Chap., §
1 I, 45 | temperate mind is able, as I said, to win the victory over
2 II, 67 | Phoenicia and Cilicia, and said, 'Being loyal to the king,
3 II, 73 | 25 For he said that he had sinned and was
4 II, 86 | Antiochus, looking on him, said: 'Before I allow the tortures
5 III, 114| king went tip to him and said:~
6 III, 122| lifted up his eyes to God and said:~
7 IV, 148| and calling them nearer said:~
8 IV, 156| the tyrant spoke again and said:~
9 V, 169| together, and as with one soul, said to him:~
10 V, 183| 15 And when the guards said to him, 'Consent to eat,
11 V, 183| from your tortures,' he said to them, 'Your method, O
12 V, 192| steadfastly enduring this agony said, 'How sweet is every form
13 V, 193| 25 And to the tyrant he said, 'O most ruthless of tyrants,
14 V, 202| at the point of death he said, 'We, O most abominable
15 V, 203| brought up the fourth, and said to him, 'Be not thou also
16 V, 204| 36 But he said unto them, 'For me ye have
17 V, 208| 40 But he said, 'Even if thou dost remove
18 V, 220| to eat and be released, said:~
19 VI, 233| encouraged the boy, and he said to the guards, 'Loose me,
20 VI, 239| on the brink of death he said, 'I am no renegade to the
21 VI, 244| unclean meat we should have said that they had been conquered
22 VI, 253| 25 And one said, 'Brother, be of good cheer,'
23 VI, 254| brightly and very boldly, said, 'With a whole heart will
24 VI, 258| whose turn was yet to come said, 'Do not disgrace us, brother,
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