Chap., §
1 Int | stoical characters of the Old man, the Seven Brothers,
2 II, 102| I am not so unmanned by old age but that when righteousness
3 II, 103| hotter. I do not so pity mine old age as to break the Law
4 II, 105| sully the pure mouth of mine old age and my lifelong constancy
5 III | Eleazar, the gentle spirited old man, shows such fortitude
6 III, 108| first they unclothed the old man, who was adorned with
7 III, 110| tormented in a dream; yea, the old man keeping his eyes steadfastly
8 III, 112| athlete taking punishment, the old man outwore his tormentors.~
9 III, 114| partly in pity for his old age, partly in sympathy
10 III, 117| living unto the truth till old age, and guarding in lawful
11 IV | of Reason is 2000 years old. The story of seven sons
12 IV, 137| wonderful of all, he, being an old man, with the sinews of
13 IV, 139| 11 Assuredly, then, if an old man despised the torments
14 IV, 146| and impotent to compel an old man to eat unclean meat,
15 IV, 149| persist in the madness of that old man who has already suffered,
16 V, 175| 7 But if the old men of the Hebrews endured
17 V, 221| 53 'I am not so old in years as my brethren,
18 V, 221| my brethren, but I am as old in mind. For we were born
19 VII, 309| in the cause of religion, old and a woman, thou didst
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