Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
malevolence 1
malevolent 1
malice 2
man 63
management 3
manere 1
manhood 4
Frequency    [«  »]
63 an
63 have
63 if
63 man
63 then
62 are
62 should
Alain of Lille
The Complaint of Nature

IntraText - Concordances

man

   Metre/Prose,  page
1 mI, 3 | declines into passive nature. Man is made woman, he blackens 2 mI, 3 | barbarously denies that he is a man. Art does not please him, 3 mI, 4 | Though all the beauty of man humbles itself before the 4 mI, 4 | though for her the free man would become a slave, and 5 pI, 14 | and with the face of a man. The luna, bereft of its 6 pI, 15 | element. In its principal part man laid aside the idleness 7 pI, 16 | for the finer sagacity of man. The hare, seized with melancholy 8 pII, 19 | their own willingness. And a man who towered above the head 9 pII, 20 | stole away the reason of man, but also made the celestials 10 mIII, 23 | itself asked that tired man take draughts of it. ~ 11 pIII, 25 | the form and eminence 'of man into the likeness of the 12 pIII, 26 | of the firmament, so in man is found a continual hostility 13 pIII, 26 | virtue. The one dishonors man, and changes him to a beast; 14 pIII, 26 | of desire. Reason makes man to talk with angels; lust 15 pIII, 26 | with brutes. Reason teaches man to find in exile a home; 16 pIII, 26 | an exile. And, in this, man's nature cannot reproach 17 pIII, 27 | universe finds its qualities in man. Hear how in this universe, 18 pIII, 27 | diligently extends its guard over man. Man, like one foreign-born, 19 pIII, 27 | extends its guard over man. Man, like one foreign-born, 20 pIII, 27 | the angel administering, man serving. God by command 21 pIII, 27 | God by command creates man; the angel by work procreates 22 pIII, 27 | by work procreates him; man by obedience recreates himself. 23 pIII, 27 | angel by action fashions it; man submits himself to the will 24 pIII, 27 | with the service of action; man obeys with the mystery of 25 pIII, 27 | ordered state arises in man. In the citadel of the head 26 pIII, 28 | things which are sick, so in man a heat which proceeds from 27 pIII, 28 | mother of many humors, so in man the liver imparts a humor 28 pIII, 28 | variety, alter the age of man. For when the dawn of age 29 pIII, 28 | human nature, there begins man's early spring. When the 30 pIII, 28 | the farther turning-posts, man basks in the summer of youth. 31 pIII, 29 | lest, if I should impart to man a close knowledge of myself, 32 pIII, 30 | according to his sure testimony, man by my working is born, by 33 pIII, 30 | better being. For through me man is begotten unto death, 34 pIII, 31 | the comparative, that of man the positive. All this discourse 35 pIV, 34 | but from this general rule man alone is excluded by an 36 pIV, 35 | inviolability of my commands. But man, who exhausted the treasury 37 pIV, 36 | narration to stray to instances? Man alone rejects the music 38 pIV, 36 | irregularity. Thus, too, man, become the tyro of a distorted 39 pIV, 41 | of art give the image of man.' ~'Now from what we have 40 pIV, 41 | the unlawful assaults of man alone the garments of my 41 pIV, 42 | affection, has so forced man's little spark of reason 42 mV, 47 | have both been foreign to a man, he yet compels these 2 ' 43 mVI, 59 | disgrace. Without shame inhuman man repudiates the proper practices 44 pVI, 60 | his cult. Therefore the man Bacchilatra very frequently 45 pVI, 64 | its voice. Now the rich man, shipwrecked in the deep 46 pVI, 64 | its midst. And the poor man, though he is not able really 47 pVI, 65 | perishable into the immortal, man into God. It is the true 48 mVII, 66 | breasts, the starved mind of man knows not rest.1 It dissolves 49 mVII, 66 | thirst. So the satiated man hungers, the drunken thirsts, 50 mVII, 67 | fear. The mind of the rich man lingers over a coin, while 51 mVII, 67 | dishes of coins, the rich man inflicts the pangs of hunger 52 mVII, 67 | plead so that the rich man does not devour the ~poor 53 mVII, 68 | does not devour the ~poor man for his gain, and pinch 54 mVII, 68 | face elsewhere. The rich man does not have riches, but 55 mVII, 68 | them. Thus the reason of man, trampled by covetousness, 56 mVII, 68 | or the utility of a rich man, if his conquering spirit, 57 mVII, 68 | riches. For though a rich man scatters his whole wealth, 58 pVII, 73 | anoint the head of the rich man with the oil of adulation; 59 pVII, 73 | flashes in the gift of a rich man, the flatterer is all poured 60 pVII, 74 | take up their abode in a man, and he be not redeemed 61 mVIII, 76| honor, to be put by the rich man to use. If the time be at 62 pVIII, 76| of instruction, behold, a man, appearing suddenly and 63 pVIII, 80| ought to be in the words of man, what circumspectness in


IntraText® (V89) Copyright 1996-2007 EuloTech SRL