Book, Chapter

 1    II,      XIV|       worthy of death, or to Herod King of the Jews, or to the High-priest
 2    II,       XX| metaphorical. Supposing an earthly king passes judgment on one in
 3   III,       IV|         there, He is acting like a king who ruins the region that
 4   III,       XI|              The barbarian met the king," instead of "the barbarians,"
 5   III,       XI|         barbarous tribe"; and "the king brought the soldier with
 6   III,       XI|        Emperor simply appointed as king of Judaea Herod the son
 7   III,       XI|      remind their great and kindly king, so to speak, of the goodwill
 8   III,      XII|           an honoured entry to the king and makes a show within
 9   III,      XII|            no one appears before a king who is implicated in any
10   III,    XXVII|            heaven. He now knew the King upon His throne, and had
11   III,   XXXVII|           a barbarian chief to his king by adopting his customs
12   III,     XLII|         rate, Amistra, the wife of King Xerxes, sent fourteen boys
13    IV,      XXV|            to be punished, but the king whose law it is may overrule
14    IV,      XXV|     criminals, by supplicating the king during his royal progress,
15    IV,      XXV|          law-court if it is in the king's hand, and not if it is
16    IV,      XXX|           that are signed with the king's letter and mark are deemed
17    IV,      XXX|            of no benefit without a king? Even thus the issue of
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