Page:A Discourse of Constancy in Two Books Chiefly containing Consolations Against Publick Evils.pdf/314

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The Table.

E.

  • Earthquakes, wonderful ones. 92, 93
    • Euripides, his saying. 214
    • Evil men, not punished why. 208
    • Evils present compared with those of former times. 256, &c.
    • Evils not grievous, nor new. 242
    • Evils publick and private what 36
    • Euclid, his Apothegme. 127

F.

  • Famines, in former times. 268, &c.
  • Fate asserted. 98
    • Vniversally ascended to 101
    • Some difference about its parts. 102
    • How distinguished of by the ancients. Ibid.
    • Mathematical Fate what 103
T 3
Natural