ripens in the most beautiful of climates, [378];
pervades the whole East from the time of Alexander, [455];
is married to Roman power in the empire, [456];
is the great intellectual opponent of the Christian mind and Church, [375];
criticises polytheism for six hundred years, [376];
its outcome up to the time of S. Peter's founding the Roman Church, [475-484];
why its philosophy disbelieved a future life, [467], [470].
Grote, Plato, [377], [402], [412], [413], [420], [421], [427], [478].
Hadrian, grandeur of Rome in his days, [240];
treatment of the Church, [221-3];