Part, Paragraph
1 Intro | revised edition"14 contained three passages not included in
2 1 | I - THE THREE WALLS OF THE ROMANISTS~The
3 1 | great adroitness, have built three walls about them, behind
4 1 | slyly stolen from us our three rods2, that they may go
5 1 | safe stronghold of these three walls, that they may practice
6 1 (2) | i.e., The three rods for the punishment
7 1 (11) | these sacraments there are three -- baptism, confirmation,
8 2 (8) | It suggested a salary of three to four thousand gulden. ~
9 2 | Babylon. There are more than three thousand papal secretaries
10 2 | that every year more than three hundred thousand gulden
11 2 | livings fall to Rome in three ways: ~First, If any one
12 2 | pleasure-ride, takes with him three or four thousand mule-riders,
13 2 (24) | pallium from Rome within three months of his election;
14 2 (44) | The three chief centers of foreign
15 2 | all these treasures, which three great kings might well think
16 Prop1 (48)| The three paragraphs enclosed in brackets
17 Prop1 | clever that they make the three journeys at once, and they
18 Prop1 (51)| Hutten's saying in Vadiscus: "Three things there are which those
19 Prop1 | least given over to two or three orders! Wandering about
20 Prop1 (55)| The three leading mendicant orders
21 Prop2 (3) | The three kinds of masses are really
22 Prop3 | himself be crowned pope by three cardinals, who are under
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