Book, Paragraph
1 Pre | some of which were of an extreme age, and very valuable. ./.
2 Pre | manuscripts that I had the extreme pleasure of discovering
3 Pre | Knowing then, as I did, the extreme rarity of this Work; in
4 1, 2 | preceding, seems to me to be in extreme error ;—that they err, as
5 1, 42| had made no use of this extreme metal-working art of evil
6 1, 72| contrary, endeavouring in his extreme state to escape egress,
7 2, 18| and violent wreck in the extreme depths of perdition, is
8 2, 19| determined 35 Rest to be the extreme good : that which is, and ./.
9 2, 19| contended for Rest (as the extreme good). ~
10 2, 20| same also, determined the extreme good to be, neither Virtue,
11 2, 21| from fire. And this is the extreme error of the Stoics, who
12 2, 30| divinely shewed too, that the extreme good was this, that (men)
13 2, 71| governours. But, if the extreme of evils had taken hold
14 4, 3 | and, because of their extreme ignorance and foolishness, (
15 4, 18| the whole building and the extreme ornamenting of the Temple
16 4, 27| thought), that Rest103 was the extreme (good) : and others, that
17 4, 34| fall into the fire: -- the extreme good things too of those,
18 5, 28| of error, -- who suffered extreme punishment before the eyes
19 5, 35| begged, on account of the extreme doubt as to provision, --
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