Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   3|       which you speak of were not unknown, were not sudden in their
 2   I,   5|          things are old, and were unknown to none of the ancients?
 3   I,  31|           wondered at if Thou art unknown; it is a cause of greater
 4   I,  34|       vital sensations into light unknown to him before. If, then,
 5   I,  43|           examined, and which are unknown to you, prating with the
 6   I,  53|           inmost nature, God from unknown realms, and was sent by
 7   I,  56|         But in nations which were unknown to the writers, and which
 8   I,  61|      choose to do it in that, are unknown, being involved in so great
 9   I,  65|        from lands far distant and unknown to you before, offering
10   I,  65|         you hesitate to drink the unknown draught, indited by the
11  II,   5|        with tranquillity hitherto unknown, become mild m disposition?
12  II,  11|         as showed some divine and unknown power. What virtues did
13  II,  13|         in which you beseech some unknown powers to be favourable
14  II,  14|          to make manifest what is unknown, this is man's real death,
15  II,  14|         shall cast them, who were unknown before Christ, and brought
16  II,  22|       with strange and previously unknown things, be above all ignorant
17  II,  36|     because of its novelty it was unknown to you before, now, though
18  II,  40|           mountains, and turn the unknown bowels of the earth into
19  II,  52|           in fine, unheard of and unknown to us by name, which may
20  II,  72|          introduce an unheard-of, unknown, and upstart religion? Is
21  II,  73|          Graeca because they were unknown to you, their name bearing
22  II,  73|           this, that he, too, was unknown to you. but that at some
23 III,   4|         and serve, or some others unknown by reputation and name?
24 III,  40|          and as many female, with unknown names and pitiless dispositions,
25 III,  42|        what he is shall be wholly unknown? or how can it avail even
26  IV,   3|      forward to us other bands of unknown gods, we cannot determine
27  IV,  14| theologians, then, and authors on unknown antiquity, say that in the
28   V,  24|       forth through an opening of unknown depth, seizes and bears
29  VI,  23|         them up, though barred by unknown means; which, indeed, would
30 VII,   5|        all agitating feelings are unknown to the gods, the consequence
31 VII,  43|           to live in the country, unknown from the obscurity of his
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