Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  17|      which wild beasts, which monstrous brutes experience, which
 2   I,  59|  solecisms, and disfigured by monstrous blunders. A censure, truly,
 3   I,  59|     works are disfigured with monstrous solecisms; or if the way
 4  II,  45|              45. But let this monstrous and impious fancy be put
 5  II,  46|    again, let this belief, so monstrous and impious, be put far
 6  II,  54|       against His will, or, a monstrous thing to say, while He knows
 7  II,  54|     the guilty? For what more monstrous act of folly can be found
 8 III,  10|  unworthily to entertain such monstrous beliefs about them?
 9  IV,  11|   lest while you imagine such monstrous things, and form such conceptions,
10   V,  30|   that, in reflecting on such monstrous stories in my own mind,
11   V,  30| although he may seem to adopt monstrous opinions from the audacity
12 VII,   9|     Is not this, then, cruel, monstrous, and savage? Does it not
13 VII,  36|       judge it marvellous and monstrous that any man thinks that
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