Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   2|         relaxed in any part, or broken up? Has the revolution of
 2  II,  12|         prostrate with his legs broken; and then, when he had been
 3  II,  58| fashioned man, whence ills have broken forth, or why the Supreme
 4 III,   2|      through its being too long broken off, be said to have given
 5 III,  27|      firm bonds of marriage are broken; that near relations burn
 6  IV,  21|         cradle, and lulled with broken words? O devout assertion
 7  IV,  36|      our meetings to be cruelly broken up, in which prayer is made
 8  VI,  15|          images melted down and broken, and were also to bid you
 9 VII,   4|         binding on men, we have broken through the bonds which
10 VII,  40|        power of the enemy being broken, and the territory of the
11 VII,  41|         lamed, their legs being broken; and that he considered
12 App     |         crippled, and limp with broken legs; who declare that the
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