Book, Paragraph

 1  II,  39|       express another in the countenance; to ensnare, to beguile
 2 III,   4|  time have seen the face and countenance of each; and then established
 3 III,  15| ashamed to give to these the countenance of an earthly creature,
 4  IV,  12|      their deportment, their countenance? or can even these be seen
 5  IV,  22|      such beauty, majesty of countenance, and snowy and marble whiteness
 6  IV,  35|  adulterer, and changing His countenance for purposes of seduction,
 7   V,  23|      her pity, with downcast countenance, pale, wounded, pretending
 8  VI,  10|      as a woman, and has one countenance, which passes through a
 9  VI,  21|    beard and disfiguring his countenance, and show by this, both
10 VII,  49|       giving to the figure a countenance by no means lifelike.
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