Book, Paragraph

1   I,  53|    whence and who He was-and naturally so. But when, freed from
2   I,  59|     the case, no language is naturally perfect, and in like manner
3  II,  29|  hold that these evils arise naturally, but-and this is much worse-you
4  II,  50|  however, that which is good naturally, does not require to be
5  II,  60| because He knew that men are naturally blind, and cannot grasp
6  IV,  37|     and that unity, which is naturally uncompounded, should divide
7  VI,  19|     Because things which are naturally single and unique, cannot
8 VII,   4|      through the bonds which naturally united us at the beginning.
9 VII,  16|     than if their senses are naturally such that they are fond
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