Book, Chapter
1 0, Int | other records of similar nature (cf. iv, 14), and that these
2 I, XVII | possessed, they made known the nature of the tempest, and the
3 I, XXVII | which is preserved to human nature by the free gift of Almighty
4 I, XXVII | because the superfluity of nature cannot be imputed to her
5 I, XXVII | through the infirmity of our nature, is ordained by the just
6 I, XXVII | from the infirmity of our nature; and what else is it to
7 I, XXVII | through the fault of their nature, are rendered infirm?~She
8 I, XXVII | naturally; yet, because our nature itself is so depraved, that
9 I, XXVII | from sin, and thereby human nature may itself know what it
10 I, XXVII | woman suffers according to nature, with a clean mind, be imputed
11 I, XXVII | superfluity or infirmity of nature, and sometimes from the
12 I, XXVII | superfluity or infirmity of nature, such an illusion is not
13 II, I | palpable by the reality of nature; according to the example
14 II, XII | shown him in spirit what the nature of the vision was that had
15 III, XIX | his body, that the lofty nature of the man may be better
16 IV, XIX | hundred families, of the nature of an island, encompassed,
17 IV, XXIV | their judgement upon the nature and origin of the gift whereof
18 IV, XXIV | yet it was of so mild a nature that he could talk and go
19 IV, XXVIII| haply it were either the nature of the soil, or the will
20 V, XVII | wheat and barley, for the nature of that soil is not such
21 V, XXI | people of God, though the nature of the mystery be different,
22 V, XXIV | or elegiac verse.~Of the Nature of Things, and of the Times,
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