Section, Paragraph
1 II, 72 | proportion to her. It is strange that they have wished to
2 II, 143 | is, you will exclaim, a strange way to make them happy!
3 II, 161 | little known, that it is a strange and surprising thing to
4 III, 194 | sensibility to trifles and this strange insensibility to the greatest
5 III, 194 | all-powerful force.~There must be a strange confusion in the nature
6 III, 198 | great things, indicates a strange inversion.~
7 V, 294 | such and such a crime. A strange justice that is bounded
8 VI, 365 | incomparable thing. It must have strange defects to be contemptible.
9 VI, 392 | Scepticism.—... It is, then, a strange fact that we cannot define
10 VI, 406 | all miseries. Here is a strange monster and a very plain
11 VI, 409 | king, that they thought it strange that he endured life. Who
12 VII, 425 | have forsaken him, it is a strange thing that there is nothing
13 VII, 537 | 537. Christianity is strange. It bids man recognise that
14 IX, 598 | are in it obscurities as strange as those of Mahomet; but
15 IX, 612 | of tyrants. For it is not strange that a State endures, when
16 IX, 613 | compromises or miracles. It is not strange to be saved by yieldings,
17 IX, 618 | imagination, whence come the strange errors and continual changes
18 IX, 618 | Jews. I likewise think it strange that the first law of the
19 XI, 712 | forgotten your God to serve strange gods. I called, and ye did
20 XIII, 833| in it there are wrought strange miracles.~Which is the most
21 XIV, 875 | His Church. It would be a strange miracle if infallibility
22 XIV, 888 | only offered to them by the strange hands of these casuists,
23 XIV, 914 | men so much, that it is strange that theirs displease. It
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