Section, Paragraph
1 II, 72 | Man is to himself the most wonderful object in nature; for he
2 II, 161 | 161. Vanity.—How wonderful it is that a thing so evident
3 V, 315 | reason of effects.—It is wonderful that men would not have
4 VI, 365 | therefore, by its nature a wonderful and incomparable thing.
5 VI, 402 | how to extract from it a wonderful code, and to have drawn
6 VII, 482 | of their union, of their wonderful intelligence, of the care
7 VIII, 560| Christ, whereof we have wonderful proofs on earth.~So the
8 IX, 612 | uninterruptedly. It is a wonderful, incomparable, and altogether
9 IX, 616 | circumstances foretold. This is wonderful.~
10 IX, 619 | attention by the number of wonderful and singular facts which
11 IX, 639 | 640. It is a wonderful thing, and worthy of particular
12 XI, 733 | nevertheless, after such wonderful predictions of the course
13 XII, 744 | more ample pretext. The wonderful thing is to have made the
14 XII, 792 | what great pomp and in what wonderful splendour He is come to
15 XII, 796 | joined to this simplicity, is wonderful.~
16 XIII, 841| of Jonah, the great and wonderful miracle of his resurrection.~
17 XIII, 842| from whence he is." It is wonderful that you know not whence
18 XIV, 856 | visible signs. This is a wonderful one, that it has always
19 XIV, 861 | hold good together in a wonderful system. The source of all
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