Part, Dialogue
1 1, Pre| was begun, more than two years ago, for my own pleasure,
2 1, Int| mother. I am forty-four years old, having been born in
3 1, Int| he was from his earliest years given to meditation and
4 1, Int| and to poetry. The, early years of Bruno's life were times
5 1, Int| he passed nearly thirteen years of early manhood, until
6 1, Int| hardly~ ./. thirty-one, years old when he quitted his
7 1, Int| and he continued for two years in that place, teaching
8 1, Int| him, and after living two years and six months at Toulouse,
9 1, Int| Bruno was about thirty-six years old when he left Paris and
10 1, Int| in the latter place two years, earning his bread by teaching.~
11 1, Int| which was to last for eight years. The next day he went over
12 1, Int| I live?"~he writes eight years and more before he ever
13 1, Int| Bruno was hardly fifty years old at this time; his face
14 1, 5 | into so many centuries and years, and whether, by the same
15 1, 5 | animates, one kills.~In all the years, the months, the days, the
16 2, 1 | As we see in particular years such as that of the sun,
17 2, 1 | inserted it. Many, many years may pass over our heads,
18 2, 1 | to have remained thirty years, during which time he had
19 2, 1 | warrior~Who had for thirty years besieged in vain.~He marked
20 2, 5 | plains for the space of ten years, and at the end of which
21 2, 5 | spirits are we, wandering many years,~Longing to know; and many
22 2, 5 | did afflict us months and years;~They were the grace of
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