Part, Dialogue
1 1, Int| was combating, with every kind of weapon, the Waldensian
2 1, Int| he did not know of what kind it was, and he only desired
3 1, 2 | antagonistic, or really kind and gracious, become the
4 1, 3 | with a nature of a contrary kind.~CIC. The Platonists say
5 1, 4 | comparison, nor puts as the same kind the divine and the human
6 1, 5 | principally love of a low kind, which is no other than
7 1, 5 | way, he judges as to the kind of taste that we can have
8 1, 6 | not in view a superhuman kind.~Such poison, 1 therefore,
9 2, 1 | similitude, figure, symbol, or kind, if it be possible, and
10 2, 1 | spirit are of so intense a kind that they extinguish all
11 2, 1 | that with progress of this kind a greater and greater facility
12 2, 1 | power, does nothing of the kind, but assaults and wounds
13 2, 2 | observation of every other kind, as vile and vain. 1 Now,
14 2, 2 | seek its food through some kind of hunting or chase. Therefore
15 2, 2 | means of negations of every kind and discourses both open
16 2, 3 | flames. What then, must that kind be, for which the heart
17 2, 3 | and consequently in its kind it can inspire~others with
18 2, 4 | which is. seen in the lower kind of love; but I mean according
19 2, 4 | the ordinary; but in that kind of madness, insensibility
20 2, 4 | heroic, and is of such a kind that it can worthily satisfy
21 2, 4 | food is bitter. Now that kind of blindness is expressed
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