Part, Dialogue
1 1, Int| harmony of colours, sounds, forms, which strike the sight
2 1, Int| according to the different forms and bodies in which it operates.
3 1, 3 | in determined colours or forms, but in harmony and consonance
4 1, 3 | extrinsic framer, as that which forms the limbs indicates the
5 1, 3 | return again to the superior forms.~CIC. So that they mean,
6 1, 3 | transmigrate into base and alien forms. And, on the contrary, through
7 1, 4 | itself.~CIC. I understand. He forms intelligible conceptions
8 1, 5 | beauty of the body, and forms it in loveliness, -- it
9 1, 5 | takes on all the natural forms. Hence it is that this particular
10 2, Pre| universal agent unique, of all forms and of life, that is called
11 2, 1 | demeaned~If decked in divers forms ornate she come~Through
12 2, 1 | vows, and attributes these forms, so that he is deaf to those
13 2, 2 | multitude of other species, forms and ideas, and "air of bells,"
14 2, 2 | dialectics, syllogisms, forms, methods, systems of science,
15 2, 2 | all her specific natural forms in which they see the eternal
16 2, 2 | all presides the form of forms, 1 the fountain of light,
17 2, 3 | are taken according to the forms, the which we cannot consider
|