Chapter
1 I | cold reasoning will not help you far in the opposite
2 I | being haunted; and I cannot help thinking about the possible
3 I | thy great divine pity! - help us that we may become united,
4 I | and they compelled mutual help and mutual kindness. Sometimes
5 I | The obligation of mutual help in time of calamity or danger
6 I | this obligation of mutual help extended to religious matters:
7 I | was expected to invoke the help of the gods for the sick
8 I | children, - for children could help to pass water; and the elders
9 I | district and district, and the help needed had to be sent from
10 I | of the good old farmer to help them in time of fear or
11 II | forty-seven songs; and with his help I made free renderings of
12 III | gate of exit, I could not help feeling envious of its keeper:
13 III | furnished by nature with the help of man, and those of time
14 III | details are precious: they help to accentuate and verify
15 IV | shape on the baby memory by help of a practical illustration, -
16 IV | says: "each stands only by help of the other. One by itself
17 IV | is like mankind. Without help one person cannot live in
18 IV | this world; but by getting help and giving help everybody
19 IV | getting help and giving help everybody can live. If nobody
20 IV | material law of love and help universally obeyed, - forthwith,
21 V | ordinary Japanese drawing may help to the understanding of
22 VII | Very long time in, august help received; honorable mercy
23 VII | repeats himself when he can help it. The lesson he has to
24 VIII| the way of love.~Yet the help of the Gods is earnestly
25 X | truth; and she could not help shedding tears. She related
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