Chapter
1 I | suggestive than anything material could possibly be; and when
2 III | everybody does, for the cheapest material is used. Paper, straw, or
3 III | independent~{p. 63}~of the material. What shapes that material
4 III | material. What shapes that material is perfect comprehension
5 III | amethyst; even were the material of the temples transformed
6 III | Perhaps it is just because the material of such creation is so frail
7 IV | suggestion of the spiritual and material law of love and help universally
8 VII | cape attached to it: the material~{p. 140}~is wool, and the
9 VII | and how independent of material, - how intuitive, - how
10 VII | bark; but, whatever the material, the tint given must show
11 VIII| would occupy pages - offers material of this description. Among
12 VIII| Concerning the instability of all material things, and the hollowness
13 IX | integrating themselves into material and mental phenomena,~{p.
14 IX | forms, - forms mental, forms material. The fathomless Reality
15 IX | phenomena, declares the material aggregate unreal because
16 IX | but woven of like sensuous material, - a mental and physical
17 IX | shared with others, - like material gifts. But the look of an
18 IX | aggregation~Of mental and material qualities~That gives them,
19 IX | with the amelioration of material social conditions - in our
20 IX | opportunities. The highest material results of civilization,
21 X | whom they furnished the material of the twenty-sixth narrative
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