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Book, Chapter grey = Comment text
1 I, Int | out his life,” and by a kind of transmigration to have
2 I, 7 | great price.” You see what kind of wedlock he enjoins. Husbands
3 I, 10 | checked an offence of this kind against God by making his
4 I, 17 | who was preserved as a kind of second root for the human
5 I, 17 | small, according to the kind of animal, I think all this
6 I, 36 | may have members of this kind for nothing? Why then should
7 I, 39 | truth, that we should be a kind of first-fruits of his creatures.”
8 I, 41 | told that views of this kind are never accepted in the
9 I, 48(4635)| have been of a more sensual kind than that of his master.
10 II, 3(4688) | and amusements of every kind, advocated extreme simplicity
11 II, 8 | and other things of the kind, the liberty of the soul
12 II, 9 | shunned company of this kind and were wont to dwell in
13 II, 10 | may take food of such a kind and in such quantities as
14 II, 15(4808)| xvii. 21 (Howbeit this kind goeth not out but by prayer
15 II, 17 | chosen, saith the Lord.” What kind He has chosen He thus teaches: “
16 II, 20 | the struggle varies in kind, but the victors’ crown
17 II, 25 | the consumer, food of this kind does not satisfy nature,
18 II, 35 | treats questions of this kind, has been expounded, and
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