Dialogue, Chapter
1 I, IV | as a breakfast for five men?"~Then he, being an exceedingly
2 I, V | into the customs of the men of the district, we found
3 I, VII | but even the most learned men were said to hold different
4 I, IX | deadly hatred of ungodly men. The heretics hate him,
5 I, XII | monastery I saw two old men who were said to have already
6 I, XII | by all mention of these men, since, indeed, I heard
7 I, XV | they should frequently have men visiting them; wherever
8 I, XV | shunned intercourse with all men, yet he did not shrink from
9 I, XVII| nakedness. As often as any pious men desired to visit him, making
10 I, XXIV| without offence to these holy men), in which Martin was inferior
11 I, XXV | the virtues of all those men whom you have mentioned,
12 II, I | tripets,2 and which you men of learning, or those at
13 II, III | state-conveyance, full of military men, was coming along the public
14 II, III | animals never moved. These men next all fall to with lashes;
15 II, III | fixed effigies. The wretched men knew not what to do, and
16 II, IV | bishop he restored two dead men to life, facts of which
17 II, XI | woman enter the camp of men, but let the line of soldiers
18 II, XI | be remote from that of men. For this renders an army
19 II, XI | mixed with the regiments of men. Let the soldier occupy
20 II, XII | herself from the eyes of all men, that she did not admit
21 II, XIV | with the view of compelling men to worship the idols of
22 II, XIV | for its object to compel men to deny Christ as God, while
23 II, XIV | Christ, and ordered all men to be circumcised, according
24 III, VI | my senses: do Christian men not believe in the miraculous
25 III, IX | Serpents hear me, but men will not hear. '~
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