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Dialogue, Chapter grey = Comment text
1 I, III | bread. That is the only kind of grain which flourishes
2 I, X | desert, bread or some other kind of food is furnished by
3 I, XI | no bread or food of any kind should be sent to him. And
4 I, XIII | miles. For that is the only kind of tree found in the desert,
5 I, XV | and, lying there with a kind of weeping and lamentation,
6 I, XVI | discriminate between the kind of the roots by the mere
7 I, XVII | shunned all meeting with his kind. To one man only, about
8 I, XX | always and utterly from every kind of drink, and for food (
9 I, XXI | further, if some signs of any kind of power fall to him even
10 I, XXI | he rejects the coarser kind of clothing, and demands
11 I, XXII | as being perfect in every kind of virtue. Capable of lengthened
12 I, XXII | plausible appearance of that kind of spurious righteousness,
13 I, XXII | stimulating others to a like kind of conduct, or of deterring
14 I, XXV | eminent in all Gaul for every kind of virtue, when he had occasion
15 I, XXVI | testified of works of the kind which Martin accomplished,
16 II, I | yea, in its elevation, a kind of royal tribunal; but Martin
17 II, XIII | by we were filled with a kind of awe and amazement, for
18 III, III | custom to fill vessels of the kind in such a, way that the
19 III, VIII(8)| secondary meaning of sus as a kind of fish. ~
20 III, IX | dissimilar marvel in a like kind of work, having the concurrence
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