Dialogue, Chapter
1 I, I | country, he had gone three years before. Having embraced
2 I, VIII| known to us. For, some five years ago, I read a certain book
3 I, X | and the younger twelve years of age. As these boys were
4 I, XII | already lived there for forty years, and in fact never to have
5 I, XV | these solitudes for twelve years; but although he shunned
6 I, XVII| He had for nearly fifty years been removed from all human
7 I, XVII| one man only, about five years before my visit, he was
8 I, XXII| a period of nearly four years, forsook his cell and the
9 I, XXII| restrained. At length, after two years, having been set free from
10 II, XII | within which for several years she had chastely confined
11 II, XIV | by this time, reached the years of boyhood, while he would
12 III, II | Martin his daughter of twelve years old, who had been dumb from
13 III, VII | plague, that for twenty years, in which he afterwards
14 III, XIII| spirit. He lived sixteen years after this, but never again
15 III, XV | inasmuch as from his earliest years he had grown up in the monastery
16 III, XVI | of contention for three years without intermission, and
|