Book, Chapter
1 I, II | God. When by this time the human race had increased to a
2 I, II | wicked habits, corrupted the human family, and from their alliance
3 I, III | determined to destroy the whole human race. But he exempted Noah,
4 I, IV | or shed the blood of any human being, because Cain, having
5 I, IV | by one. Butalthough the human race was now multiplied,
6 I, IV | These, after the manner of human nature, formed the design
7 I, VI | He supposed them to be human beings, and welcomed them
8 I, VI | with that evil tendency of human nature which renders it
9 I, VI | imagining that the whole human race had perished, sought
10 I, IX | were to meet, God, taking a human form, is said to have wrestled
11 I, XVI | not, in accordance with human nature, restrain their desires,
12 I, XLVIII| lamented along with the human inhabitants. In this way,
13 II, II | not within the reach of human power. The king, enraged
14 II, III | those future mixtures of the human race which disagree among
15 II, III | For he, not born under human conditions (since he was
16 II, XIII | There was at that period one Human, a very confidential friend
17 II, XIII | Along with him also went Human, the favorite of the king,
18 II, XIII | and demanded the death of Human as a satisfaction to her
19 II, XIII | returned, and when he saw Human grasping the knees of the
20 II, XXX | did not even abstain from human bodies, except those which
21 II, XXX | distinguished above all human achievements, ought not
22 II, XXXIII| earth, unaccustomed to mere human contact, rejected all the
23 II, XL | illustration's sake, a picture of a human body might be like a man,
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