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| Alphabetical [« »] hue 4 hugely 1 hujus 1 human 28 humanity 7 humble 3 humbled 2 | Frequency [« »] 30 being 30 face 30 power 28 human 28 may 27 hand 27 life | Alain of Lille The Complaint of Nature IntraText - Concordances human |
Metre/Prose, page
1 pI, 13 | throat fashioned the coin of human speech. There the trick 2 pIII, 24 | marked it with the stamp of human appearance, and ennobled 3 pIII, 25 | erect the building of the human body. And those qualities 4 pIII, 26 | latter, lust, leads the human mind into the ruin of vices, 5 pIII, 27 | as in the citadel of a human city, resides imperially 6 pIII, 27 | as in the midst of the human city, magnanimity has established 7 pIII, 28 | other parts, also, of the human body is shown the likeness 8 pIII, 28 | freshens the members of the human body. And just as the moon 9 pIII, 28 | the dawn of age arises in human nature, there begins man' 10 pIII, 31 | nevertheless it exceeds human power, when balanced with 11 pIII, 32 | close association, frail human nature is always wont, like 12 pIV, 36 | frenzied Orpheus. For the human race, derogate from its 13 pIV, 39 | solely against the faults of human kind, while we also read 14 pIV, 45 | together the line of the human race in unwearied continuation, 15 pIV, 45 | And his authority over the human race is seen from experience 16 pV, 54 | in weaving the series of human birth, mending with a slender 17 pV, 55 | far into the grain of the human race, and does not repair 18 pVI, 65 | error, the only solace for human misfortune, alone the morning-star 19 mVII, 67 | whole stronghold of the human breast. For fear marches 20 mVII, 68 | basely covers the splendor of human riches, and the glory of 21 pVII, 69 | deprives the wings of the human mind of liberty. Now is 22 pVII, 72 | blindness, the hell of the human mind, the spur of contention, 23 pVII, 72 | envy but the enemies of human peace, the attendants of 24 pVIII, 81| had scorned the poverty of human stature in its growth, and 25 pVIII, 82| the mechanical deceits of human art, but gushing from the 26 pVIII, 83| said: ~`O lonely lamps in human darkness, morning stars 27 pVIII, 85| of the shipwreck of the human race. For thou seest how 28 pIX, 89 | of whose excellence the human race enters into the habitation