Part,  Paragraph

1     I,      2|     that "the Stranger like a man of war was able to come,"
2     I,      2|   come," well if he came as a man of war -- [though he did
3   III        |    its nature, and wherever a man has pleasure in it, it is
4   III,     10|      darkness shows that if a man opens the doors [P. 80,
5   III,     10|  nature does not teach. For a man never eats Light nor ever
6   III,     12|      he says] that the Primal Man(?) cast(?) "the Sons of
7   III,     12| exceedingly ridiculous that a man . . . O what vile blasphemy! . . .
8   III,     12|       Darkness by the Primal [Man] who bore it, he would have [
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