bold = Main text
   Book, Chapter        grey = Comment text

 1   Int,        5     |        question as to whether a real dialogue underlies his work
 2   Int,        6     |       in his Philalethes, |23 a real dialogue being conceivably
 3    II,     XIII     |      man witnesses to something real; but how can witness be
 4    II,     XIII     | concerning a thing which is not real ?~ ~
 5   III          (117)|        devil, by concealing the real power of the Redeemer, and
 6   III,    XXIII     |    physiologists, and learn the real truth about such matters (
 7   III,    XXVII     |           Christ recognises the real speaker, and addresses the
 8    IV,     XIII     |       end. This He does without real alteration of His will.
 9    IV,     VIII     |    imaginings do not come from (real) men, nor even from women
10    IV          (286)|      support to the theory of a real dialogue.~ ~
11    IV,    XXVII     |     more true than that it is a real lion that a man has seen
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