Parte,  Chap.

 1   I,  TransPre|           invention or knowledge of human nature it displays, has
 2   I,  TransPre|          observation on mankind and human nature. Among modern novels
 3   I,   AuthPre|           anybody, mixing up things human and divine, a sort of motley
 4   I,       III|       praise and the benefit of the human race." The landlord, seeing
 5   I,      VIII|             to those laws, for laws human and divine allow each one
 6   I,       XII|            and deserved that of all human beauty. Here one shepherd
 7   I,      XIII|            that mortal enemy of the human race, and here, too, for
 8   I,        XX|          now in a place so far from human reach: for God's sake, master
 9   I,       XXI|          something more divine than human, and, without knowing how
10   I,       XXV|            the end and limit of all human beauty! Oh, ye wood nymphs
11   I,     XXVII|           remote spot, cut off from human intercourse, sends me, though
12   I,     XXVII|          can check their course nor human device stay their coming.
13   I,    XXVIII|            Heaven, than that of any human being, for there is none
14   I,    XXVIII|           is not Luscinda, it is no human creature but a divine being."~ ~
15   I,    XXVIII|         consider his soul above all human objects. All this passed
16   I,      XXIX|         bare, ragged, bereft of all human comfort, and what is worse,
17   I,      XXIX|             traitor who against all human and divine law, has usurped
18   I,       XXX|       caressing him as if he were a human being. The ass held his
19   I,      XXXI|         things necessary to support human life, and is bigger than
20   I,    XXXIII|       forfeited for the sake of any human friendship? And if a friend
21   I,    XXXIII|         live the lives of angels in human bodies; those undertaken
22   I,     XXXIV|           is needed to overcome his human power. Leonela alone knew
23   I,    XXXVII|          can be compared-I speak of human letters, the end of which
24   I,        XL|          disposed towards the whole human race. The only one that
25   I,       XLI|        might, neither dwelling, nor human being, nor path nor road
26   I,      XLIV|             and change things, than human will."~ ~With this the love-smitten
27   I,    XLVIII|             should be the mirror of human life, the model of manners,
28   I,    XLVIII|           always bent, nor can weak human nature exist without some
29   I,      XLIX|            is? How can there be any human understanding that can persuade
30  II,       III|            I liked."~ ~"There is no human history in the world, I
31  II,        VI|           but, not to mix up things human and divine, I refrain. Look
32  II,         X|            utmost limit of grace in human shape, sole relief of this
33  II,        XI|         that of Death itself with a human face; next to it was an
34  II,        XI|         boasting, even if the whole human race favours him."~ ~So
35  II,       XII|           displayed what goes on in human life; nor is there any similitude
36  II,       XIV|          monster of some kind, or a human being of some new species
37  II,      XXII|             and spectacle that ever human being enjoyed or beheld.
38  II,     XXIII|          produce or the most lively human imagination conceive. I
39  II,       XXV|             an ape or imagined in a human being; for if you ask him
40  II,     XXVII|          are bound to keep quiet by human and divine law."~ ~"The
41  II,    XXVIII| ill-bestowed! O man more beast than human being! Now, when I was about
42  II,     XXXVI|             the thickest beard that human eyes had ever beheld until
43  II,     LVIII|             a sinner and fight with human ones. They won heaven by
44  II,      LXIX|           which, coming unbroken by human voice (for there silence
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