But the road lost its mysticmeaning when Abbott discovered Fran.
2
No doubt the words 'Water of Life' have a spiritual and mysticmeaning.
3
Indeed, in the true and mysticmeaning of the rite, you could not marry Christine Ludolph.
4
They had a spiritual and mysticmeaning already among the heathens of the East-Greeksand barbarians alike.
5
The "white flame" seems to have had a mysticmeaning to the boy; it occurs repeatedly.
6
And this is the mysticmeaning of (Ps.
7
And this is the mysticmeaning of (Hab.
8
Still more obviously suffused with mysticmeaning and influence are the Teutonic myths concerning the waters of the underworld.
9
Then the words over whose mysticmeaning he had so often pondered, came, like the sound of many waters, upon his ear:
10
One can always put a mysticmeaning to the direct saying of a Hindu holy man, but there seemed no equivocation here.
11
What mysticmeaning, it may be asked, is contained in such things as a brick, a house, a hat, a pair of shoes?
12
Both are "mystic " numbers, and in Gothic architecture particularly, proportions were frequently determined by numbers to which a mysticmeaning was attached.
13
As Weishaupt said to Knigge after explaining all this, "Could Aquinas do better?" (Actually, the mysticmeaning of these numbers is sexual.
14
I had made a special point of bringing out the mysticmeaning in the orchestra, which I divided into three distinctly different and opposite elements.
15
There is meaning in them-deep ,mysticmeaning, such as no ordinary picture can boast.
16
And he associated with her, teaching her the mysticmeanings of flowers in the garden.