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We find her impatient of mint and cummin, of over-anxious self-scrutiny.
2
Black cummin is one of the sixty deadly drugs.
3
Is sowed as cummin or hempseed, with curses, and he thinks he thrives the better.
4
Or must they neglect the weightier matters, because they want mint, and anise, and cummin?
5
They tithed mint, and anise, and cummin.
6
Where one fifty thousand pound be a forth cummin from, another may a behappen to be found.
7
We might then a be happen to raise the wind; and the wherewithalls might a be forth cummin.
8
The tithe of "mint, anise, and cummin" is preferred to the weightier matters of the law.
9
But nevertheless I dares to say, likewise and notwithstandin as aforesaid, that the money may be a forth cummin.
10
But giving Stendhal his full mint and cummin of praise, he yet was but the forerunner of a mightier man.
11
How should he perceive, amid this tithe-paying of mint, and anise, and cummin, the weightier matters which were left undone?
12
But all this was only the mint and cummin of imperial things compared with the exalting deeds that Drake had done.
13
She therefore pays her tythe of mint and cummin, and thanks her God that she is not as other women are.
14
But how often have I not insisted on the mint and anise and cummin, and forgotten the judgment, mercy and faith!
15
Apollophanes the grammarian presently satisfied him, saying, by that proverb were meant intimate acquaintance, who could sup together on salt and cummin.
16
Ye pay tithe of mint and anise and cummin, but ye have ignored the weightier matters of the law; judgment, mercy, and faith.