VI B 98:8 n.d., 1845      

From draft; see 1.21:29:

. . . . . under B

—Pap. VI B 21:1 n.d., 1844-45      

From final copy; see 1.21:29:

. . . . . in Part Two— changed from: under B

—Pap. VI B 98:9 n.d., 1845      

From final copy; see 1.23:1:

Chapter I— changed from: (a)

—Pap. VI B 98:10 n.d., 1845      

From draft; see 1.23:3:

(a) The Historical Point of View.

—Pap. VI B 21:2 n.d., 1844-45      

From draft; see 1.28:27-29:14:

Moreover, there is no contradiction, since along this way one begins again to become philological-critical.—Pap. VI B 21:4 n.d., 1845      

From draft; see 1.31:2-25:

This is taking faith in vain, just as also when speculation is supposed to be made necessary. One is unwilling to bear the martyrdom of faith; one wants to have one’s cake and eat it, too, which is a long way from being faith.— Pap. VI B 21:5 n.d., 1845

From final copy; see 1.35:40:

. . . . . “proclaimed even by street-corner loafers.”

—Pap. VI B 98:11 n.d., 1845      

From draft; see 1.36:15:

Lücke9—Delbrück

—Pap. VI B 21:7 n.d., 1845      

From draft; see 1.36:35-37:

. . . . . became penetrated by a little thought and is no longer so hiatically bellowing as when it is rendered on the Jew’s-harp of the genius, the seer, the bard, the prophet (since Grundtvig, in his position as pastor at Vartou, unites many world-historical dignitaries).—Pap.