Citations:lusûs naturæ

archaic spelling of lusus naturae

 * 1871, Charles Dickens, Jr., All the Year Round: A Weekly Journal, volume 6, page #105:
 * Helen-Judith, if now living, would be great objects of interest to Millie-Christine, and vice versâ ; for the two pairs seem to have made a nearer approach to similarity than any other examples of such lusûs naturæ.
 * 1893,, The Secret Doctrine: The Synthesis of Science, Religion, and Philosophy – Volume II. Anthropogenesis. Third and revised edition, Theosophical Publishing Society, London/New York/Madras, p. 464:
 * All we know is, that it will silently come into existence; so silently, indeed, that for long millenniums will its pioneers—the peculiar children who will grow into peculiar men and women—be regarded as anomalous lusûs naturæ, abnormal oddities physically and mentally.