Book, Chapter
1 1, 6-8 | without; nor could they by any sense of theirs enter within my
2 1, 20-31| I guarded by the inward sense the entireness of my senses,
3 2, 1 | influence, and each other sense hath his proper object answerably
4 3, 1-1 | the touch of objects of sense. Yet if these had not a
5 3, 6-11 | beasts, but according to the sense of the flesh. But Thou wert
6 4, 10-15| they are hard by? For the sense of the flesh is slow, because
7 4, 10-15| slow, because it is the sense of the flesh; and thereby
8 4, 11-17| Whatever by her thou hast sense of, is in part; and the
9 4, 11-17| delight thee. But had the sense of thy flesh a capacity
10 4, 11-17| speak also, by the same sense of the flesh thou hearest;
11 5, 3-5 | themselves who number, and the sense whereby they perceive what
12 6, 3-3 | his heart searched out the sense, but his voice and tongue
13 6, 11-18| otherwise taken, and in a good sense. I will take my stand, where,
14 9, 12-31| conceiving me to be without all sense of sorrow. But in Thy ears,
15 10, 7-11 | too whereby I imbue with sense my flesh, which the Lord
16 10, 8-12 | varying those things which the sense hath come to; and whatever
17 10, 8-13 | plainly appear by which sense each hath been brought in
18 10, 8-15 | only. And I know by what sense of the body each was impressed
19 10, 9-16 | evaporates into air affects the sense of smell, whence it conveys
20 10, 10-17| I never reached with any sense of my body, nor ever discerned
21 10, 12-19| of which hath any bodily sense impressed; seeing they have
22 10, 21-30| life, we do by no bodily sense experience in others. As
23 10, 21-30| nor did I ever with bodily sense see, hear, smell, taste,
24 10, 30-42| only not, through images of sense, commit those debasing corruptions,
25 10, 33-49| doth oft beguile me, the sense not so waiting upon reason
26 10, 35-54| knowledge, and sight being the sense chiefly used for attaining
27 11, 5-7 | he doth without; Thou the sense of his body, whereby, as
28 11, 15-18| days hence. But in what sense is that long or short, which
29 11, 27-35| find it so, as one's plain sense perceives. By plain sense
30 11, 27-35| sense perceives. By plain sense then, I measure a long syllable
31 11, 27-35| presumed on a practised sense) that as to space of time
32 12, 5-5 | thought seeketh what the sense may conceive under this,
33 12, 5-5 | of bodies; nor object of sense, because being invisible,
34 12, 5-5 | it no object of sight or sense";- while man's thought thus
35 12, 24-33| either of these, or any sense beside (that I have not
36 12, 29-40| is, in time, an object of sense together with its form.
37 12, 32-43| true, certain, and good sense that Thou shalt inspire
38 13, 18-22| intellectual, and things of sense, as betwixt the day and
39 13, 18-22| intellectual, or things of sense, so that now not Thou only
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