Book, Chapter
1 1, 14-23| God, Thy laws, from the master's cane to the martyr's trials,
2 4, 17-28| so often as my rhetoric master of Carthage, and others,
3 5, 12-22| they, to avoid paying their master's stipend, a number of youths
4 6, 7-11 | friend, or the authority of a master. For I supposed that he
5 6, 9-15 | apprehending any harm to his master, to disclose the whole.
6 6, 9-15 | For he had attended his master to the market-place. Whom
7 7, 5-8 | which could not escape her master, who took care with most
8 8, 8-19 | the whole house; for the master of the house, our host,
9 9, 5-13 | their scholars with another master to sell words to them; for
10 9, 6-14 | book of ours entitled The Master; it is a dialogue between
11 9, 8-17 | Whence also the charge of her master's daughters was entrusted
12 9, 10-25| not this, Enter into thy Master's joy? And when shall that
13 10, 31-46| praise to Thee, my God, my Master, knocking at my ears, enlightening
14 11, 8-10 | where the good and only Master teacheth all His disciples.
15 12, 18-27| unfeigned. And well did our Master know, upon which two commandments
16 13, 19-24| rich man asked of the good Master, what he should do to attain
17 13, 19-24| eternal life. Let the good Master tell him (whom he thought
18 13, 19-24| thou hast heard of the good Master. But that barren earth was
19 13, 26-41| the giver. For the Good Master said not only, He that receiveth
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