|    Part, Question1   2, 32  |   movement is the chief cause of toil and fatigue in our ~works.
 2   2, 32  |     Reply OBJ 2: Movement causes toil and fatigue, when it exceeds
 3   2, 41  |       fear. First, ~there is the toil that burdens his nature:
 4   2, 41  |        work for fear of too much toil. Secondly, ~there is the
 5   2, 41  |       laziness ~shrinks from the toil of external work, so amazement
 6   2, 61  |        through fear of danger or toil: and ~then man needs to
 7   2, 61  |          of the passions, or the toil involved by any operations.
 8   2, 61  |    himself to be unconquered ~by toil."~Aquin.: SMT FS Q[61] A[
 9   2, 87  |      very fact ~that man endures toil and loss in sinning, is
10   2, 105 |          hire, are poor men who ~toil for their daily bread: and
11   2, 105 |     unfittingly excused from the toil of battle (Dt. 20:8).~Aquin.:
12   2, 109 |           natural to man, as "to toil in the fields, to drink,
13   2, 114 |     anyone in return for work or toil, as a price for it. ~Hence,
14   2, 114 |       make a return ~for work or toil. Now justice is a kind of
15   2, 114 |     charity does not lessen the ~toil - rather, it makes us undertake
16   2, 114 | difficult to all of us, and this toil lessens ~merit and is removed
17   2, 33  |      nothing, seemingly, ~except toil, can determine it to sloth,
18   2, 33  |      weariness: while dislike of toil, ~and love of bodily repose
19   2, 43  |         result any bitterness or toil in human acts; on the ~contrary
20   2, 57  |          and less evils, such as toil and losses, and thus injustice
21   2, 121 |         all vice, undeterred ~by toil, brave in face of dangers,
22   2, 121 |         face dangers and to bear toil. But this seemingly has ~
23   2, 121 |        fellow body, with fear of toil and pain, ~lest the body
24   2, 121 |        of danger, and bearing of toil." Therefore fortitude ~does
25   2, 121 |         is endurance of evil and toil, as ~Tully says (De Invent.
26   2, 134 |       desire helps a man to bear toil and pain: and no one willingly
27   2, 134 |     regards longanimity) and the toil which man endures ~in persistently
28   2, 136 |      proved himself unbeaten by ~toil, to yield to pleasure."
29   2, 136 |         2 Para. 1/1~Reply OBJ 2: Toil is opposed to bodily pleasure:
30   2, 136 |   hinders pleasure, for instance toil or the like.~Aquin.: SMT
31   2, 136 |        rest which is ~opposed to toil. Accordingly just as it
32   2, 137 |         enjoy full security from toil and evil.~Aquin.: SMT SS
33   2, 137 |        and material things, must toil."~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[139]
34   2, 146 |           indeed, nearly all the toil of man's life is ~directed
35   2, 162 |   Secondly, by the cares of his ~toil, without which he does not
36   2, 162 |           3:17), "With labor and toil shalt thou eat thereof all
37   2, 180 |     charity undertake an honest ~toil," the work namely of the
38   2, 184 |       fasting, watchings, bodily toil, privation, ~reading, and
39   2, 185 |         to be unable to bear the toil of ~bodily labor.~Aquin.:
40   2, 185 |      evading a ~life of want and toil with a view to being fed
41   2, 186 |          flesh on account of the toil that study entails according
42   2, 186 |          is enough to endure the toil for ~necessary things, labor
43   3, 58  |     Consequently, Stephen in his toil of combat saw ~Him standing
44 Suppl, 25|         is not ~the devotion, or toil, or gift of the recipient;
45 Suppl, 25|        proportionate, not to the toil, but to the merits which ~
 
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