Part, Question
1 1, 36 | call the breath and the wind by the term spirit. Now
2 1, 41 | spirit, sometimes called wind, sometimes air, sometimes
3 1, 74 | the ~Lord," the air or the wind, as Plato also did, and
4 1, 41 | spirit, sometimes called wind, sometimes air, sometimes
5 1, 73 | the Lord," the air or the wind, as Plato also did, and
6 1, 91 | such as ~that of a south wind, which is moist, as the
7 1, 98 | vi, 19): "The northern wind favors the generation of ~
8 1, 98 | males, and the southern wind that of females": sometimes
9 1, 101 | the air, ~where rain, and wind, and the like arise; because
10 1, 114 | heavens, such as rain and wind, should not ~be fulfilled."
11 2, 61 | carries straw against the wind." Therefore humility seems ~
12 2, 102 | hair, which were exposed to wind and rain, as the gloss observes.~
13 2, 113 | from heaven as of a mighty wind coming," upon which the
14 2, 71 | Prov. 25:23, "the north wind driveth away rain, as doth
15 2, 86 | He that observeth ~the wind shall not sow, and he that
16 2, 92 | either the fire, or the wind, or the swift air, or the
17 2, 93 | resulting from rain and wind ~and so forth).~Aquin.:
18 3, 54 | impalpable, and more subtle than wind and air: ~and that our Lord,
19 Suppl, 40| will scatter into every ~wind them that have their hair
20 Suppl, 76| to bodies subtle as ~the wind, as Gregory relates of a
21 Suppl, 80| be "more subtle ~than the wind and the air," which was
22 Suppl, 80| be like the air or ~the wind, as Gregory relates (Moral.
23 Suppl, 96| for ever. For man is "a wind that goeth," namely to sin, ~"
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