Part, Question 
 1   1, 58  |      the ~object desired, but weariness thereof. Or they are said
 2   1, 70  |    the seasons, which prevent weariness, ~preserve health, and provide
 3   1, 59  |      the ~object desired, but weariness thereof. Or they are said
 4   1, 71  |    the seasons, which prevent weariness, ~preserve health, and provide
 5   2, 35  |  apprehension, to whose acts ~weariness is incidental; therefore
 6   2, 35  |       sorrow caused by bodily weariness, does not belong to the
 7   2, 38  |      in bodies, repose ~is to weariness, which is due to a non-natural
 8   2, 38  |      itself implies a certain weariness or ailing of the appetitive
 9   2, 38  | brings relief to any kind of ~weariness, ensuing from any non-natural
10   2, 102 |     the ~"dung" betokened His weariness, His thirst, and all such
11   2, 33  |      sloth implies ~a certain weariness of work, as appears from
12   2, 33  |  wherefore sloth is a kind of weariness: while dislike of toil, ~
13   2, 81  |       longer without ~causing weariness, it should be discontinued.
14   2, 135 |      passions, namely fear of weariness or failure ~on account of
15   2, 162 |     in two ways: first in the weariness to which she is ~subject
16   2, 166 |     in consequence a certain ~weariness of soul, whether the operations
17   2, 166 |  speculative reason. Yet this weariness ~is greater if the soul
18   2, 166 |       of reason. ~Now just as weariness of the body is dispelled
19   2, 166 |      by resting the body, so ~weariness of the soul must needs be
20   2, 166 |  Consequently, the remedy for weariness of soul must needs ~consist
21   3, 46  |       His soul, from sadness, weariness, and ~fear; in His body,
22   3, 54  |     be there; motion without ~weariness, the power to eat, without
23 Suppl, 78|       man for ~the removal of weariness; or again, they are unhealthy,
 
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