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beginners 19
beginning 52
beginnings 1
begins 39
begs 3
begun 41
behalf 6
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40 together
40 wanted
40 ways
39 begins
39 consider
39 especially
39 fire
St. Teresa of Avila
Autobiography

IntraText - Concordances

begins

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   Part, Chapter                                     grey = Comment text
1 Pref, 2 | I do let myself wander!" begins Chapter XXIII of the Way 2 Outl, 0 | nchez de Cepeda.~c. 1555-6. Begins to think she is "sometimes 3 Outl, 0 | 3).~At about this time, begins the Way of Perfection.~1566~( 4 Outl, 0 | in September.~August 24. Begins to write the Foundations ( 5 Outl, 0 | that chapter).~1577~June 2. Begins Interior Castle.~(June 18. 6 Intr, 0 | He begins with the Saint's earliest 7 Unic, 4(80)| winter began" -- but it begins early on the Castilian plateau), 8 Unic, 7 | but if a single person begins to devote himself to God, 9 Unic, 10 | CHAPTER X - Begins to describe the favours 10 Unic, 10 | result that, when the Lord begins to grant them, it grows 11 Unic, 10 | believe that, when the devil begins to tempt us about this, 12 Unic, 11 | perfectly in a short time. Begins, by means of a comparison, 13 Unic, 11 | experience -- that the soul which begins to walk resolutely in this 14 Unic, 13 | cost of many words. A nun begins to practise prayer: if her 15 Unic, 14 | CHAPTER XIV - Begins to describe the second degree 16 Unic, 14 | state, in which the soul begins to recollect itself, borders 17 Unic, 14 | namely, God. For His Majesty begins to communicate Himself to 18 Unic, 14 | arrives at this state, it begins to lose its covetousness 19 Unic, 14 | matter, and, when the Lord begins to grant these favours, 20 Unic, 15 | love for the Lord which He begins to enkindle in the soul, 21 Unic, 15 | our own, it is this that begins to kindle the great fire 22 Unic, 15 | the result that, when it begins to hold discourse with itself 23 Unic, 18 | fourth degree of prayer. Begins to describe in an excellent 24 Unic, 18 | all its bodily strength begins to fail it: it cannot even 25 Unic, 19 | Continues the sane subject. Begins to describe the effects 26 Unic, 19 | full of vigour, that it begins to abhor the world and that 27 Unic, 19 | lack of them itself. It begins to show signs of being a 28 Unic, 19 | consciously to that end, it begins to benefit its neighbours, 29 Unic, 19 | dangers, and in its zeal begins to give away its fruit without 30 Unic, 20 | takes the soul with it, and begins to reveal to it things concerning 31 Unic, 20 | very depths of the soul, begins to weary it so much that 32 Unic, 22 | How is it, when the Lord begins to grant a soul such sublime 33 Unic, 29 | which I am now speaking begins, the Lord seems to transport 34 Unic, 29 | pain because it immediately begins to experience fruition. 35 Unic, 30 | and unrest with which it begins, from the turmoil which 36 Unic, 31 | When the Lord begins to implant a virtue in us, 37 Unic, 32 | what was shown her there. Begins to tell of the way and means 38 Unic, 34 | who was in sore distress. Begins the description of what 39 Unic, 39 | the same as before, but begins to walk in the way of the


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