Chapter
1 I | is man's. Stand forth, O soul, whether thou art a divine
2 II| elsewhere, confessing that the soul is divine, and bestowed
3 II| against a testimony of the soul itself, which affords an
4 II| avoid? Whence, then, the soul's natural fear of God, if
5 II| thou art always ready, O soul, from thine own knowledge,
6 IV| is it the nature of the soul to have these posthumous
7 IV| also the doctrine of the soul; for if any one inquires
8 V | These testimonies of the soul are simple as true, commonplace
9 V | of nature, from which the soul derives its authority. If
10 V | and her disciple is the soul. But everything the one
11 V | the teacher. And what the soul may know from the teachings
12 V | regard those outbursts of the soul as the teaching of a congenital
13 V | men. Unquestionably the soul existed before letters,
14 V | trustworthiness); if the soul have taken these utterances
15 V | matters little whether the soul's knowledge was put into
16 V | those testimonies of the soul have gone forth from the
17 VI| but in the witness of the soul itself give like confidence
18 VI| Nature, have faith in the soul; thus you will believe yourself.
19 VI| Certainly you value the soul as giving you your true
20 VI| become a Christian, call the soul before you, and put her
21 VI| us as so near akin. The soul is not a boon from heaven
22 VI| upon earth: there is one soul and many tongues, one spirit
23 VI| found the witness of the soul. There is not a soul of
24 VI| the soul. There is not a soul of man that does not, from
25 VI| Most justly, then, every soul is a culprit as well as
26 VI| Thou proclaimedst God, O soul, but thou didst not seek
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