Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   9|        wants? and that you may be able to live more softly and
 2   I,  20|  strenuous advocacy, they are not able of themselves to repel and
 3   I,  28|          at whose behest they are able both to perish and be dissolved,
 4   I,  33|      their thoughts, if they were able to use our languages; nay,
 5   I,  33|         by vital perceptions were able to produce vocal sounds,
 6   I,  43|    attempt anything useful, to be able to do it not by their own
 7   I,  47|          summary, that Christ was able to do not only those things
 8   I,  48|           to a god that he is not able to effect it of himself,
 9   I,  51|         you do that which you are able to do, and what is compatible
10   I,  51|          done that which you were able, and which your power was
11   I,  51|          deed and the doer. To be able to transfer to a man your
12   I,  51|          that which you alone are able to do, is a proof of power
13   I,  53|        the whole human race, were able to know or to guess whence
14   I,  54|           and that when they were able to live in harmony and to
15   I,  56|          and perhaps you might be able to discover a passage from
16  II,   3|          might long ago have been able to understand what He forbade
17  II,   6| scientific training have you been able to gain so much wisdom,
18  II,  11|         with cause, we are better able to point out what we have
19  II,  11|          Was any one of them ever able by one word, or by a single
20  II,  22|            If you ask, will he be able to say what the sun is,
21  II,  22|            snow. hail? Will he be able to know what trees are,
22  II,  23|           life, will he indeed be able to distinguish for what
23  II,  32|    gentler ways, that they may be able to be ready for that which
24  II,  34|          to escape death, or were able to provide it and bring
25  II,  36|         although fell death seems able to cut them off and blot
26  II,  52|          and surmises, we too are able to bring them forward as
27  II,  55|        answer, for whether we are able to say whence evil springs,
28  II,  62|         can it be that others are able to give that which they
29  II,  66|         by no efforts will you be able to reach the prize of immortality,
30 III,   6|         might, perhaps, have been able to attract us to the worship
31 III,   9|    generation, that they might be able to raise up offspring, and
32 III,  12|           through whom you may be able to learn how best to overcome
33 III,  14|        they might individually be able to recognise themselves
34 III,  17|         even if we are still less able to explain what it is.
35 III,  29|       might, however, even yet be able to receive from you these
36  IV,   7|         of the truth, are you not able, even from the very names,
37  IV,  13|           by truthful authors, be able to say; but, lest you should
38   V,   2|     fountains, that they might be able to cool with water their
39   V,   9|            when you have not been able for but a little time even
40   V,  10|       assured himself that he was able to thrust down from heaven
41   V,  27|      misery? and that they may be able to turn their mind to victuals
42   V,  29|       perfect nature has not been able to restrain its passion
43  VI,   4|           in order that we may be able to see them in person and
44  VI,  12|           s head, how will you be able to distinguish between them,
45  VI,  16|         spiders, that they may be able to entangle in them buzzing
46  VI,  17|         the meanest things may be able to become of greater importance,
47 VII,   8|            with which they may be able to divert themselves, do
48 VII,  10|          except that they will be able, if they choose, to depreciate
49 VII,  11|       laid under obligation, were able to ward off, to turn aside,
50 VII,  26|           what thee you have been able to become acquainted with
51 VII,  32|       sleep; and that they may be able to be overcome by it, must
52 VII,  32|     couches; and that they may be able to lie on softer cushions,
53 VII,  44|         coils; and that he may be able to go forward, he draws
54 VII,  45|         in order that he might be able to deceive men as to himself,
55 VII,  48|        the good and bad have been able to exist at the same time
56 VII,  50|           own accord. She was not able, you say, to expel the enemy
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA2) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License