Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  15|           gods at one time bore in mind our acts of wrong-doing,
 2   I,  23|      blessed nature is uplifted in mind if one prostrates himself
 3   I,  24|       frenzy what you in your sane mind do not blush to believe.
 4   I,  38|           was one of us-similar in mind, soul, body, weakness, and
 5   I,  46|        righteous men of unpolluted mind who love Him, not in airy
 6   I,  50|         health and to soundness of mind those labouring under the
 7   I,  58|         put forth by men of simple mind, who knew not how to trick
 8   I,  64|        such as to trouble no one's mind, nay, rather to fill all
 9  II,   3|      honour? But if haughtiness of mind and arrogance, as it is
10  II,  13|         rest of you who are of one mind, and walk in unity in the
11  II,  37|        they would all have had one mind, and been of one accord;
12  II,  37|            had learned and kept in mind the noblest teachings, rashly
13  II,  39|         own abodes had been of one mind, equals in intellect and
14  II,  51|           know is to retain in the mind that which you have yourself
15  II,  51|       things, and directing of the mind upon nothing accessible?
16  II,  60|            universe with the whole mind and spirit; be raised above
17  II,  69|         labour, or attained by the mind's learning and knowledge,
18  II,  74|        power of any one to see the mind of God, or the way in which
19 III,  10|            dishonourable blot! The mind longs and burns to see,
20 III,  28|         strife, and to disturb the mind by the stings of the furies.
21 III,  35|            from the impulse of one mind, neither can it be dispersed
22 III,  40|     anything reliable on which the mind can take its stand, drawing
23  IV,  19|            do you not feel in your mind that something is said which
24  IV,  35|            who disclose the divine mind and will; and the chaste
25   V,   2|                        2. What the mind should take up first, what
26   V,   9|         wicked was his desire, his mind being madly agitated? But,
27   V,  23|    sacrilege than this, or can any mind be found so imbued with
28   V,  26|          little the sadness of her mind; Thereafter she takes the
29   V,  26|           citizens of Minerva? The mind is eager to know with what
30   V,  27|          may be able to turn their mind to victuals and the taking
31   V,  27| cheerfulness to a happier state of mind? Oh, what have we had it
32   V,  29|    religion may not creep into the mind? For what man is there who
33   V,  30|        monstrous stories in my own mind, I have long been accustomed
34   V,  41|          the baseness occupies the mind before any regard for religion
35  VI,  11|          and very recesses of your mind, in which yon revolve various
36  VI,  14|      returning to the light of the mind, look more closely and see
37  VI,  22|            from ancient times, his mind, spirit, the light of his
38  VI,  24|          to strike terror into the mind itself at the majestic beaming
39 VII,   5|            always bear steadily in mind, that all agitating feelings
40 VII,   8|           god changes his state of mind, and lays aside his angry
41 VII,  18|       believed to be so-are of one mind, or should be of one nature,
42 VII,  19|        himself believes in his own mind, and persuades himself that
43 VII,  33|           which a rigidly virtuous mind will turn from with disgust,
44 VII,  43|           god, to change the man's mind, and constrain him to be
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