Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  26|      what we hold in our inmost thoughts, yet he might either know
 2   I,  27|       to be comprehended in our thoughts, that whilst we entreat
 3   I,  33|       could stammer forth their thoughts, if they were able to use
 4   I,  38|       gifts; who has raised our thoughts to heaven from brutish statues
 5   I,  39|          I entertain honourable thoughts concerning those which are
 6   I,  46|     what each had in his secret thoughts? Was He one of us, who,
 7  II,   5|        at least, in your secret thoughts, lest that which to-day
 8  II,  16| consider in the silence of your thoughts that we are creatures either
 9  II,  19|      has taken firm root in our thoughts.
10  II,  36|     divine Plato, many of whose thoughts are worthy of God, and not
11  II,  60|        speak, and not waste our thoughts upon things which have been
12  II,  70|     your own not come into your thoughts, and do you not take care
13 III,  27|        men's minds with lustful thoughts, it must be held in consequence
14 III,  29|       to receive from you these thoughts, most full of wicked falsehoods,
15  IV,  18|         to all, and which men's thoughts have generally received.
16  IV,  18|      that has not reached men's thoughts from what has been written
17  IV,  22|      profane ones; or what vile thoughts do you fashion about your
18   V,  34|         in the silence of their thoughts, but expressed by words
19   V,  34|       been adopted to which his thoughts and surmises led him. But
20   V,  44|      your beliefs and unchanged thoughts should have been exactly
21  VI,   4|        in his secret and silent thoughts. And as the stars, the sun,
22  VI,  13|        Cytherean. The beautiful thoughts of the artists were full
23 VII,  35|    above are the better, or our thoughts preferable, and much more
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