Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   3|   which, on the one hand, they knew that they themselves had
 2   I,  26|       prayers? And although he knew not the secrets of our hearts,
 3   I,  56|  writers, and which themselves knew not the use of letters,
 4   I,  58|        men of simple mind, who knew not how to trick out their
 5   I,  65|      an immortality which they knew not of? And when the strange
 6  II,  19|          19. But if men either knew themselves thoroughly, or
 7  II,  24|   memory those things which we knew in former times? Now, if
 8  II,  26|     that it has forgot what it knew but a little before, and
 9  II,  28| remember those things which it knew long ago, and before it
10  II,  36|      end? For if by chance you knew it not, and because of its
11  II,  44| dangerous pleasures? For if He knew that by change of place
12  II,  45|    kinds of sins; and while He knew that they were such and
13  II,  57|        something as though you knew it, or to wish to assert
14  II,  60|        Supreme God, because He knew that men are naturally blind,
15  II,  74|       of those who went before knew them not? You will say that
16 III,   4|   circumstances you in no wise knew?
17  IV,  19|    have reached the light they knew not of, thanks to lewdness?
18  IV,  19|     universe, by ways which He knew Himself, sent them forth
19  VI,  13| himself, and be wanton when he knew that, but a little before,
20  VI,  23|    their minds, and which they knew was suggested to human desires
21  VI,  24|        also, that the ancients knew well that images have no
22 VII,  43|    dancer is? And if he indeed knew, as he must have known if
23 VII,  45|        show himself such as he knew that he was in his own divine
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