Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  38|    taught us to conceive and to understand, as far as our limited capacity
 2   I,  38|      vain expectations, that we understand nothing thoroughly, that
 3   I,  61|         already prepared not to understand, and were not shaping your
 4  II,   3|      long ago have been able to understand what He forbade to be done,
 5  II,  10|      they say is true, so as to understand that the very proposition
 6 III,   8|         masculine word,-let him understand that it is not sex which
 7 III,  14|        we should, consequently, understand that these differences have
 8  IV,   5|         what meaning, we do not understand ourselves; and we are sure
 9  IV,   7|         from the very names, to understand that these are the inventions
10   V,  18|         Corniculum to learn and understand what was the meaning of
11   V,  33|         shows in you to wish to understand what they did not wish,
12   V,  35|     ought to say what we should understand for the bull, what for the
13   V,  36|       we confess that we do not understand at all by whom this is either
14  VI,  10|   states, changing each day. We understand that all the winds are only
15  VI,  18|       it follows that we should understand that the gods contract themselves
16 VII,  12| perceive what to do, since they understand that their favour has been
17 VII,  23|       we confess that we cannot understand. For to say that the gods
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