Chapter
1 II | are, will not be able to understand the nature of the things
2 III | and hearing, he did not understand.' ~But, learning that some
3 VI | saying, ~"I would have thee understand, my lord, that I am a merchant
4 VI | answer which he failed to understand. ~"It was the custom of
5 VII | there was none that did understand and seek after God.' ~"Now
6 XI | stewardship, that he might understand the worthlessness and misery
7 XIV | his wise forethought. ~"Understand thou, therefore, that the
8 XIV | king the way of salvation, understand thou that I, thy poor and
9 XV | flow drop by drop, thus, understand thou, is it also with our
10 XVI | also, peradventure he shall understand and know the dire evil in
11 XVII | knowledge, he cried for all to understand, `O the depth of the riches
12 XIX | belief; but seek not to understand the manner of the generation
13 XXI | it before me. But, as I understand that the possession thereof
14 XXIII | people, and, O ye fools, understand at last.' Understand thou
15 XXIII | fools, understand at last.' Understand thou that there is no God
16 XXIV | happiness to come! Wilt thou not understand this, my father? Wilt thou
17 XXVII | philosophers among them, fail to understand that even the very elements
18 XXVIII| precipices of iniquity. Understand then, Nachor, man of understanding
19 XXXII | with difficulty, came he to understand his own misery, for the
20 XXXVI | but, with purified reason, understand the nothingness of thine
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