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| Alphabetical [« »] pensar 1 pentecost 2 pentecostâ 1 people 125 per 9 perales 1 perceive 5 | Frequency [« »] 127 evil 126 9 126 came 125 people 124 7 124 clearly 124 however | St. Teresa of Avila Life of St. Teresa of Jesus IntraText - Concordances people |
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1 Pref | contempt that were made.58 People ought to entreat our Lord
2 Pref | His goodness makes wicked people just, yea, even grievous
3 Pref | and conversed with secular people within the cloisters. She
4 Pref | in the hands of secular people,—he had probably also
5 Pref | see how lax and worldly people delight in seeing those
6 Pref | suffers more than if those people had not been so esteemed.
7 Pref | consider them always as people in danger, however good
8 Ann | to converse with secular people, moved thereto by the sight
9 Life, I | to go to any place where people would put me to death for
10 Life, II | had been thrown among good people, I should have persevered
11 Life, II | not cease to tempt me; and people in the world sought means
12 Life, II | whom He places among good people. It seems as if His Majesty
13 Life, III | Blessing of Being with Good People. How Certain Illusions Were
14 Life, VI | other devotions which some people, especially women, make
15 Life, VII | is very difficult to make people understand this; it is necessary
16 Life, VII | occasionally into light, people would not believe it when
17 Life, VII | virtue; for they have so many people, enemies as well as friends,
18 Life, X | I may no longer deceive people who think there ./. must
19 Life, XI | fear: no, no; spiritual people have nothing to fear. There
20 Life, XI | of Thy love, be given to people who serve Thee only because
21 Life, XIII | unconstrained; for there are people who think it is all over
22 Life, XIII | which is very common: when people begin to have pleasure in
23 Life, XIII | mistakes which I have seen people make, in reliance on their
24 Life, XIII | truth, of which we unlearned people are ignorant. I often wonder
25 Life, XIII | for it. And yet there are people who will not take advantage
26 Life, XV | that they may help poor people of little learning, of whom
27 Life, XVI | might never see any but people ill, as I am now. I beseech
28 Life, XVI | you; for I see very few people who have not too much sense
29 Life, XIX | of great authority, that people might believe what I say.
30 Life, XIX | accordingly I wish ignorant people like myself knew it; for
31 Life, XX | die in that loneliness. If people spoke to it, and if itself
32 Life, XX | not understand this make people suffer. I shall speak of
33 Life, XX | fall upon it as a shower. People consider it wanting in humility,
34 Life, XXI | to publish this abroad, people would not believe me— ./.
35 Life, XXI | with acts, for there are people who ./. think themselves
36 Life, XXII | knowledge than I am. If you see people who are beginning to taste
37 Life, XXII | the conversation of good people does not profit us in one
38 Life, XXII | of their means; but these people will remain dry as a stick.
39 Life, XXIII | and very gentle with all people; his conversation is never
40 Life, XXIII | consolations were given to people who had made great progress,
41 Life, XXIV | to do, they were extreme: people, therefore, had reason to
42 Life, XXV | one disposed to deceive people by saying that he heard
43 Life, XXV | fears which possessed some people. For instance, it happened
44 Life, XXV | much more afraid of those people who have so great a fear
45 Life, XXVII | extremely cast down by what people said to me, and by the fears
46 Life, XXVII | to stop his ears, while people standing close beside him
47 Life, XXVII | they are all gone whom people regarded as mad,399 because
48 Life, XXVII | little edification given when people do not go about, every one
49 Life, XXVII | obtains great fruit. If some people took scandal, others are
50 Life, XXVIII| understanding, that, although people have very much wished to
51 Life, XXVIII| relate this in order that people may see what a great trial
52 Life, XXVIII| The contradiction of good people, which a wretched woman,
53 Life, XXX | the contradiction of good people,448—and that more was
54 Life, XXX | that I think I could eat people up; nor can I help myself.
55 Life, XXX | what would happen if those people who think I am good knew
56 Life, XXX | which He gives to many good people. I am a mass of imperfection,
57 Life, XXXI | am tormented—when I saw people make much of me, particularly
58 Life, XXXI | of me, particularly great people, and when they spake well
59 Life, XXXI | I would not appear where people might see me.~15. Once,
60 Life, XXXI | two things must happen—people would either speak ill of
61 Life, XXXI | tolerates no faults in good people, and helps them to perfection
62 Life, XXXI | are so great as to fill people with wonder. O my God, why
63 Life, XXXII | saved me. I have listened to people speaking of these things,
64 Life, XXXII | sayings and keen jests. People said it was folly in me,
65 Life, XXXII | to do, and I thought that people were partly in the right.
66 Life, XXXII | came to pass; for among people of prayer, and indeed in
67 Life, XXXIII| given up and abandoned, people were the more convinced
68 Life, XXXIII| revelation in the matter; and people came to me in great terror,
69 Life, XXXIV | heed to the opinions of people, for they were few who would
70 Life, XXXIV | many prayers which the good people of my acquaintance made
71 Life, XXXIV | anxiety and trouble it brings. People must be careful of the dignity
72 Life, XXXIV | much He was pleased when people thus found their delight
73 Life, XXXV | distraction never makes people richer, and God never fails
74 Life, XXXV | first look away from Him. People are not afraid of living
75 Life, XXXVI | been done at all; for the people of the city were against
76 Life, XXXVI | so much intercourse with people had worn me out.~12. When
77 Life, XXXVI | women, and also how all people thought that merely twelve
78 Life, XXXVI | in any way; and yet the people thought ./. there was so
79 Life, XXXVI | would not be amiss, till the people were pacified, to accept
80 Life, XXXVI | to sing the Office, the people began to have a great devotion
81 Life, XXXVI | and by the prayers of many people, accomplished that which
82 Life, XXXVII| serve Him truly? Let all people resolve to please His Majesty,
83 Life, XXXVII| business with a king! Poor people, not of gentle blood, cannot
84 Life, XXXVII| so much to be recognised, people will not own him when he
85 Life, XXXVII| dignity should be visible, if people are to believe in it. This
86 Life, XXXVII| much more ceremonious with people than they deserve is not
87 Life, XXXVII| unceasingly giving satisfaction to people; for, though I tried my
88 Life, XXXVII| is not so; for there are people who say that monasteries
89 Life, XXXVII| of heaven, and that these people misunderstood their meaning;
90 Life, XXXVII| sorry for those spiritual people who, for certain holy purposes,
91 Life, XXXIX | if he speaks, sees that people do not listen to him. And
92 Life, XXXIX | multitude of all kinds of people, who hemmed me in on every
93 Life, XXXIX | frightens me most—even good people. I found myself afterwards
94 Life, XXXIX | beset on all sides, good people thinking they were doing
95 Life, XL | The conversation of good people was never hurtful; my words
96 Life, XL | abstain from converse with all people; for it seemed to me that
97 Life, XL | were weak, and some other people also. Never did He cease
98 Life, XL | forced to speak to some people. But as I am in a house
99 Life, XL | and care very little what people say or know about me. I
100 Life, XL | slight, than of all that people may say of me; and since
101 Rel, I(622)| consolation in her troubles, when people speak ill of her, and in
102 Rel, I(622)| Moreover, she cannot endure people who are in a state of perfection,
103 Rel, I(622)| desire to converse with people, and loves solitude. She
104 Rel, I(622)| great reverence for good people, and self-abasement; and
105 Rel, I | I speak or converse with people in the world—for I cannot
106 Rel, I | I think they help me on. People who are afraid, and seemingly
107 Rel, I | used to feel.~22. If I see people do anything which clearly
108 Rel, I | also I feel, when I see people who used to give themselves
109 Rel, I | prayers of so many good people for two years, and I do
110 Rel, II | unless it be by letting people suppose that, as I am subject
111 Rel, III | monastery of Toledo, and some people were advising me not to
112 Rel, III | despised of men: are the great people of the world likely to be
113 Rel, III | should stay at home,651—people reminded me lately of this,
114 Rel, V | will think, when he sees people throw themselves into the
115 Rel, VII | confounded when she saw that people knew of her state, and except
116 Rel, VII | for it seemed to her that people must laugh at her,686 and
117 Rel, VII | and she would not have people, even if they had good cause,
118 Rel, VIII | the latter word frightens people; and, indeed, the union
119 Rel, VIII | that I was so wicked; good people do not need so much to make
120 Rel, IX | when I was thinking how people sought to destroy this monastery
121 Rel, X | to converse little with people in the world, and that only
122 Rel, XI | learn that certain souls of people connected with me when they
123 Ind | 6.~Contradiction of good people, xxviii. 24, xxx. 6.~Conversation,
124 Ind | obtains the good will of the people, xxxvi. 25; goodness of
125 Ind | xxxvii. 15, 16; hard on good people, xxxi. 19; vanity of, Rel.