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1 Int | have gained what he had so long been seeking. First of all,
2 Int | the garden at Treves. The long struggle is recapitulated
3 Int | incontinence and pride which had so long held him from decisive commitment
4 Int, 1 | although I published them long before the Pelagian heresy
5 1, VI | behold, my infancy died long ago, but I am still living.
6 1, XVI | will you ever run dry? How long will you carry down the
7 1, XVIII | be applauded for it, so long as they did it in a full
8 2, III | how chaste I was, just so long as I was skillful in speaking -
9 2, VI | Human sloth pretends to long for rest, but what sure
10 2, X | to look on it. But I do long for thee, O Righteousness
11 2, X | to all virtuous eyes - I long for thee with an insatiable
12 3, XI | come to that pious woman so long after was predicted long
13 3, XI | long after was predicted long before, as a consolation
14 4, IV | sore sick of a fever, he long lay unconscious in a death
15 4, V | enjoyed and this only as long as we loathe them?~
16 4, XI | you have to him. For at long last you are now becoming
17 4, XII | He could not be with us long, yet he did not leave us.
18 4, XII | him. O sons of men, how long will you be so slow of heart?
19 5, V | can do him much harm, as long as he does not hold a belief
20 5, VI | therefore, with which I had so long awaited this man, was in
21 5, VII | their books are full of long fables about the sky and
22 5, XIV | remained foremost with me as long as I despaired of finding
23 6, III | them - which was never for long at a time - he was either
24 6, III | After we had sat for a long time in silence - for who
25 6, IV | ashamed because during the long time I had been deluded
26 6, VII | fervently. Thou hast said it long ago and written in thy Book, “
27 6, VIII | but in thee - but not till long after.~
28 6, X | groaning and exclaiming, “How long shall these things be?”
29 6, XI | wondered when I remembered how long a time had passed since
30 6, XI(167) | Here begins a long soliloquy which sums up
31 6, XII | love of wisdom as we had long desired. For he himself
32 6, V | something out of it after so long a time? Or, if he wished
33 6, XII | will cease to exist. So long as they are, therefore,
34 6, XXI(226)| interpretation achieved by the long struggle of the Church to
35 7, II | of instruction, and not long afterward gave in his name
36 7, V | willfulness, made strong by long indulgence. Thus my two
37 7, V | little while” went on for a long while. In vain did I “delight
38 7, VIII | desirable, which before long I should have power to will
39 7, X | Lord my God now, as I had long purposed to do, it was I
40 7, XII | And thou, O Lord, how long? How long, O Lord? Wilt
41 7, XII | thou, O Lord, how long? How long, O Lord? Wilt thou be angry
42 7, XII | these sorrowful cries: “How long, how long? Tomorrow and
43 7, XII | sorrowful cries: “How long, how long? Tomorrow and tomorrow?
44 8, III | of his country house so long as we would stay there.
45 8, III | inquirer after truth. Not long after our conversion and
46 8, III | ended. The days had seemed long and many because of my eagerness
47 8, IV | said, “O sons of men, how long will you be slow of heart,
48 8, IV | you be slow of heart, how long will you love vanity, and
49 8, IV | prophet cried out: “How long will you be slow of heart?
50 8, IV | you be slow of heart? How long will you love vanity, and
51 8, IV | Holy One.” He cries, “How long?” He cries, “Know this,”
52 8, IV | Know this,” and I - so long “loving vanity, and seeking
53 8, VII | to thy hymns, having so long panted after thee. And now
54 8, X | after the fatigues of a long journey.~We were conversing
55 9, V | face.”328 Therefore, as long as I journey away from thee,
56 9, XVII | feels them no longer, as long as whatever is in the memory
57 9, XX | of all the other tongues long so earnestly to obtain.
58 9, XXI | delighted to observe this and long to be this way themselves.
59 9, XXI | to mind and love it and long for it? It is not I alone
60 9, XXXIV | with longing, and if it is long absent the mind is saddened.~
61 10, II | CHAPTER II~ ~2. But how long would it take for the voice
62 10, II | precious to me and I have for a long time been burning with the
63 10, III(419)| it. In addition to this long and involved analysis of
64 10, XI | incommensurable? They would see that a long time does not become long,
65 10, XI | long time does not become long, except from the many separate
66 10, XV | 18. And yet we speak of a long time and a short time; but
67 10, XV | years ago, for example, a long time past. In like manner,
68 10, XV | a hundred years hence a long time to come. But we call
69 10, XV | what sense is something long or short that is nonexistent?
70 10, XV | let us not say, “It is long”; instead, let us say of
71 10, XV | say of the past, “It was long,” and of the future, “It
72 10, XV | the future, “It will be long.” And yet, O Lord, my Light,
73 10, XV | man even here? For that long time past: was it long when
74 10, XV | that long time past: was it long when it was already past,
75 10, XV | For it might have been long when there was a period
76 10, XV | was a period that could be long, but when it was past, it
77 10, XV | not at all could not be long. Let us not, therefore,
78 10, XV | therefore, say, “Time past was long,” for we shall not discover
79 10, XV | discover what it was that was long because, since it is past,
80 10, XV | say that “time present was long, because when it was present
81 10, XV | when it was present it was long.” For then it had not yet
82 10, XV | state that could be called long. But after it passed, it
83 10, XV | passed, it ceased to be long simply because it ceased
84 10, XV | whether present time can be long, for it has been given you
85 10, XV | hundred years when present a long time? But, first, see whether
86 10, XV | time that could be called “long,” has been cut down to the
87 10, XV | time which we may call “long”? Is it future? Actually
88 10, XV | say of the future, “It is long,” for it has not yet come
89 10, XV | come to be, so as to be long. Instead, we say, “It will
90 10, XV | Instead, we say, “It will be long.” When will it be? For since
91 10, XV | is future, it will not be long, for what may be long is
92 10, XV | be long, for what may be long is not yet. It will be long
93 10, XV | long is not yet. It will be long only when it passes from
94 10, XV | be something that may be long. But in that case, time
95 10, XV | heard, that it cannot be “long.”~
96 10, XVI | that this time is twice as long, or three times as long,
97 10, XVI | long, or three times as long, while this other time is
98 10, XVI | other time is only just as long as that other. But we measure
99 10, XXI | that this time is twice as long as that one or that this
100 10, XXI | or that this is just as long as that, and so on for the
101 10, XXII | times and those times: “How long ago since he said this?” “
102 10, XXII | since he said this?” “How long ago since he did this?” “
103 10, XXII | since he did this?” “How long ago since I saw that?” “
104 10, XXII | This syllable is twice as long as that single short syllable.”
105 10, XXIII | some syllables that were long and others short, because
106 10, XXIII | this motion is twice as long as that. For I ask, since
107 10, XXIII | time went on. For in as long a span of time as was sufficient
108 10, XXIV | moved, I measure by time how long it was moving from the time
109 10, XXIV | But if I look at it for a long time, I can affirm only
110 10, XXIV | affirm only that the time is long but not how long it may
111 10, XXIV | time is long but not how long it may be. This is because
112 10, XXIV | because when we say, “How long?”, we are speaking comparatively
113 10, XXIV | comparatively as: “This is as long as that,” or, “This is twice
114 10, XXIV | or, “This is twice as long as that”; or other such
115 10, XXIV | a wheel, we can say how long the movement of the body
116 10, XXIV | by which we measure how long it takes is another thing,
117 10, XXIV | say, “It stood still as long as it moved,” or, “It stood
118 10, XXIV | twice or three times as long as it moved” - or any other
119 10, XXV | already spoken of time a long time, and that “very long”
120 10, XXV | long time, and that “very long” is not long except when
121 10, XXV | that “very long” is not long except when measured by
122 10, XXVI | the motion of a body - how long it takes, how long it is
123 10, XXVI | how long it takes, how long it is in motion from this
124 10, XXVI | say that the length of a long syllable is measured by
125 10, XXVI | syllable and thus say that the long syllable is double. So also
126 10, XXVI | syllable, and the length of the long syllables by the length
127 10, XXVI | pass by we say: “It is a long stanza, because it is made
128 10, XXVI | so many verses; they are long verses because they consist
129 10, XXVI | of so many feet; they are long feet because they extend
130 10, XXVI | many syllables; this is a long syllable because it is twice
131 10, XXVI | precisely, “This is twice as long as that.” I know that I
132 10, XXVII | so that one could say how long or how briefly it will continue.
133 10, XXVII | alternates between short and long syllables. The four short
134 10, XXVII | in relation to the four long ones - that is, the second,
135 10, XXVII | and eighth. Each of the long ones is double the length
136 10, XXVII | sense, then, I measure a long syllable by a short one,
137 10, XXVII | find that it is twice as long. But when one sounds after
138 10, XXVII | be short and the latter long, how can I hold the short
139 10, XXVII | how can I apply it to the long one as a measure, so that
140 10, XXVII | I can discover that the long one is twice as long, when,
141 10, XXVII | the long one is twice as long, when, in fact, the long
142 10, XXVII | long, when, in fact, the long one does not begin to sound
143 10, XXVII | off sounding? That same long syllable I do not measure
144 10, XXVII | I measure? Where is the long one that I am measuring?
145 10, XXVII | this silence has lasted as long as that voice lasts? Do
146 10, XXVII | specify their time spans - how long this is in relation to that -
147 10, XXVII | forethought, he has decided how long it should be, that man has
148 10, XXVIII | which is nonexistent, is not long; but “a long future” is “
149 10, XXVIII | nonexistent, is not long; but “a long future” is “a long expectation
150 10, XXVIII | but “a long future” is “a long expectation of the future.”
151 10, XXVIII | which is now no longer, long; a “long past” is “a long
152 10, XXVIII | now no longer, long; a “long past” is “a long memory
153 10, XXVIII | long; a “long past” is “a long memory of the past.”~38.
154 11, XXVI | might be produced which so long after were to profit all
155 11, XXVII | from the same spring over a long course - so also is the
156 12, VI | Scripture should then at long last refer to thy Spirit?
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