Book, Chapter
1 1, VI | nor an end to this present day - although there is a sense
2 1, VI | years are an ever-present day. And how many of ours and
3 1, VI | passed through this thy day and have received from it
4 1, VI | wilt gather into this thy day. What is it to me if someone
5 1, VII | infant who has lived but a day upon this earth. Who brings
6 1, XIII | my boyhood? Even to this day I have not fully understood
7 2, III | when my father saw me one day at the baths and perceived
8 3, VII | see that in one man, one day, and one house, different
9 3, VII | one and the same body, or day, or family, they can readily
10 4, VIII | time came and went from day to day, and by coming and
11 4, VIII | came and went from day to day, and by coming and going
12 5, III | many years in advance, the day, the hour, and the extent
13 5, III | discovered, so that to this day they may be read and from
14 5, III | what year and month and day and hour of the day, and
15 5, III | and day and hour of the day, and at what quarter of
16 5, V | whether the alternation of day and night, and of longer
17 5, VII | tears that she poured out by day and by night, there was
18 5, IX | visit to church twice a day, morning and evening - and
19 6, III | him, indeed, every Lord’s Day, “rightly dividing the word
20 6, VI | from the incident of the day on which I was preparing
21 6, VII | forgotten him who was one day to be numbered among thy
22 6, VII | knew nothing of it.~One day, when I was sitting in my
23 6, VIII | spectacles and detested them, one day he met by chance a company
24 6, VIII | into the amphitheater, on a day of those cruel and murderous
25 6, XI | doing with the rest of the day? Why not do this? But, then,
26 6, XI | the Lord; I postponed from day to day the life in thee,
27 6, XI | I postponed from day to day the life in thee, but I
28 6, V | utterly lose it, and every day drank in more and more of
29 6, VIII | eyesight of my mind was from day to day made whole by the
30 6, VIII | my mind was from day to day made whole by the stinging
31 6, X | sort, as if the light of day were to grow brighter and
32 6, X | whom I sigh both night and day. When I first knew thee,
33 7, VI | wisdom.~14. On a certain day, then, when Nebridius was
34 7, VI | reminded them to return, as the day was declining. But the first
35 7, VII | thought that I delayed from day to day in rejecting those
36 7, VII | that I delayed from day to day in rejecting those worldly
37 7, VII | direct my course. And now the day had arrived in which I was
38 7, X | both are open on the same day; or, whether he should take
39 8, IV | CHAPTER IV~ ~7. Finally the day came on which I was actually
40 8, IV | themselves dire wrath against the day of wrath and the revelation
41 8, IX | between them, even for a day. And when they asked her
42 8, X | CHAPTER X~ ~23. As the day now approached on which
43 8, X | to depart this life - a day which thou knewest, but
44 8, X | thou knowest that on that day we were talking thus and
45 8, XI | was sick, she fainted one day and was for a short time
46 8, XI | me.” And so on the ninth day of her sickness, in the
47 8, XII | grievously sad in secret all the day, and with a troubled mind
48 8, XII | celestial, ~Clothing the day with lovely light, ~Appointing
49 8, XIII | O Lord.”317 For when the day of her dissolution was so
50 8, XIII | the omission of a single day, and where she knew that
51 9, XXXI | yet another “evil of the day”351 to which I wish I were
52 9, XXXI | losses of the body until that day when thou destroyest both
53 9, XXXIV| everywhere I go during the day. It flits about me in manifold
54 9, XXXIV| which my soul sighs for day and night. But the craftsmen
55 10, II | should we cry?~“Thine is the day and the night is thine as
56 10, XIII | be. Thy years are but a day, and thy day is not recurrent,
57 10, XIII | years are but a day, and thy day is not recurrent, but always
58 10, XIII | whom thou didst say, “This day I have begotten thee.”433
59 10, XV | space of scarcely a single day. But let us examine even
60 10, XV | examine even that, for one day is never present as a whole.
61 10, XV | divided between night and day. The first of these hours
62 10, XXIII| that wooden wheel was a day, neither would that learned
63 10, XXIII| For I ask, since the word “day” refers not only to the
64 10, XXIII| the earth (which separates day from night), but also refers
65 10, XXIII| separately) - since, then, the day is ended by the motion of
66 10, XXIII| the motion itself is the day, or whether the day is the
67 10, XXIII| the day, or whether the day is the period in which that
68 10, XXIII| the sun’s passage is the day, then there would be a day
69 10, XXIII| day, then there would be a day even if the sun should finish
70 10, XXIII| the motion itself is the day, then it would not be a
71 10, XXIII| then it would not be a day if from one sunrise to another
72 10, XXIII| twenty-four times to make just one day. If it is both, then that
73 10, XXIII| that could not be called a day if the sun ran his entire
74 10, XXIII| hour; nor would it be a day if, while the sun stood
75 10, XXIII| what it is that is called a day, but rather what time is,
76 11, VIII | didst make on the second day after the creation of light,
77 11, VIII | thou madest on the third day, giving a visible shape
78 11, VIII | days. For even before any day thou hadst already made
79 11, XII | formless, for, before any “day” in the beginning, thou
80 11, XIII | It does not say on what day thou didst create these
81 11, XIII | about. When, on the second day, the firmament is recorded
82 11, XIII | earlier, without specifying a day.~
83 12, XIII | which “have been my meat day and night, while they continually
84 12, XIV | Hope and endure until the day breaks and the shadows flee
85 12, XIV | light and children of the day - not children of the night,
86 12, XIV | who dost call the light day, and the darkness night.562
87 12, XVIII| tangible, as if between the day and the night - and to distinguish
88 12, XVIII| and may divide between the day and night, and may be for
89 12, XVIII| night is far spent and the day is at hand”589; and because “
90 12, XVIII| given for the ruling of the day592). But to another the
91 12, XVIII| splendor of Wisdom in which the day rejoices and are only for
92 12, XIX | how to give rightly to the day and to the night - and you
93 12, XIX | all the earth, and let the day be lighted by the sun, utter
94 12, XIX | the Word of wisdom to the day (“day unto day utters speech”605)
95 12, XIX | Word of wisdom to the day (“day unto day utters speech”605)
96 12, XIX | wisdom to the day (“day unto day utters speech”605) and let
97 12, XXI | by them in manifold ways, day by day. “The living soul”
98 12, XXI | in manifold ways, day by day. “The living soul” has its
99 12, XXIII| secret heaven, nor over the day and the night which thou
100 12, XXIV | which thou calledst “the day,” nor the firmament of heaven,
101 12, XXIX | that what thou madest each day thou didst see to be good;
102 12, XXXII| above - the sun to serve the day, the moon and the stars
103 12, XXXV | evening.~51. But the seventh day is without an evening, and
104 12, XXXV | didst rest on the seventh day, although thou hadst created
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