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1 Int | doctrine for the next thousand years and more. Wherever one touches
2 Int | space of some forty-four years, from his conversion in
3 Int | thought over this twoscore years, but one can hardly miss
4 Int | written more than twenty years later. In the Confessions,
5 1, VI | sustain them. And since “thy years shall have no end,”20 thy
6 1, VI | shall have no end,”20 thy years are an ever-present day.
7 1, VII | they will vanish as the years pass. For, although we allow
8 3, IV | father had been dead two years,62 and my mother was providing
9 3, XI | present anguish.~Nearly nine years passed in which I wallowed
10 4 | This is the story of his years among the Manicheans. It
11 4, I | During this period of nine years, from my nineteenth year
12 4, II | CHAPTER II~ ~2. During those years I taught the art of rhetoric.
13 4, II | their companion.~In those years I had a mistress, to whom
14 4, III | he himself in his earlier years had studied the astrologers’
15 4, IV | CHAPTER IV ~ ~7. In those years, when I first began to teach
16 4, XV | when I was scarcely twenty years old, a book of Aristotle’
17 5, III | and have foretold, many years in advance, the day, the
18 5, VI | almost the whole of the nine years that I listened with unsettled
19 6, III | blushed that for so many years I had bayed, not against
20 6, XIII | who was as yet some two years too young to marry.171 And
21 6, XV | bear the delay of the two years that should elapse before
22 6, I | manhood.176 As I increased in years, the worse was my vanity.
23 6, I(176) | Thirty years old; although the term "
24 6, I(176) | juventus) normally included the years twenty to forty.~
25 6, IX(186)| translated into Latin several years before; cf. M.P. Garvey,
26 7, II | eloquence defended for so many years - despite all this, he did
27 7, VII | with them. For many of my years - perhaps twelve - had passed
28 7, VII | you have, nor spent ten years and more in thinking about
29 7, XII | rule of faith which so many years before thou hadst showed
30 8, I | free will during all those years and from what deep and secret
31 8, IV | because from my earliest years I had never experienced
32 8, VI | lad. He was barely fifteen years old, but his intelligence
33 8, VII | uncorrupted for so many years in thy secret storehouse,
34 8, VII | of the city, blind many years, who, when he had asked
35 8, XII | my eyes, who had for many years wept for me that I might
36 8, XIII | contracted during so many years since the water of salvation.
37 10, XIII | always the Selfsame and thy years shall have no end.”432 Thy
38 10, XIII | shall have no end.”432 Thy years neither go nor come; but
39 10, XIII | may come to pass. All thy years stand together as one, since
40 10, XIII | are abiding. Nor do thy years past exclude the years to
41 10, XIII | thy years past exclude the years to come because thy years
42 10, XIII | years to come because thy years do not pass away. All these
43 10, XIII | not pass away. All these years of ours shall be with thee,
44 10, XIII | shall have ceased to be. Thy years are but a day, and thy day
45 10, XV | future. We call a hundred years ago, for example, a long
46 10, XV | we should call a hundred years hence a long time to come.
47 10, XV | answer me?~Is a hundred years when present a long time?
48 10, XV | first, see whether a hundred years can be present at once.
49 10, XV | future. Therefore, a hundred years cannot be present all at
50 10, XXIII | seasons, and for days and years.”441 This is doubtless the
51 10, XXIX | nor pass away.~But now my years are spent in mourning.452
52 11, XI | but thy eternity, like thy years which do not fail, since
53 12, XVIII | and thou dost bless the years of the righteous man. But
54 12, XVIII | the Selfsame, and in thy years which fail not thou preparest
55 12, XVIII | granary for our transient years. For by an eternal design
56 12, XVIII | seasons and in days and years.~
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