Book, Chapter
1 1, I | whether first to know thee or call upon thee. But who can invoke
2 1, I | thee. But “how shall they call on him in whom they have
3 1, I | will seek thee, O Lord, and call upon thee. I call upon thee,
4 1, I | Lord, and call upon thee. I call upon thee, O Lord, in my
5 1, II | II~ ~2. And how shall I call upon my God - my God and
6 1, II | and my Lord? For when I call on him I ask him to come
7 1, II | Lord; even so. Where do I call thee to, when I am already
8 1, VI | life-in-death. Or should I call it death-in-life? I do not
9 1, X | and deliver us who now call upon thee; deliver those
10 1, X | deliver those also who do not call upon thee, that they may
11 1, X | upon thee, that they may call upon thee, and thou mayest
12 3, II | person, it is the custom to call this “misery.” But when
13 4, III | other impostors, whom they call “astrologers” [mathematicos],
14 4, XV | me in thy presence, or to call upon thee - any more than
15 5, X | those philosophers whom they call “The Academics”143 were
16 6, I | convulsion which physicians call “the crisis.”~
17 6, IX | silversmiths below began to call to each other in whispers
18 6, XVI | know it. Nor did anything call me back from a still deeper
19 6, IX | younger and thou mightest call the Gentiles, and I had
20 6, XIII | part of creation which we call the earth, having its own
21 7, IV | and act: stir us up and call us back; inflame us and
22 8, IV | Scripture.~12. When shall I call to mind all that happened
23 9, XIII | so that if afterward I call to mind that I once was
24 9, XIV | slipped my mind.” Thus we call memory itself mind.~Since
25 9, XIV | of these emotions when I call them to mind by remembering
26 9, XV | memory, I could not possibly call to mind what the sound of
27 9, XVI | though I could not even call my own name without it.
28 9, XXI | hear the term eloquence, call the thing to mind, even
29 9, XXI | my memory so that I can call it to mind, sometimes with
30 9, XXI | detest and execrate as I call them to mind. At other times,
31 9, XXI | mind. At other times, I call to mind with longing good
32 9, XXI | my happy life that I can call it to mind and love it and
33 9, XXI | joy. Is this joy what they call a happy life? Although one
34 9, XXIV | that I find thee whenever I call thee to remembrance, and
35 9, XXV | thee in my memory when I call thee to mind.~
36 9, XXVII | were in thee. Thou didst call and cry aloud, and didst
37 9, XXXIII| singing.~However, when I call to mind the tears I shed
38 10, II | thou art rich to all who call upon thee - thou who, in
39 10, VII | CHAPTER VII~ ~9. Thou dost call us, then, to understand
40 10, XV | time past and future. We call a hundred years ago, for
41 10, XV | In like manner, we should call a hundred years hence a
42 10, XV | long time to come. But we call ten days ago a short time
43 10, XV | this alone is what we may call time present. But this flies
44 10, XV | is that time which we may call “long”? Is it future? Actually
45 10, XVIII | not now exist. But when I call to mind its image and speak
46 10, XXIII | these periods, we could call one of them a single and
47 11, II | Indeed, it is not absurd to call each of those two great
48 11, VIII | This firmament thou didst call heaven, that is, the heaven
49 12, I | CHAPTER I~ ~1. I call on thee, my God, my Mercy,
50 12, I | was forgetful of thee. I call thee into my soul, which
51 12, I | Do not forsake me when I call on thee, who didst anticipate
52 12, I | afar off and be turned and call upon thee, who callest me.
53 12, X | had been borne up by the call in which thou saidst, “Let
54 12, XIV | test the heart and who dost call the light day, and the darkness
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