bold = Main text
Book, Chapter grey = Comment text
1 Int | unless it discovers the means by which men are brought
2 Int | more importantly, confiteri means to acknowledge, to God,
3 Int | the Confessions are by no means complete when the personal
4 Int, 1 | competent - though by no means complete - introduction
5 1, VIII | to whomever I wished by means of whimperings and grunts
6 1, IX | quickly those lessons by means of which, as a man, I could
7 1, XVI(29)| figure of Noah's ark, as the means of safe transport from earth
8 2, III | father’s ambition than of his means, for he was only a poor
9 2, III | he went quite beyond his means to supply his son with the
10 3, II | himself could not by any means endure? Yet, as a spectator,
11 3, II | compassion be repudiated? By no means! Let us, however, love the
12 3, VI | from them, we go on by means of them to imagine of other
13 3, VI | understanding of the mind, by means of which thou hast willed
14 5, VIII | wast using my longings as a means and wast hastening me on
15 5, IX | the soul of her son? By no means, O Lord. It is certain that
16 6, VII | already done so. Yet I had no means of advising him, or any
17 6, XVII | which perceives them by means of the bodily senses, and
18 6, XVII | invisibilia tua] understood by means of the things that are made.
19 7, II | they smoked,”242 by what means didst thou find thy way
20 7, IV | them, he controls more by means of their influence. The
21 8, IV | And I remember by what means thou also didst subdue Alypius,
22 8, VIII | thou workest through their means, but for the malice they
23 9, II | wicked, to confess to thee means nothing less than to be
24 9, II | when I am truly devout, it means nothing less than not to
25 9, XV | Now whether all this is by means of images or not, who can
26 9, XVI | forgotten what the name means? When, therefore, I remember
27 9, XVI | through itself, then this means that it itself was once
28 9, XXXI | receive in thy gifts (by means of which land and water
29 9, XXXVI | but in thy stead. By such means as this, the adversary makes
30 10, IV | already existent is what it means to be changed and varied.
31 10, VIII | when we are instructed by means of the mutable creation,
32 10, XV(434)| Spatium, which means extension either in space
33 10, XXIX | many ways and by so many means. Thus through him I may
34 11, II(457)| typical nominal sentence and means simply "The heavens are
35 11, XIII | Temporal change customarily means having one thing now and
36 11, XIII | or that. It is, then, by means of these two - one thing
37 11, XIII | and unformed) - it is by means of these two notions that
38 11, XX | the heaven and the earth” means, “In his Word, coeternal
39 11, XX | the heaven and the earth” means, “In his Word, coeternal
40 11, XX | the heaven and the earth” means, “In his Word, coeternal
41 11, XX | created heaven and earth” means, “In the very beginning
42 11, XXI | darkness was over the abyss” means, “That corporeal entity
43 11, XXI | darkness was over the abyss” means, “This totality called heaven
44 11, XXI | darkness was over the abyss” means, “This totality called heaven
45 11, XXI | darkness was over the abyss” means, “The Scripture does not
46 11, XXI | darkness was over the abyss” means, “There was already an unformed
47 12, XXIII | he judges all things,” means that man has dominion over
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