Book, Chapter
1 1, VI | scorn me; but when thou dost turn and attend to me, thou wilt
2 1, XVII | poetic fictions, and to turn into prose what the poet
3 1, XVIII| of place, that we either turn from thee or return to thee.
4 2, II | regulate my disorder and turn to my profit the fleeting
5 2, III | ways in which they walk who turn their backs to thee and
6 3, VI | For verses and poems I can turn into food for the mind,
7 3, X | them save to be mocked in turn by thee? Insensibly and
8 4, IV | Fountain of mercies, who dost turn us to thyself by ways that
9 4, X | CHAPTER X~ ~15. “Turn us again, O Lord God of
10 4, XII | praise God for them, but turn back your love to their
11 4, XV | forever with thee, and when we turn from thee with aversion,
12 5, II | thee. Let them, therefore, turn back and seek thee, because
13 5, II | thy creatures. Let them turn back and seek thee - and
14 5, X | For when my mind tried to turn back to the Catholic faith,
15 6, II | she could bring herself to turn critic of her own customs,
16 6, II | both male and female, who turn as sick at a hymn to sobriety
17 6, VI | might forsake all else and turn to thee - who art above
18 6, VIII | savage temper, and he did not turn away, but fixed his eyes
19 6, XVI | sakes, and felt that they in turn loved me for my own sake.~
20 6, VI | the same future did not turn out for them. He must therefore
21 6, VII | Nor did they allow me to turn back to where it might be
22 7, II | the Platonists, at every turn, the pathway led to belief
23 7, VI | at our ignorance. We in turn were amazed to hear of thy
24 7, VII | discover. And if I sought to turn my gaze away from myself,
25 7, XI | not strike me back, nor turn me aside, but held me in
26 7, XII | all to Alypius. And he in turn disclosed to me what had
27 7, XII | about me. And so thou didst turn her grief into gladness
28 9, XX | delighted as he would be in turn if he heard it in Greek,
29 9, XXXV | me after it - not that I turn aside with my horse, but
30 10 | From this, he prepares to turn to a detailed interpretation
31 10, II | and give me what I may in turn offer back to thee. For “
32 10, XXIII| and a potter’s wheel still turn round: would there be no
33 11, VI | in its agitation used to turn up all sorts of foul and
34 11, XV | such a one will neither turn himself away from thee nor
35 11, XV | himself away from thee nor turn away toward himself. This
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