Book, Chapter
1 1, VIII | speak. My elders did not teach me words by rote, as they
2 1, XIII | but what the grammarians teach. For those beginner’s lessons
3 2, II | save in thee, who dost teach us by sorrow, who woundest
4 3, XI | to learn from her, but to teach her, as is customary in
5 4, IV | years, when I first began to teach rhetoric in my native town,
6 5, V | most impudently dared to teach them, it is clear that he
7 5, VI | is true - that thou didst teach me and that beside thee
8 5, VII | much - who undertook to teach me what I wanted to know,
9 5, VIII | persuaded to go to Rome and teach there what I had been teaching
10 6, IV | now knew that it did not teach what I had so vehemently
11 6, IV | meaning of what seemed to teach perverse doctrine if it
12 6, XI | Catholic faith does not teach what we thought it did,
13 6, IX | judgment; and the meek will he teach his way; beholding our lowliness
14 6, XVIII | his weakness was meant to teach us. For thy Word, the eternal
15 6, XX | when would these books teach me this? I now believe that
16 7, V | Christians were forbidden to teach literature and rhetoric;
17 7, VI | sake of our friendship, to teach under Verecundus - a citizen
18 8, IX | intimate instructor, didst teach her in the school of her
19 9, XLIII | incompetence and my infirmities; teach me and heal me. Thy only
20 10, VIII | us. But he that doth not teach us doth not really speak
21 10, XIX | whom nothing is future, teach future things - or rather
22 10, XIX | future things - or rather teach things present from the
23 12, VI | up my heart - let it not teach me vain notions. Disperse
24 12, XXII | perfect will. And thou dost teach him, now that he is able
25 12, XXXVIII| own rest.~What man will teach men to understand this?
26 12, XXXVIII| this? And what angel will teach the angels? Or what angels
27 12, XXXVIII| angels? Or what angels will teach men? We must ask it of thee;
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