Book, Chapter
1 1, VI | and from my God is all my health. This is what I have since
2 1, VII | energies for its well-being and health - thou dost command me to
3 1, XI | In the matter of bodily health, no one says, “Let him alone;
4 1, XI | myself, my soul’s restored health had been kept safe in thy
5 4, IV | should get well and his health recover enough to allow
6 5, IX | that I regained my bodily health, although I was still disordered
7 5, X | better and more certain health. After this, at Rome, I
8 6, I | should pass from sickness to health, even though it would be
9 6, IV | one, so it was with the health of my soul, which could
10 6, XI | apart certain hours for the health of the soul. A great hope
11 6, XIV | CHAPTER XIV~ ~20. There is no health in those who find fault
12 6, XIV | creation; as there was no health in me when I found fault
13 7, VIII | did not. But I was mad for health, and dying for life; knowing
14 8, IV | to thee, the God of all health. And I wrote it down on
15 9, XV | pleasure. I name bodily health when I am sound in body,
16 9, XV | know what was meant when health was named, unless the same
17 9, XVI | other senses. I remember the health or sickness of the body.
18 9, XXIII| Truth, O God my Light, “the health of my countenance and my
19 9, XXXI | compels us to pass. And while health is the reason for our eating
20 9, XXXI | what I say I want to do for health’s sake. They do not both
21 9, XXXI | What is sufficient for health is not enough for pleasure.
22 9, XXXI | sufficient for the moderation of health, so that under the pretense
23 9, XXXI | that under the pretense of health it may conceal its projects
24 12, XIV | shall see my God, who is the health of my countenance,559 who
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