Book, Chapter
1 Int, 1 | Pelagian heresy had even begun to be, it is plain that
2 2, III | breast thou hadst already begun to build thy temple and
3 3, XI | the table which she had begun to avoid, even while she
4 5, XI | these same Manicheans, had begun to impress me, even when
5 5, XII | whom and through whom I had begun to be known. And lo, I then
6 5, XIV | all, his ideas had already begun to appear to me defensible;
7 6, V | Holy Writings, I had now begun to believe that thou wouldst
8 6, IX | and the rabble, who had begun to triumph over Alypius,
9 6, VI | horoscope. Although I had now begun to learn in this matter
10 6, XX | fact my punishment, I had begun to desire to seem wise.
11 7, V | that new will which had begun to spring up in me freely
12 8, II | same summer my lungs had begun to be weak from too much
13 8, IV | even there thou hadst begun to grow sweet to me and
14 8, VII | Milan had only recently begun to employ this mode of consolation
15 8, XI | bounty of thy goodness, had begun to be no longer in her heart,
16 9, IV | abandon what thou hast begun in me. Go on, rather, to
17 9, XXXVI | complete mercy since thou hast begun to change us? Thou knowest
18 10, I | altogether, as thou hast already begun; and that we may cease to
19 10, XV | not as yet, and will have begun to be present, so that there
20 10, XVIII | started the action and have begun to do what we were premeditating,
21 10, XXVII | suppose that another voice had begun to sound and is still sounding
22 10, XXVIII| the whole, but once I have begun, as much of it as becomes
23 11, XXIV | each of them only newly begun and still formless. Whichever
24 11, XXVII | done,” they think of words begun and ended, sounding in time
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