Book, Chapter
1 1, XIII | wanderings, and to weep for Dido dead, who slew herself for love.
2 1, XIII | who sheds tears over Dido, dead for the love of Aeneas,
3 3, IV | nineteen; my father had been dead two years,62 and my mother
4 3, XI | thee, she saw that I was dead. And thou didst hear her,
5 4, VI | would never die was now dead. And I marveled all the
6 4, VI | go on living when he was dead. Someone spoke rightly of
7 6, I | she had mourned me as one dead, but also as one who would
8 6, I | CHAPTER I~ ~1. Dead now was that evil and shameful
9 6, IX | highly exalted him” from the dead, “and given him a name above
10 7, III | the younger son who “was dead and is alive again, was
11 7, III | friendship; and in him who was dead and lived again, who had
12 7, V | sleep, and arise from the dead, and Christ shall give you
13 8, IV | One, raising him from the dead and setting him at thy right
14 8, IV | magnified, rising from the dead and ascending into heaven.
15 8, IV | to do with those deaf and dead Manicheans to whom I myself
16 8, XII | unhappy or are altogether dead are usually mourned. But
17 8, XII | mother who was for a while dead to my eyes, who had for
18 9, XLIII| alone was “free among the dead.”398 He alone had power
19 12, XIV | about us in our bodies, dead because of sin.556 Hope
20 12, XXI | live to thee. This soul was dead while it was living in pleasures -
21 12, XXI | curiosity are motions of the dead soul - not so dead that
22 12, XXI | of the dead soul - not so dead that it has lost all motion,
23 12, XXI | has lost all motion, but dead because it has deserted
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