Book, Chapter
1 1, VIII | countenance, glances of the eye, gestures and intonations
2 3, VI | deceive the mind through the eye. And yet because I supposed
3 3, VIII | of the flesh, and of the eye, and of power.75 Sometimes
4 5, II | thou seest them and thy eye pierces through the shadows
5 6, IV | be read, not now with an eye to what had seemed absurd
6 6, XVI | its own sake, which the eye of flesh cannot see, and
7 6, III | then, trying to draw the eye of my mind up out of that
8 6, X | I entered, and with the eye of my soul - such as it
9 6, X | was - saw above the same eye of my soul and above my
10 8, II | had made the break in the eye of the general public, all
11 8, X | life of the saints: which eye has not seen, nor ear heard,
12 8, XI | she fixed him with her eye and an anxious countenance,
13 9, III | they can neither extend eye nor ear nor mind. They desire
14 9, VII | me; commanding that the eye is not to hear and the ear
15 9, VII | that I am to see by the eye and to hear by the ear;
16 9, XII | images of such things as the eye of my body has showed me.
17 9, XXI | life is not visible to the eye, since it is not a physical
18 9, XXXIV | added for the delight of the eye, copying the outward forms
19 9, XXXVIII| for that peace which the eye of the proud does not know.
20 10, V | perceived in itself by its inner eye (yet how should even he
21 11, XX | such things in their inner eye and who believe unshakably
22 12, XVIII | for solid meat, and his eye is able to look into the
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