Book, Chapter
1 Int, 1 | reliance on the limited but real powers of human reason,
2 1, XVI | cloak for him to play at real adultery. Yet which of our
3 3, II | he who has the power of real compassion would still prefer
4 3, VI | of bodies which have no real being at all! The images
5 3, VIII | violence where there is a real desire to harm another,
6 4, XV | not only a substance but real life as well, and yet I
7 4, XV | in them, not knowing the real source of what it was in
8 5, VIII | secret counsel and noting the real point to her desire, didst
9 5, IX | death of my soul was as real then as the death of his
10 5, IX | the death of his flesh was real, though I believed it not.~
11 6, IX | the scholars, who was the real thief - secretly brought
12 6, V | evil since we have nothing real to fear, and yet do fear.
13 6, XI | they are neither wholly real nor wholly unreal. They
14 6, XI | wholly unreal. They are real in so far as they come from
15 6, XI | thou art. For that is truly real which remains immutable.
16 8, IV | cried to thee; for by a real death in the flesh He died
17 9, XXVIII| and my life shall be a real life, being wholly filled
18 9, XL | were, and what was their real value. In all this I heard
19 10, IV | nor as good, nor as truly real as thou their Creator art.
20 10, VI | below me; they are not even real, for they fly away and pass,
21 12, XVI | as thou art the utterly Real, thou alone dost fully know,
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