bold = Main text
Book, Chapter grey = Comment text
1 1, IX | were sinning by writing or reading or studying less than our
2 1, XIII | those beginner’s lessons in reading, writing, and reckoning,
3 1, XIII | still retain, the power of reading what I find written and
4 1, XIII | life, if it were forgotten: reading and writing, or these poetical
5 3, XII | will of his own accord, by reading, come to discover what an
6 4, XV | than I had acquired in the reading of it by myself alone? For
7 6, III | necessary food or his mind with reading. ~Now, as he read, his eyes
8 6, III | we would see him thus reading to himself. After we had
9 6, III | even a truer reason for his reading to himself might have been
10 7, II | steadily gained strength from reading and inquiry, and came to
11 7, VI | be inflamed by it. While reading, he meditated on embracing
12 7, VI | onto the page and continued reading; he was inwardly changed,
13 7, VII | nineteenth, when, upon the reading of Cicero’s Hortensius,
14 7, X | thing to have delight in reading the apostle, or is it a
15 9, VI(335) | Reading videnti (with De Labriolle)
16 11, II(457) | S.V., Ps. 115:16. The LXX reading (o ouranoz tou ouranou)
17 11, III(459)| succeeding exegesis this reading can hardly have been the
18 12, XV | knowledge of thy Word by reading it - let them praise thee.
19 12, XV | love.569 They are always reading, and what they read never
20 12, XIX(602)| Cf. Matt. 97 Reading here, with Knöll and the
21 12, XXIV | be silent as to what my reading has suggested to me. For
|