Book, Chapter
1 1, XIII | thee from the poisonous pleasures that first drew us from
2 1, XIX | rest - that I sought for pleasures, honors, and truths. And
3 2, II | flavoring all my unlawful pleasures with bitter discontent,
4 2, II | order that I might seek pleasures free from discontent. But
5 2, V | revenge. Yet, in seeking these pleasures, we must not depart from
6 4, VII | banquetings, nor in the pleasures of the bed or the couch;
7 6, VII | blinded by its miserable pleasures. And he roused his mind
8 6, VII | filth of the gladiatorial pleasures dropped away from him, and
9 6, XII | overcome by the lust for such pleasures, but out of curiosity. For,
10 6, XVI | rich the store of my carnal pleasures might be. Yet of a truth
11 7, III | strong. Indeed, the very pleasures of human life - not only
12 7, III | But it is also apparent in pleasures that are permitted and lawful:
13 7, VII | better than all bodily pleasures, though they were to be
14 9, XXXI | refrain yourself from your pleasures.”355 And by thy favor I
15 9, XXXIII| secret correlation. But the pleasures of my flesh - to which the
16 9, XXXIV | good, and not these. The pleasures of sight affect me all the
17 9, XXXV | gratification of all senses and pleasures - in which its slaves perish
18 9, XXXVII| not. For in respect of the pleasures of my flesh and of idle
19 10, II | honors and power, nor fleshly pleasures, nor of bodily necessities
20 12, XXI | dead while it was living in pleasures - in pleasures that bear
21 12, XXI | living in pleasures - in pleasures that bear death in them -
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