Book, Chapter
1 2, II | would have with greater happiness expected thy embraces.~4.
2 5, VIII| place sought fictitious happiness in the other.~15. Thou knewest
3 6, III | man, as the world counted happiness, because great personages
4 6, VI | only to attain that very happiness which this beggar had reached
5 6, XVI | according to the notions of happiness I had then, and no matter
6 6, II | and changed by them from happiness into misery, so that it
7 7, VII | abandonment of this world’s happiness to devote myself to the
8 8, III | severely disturbed by this new happiness of mine, since he was still
9 8, X | and spurning all earthly happiness. What more am I to do here?”~
10 8, XI | should be added to all that happiness, and commented on by others:
11 9, IV | this? Will they wish me happiness when they learn how near
12 9, XX | seek a happy life, since happiness is not mine till I can rightly
13 9, XX | these, if they had not known happiness in some degree, would not
14 9, XX | desire. How they come to know happiness, I cannot tell, but they
15 9, XX | neither Greek nor Latin, this happiness which Greeks and Latins
16 9, XX | thing itself, which we name “happiness,” were held in the memory.~
17 9, XXI | happy. Is the memory of happiness, then, something like the
18 9, XXI | in others.~Do we remember happiness, then, as we remember joy?
19 9, XXI | everybody. Unless we knew happiness by a knowledge that is certain,
20 9, XXI | agree in their wish for happiness just as they would also
21 12, XVII| is temporal and earthly happiness. This is their motive for
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