Book, Chapter
1 Int | fully persuaded that the vast majority of mankind are
2 Int | mostly at dictation - a vast sprawling library of books,
3 Int, 1 | in human history on the vast stage of the cosmos itself.
4 1, V | art angry and threatenest vast misery? Is it, then, a trifling
5 1, XVI | the sons of Eve into that vast and hideous ocean, which
6 1, XVIII | now thou drawest from that vast deep the soul that seeks
7 3, VI | manifold ways, in numerous and vast books, [the Manicheans]
8 4, XV | Truth, wert a bright and vast body and that I was a particle
9 6, V | myself thy creation as one vast mass, composed of various
10 6, V | I pictured this mass as vast - of course not in its full
11 7, X | even more, in view of the vast range of human desires -
12 9, VIII | internal to the body. The vast cave of memory, with its
13 9, VIII | I say to myself in that vast recess of my mind, with
14 9, VIII | believe in - and with the same vast spaces between them as when
15 9, XVII | manifold, and exceedingly vast. Behold in the numberless
16 9, XXXV | In such a wilderness so vast, crammed with snares and
17 9, XL | themselves; and in that vast storehouse of my memory,
18 10, XVIII | take an example from the vast multitude and variety of
19 11, XXVIII| produced, containing in its vast bosom these visible and
20 12, XXXII | gathered together in the vast plains of the sea; and the
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