bold = Main text
Book, Chapter grey = Comment text
1 1, IV | can any man say when he speaks of thee? But woe to them
2 4, VI(98) | Horace, Ode I, 3:8, where he speaks of Virgil, et serves animae
3 8, XI | me she said, “See how he speaks.” Soon after, she said to
4 9, IV | strange children, whose mouth speaks vanity, and whose right
5 9, VI | mute to this one and it speaks to that one. Indeed, it
6 9, VI | one. Indeed, it actually speaks to all, but only they understand
7 10, III | syllables - would say, “He speaks the truth,” and I should
8 10, VIII | Beginning,” because it also speaks to us.424 Thus, in the gospel,
9 11, XVIII | since we believe that he speaks truly we dare not suppose
10 11, XXII | which the apostle distinctly speaks: ‘thrones,’ ‘dominions,’ ‘
11 11, XXV | For he who tells a lie speaks of his own thought.494~35.
12 11, XXVIII | beginning,” because it also speaks to us. Another man directs
13 12, XI | indeed it is of it that he speaks? Rare is the soul who, when
14 12, XI | is the soul who, when he speaks of it, also knows of what
15 12, XI | it, also knows of what he speaks. And men contend and strive,
16 12, XIV | still is an abyss. My faith speaks to my soul - the faith that
17 12, XVII(579)| In The City of God, he speaks of the bitterness of life
18 12, XXV | liar.634 Hence, he that speaks a lie, speaks out of himself.
19 12, XXV | Hence, he that speaks a lie, speaks out of himself. Therefore,
20 12, XXIX | Scripture says, I say. But it speaks in terms of time, whereas
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