Book, Chapter
1 1, VI | God, my Joy, preceded that period of life? Was I, indeed,
2 1, VII | forgetfulness and thus is like the period which I passed in my mother’
3 1, VII | see now, I pass over that period, for what have I to do with
4 3, IV | these, in that unstable period of my life, I studied the
5 4, I | CHAPTER I~ ~1. During this period of nine years, from my nineteenth
6 5, XIV | For I judged, even in that period of doubt, that I could not
7 10, XIII | dost thou precede any given period of time by another period
8 10, XIII | period of time by another period of time. Else thou wouldst
9 10, XV | been long when there was a period that could be long, but
10 10, XXIII| or whether the day is the period in which that motion is
11 10, XXIII| his course in as short a period as an hour. If the motion
12 10, XXIII| to another there were a period no longer than an hour.
13 10, XXIII| his entire course in the period of an hour; nor would it
14 10, XXIII| was finished in half the period of time that it customarily
15 10, XXIII| if it were completed in a period of only twelve hours. If,
16 10, XXIII| single and the other a double period, as if the sun might run
17 10, XXIII| east sometimes in a single period and sometimes in a double
18 10, XXIII| and sometimes in a double period.~Let no man tell me, therefore,
19 11, XV | every revolving temporal period, and it rises to what is
20 12, XXVI | Philippians, in their extended period of weariness in well-doing,
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