Book, Chapter
1 1, IV | things; never new, never old; making all things new, yet bringing
2 1, VI | and legs about and cry, making the few and feeble gestures
3 3, VII | pious fathers, not only for making use of present things as
4 3, IX | men who are, on the whole, making progress toward the good.
5 6, I | and the birds of the air, making me wiser than they? And
6 6, IX | begin to learn that, in making just decisions, a man should
7 6, XIV | severally owned and thus making of it a common household,
8 6, VI | lighted on the truth by making so many guesses.~And thou
9 6, XVII | was that supported me in making correct judgments about
10 7 | himself. He almost succeeds in making the decision for continence,
11 7, VI | declining. But the first two, making known to Ponticianus their
12 8, XIII | sittest at thy right hand “making intercession for us.”312
13 9, III | at this very moment of making my confessions? Many different
14 9, XVII | the fowls of the air by making me a wiser creature. Thus
15 11, XV | but not even in it, thus making it able to behold thy face
16 11, XXVIII| creature that is not of thy making. By thy will, since it is
17 11, XXIX | behold thy eternity immutably making mutable things, and thereby
18 11, XXIX | that it has any power of making a sound or tune. Nor is
19 12, XVIII | portion, as He wills, and making stars to appear in their
20 12, XXIV | earth.” In this art thou not making a sign to us that we may
|