Book, Chapter
1 1, VI | from it what measure and fashion of being they had? And all
2 1, XIII | pour forth whatever I could fashion. From this it is sufficiently
3 4, XIV | different and more serious fashion, as I would myself desire
4 5, VII | show me in any satisfactory fashion what I so ardently desired:
5 6, VII | whirlpool of Carthaginian fashion - where frivolous spectacles
6 6, IX | men: and being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself,
7 6, XVII | it had known it in some fashion, it could have had no sure
8 9, XL | down. I can exist in this fashion but I do not wish to do
9 10, V | in thy hand from which to fashion the heaven and the earth,421
10 10, VIII | my God? I see it after a fashion, but I do not know how to
11 11, VIII | nature, perceptible in some fashion to fishes and the things
12 11, XXII | flowing in so beautiful a fashion, are not formless and invisible.
13 11, XXIX | singing and then adapt or fashion them into the form of a
14 11, XXXII| to be interpreted in this fashion?504 Allow me, therefore,
15 12 | mystical and allegorical fashion so as to exhibit the profundities
16 12, XI | conceive? Who can in any fashion express it plainly? Who
17 12, XXIV | multiplied on the earth. In like fashion, I might say that this blessing
18 12, XXIV | corporeally! In similar fashion, the “young fish” in “the
19 12, XXX | that thou didst collect and fashion and weave them together,
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