Book, Chapter
1 1, XIII| in our life, if it were forgotten: reading and writing, or
2 3, XII | many things I have simply forgotten. But thou gavest her then
3 6, VII | created,161 thou hadst not forgotten him who was one day to be
4 8, IV | those holidays? I have not forgotten them; nor will I be silent
5 9, VIII| them - except what I have forgotten. There also I meet myself
6 9, IX | liberal sciences, and has not forgotten - removed still further,
7 9, XVI | sound signified if I had forgotten what the name means? When,
8 9, XIX | remembered it. Yet we had indeed forgotten it.~Perhaps the whole of
9 9, XIX | man we know, and, having forgotten his name, try to recall
10 9, XIX | For we have not entirely forgotten anything if we can remember
11 9, XIX | can remember that we have forgotten it. For a lost notion, one
12 9, XIX | one that we have entirely forgotten, we cannot even search for.~
13 9, XX | remembering, as though I had forgotten it and still knew that I
14 9, XX | and still knew that I had forgotten it? Do I seek it in longing
15 9, XX | known or had so completely forgotten as not even to remember
16 9, XX | even to remember that I had forgotten it? Is not the happy life
17 9, XXIV| learned this I have not forgotten. And thus since the time
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