Book, Chapter
1 1, XVIII | commandments. It is as if he should feel that there is an enemy who
2 2, IX | great misfortune for me to feel it. But still, what was
3 3, II | grief and pity. Nowadays I feel much more pity for one who
4 3, II | compassion, but the sorrow I feel in it has no delight for
5 3, V | different from what I now feel. When I then turned toward
6 4, XI | follow you. Whatever you feel through it is but partial.
7 6, XIX | time not; at one time to feel some emotion, at another
8 7, XII | enough away that I could feel that even his presence was
9 9, XIV | is thus recalling them, feel in the mouth of his reflection
10 9, XX | spoken in Latin, he does not feel delighted, for he does not
11 9, XXV | living creature (such as we feel when we rejoice or are grief-stricken,
12 9, XXX | who did it, while we still feel sorry that in some way it
13 9, XXXII | light. Thus no man ought to feel secure in this life, the
14 9, XXXV | Taste how it shines,” or “Feel how it flashes,” since all
15 9, XXXVII| how do I know whether I feel this way because I am unwilling
16 9, XXXIX | heart, and I would rather feel my wounds being cured by
17 10, XV | it has been given you to feel and measure the periods
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