bold = Main text
Book, Chapter grey = Comment text
1 Int | reversed and man has looked as deeply as may be into the mystery
2 Int, 1 | glory. Augustine’s style is deeply personal; it is therefore
3 3, II | But if his feelings are deeply touched, he sits it out
4 3, II | would not probe into me too deeply (for I did not love to suffer
5 3, IV | heart had piously drunk in, deeply treasured even with my mother’
6 3, XI | this answer moved me more deeply than the dream itself. Still,
7 5, VIII | to my mother, who grieved deeply over my departure and followed
8 6, VII | upon the circus, and I was deeply grieved, for he seemed likely
9 7 | to Christ. Augustine is deeply impressed by Simplicianus’
10 8, IV | angry, and sin not.” And how deeply was I touched, O my God;
11 8, VI | hymns and canticles; how deeply was I moved by the voices
12 9, VI | Wherefore, still more deeply wilt thou have mercy on
13 10, XXII | these very same things lies deeply hid and its discovery is
14 11, I | CHAPTER I~ ~1. My heart is deeply stirred, O Lord, when in
15 11, VI | themselves and looked more deeply into their mutability, by
16 11, VI(462)| 236C-237B), but he clearly is deeply influenced here by Plotinus;
17 12, XX | sea - the human race - so deeply prying, so boisterously
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