Book, Chapter
1 1, VI | instinctive affection, were willing to give me what thou hadst
2 1, X | children. They are therefore willing to have them beaten, if
3 1, XII | but my error in not being willing to learn thou didst use
4 4, VI | Indeed, I doubt whether I was willing to lose it, even for him -
5 4, VII | knew, but I was neither willing nor able to do; especially
6 5, VII | their death - though neither willing nor witting it - now began
7 5, VIII | me tight in her embrace, willing either to keep me back or
8 6, IX | 13. And first of all, willing to show me how thou dost “
9 7, V | unwilling sufferer than a willing actor. And yet it was through
10 7, VII | indeed that you were not willing to cast off the baggage
11 7, VIII | For in this, the power of willing is the power of doing; and
12 9, III | mind. They desire as those willing to believe - but will they
13 9, XXIII| too, since they are not willing to be deceived. And when
14 9, XXIII| And since they are not willing to be deceived, but do wish
15 9, XLIII| justified sinners, which he was willing to have in common with them.
16 12, XI | will. I am a knowing and a willing being; I know that I am
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