Book, Chapter
1 I, 13| whose body is intact, their soul corrupt. But that virgin
2 I, 25| to another. 4411 “For the soul that sinneth, it shall die.”
3 I, 37| man Adam was made a living soul, the last Adam was made
4 II, 8 | vice has access to the soul. The metropolis and citadel
5 II, 8 | entered by its doors. The soul is distressed by the disorder
6 II, 8 | kind, the liberty of the soul is lost through the windows
7 II, 8 | recollection of vice forces the soul to take part in them, and
8 II, 10| horses madly racing, but the soul like a charioteer holds
9 II, 10| governed by the reasonable soul rushes to its own destruction.
10 II, 10| of the relations between soul and body; 4758 they say
11 II, 10| say the body is a boy, the soul his tutor. Hence the 4759
12 II, 10| historian tells us “that our soul directs, our body serves.
13 II, 10| the free movement of the soul: for it is the way with
14 II, 11| the nurses of avarice. The soul greatly exults when you
15 II, 15| the garlic: but now our soul is dried away: we have nought
16 II, 17| who does not afflict his soul shall die and be cut off
17 II, 29| the essence of the human soul and the essence of God are
18 II, 31| lieth,” says one, “kills the soul.” I suspect that you, like
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