Chap., §
1 I, 7 | things which can benefit the mind, I' feel it incumbent upon
2 I, 29 | He would so dispose the mind of the king that all the
3 III, 151 | of art produced upon the mind when they were finished.~
4 IV, 200 | such awe and confusion of mind as to make one feel that
5 IV, 201 | profoundly affected in his mind at the thought of the sanctity
6 VI, 303 | invisible movement of the mind, the rapidity of its particular
7 VI, 311 | thought that occurred to the mind, but with a view to truth
8 VIII, 405| 22 For the mind mostly busies itself in
9 VIII, 410| certain natural bent of mind. It is probable that most
10 IX, 437 | possible unless God dispose the mind to the pursuit of the noblest
11 IX, 445 | 14 And he said, 'When the mind is conscious that it has
12 IX, 449 | multitudes, and that his mind ought not to be occupied
13 IX, 451 | But God will incline your mind, O King, to all that is
14 IX, 456 | By keeping before your mind,' he replied, 'the thought
15 IX, 467 | to God to instil into our mind a regard for these things.'~
16 X, 502 | But to possess an alert mind and to be able to form a
17 X, 523 | since God bestows upon you a mind which is pure and untainted
18 XI, 557 | had been driven out of his mind for more than thirty days
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