Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 1, 3, 5 | grass, and of thousands of trees. There are characters, some
2 1, 3, 8 | great thinkers may form. Trees, grass, mountains, rivers,
3 1, 3, 8 | idea. Why not, then, these trees, grass, etc., the alphabets
4 1, 3, 8 | haunt,~Finds tongues in trees, books in the running brooks,~
5 1, 4, 3 | not non-intelligent like~trees and stone. Is it conscious?
6 1, 4, 4 | mountains, rivers, and trees; now he has a large body;
7 1, 4, 8 | If there be no change in trees and grass, they are utterly
8 1, 4, 11| old, mountains, rivers, trees, serpents, oxen, and eagles
9 1, 4, 11| will, just as we say that trees and grass turn their leaves
10 1, 5, 22| paved smoothly, grass and trees always blooming, birds ever
11 1, 6, 13| So destined are growing trees, rising generations, prospering
12 1, 6, 13| that dust come flowers. Trees may die out, yet they are
13 1, 8, 2 | fire, water, air, grass, trees, rivers, hills, thunder,
14 1, 8, 13| I do not see my cow,~But trees and grass,~And hear the
15 1, 8, 13| landscape full of lovely trees in full blossom.~"There
16 1, 8, 15| directions, the earth, grass, trees, walls, fences, tiles, pebbles-in
17 Appen, 1 | after his birth? Why are trees and grass which were also
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