Part, Chapter
1 1, 6 | naught, without eyes or ears,~And at these words they
2 1, 13 | mire,~Is audible by the ears of men of heart!~Tho philosopher,
3 1, 15 | as slaves with rings in ears;~Dancing and clapping hands
4 2, 1 | Would you have eyes and ears of reason clear,~Tear off
5 2, 1 | how greed closes up the ears.~Every man subject to greed
6 2, 2 | that if he had kept his ears open he must have heard
7 2, 10 | as golden earrings in his ears.~Then follow anecdotes of
8 3, 9 | will or no;~Their eyes and ears are open and the snare is
9 3, 9 | release me!" ~His eyes and ears are open, and he is free
10 3, 13 | ye have locks upon your ears and your hearts. 4 ~No condition
11 4, 2 | Soon will death pull thy ears, as if thou wert ~A thief
12 4, 6 | as I make your head and ears bleed with my stick. ~In
13 4, 7 | divine voice reached his ears:~"Why hast thou sown and
14 4, 8 | those waters reaches my ears,~My brain and senses are
15 5, 6 | pay one-tenth of the green ears of corn, another tenth of
16 5, 7 | others, resolutely shut his ears to the Earth's entreaties,
17 5, 13 | oft-told secrets into inanimate ears?~Like the Arab lover to
18 5, 13 | heart, but it touches your ears only.~The thesis that silence
19 5, 13 | expressions may indicate that the ears only, and not the heart,
20 5, 13 | properties of an eye;~Your ears, now worthless as wool,
21 6, Prol| Did not evil eyes or evil ears hold them back.~Of these
22 6, 9 | voice sounds sweet in my ears,~And his wailing and cries
23 6, 9 | How strange you have no ears!~Though I utter cries, you
24 6, 9 | you hear them not;~Sensual ears, however sharp, are deaf
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