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1 1 (1)| God and keep your powder dry." ~
2 1, 5 | pitcher with full belly but dry lip;~How canst thou ever
3 1, 8 | hundred beauties~'Tis as one dry stick in a garden of green
4 1, 17 | has gone and it becomes dry,~If the camel crops that
5 1, 17 | tis "form," 'tis as the dry and coarse thorn.~And thou
6 1, 17 | helpless being,~Eatest this dry thing in the same manner,~
7 1, 17 | become mingled with dust, dry in pith and rind.~O camel,
8 2, 5 | low,~Sometimes makes it dry and sometimes moist.~The
9 2, 18 | was earthy, and her wing dry land.~The longing for the
10 2, 18 | mother.~Thy longing for dry land comes to thee from
11 2, 18 | Leave thy nurse on the dry land and push on,~Enter
12 2, 18 | land."~The angels go not on dry land,~And the animals know
13 3, 2 | has no cognizance. ~The dry branch and the green are
14 3, 2 | fruits? ~But as for the dry branch) from its nearness
15 3, 2 | it but more quickly grow dry and sapless? ~Be not intoxicated
16 5, 10 | landed on the shore and dry land,~Which is its home,
17 5, 11 | wills is," and "The pen is dry, and alters not its writing,"
18 6, 4 | last you are seen to be dry and hollow.~O gourd, your
19 6, 7 | another species that lived on dry land."~Comparison of the
20 6, 9 | horse of wood is useless on dry land,~It is the special
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