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| Alphabetical [« »] malicious 1 maliciously 1 malt 1 man 35 managed 1 manages 2 mane 1 | Frequency [« »] 36 oft 36 why 35 having 35 man 34 sweet 33 see 33 should | Kristijonas Donelaitis The seasons IntraText - Concordances man |
Season
1 Spring| God! ~You too, o futile man, be thankful and content: ~ 2 Spring| speed!" ~Here you, O futile man, must learn to be content. ~ 3 Spring| of complaints. ~To you, O man, the Lord has given more 4 Spring| or a hawk? ~Has that foe, man, shot down some poor liegeman 5 Spring| quack or moo within some man's back yard. ~And He provides 6 Spring| punishes the world. ~And man, that heartless foe, oft 7 Spring| to gorge fresh meats: the man." ~As this discourse went 8 Spring| Quote Prickus, "A young man, meseems, is but a fool ~ 9 Spring| arrives. ~"O Adam, the first man of this wanton mankind,~ 10 Spring| the wise advice of my old man, ~And will repeat his words 11 Summer| precious gift to any mortal man. ~For he who toils and sweats 12 Summer| devil takes you all..." ~Ah, man O man, have you become bereft 13 Summer| takes you all..." ~Ah, man O man, have you become bereft 14 Summer| holes, ~Because of this man's hellish rage, grew faint 15 Summer| serfdom ~Was such a gentle man, that all recalling him ~ 16 Summer| on a dog, ~As if such a man was abject even to see. ~ 17 Summer| herd the nasty pigs of old man Bleberis ~Then having herded 18 Summer| not nice for a gray-headed man, ~To be shamed by the work 19 Summer| revive our souls. ~"But man O man, fail not to glorify 20 Summer| revive our souls. ~"But man O man, fail not to glorify His 21 Autumn| e'en the most brilliant man. ~Lauriene, Pakuliene, Berge 22 Autumn| kill and slay our food.~Man, slaughter right away that 23 Autumn| distinctly marked to ev'ry man his place, ~And so one like 24 Autumn| was an abased and abject man. ~"But, ah, when I was young - 25 Autumn| peaceful men. ~Many a decent man forsook his happy home ~ 26 Autumn| the crops so hard.~Many a man, who ate the mixed mass 27 Autumn| too; ~Puts them in her man's lap, and drinks along 28 Winter| their homes? ~And then, one man by overheating his old stove, ~ 29 Winter| is a fine and honorable man;~He cherishes his friends 30 Winter| too bad, when oft a stupid man ~Shoots rashly and burns 31 Winter| simpleton that skins the poor man's back ~Is not ashamed to 32 Winter| so governing to cherish man and God." ~"You," Prickus 33 Winter| That for five days the man was forced to stay in bed; ~ 34 Winter| work. ~"We, aging dusty man, we bent and careworn souls;~ 35 Winter| human days wear out. ~"Each man, be he a lord or a boor,