Book, Paragraph

1   I,  10| excessive moisture by a burning drought, or by the outpouring of
2  II,   8|       filled with wisdom's pure drought, is there in life any kind
3  II,  40|  laboured through blight, hail, drought; and at last forced by hunger
4   V,  25|        takes and drinks off the drought spurned before, and the
5   V,  35|    rustic hospitality; what the drought of cyceon means, the refusal
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