Book, Paragraph

1   I,   2| twilights of summer? Have the winds at all exhausted their violence?
2   I,   9|      a long time there are no winds, and that the blasts of
3   I,  20|      hurtful cold, by noxious winds, by the most occult diseases,
4  II,  37|       would the blasts of the winds be lulled? and from the
5 III,  24|      the season of night, the winds, the rains, the fruits,
6   V,  21| terrible form of a dragon: he winds his huge coils round the
7  VI,   4|     drenching storms of rain, winds, showers, or the rays of
8  VI,  10|       understand that all the winds are only a flow of air driven
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