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Auctor incertus (Tertullianus?)
A strain of the Judgment of the Lord

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(Hapax - words occurring once)


1-gehen | gem-silen | simil-youth

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     Verse                                        grey = Comment text
501 276 | The gem: here shines the prasinus;42 502 69(16) | solid mass of earth. See Gen. i. 9, 10.~ 503 345(48)| former, I attest the coming generations." This "attesting of its 504 216(36)| Virgil, Aen., vi. 305 sqq.; Georg., iv. 475 sqq.~ 505 178 | Curved by the germen of the fruits. While then~ 506 283 | In blooming time, and germens fruitfullest~ 507 277 | The carbuncle; and giant-emerald~ 508 302 | and there Crete's healing gift44 ~ 509 359 | Your seasons-God's gifts-fruitful with fair yields!~ 510 332 | His ample table's pledges given; hath done~ 511 195(33)| earth, as their mother, giving them birth our of her womb, 512 120 | He bids be forthwith by glad gales~ 513 491 | your senseless eyes do glaze,~ 514 275 | coloured pebbles beauteous gleams~ 515 377 | brimstone; doomed to suffer glowing ires~ 516 276 | shines the prasinus;42 there glows~ 517 391 | will the conflagrations gnash~ 518 281 | Here, a native, lies the gold~ 519 238 | Wreaths golden-red; and all submissive kneel~ 520 263 | With golden-ruddy light. One gladsome flower,~ 521 435 | Made sacred to gore-stained images~ 522 115 | 115 Their tardy bodies governs He-against~ 523 2 | muses? and with flowers will grace~ 524 360 | Roses were vernal; the grain's summer-tide~ 525 163 | And yellow with the living grains? and, rich~ 526 124(21)| as obscure as defiance of grammar can well make it. The sense 527 28 | Full granaries by fruit of slender stalks 528 9 | And cut from waving grass the leafy flowers?~ 529 278 | Is green with grassy light. Here too are born~ 530 469 | Their gratulating homage. Certain 'tis~ 531 384 | Descend in clouds. 3 Then greedy Tartarus~ 532 100 | More frequent grew atrocious deed; and toil~ 533 195(33)| keeping, up, earth will grieve at the throes it causes 534 200 | sepulchres are burst, and every ground~ 535 282 | radiant sheen; and lofty groves reach heaven~ 536 510 | All growing to a flame; thus shall ye, 537 331 | with accusation; hath to guests~ 538 46 | And guide it into our new-fumed lands~ 539 95 | By guile, the thresholds oped to 540 74 | 75 Of God, such guilt rashly t' incur I Beyond~ 541 445 | lurked, or robed with wicked guise~ 542 124(21)| their death, shut up in Hades to await the "decreed age," 543 202 | Outbelches living peoples; to the hair35 ~ 544 428 | His life's excesses, handiworks unjust,~ 545 267 | rosy flowers. No region happier~ 546 340 | Their harmless way with comrade messengers.~ 547 4 | The summer harvest's heavy stalks mature?~ 548 164 | With various usury,26 new harvests rise~ 549 115 | Their tardy bodies governs He-against~ 550 202(35)| Comis, here "the heads."~ 551 302 | life; and there Crete's healing gift44 ~ 552 42 | Healthful will from their fountainheads 553 253 | And healthier blows the breeze; day is 554 355 | sounds of heaven ye have heard; have seen~ 555 449 | Of evil deeds: him mighty heat shall rack,~ 556 408 | With heats infernal, where, in furnaces~ 557 62 | Above high heavens; omnipotent alone;~ 558 425 | Heavenward its palms; and then will 559 4 | The summer harvest's heavy stalks mature?~ 560 197 | stars move and quake from height~ 561 108 | Who o'er the heights the summits holds of heaven~ 562 380 | ardour of an endless raging hell;53 ~ 563 327 | With faithful help a friend in indigence;~ 564 232 | from His seat; with martyrs hemmed~ 565 370 | Horrible!) have God's heralds put to flight;50 ~ 566 241(40)| it would seem to mean "hereon." ~ 567 241(40)| have corrected "his" for "hic." If the latter be retained, 568 403 | Are hidden. Ether thickens. O'er the 569 231 | And on His high-raised throne the Heavenly One~ 570 213 | Mothers, and sires, and high-soured youths, and boys,~ 571 256(41)| Cardine, i.e., the hinge as it were upon which the 572 418 | Wild is the hissing of the flames, and thence~ 573 75(19) | contingeret."Whether I have hit the sense here I know not. 574 413 | With miry bottom. Hither will be sent,~ 575 220 | 220 Of the mid-world, and hold the frosty star's~ 576 58 | Alway for aye; holding the ages12 all;~ 577 469 | Their gratulating homage. Certain 'tis~ 578 313 | Is homeless; he is into worthy courts~ 579 223(37)| king." The "Atridae" of Homer are referred to, - Agamemnon " 580 299 | Rich honies with green cane their fragrance 581 345(48)| 44. It appeals to them in hope of mitigating its doom.~ 582 370 | Horrible!) have God's heralds put 583 409 | Horrific, penal deed roars loud, 584 423 | Then human progeny its bygone deeds~ 585 164(26)| some sixty-fold, some an hundred-fold." See the parable of the 586 366 | 365 Hung, and the rivers trembling 587 151 | The entrails have, in hunger, satisfied~ 588 352 | the lowest bottom they are hurled!~ 589 334 | Enjoined; done hurt to none; ne'er coveted~ 590 94 | Transgressed) deceived her husband. Eve, induced~ 591 29 | 30 'Mid ice, with olives black; who 592 363 | The olives, icy though they were: 'twas 593 48 | Still ignorant of God, and knowing naught~ 594 180(30)| the allusion is to Eph. ii. 2, Matt. xxiv. 29, Luke 595 113 | Of ill-desert, and all the souls which 596 502 | Wicked ill-stains contracted; and appease~ 597 75(19) | Immemor ille Dei temere committere tale!~ 598 76 | One fruit illicit, whence he was to know~ 599 91 | wife who counselled all the ills),~ 600 435 | Made sacred to gore-stained images~ 601 275 | 275 Imbued. With coloured pebbles beauteous 602 216(36)| This passage is imitated from Virgil, Aen., vi. 305 603 124(21)| while the vast majority are, immediately on their death, shut up 604 75(19) | Immemor ille Dei temere committere 605 17 | sea fluctuates with wave immense:~ 606 83 | and mandates useful did impart~ 607 430 | at the knowledge of the impious deeds~ 608 30 | Their increments of vigour various;~ 609 74 | God, such guilt rashly t' incur I Beyond~ 610 285 | 285 Hath Ind herself forth-stretcht; 611 | indeed 612 327 | faithful help a friend in indigence;~ 613 94 | deceived her husband. Eve, induced~ 614 247 | Amid light's inextinguishable airs,~ 615 408 | With heats infernal, where, in furnaces~ 616 206 | With simultaneously infused blood:~ 617 373 | Inhered. Ye then shall reap the 618 330 | Rescued the innocent, and succoured them~ 619 237(39)| seqq. xx. 3, 4, and to the inscribed mitre of the Jewish high 620 193(32)| the words are probably inserted, because the conflagration 621 237(39)| Insigni. The allusion seems to be 622 454 | And (by God's inspiration warned) oft told~ 623 102 | the crafty serpent spread, inspired~ 624 23 | living which each people so inspires;~ 625 47(9) | endeavoured to give some intelligible sense to these lines; but 626 103 | self:) then peoples more invent~ 627 203 | members cleave; the bones inwoven are~ 628 467(59)| Ipsa voce," unless it mean "voice 629 395 | The savage flame's ire meets them fugitive!~ 630 0(1) | to the original. It was irksome to reproduce them; but fidelity 631 | itself 632 216(36)| vi. 305 sqq.; Georg., iv. 475 sqq.~ 633 237(39)| allusion seems to be to Ezek. ix. 4, 6, Rev. vii.3 et seqq. 634 237(39)| the inscribed mitre of the Jewish high priest, see Ex. xxviii. 635 299 | green cane their fragrance Join,~ 636 280 | dense leaf gladsome amomum Joins~ 637 447 | Iniquitous, was wont to joy; whoe'er~ 638 317 | Joying in an eternal covenant;~ 639 338 | Thanksgivings to the Lord in joyous wise~ 640 513 | starry kingdom's golden joys.~ 641 183 | The whole world's31 Judge! His countless ministers~ 642 128 | Of pious duties, by God's judgments taught;~ 643 81 | Of His own love! and jurisdiction gave~ 644 378(51)| in Migne) of justis for justas. ~ 645 378(51)| suggested in Migne) of justis for justas. ~ 646 295 | 295 An odour keen); such aspect on its leaves~ 647 195(33)| render the dead, whom she is keeping, up, earth will grieve at 648 121 | to life, and be in secret kept~ 649 308 | her birth-throes, with a kindlier blast~ 650 513 | Seeing the starry kingdom's golden joys.~ 651 238 | golden-red; and all submissive kneel~ 652 48 | Still ignorant of God, and knowing naught~ 653 430 | And at the knowledge of the impious deeds~ 654 148 | If one, perhaps, laid on sepulchral pyre,~ 655 154 | reft by birds, unhid have lain:~ 656 222 | Of every land stands frighted here: the 657 351 | 350 (Too late!) with clamour loud: pardon 658 | latter 659 375 | know; yet are ye wont to laugh at Him.~ 660 117 | Men lay aside their ponderous limbs, 661 280 | 280 And with dense leaf gladsome amomum Joins~ 662 9 | cut from waving grass the leafy flowers?~ 663 479 | Is open. Learn that God can do whate'er~ 664 91 | Led by a wife who counselled 665 456 | 455 Did lend his ears. But God Almighty 666 396 | 395 And now at length they own the penalty~ 667 195(33)| have ventured to alter one letter of the Latin; and for "quos 668 452 | Thus shall the vast crowd lie of mourning men!~ 669 281 | fragrance. Here, a native, lies the gold~ 670 356 | 355 Its lightnings; have experienced its rains~ 671 12 | To meet the lightsome2 muses! to disclose~ 672 | likely 673 71 | His own fair likeness17 to exist in him;~ 674 271 | Such lilies, nor do such upon our plains~ 675 60 | Limitless God; who holds alone His 676 225 | 225 Coequally in line with pauper peers.~ 677 480 | He list; for 'tis enough for Him 678 321 | Here whosoe'er hath lived~ 679 173 | shaded; and the phoenix lives~ 680 287 | So lofty-leaved is her cypress crisped;~ 681 500 | Quite banish; and let long-inveterate fault~ 682 268 | other spots; none which in look~ 683 473 | In lowliest beds, until-time's circuit 684 476(61)| of "suam lucem" for "sua luce," is adopted.~ 685 476(61)| in Migne's ed., of "suam lucem" for "sua luce," is adopted.~ 686 12(2) | Luciferas.~ 687 180(30)| ii. 2, Matt. xxiv. 29, Luke xxi. 26.~ 688 102 | This lure the crafty serpent spread, 689 445 | Wherein death lurked, or robed with wicked guise~ 690 264 | With its own lustre clad, another clothes;~ 691 236 | them. And now priests in lustrous robes~ 692 260 | 260 Luxuriant, bears all things; in the 693 131(22)| xlix. 14 (xlviii. 15 in LXX.).~ 694 433 | worshipped stones unsteady, lyingly~ 695 52(11) | eterne." - Shakespeare, Macbeth, act iii. scene 2.~ 696 214 | And maids unwedded; and deceased old 697 309 | there is none; the stars maintain~ 698 124(21)| brief, that while the vast majority are, immediately on their 699 241 | To these40 the Lord will mandate give, to range~ 700 114 | reason's force much-erring manf-nor less~ 701 184 | Forthwith conjoin their rushing march, and God ~ 702 237 | Attend, who wear upon their marked39 front~ 703 204 | With marrow; the entwined sinews rule~ 704 407 | Fiery, and a dreadful marsh white-hot~ 705 302(44)| This seems to be marshmallows.~ 706 232 | Coruscates from His seat; with martyrs hemmed~ 707 4 | summer harvest's heavy stalks mature?~ 708 260 | bears all things; in the meads~ 709 12 | To meet the lightsome2 muses! to 710 395 | The savage flame's ire meets them fugitive!~ 711 362 | Its mellow fruits; the rugged winter 712 203 | The members cleave; the bones inwoven 713 223(37)| Agamemnon "king of men," and Menelaus.~ 714 318(46)| widest sense, both bodily and mental; or perhaps "safety," "salvation."~ 715 256 | In the meridian41 of His cloudless seat.~ 716 347 | Of flames, their merit's due, and stagnant pools~ 717 348(49)| stands thus: "Flammas pro meritis, stagnantia tela tremiscunt."~ 718 340 | harmless way with comrade messengers.~ 719 220 | 220 Of the mid-world, and hold the frosty star' 720 | might 721 182 | Heaven's mightiest murmurs, on the approach 722 300 | 300 And milk flows potable in runners 723 43 | And may this strain of mine the gladsome shower~ 724 412 | surge the turbid sand all mingled is~ 725 183 | s31 Judge! His countless ministers~ 726 413 | With miry bottom. Hither will be sent,~ 727 495 | pious sacred rites your past misdeeds~ 728 345(48)| appeals to them in hope of mitigating its doom.~ 729 237(39)| 4, and to the inscribed mitre of the Jewish high priest, 730 75(19) | committere tale!~Non ultra monitum quidquam contingeret."Whether 731 87 | and the sea's race, and monsterforms~ 732 504 | Most evil mortal things to living good~ 733 213 | Mothers, and sires, and high-soured 734 70 | Did love to mould; and furthermore did will~ 735 286 | Rears on her mount the pine; nor with a shade~ 736 452 | shall the vast crowd lie of mourning men!~ 737 180 | 180 And deeply moved are the high air's powers,30 ~ 738 18 | What power5 moves the solid lands to quake;~ 739 114 | By reason's force much-erring manf-nor less~ 740 458 | Mid multitudes of such like signs promulged.~ 741 36(7) | Mundum.~ 742 79(20) | Munera mundi. ~ 743 | my 744 | myself 745 132 | Without a name; and in God's ear, now deaf,~ 746 14(3) | Helicon is not named in the original, but it 747 281 | Its fragrance. Here, a native, lies the gold~ 748 48 | ignorant of God, and knowing naught~ 749 334 | Enjoined; done hurt to none; ne'er coveted~ 750 47(9) | it now stands, makes it necessary to guess at the meaning 751 66(14) | the exertion (so to speak) needed to do such mighty works 752 328 | Succoured the over-toiling needy one,~ 753 446 | 445 His breast, or at his neighbour's ill, or gain~ 754 | Never 755 273 | New-born, 'tis opened by the breeze; 756 46 | And guide it into our new-fumed lands~ 757 36 | decked with varied star the new-made world;7 ~ 758 358 | How often nights and days serene do make~ 759 75(19) | temere committere tale!~Non ultra monitum quidquam contingeret." 760 243 | To set apart by number the depraved;~ 761 50 | The care-effacing living nymph, and through~ 762 195(33)| commands," i.e., to render obedience to them; or else, "to render ( 763 63 | Whom all things do obey; who for Himself~ 764 55 | Alone the object of our prayers; who 'neath~ 765 124(21)| the original, which is as obscure as defiance of grammar can 766 279 | The cinnamons, with odoriferous twigs;~ 767 490(62)| suggestion, for "quia;" and Oehler's and Migne's punctuation 768 | off 769 468 | And offer God and so-victorious Christ~ 770 333 | All things divinely; pious offices~ 771 | often 772 62 | Above high heavens; omnipotent alone;~ 773 414 | the captive crowd of evil ones,~ 774 438 | Revered; whome'er ill error onward hath~ 775 7 | ever-peaceful? and will ope~ 776 95 | By guile, the thresholds oped to death, and proved~ 777 273 | New-born, 'tis opened by the breeze; nor is~ 778 201 | bones from wide chasms, and opening sand~ 779 242 | people in twin lines; and orders them~ 780 209 | Each its own organs, as at their own place~ 781 329 | As orphans' patron, and the poor man' 782 | ours 783 314 | Out-gone, nor is't e'er granted him 784 401 | 400 (His ray out-measured) divides the orb,~ 785 311 | Are absent; and out-shut is fear, and cares~ 786 202 | Outbelches living peoples; to the hair35 ~ 787 272 | Outbloom; nor does the rose so blush, 788 201 | Outpours bones from wide chasms, 789 420 | and limbs sonorous,57 will outrise~ 790 138 | He could outstretch the light, and could compound~ 791 | over 792 328 | Succoured the over-toiling needy one,~ 793 471(60)| See note 1, p. 137.~ 794 389(54)| but see note 5 on this page.~ 795 451 | 450 In passing painful death, their punishment.~ 796 164(26)| an hundred-fold." See the parable of the sower.~ 797 344 | Wailing its crimes; with parching tears it pours~ 798 351 | late!) with clamour loud: pardon withheld,~ 799 305 | 305 Thence water parted lands.45 The garden robed~ 800 119 | And take in diverse parts their proper spheres~ 801 194 | The roar, parturient of men, whom she,~ 802 216(36)| This passage is imitated from Virgil, 803 75(19) | not. In this and in other passages I have punctuated for myself.~ 804 495 | pious sacred rites your past misdeeds~ 805 65 | Him to be pastor of beasts tame, and lord~ 806 498 | Then turn to right paths, and keep sanctities.~ 807 0(1) | expressions with which his patience will be tried, are due to 808 329 | As orphans' patron, and the poor man's aid;~ 809 225 | 225 Coequally in line with pauper peers.~ 810 289 | Here black firs on lofty peak~ 811 275 | 275 Imbued. With coloured pebbles beauteous gleams~ 812 225 | Coequally in line with pauper peers.~ 813 409 | Horrific, penal deed roars loud, and seethes,~ 814 92 | By death he 'gan to perish. Woman 'twas~ 815 172 | Light perishes when by the coming eve~ 816 80 | Permit to man, and sealed the sweet 817 250 | And in bright body spend perpetual life.~ 818 193(32)| therein" predicted in 2 Pet. iii. 10, and referred to 819 173 | world27 is shaded; and the phoenix lives~ 820 436 | 435 Altars; hath voiceless pictured figures feared;~ 821 509 | Thus shall your piety find better things~ 822 286 | Rears on her mount the pine; nor with a shade~ 823 343 | The just, then comes a pitiable crowd~ 824 455 | The future, none ('tis pity!) none (alas!)~ 825 305(45)| Here again it is plain that the writer is drawing 826 482 | And Him nought plainly, by withstanding, checks.~ 827 64 | 65 Formed, when it pleased Him, man for aye; and gave~ 828 80 | and sealed the sweet sweet pledge~ 829 332 | His ample table's pledges given; hath done~ 830 389 | Are turned to plough it, and for all the years54 ~ 831 56 | threshold hath the whole world poised; Himself~ 832 444 | palms with blood of men, or poison mixt~ 833 117 | Men lay aside their ponderous limbs, and light~ 834 329 | orphans' patron, and the poor man's aid;~ 835 399 | Possest, is by the sea's profundity~ 836 195(33)| reading be retained, the only possible meaning seems to be "whom 837 300 | 300 And milk flows potable in runners full;~ 838 361 | not; the autumn variously poured~ 839 344 | with parching tears it pours~ 840 104 | 105 Practices of ill deeds; and by ill 841 508 | render ready voices to God's praise.~ 842 336 | 335 In divine praises, and themselves at once~ 843 276 | The gem: here shines the prasinus;42 there glows~ 844 350 | Forbids to pray, forbids to pour their cries~ 845 393 | seething tide with course precipitate;~ 846 193(32)| works that are therein" predicted in 2 Pet. iii. 10, and referred 847 35 | light, seas, sky, earth prepared,~ 848 112 | Prescient beforehand, keeps the progeny~ 849 111 | Of present time, and of futurity~ 850 331 | 330 When press with accusation; hath to 851 400 | Prest, at her farthest limit, 852 434 | Pretending to divinity; hath e'er~ 853 237(39)| mitre of the Jewish high priest, see Ex. xxviii. 36, xxxix. 854 236 | Above them. And now priests in lustrous robes~ 855 348(49)| Latin stands thus: "Flammas pro meritis, stagnantia tela 856 97 | A procreatrix of funereal woes.~ 857 399 | Possest, is by the sea's profundity~ 858 249 | Through promised wealth, through ever sunny 859 458 | multitudes of such like signs promulged.~ 860 25 | 25 Death's propagation; whence have rosy wreaths~ 861 119 | take in diverse parts their proper spheres~ 862 31 | young's soft shadowings protects~ 863 131(22)| Cf. Ps. xlix. 14 (xlviii. 15 in 864 339 | They psalming celebrate; and they shall 865 75(19) | in other passages I have punctuated for myself.~ 866 490(62)| and Oehler's and Migne's punctuation both are set aside.~ 867 451 | passing painful death, their punishment.~ 868 262 | The purple-not in envy-mingles all~ 869 148 | perhaps, laid on sepulchral pyre,~ 870 193(32)| Vel quanta est. If this be the right 871 296(43)| Or, "there." The question is, whether a different 872 490(62)| Qui" is read here, after Migne' 873 490(62)| Migne's suggestion, for "quia;" and Oehler's and Migne' 874 157 | Quickened from death 'fore God, and 875 68 | And quicklier than word15 had the seas 876 75(19) | tale!~Non ultra monitum quidquam contingeret."Whether I have 877 449 | deeds: him mighty heat shall rack,~ 878 282 | Of radiant sheen; and lofty groves 879 380 | The ardour of an endless raging hell;53 ~ 880 356 | lightnings; have experienced its rains~ 881 385 | With rapid fire enclosed is; and flame~ 882 74 | 75 Of God, such guilt rashly t' incur I Beyond~ 883 401 | 400 (His ray out-measured) divides the 884 19 | golden light first shot its rays~ 885 470 | That these no more re-sought their silent graves,~ 886 282 | sheen; and lofty groves reach heaven~ 887 0(1) | The reader is requested to bear in 888 508 | And render ready voices to God's praise.~ 889 248 | ancients' ever blooming realm,~ 890 373 | Inhered. Ye then shall reap the natural fruit~ 891 286 | Rears on her mount the pine; nor 892 114 | By reason's force much-erring manf-nor 893 121 | Recalled to life, and be in secret 894 511 | 510 Receive the gifts of the celestial 895 34 | 35 Be granted us to recognise through all~ 896 303 | Is sweetly redolent. tide,~ 897 398 | And now the reeling earth, by not a swain~ 898 345(48)| attesting of its acts" seems to refer to Matt. xxv. 44. It appeals 899 154 | His body reft by birds, unhid have lain:~ 900 212 | Of dead. Regaining light, there rise again~ 901 109 | Supreme, and in exalted regions dwells~ 902 325(47)| apparently his life in all other relations; unless it mean his life 903 325(47)| Reliquam vitam, i.e., apparently 904 472 | But the remaining host reposes now~ 905 54 | 55 To come, let such remember God is One,~ 906 166 | Renew their sheen; and day dies 907 51 | waves' virtue his lost life repair,~ 908 162 | With stalks repaired? and do they25 not grow 909 309 | Repairs. Night there is none; the 910 0(1) | effect, that the constant repetitions of words and expressions 911 472 | But the remaining host reposes now~ 912 0(1) | original. It was irksome to reproduce them; but fidelity is a 913 0(1) | The reader is requested to bear in mind, in reading 914 66(14) | of a speech; no more was requisite. See for a similar allusion 915 330 | Rescued the innocent, and succoured 916 216 | Of babes the groaning orb resounds.36 Then tribes~ 917 135 | able after death life to restore?~ 918 208 | Souls are restored, and seek to find again~ 919 316 | Rests in elect abode; and life 920 158 | Stand in their shapes resumed. Thus arid seeds~ 921 124(21)| graves after our Lord's resurrection (see Matt. xxvii. 51-54) 922 123 | Their bodies with resuscitated limbs~ 923 237(39)| to be to Ezek. ix. 4, 6, Rev. vii.3 et seqq. xx. 3, 4, 924 438 | Revered; whome'er ill error onward 925 239 | And reverently adore. The cry of all~ 926 124 | Revive.21 ) Then shall men 'gin 927 124(21)| and Elisha, the man who revived on touching Elisha's bones, 928 161(24)| i.e., the surface or ridge of the furrows.~ 929 28 | or makes the tree grow ripe ~ 930 221 | Riphaean citadels. Every colonist~ 931 463 | Had risen. Many 'wildered were, indeed,~ 932 495 | By pious sacred rites your past misdeeds~ 933 194 | The roar, parturient of men, whom 934 409 | Horrific, penal deed roars loud, and seethes,~ 935 441 | 440 Had stalked in robbery; whoe'er by fraud~ 936 236 | now priests in lustrous robes~ 937 360 | Roses were vernal; the grain's 938 160 | the fixt furrows die and rot: and hence~ 939 381 | a seething mass, through rotant pools~ 940 461 | 460 Roused from their sleep, He bids 941 224 | Of royalty put off; the rich man mixt~ 942 26 | Sweet smell and ruddy hue; what makes the vine~ 943 362 | Its mellow fruits; the rugged winter brake~ 944 204 | marrow; the entwined sinews rule~ 945 134 | whose law are all things ruled,~ 946 300 | And milk flows potable in runners full;~ 947 190 | 190 Rutilant are their bodies; heaven' 948 404 | Spreads sable darkness; and the latest 949 21(6) | Saeculo. ~ 950 318(46)| and mental; or perhaps "safety," "salvation."~ 951 195(33)| birth our of her womb, is said to teach them to do this. 952 124(21)| writer believes that the saints who came out of their graves 953 318(46)| Salus," health (probably) in its 954 | same 955 498 | to right paths, and keep sanctities.~ 956 453 | This oft as holy prophets sang of old,~ 957 151 | entrails have, in hunger, satisfied~ 958 52 | And'scape the penalties of flame eterne,11 ~ 959 379(52)| penalty eternal," it is scarcely less so.~ 960 99 | like seed, for aye, is scattered. Then~ 961 52(11) | Shakespeare, Macbeth, act iii. scene 2.~ 962 392 | world.55 There are they scorched~ 963 288 | Nor better in its season blooms her bough~ 964 359 | Your seasons-God's gifts-fruitful with fair 965 229 | Seated, is bright with light sublime; 966 217 | Various from their lowest seats will come:~ 967 439 | Seduced; whoe'er was an adulterer,~ 968 513 | Seeing the starry kingdom's golden 969 492 | Seek what remains worth seeking: watchful be~ 970 | seem 971 233 | troop of men), and by His seers~ 972 219 | Sees; those which dwell in the 973 409 | penal deed roars loud, and seethes,~ 974 459 | He 'stablished them58 by sending prophets more,~ 975 491 | By death's law fixt, your senseless eyes do glaze,~ 976 484 | With deepest senses. But, since death con~ 977 148 | If one, perhaps, laid on sepulchral pyre,~ 978 200 | 200 The sepulchres are burst, and every ground~ 979 237(39)| ix. 4, 6, Rev. vii.3 et seqq. xx. 3, 4, and to the inscribed 980 358 | How often nights and days serene do make~ 981 66(14) | Sermone tenus: i.e., the exertion ( 982 102 | This lure the crafty serpent spread, inspired~ 983 170 | its own stars; and the sun sets,~ 984 286 | mount the pine; nor with a shade~ 985 173 | The world27 is shaded; and the phoenix lives~ 986 437 | Hath slender shades of false divinity~ 987 31 | And with her young's soft shadowings protects~ 988 52(11) | s copy's not eterne." - Shakespeare, Macbeth, act iii. scene 989 142 | The well-known shape which erst had been, which 990 88 | Shapeless of swimming things. But 991 158 | Stand in their shapes resumed. Thus arid seeds~ 992 394 | thence back are borne in sharp career;~ 993 261 | Flowers shed their fragrance; and upon 994 131 | live wholly the life of sheep,22 ~ 995 19 | whence the golden light first shot its rays~ 996 43 | strain of mine the gladsome shower~ 997 431 | 430 of his own life will shudder. And now first,~ 998 496 | Which expiation need; and shun the storms,~ 999 458 | multitudes of such like signs promulged.~ 1000 470 | no more re-sought their silent graves,~


1-gehen | gem-silen | simil-youth

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