Part, Dialogue
1 1, Int| pilgrims from all parts, come to celebrate the jubilee
2 1, 1 | Under one sign and standard come.~But yet for some in vain
3 1, 2 | so far as they diminish, come to be virtues, because they
4 1, 2 | other extreme, it does not come to be in the conditions
5 1, 3 | than ordinarily; and they come in the end to speak and
6 1, 3 | unless it means his having come out from the Platonic groove
7 1, 4 | of that wide sphere,~And come not back to me till thou
8 1, 4 | thoughts, the time being come in which those impediments
9 1, 4 | banished. Whence he says, "Come not back to me till thou
10 1, 4 | of you once more behold,~Come back to me from those retaining
11 1, 4 | of things intelligible, come to the succour of the body
12 1, 4 | And these, although late, come and show themselves, but
13 1, 4 | tardily turning towards her, come rather to draw her up than,
14 1, 4 | then that individual souls come to be influenced differently
15 1, 4 | ascension and descension, and come to display various kinds
16 1, 4 | beginning.~TANS. Now to come to the proposition: From
17 1, 4 | effect,~And so at last may come to enjoy with joy,~As he
18 1, 4 | fulness. Then will happiness come to me in that manner which
19 1, 5 | everywhere present, and ready to come to the aid of whosoever
20 1, 5 | fate conduct;~But thou wilt come again, again behold thy
21 1, 5 | the same spirit and soul come to inhabit it. The enthusiast
22 1, 5 | friend to one that he may come to feel contempt and indifference
23 1, 5 | this we shall see when we come to read the lines:~36.~Sons
24 2, 1 | past, of now, and of to come,~Pat me in fear, in anguish
25 2, 1 | inevitable that from evil they come to good, from good to evil,
26 2, 1 | divers forms ornate she come~Through vows I offer to
27 2, 1 | the better heard, but to come into the inner self believing
28 2, 1 | this aspiration of his he come not to say: "Nitimur incassum"?~
29 2, 1 | all care to the soul doth come:~Seek I myself from pain
30 2, 1 | That is all well. Let us come to that which follows. I
31 2, 1 | elements, the nearer they come to their natural place,
32 2, 1 | whales, lords of the seas, come not with treachery,~But
33 2, 1 | But the assaults of Love come stealing secretly.~The animal
34 2, 1 | in sky, does this fellow come and tyrannize over the whole
35 2, 1 | lest thou shouldst see him come.~If thee no friendly aid
36 2, 2 | carefully we use it, should come to be chiefly consumed about
37 2, 2 | highest love. Let us now come to the consideration of
38 2, 2 | was subject to one should come to be subject to the other.~
39 2, 3 | than burning fire;~If to come near me is to feel the blaze,~
40 2, 3 | many, why does Neptune not come to tyrannize over the kingdoms
41 2, 3 | than the other. But let us come at once to the answers if
42 2, 3 | if it is not limited, may come to be poison. Thus it is
43 2, 4 | the which habit cannot come into use for the multitude,
44 2, 5 | goddess. When they were come there, the majesty of the
45 2, 5 | of the British Isles, and come into the presence of the
46 2, 5 | beauteous hands,~Of those who come anear for remedy,~Its god-like
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