Part, Dialogue
1 1, Int| ever breathed the stifling air of a dungeon; and again:~
2 1, 2 | burn;~Am mute, and fill the air with clamorous plaints.~
3 1, 3 | desire,~The more I feel the air beneath my feet,~So much
4 1, 3 | this my death?~Out on the air my heart's voice do I hear:~"
5 1, 5 | dissipated in puffs into the air. Here is signified the heart
6 1, 5 | gusty sighs agitates the air. Therefore he says: "At
7 1, 5 | freely to the sea.The greedy air receives from out my breast~
8 1, 5 | diminish not.~Thus pay I to the air, the sea, the fire,~The
9 1, 5 | tears, my zeal.~The sea, the air, the fire, accept a part
10 1, 5 | his breast into the wide air sighs in a great multitude,
11 1, 5 | which, cooling itself in the air, smokes, and transmigrates
12 1, 5 | constructs castles in the air, and amongst other things
13 1, 5 | spread'st thy branches to the air,~And firmly in the earth
14 2, 1 | above the earth the more air he has beneath to uphold
15 2, 1 | the labour of cleaving the air, return downwards, although
16 2, 1 | more easy to cleave the air downwards towards the earth
17 2, 1 | The more I feel the air beneath my feet~So much
18 2, 1 | the earth, the water, the air, and there are three species --
19 2, 1 | settled and defined, in the air the eagle, on earth the
20 2, 2 | Midst beauteous nymphs, with air of nascent bells.~Then said
21 2, 2 | species, forms and ideas, and "air of bells," that is the genius
22 2, 3 | reasoning, is in the middle air, or again in the nearer
23 2, 3 | below~Than open through the air and us a way?~No spark of
24 2, 4 | wherefore do I drink~The hated. air, since all my pain~Is clue
25 2, 4 | the light diffused in the air and the figure of the thing,
26 2, 4 | more or less turbid, or air foggy and cloudy, who~would
27 2, 4 | to look through the pure air, light and clear, All which
28 2, 4 | into flame, the flame into air, and this in other and other
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