Part, Dialogue
1 1, 5| tears stream freely to the sea.The greedy air receives
2 1, 5| Thus pay I to the air, the sea, the fire,~The tribute of
3 1, 5| my tears, my zeal.~The sea, the air, the fire, accept
4 1, 5| copious tears that flow to the sea; he sends forth from his
5 1, 5| heaven, earth, and the wide sea,~Leave now this stormy war
6 2, 1| reverts,~The rivers from the sea to sea return,~And thither,
7 2, 1| The rivers from the sea to sea return,~And thither, whence
8 2, 1| venture on the treacherous sea, which having suddenly become
9 2, 1| unskilled hand; lured by the sea!~Late hast thou seen the
10 2, 1| of water vanishes in the sea, or as a small spirit, becomes
11 2, 2| the other, whether the sea was first or the springs;
12 2, 3| sevenfold course unto the sea.~Nature hath given two lights~
13 2, 3| from us derive~Who of the sea the double parent are?~So
14 2, 3| potentiality of which is the sea; so that if Neptune should
15 2, 3| in the caves of the deep sea. Therefore by analogy, if
16 2, 3| eyes.~If to the foaming sea the rivers run,~And pour
17 2, 3| pour their streams into the sea's dark gulf,~How does the
18 2, 3| defends. If therefore the sea is infinite and the force
19 2, 3| the twin torrent to the sea if the heart shelters them
20 2, 3| we poured into the wavy sea,~The strength of our two
21 2, 3| twofold course unto the sea,~Nature abhors the covered
22 2, 3| said to be the infinite sea by the apprehension of the
23 2, 5| rocks, the murmur of the sea waves which break amongst
24 2, 5| make thee lover more of sea than sky,~Oh Jove, High
25 2, 5| Jove, "God of the billowy sea!~That one should ere be
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