Part, Dialogue
1 1, Int| universe, and becoming in our turn creators, we raise the edifice
2 1, 1 | should towards some others turn. ./. O Mount! O Goddesses!
3 1, 1 | favours the greatest evils turn to greatest good, for needs
4 1, 1 | And towards one paradise I turn.~This captain is the human
5 1, 1 | without exercise of thyself, turn elsewhere thy anger. Get
6 1, 3 | Daedalus's son~Does warn me to turn downwards,~But ever higher
7 1, 3 | carry me, thou fearless one?~Turn back. Such over-boldness
8 1, 3 | principle and genius, they turn towards superior things
9 1, 4 | appetite. He likes~better to turn about in mud than in a bed
10 1, 5 | Nor pitifully will she turn to note my zeal.~Here the
11 1, 5 | now to my Sicilian mount I turn,~Where thou dost forge the
12 2, 1 | heroic, spirit, all things turn to good and how they are
13 2, 1 | and how they are able to turn captivity into greater liberty,
14 2, 1 | this octave:~The sun must turn and reach his starting-point,~
15 2, 1 | possible that one should turn to love any other thing
16 2, 1 | printed, stabbed, or pierced,~Turn thee aside, turn otherwhere
17 2, 1 | pierced,~Turn thee aside, turn otherwhere thy bow,~For
18 2, 1 | where be says to Love, "Turn otherwhere thy bow," and
19 2, 1 | not know where and how to turn, no place of flight or refuge
20 2, 1 | to go back, nor where to turn, vanishes and loses itself
21 2, 2 | life in considering how to turn wheat into tares, 1 and
22 2, 3 | it should not some time turn to evil; as food, which
23 2, 4 | the blind man pass on!~And turn your eyes upon these founts~
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