Part, Dialogue
1 1, 1| concede, and that which he sees and desires is distant and
2 1, 2| torment, and although he sees his folly quite clearly,
3 1, 3| it should happen that he sees the lord of all those pictures,
4 1, 4| between the waters, he sees a bust and face more beautiful
5 1, 4| alabaster, and fine gold;~He sees: and the great hunter straight
6 1, 4| below the firmament, he sees the most beautiful bust
7 1, 4| blind by him who nothing sees.~Go! and ever be by thee
8 1, 4| moving with it. Because it sees that all which it possesses
9 1, 4| and ever see that which it sees. Therefore she wills that,
10 1, 5| by the inferior powers -- sees its object stable, fixed
11 2, 1| Him, in the which, if He sees Himself~adored, He is not
12 2, 1| presents itself; and he sees that, from every side, the
13 2, 1| study without results; he sees the effects of the fear
14 2, 2| Diana as thro 1 So that he sees all as one; he sees no more
15 2, 2| that he sees all as one; he sees no more by distinctions
16 2, 2| understood in confusion.~He sees Amphitrite, the source of
17 2, 2| essence, in absolute light, he sees it in its seed, which is
18 2, 3| own vessel allows, and one sees that the light is beyond
19 2, 4| which is seen, to that which~sees, the act of seeing is put
20 2, 4| body; as happens to him who sees by means of the waters more
21 2, 4| the subject; and he who sees other and other different
22 2, 4| thought.~MIN. In truth, one sees how much diversity there
23 2, 4| silence than by words; as one sees more by shutting the eyes
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