Part, Dialogue
1 1, Int| Thought. By means of it we rise to the contemplation of
2 1, Int| sometimes the soul strives to rise up to it, and the poet describes
3 1, Int| without, they forced Bruno to rise, and conducted him to a
4 1, 1 | ponder and grow fair;~I rise, I live: heart, spirit,
5 1, 3 | But ever higher will I rise.~Well do I see, I shall
6 1, 4 | the ordinary way, or who rise above the ordinary from
7 1, 4 | thoughts, she now desires to rise on high with them, and exhibits
8 1, 4 | When shall it be that I rise up to the height of the
9 1, 4 | that high object rising, rise,~And if my good alone, alone
10 1, 5 | lightnings are unlocked~That rise to heaven, and yet diminish
11 1, 5 | spent,~At sight of thee they rise once more;~Their strength
12 1, 5 | Now does the intellect rise still higher, and learns
13 2, 1 | more should one breathe and rise, and with spirit, if possible,
14 2, 1 | inasmuch as some parts rise to the summit and others
15 2, 1 | pain,~Weighted with lead, I rise towards the sky.~Necessity
16 2, 1 | gravitation; he may even rise so high that he cannot,
17 2, 1 | towards the earth than to rise on high towards the stars.~
18 2, 2 | the soul is impotent to rise to that height from which
19 2, 2 | who seeks the truth must rise above the reason of corporeal
20 2, 3 | than wind, dost thou not rise and flash~Into the sun and
21 2, 4 | than the greater number rise or can rise, and these are
22 2, 4 | greater number rise or can rise, and these are they who
23 2, 5 | make thy foolish boasting rise so high?"~"Thou hast," said
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