Part, Dialogue
1 1, Int| union with God upon the wings of thought. This idea is
2 1, 1 | she gives me death,~She wings, he burns my heart,~He murders
3 1, 1 | delivers me from death -- wings, enlivens, and sustains.
4 1, 2 | richly and easily supply the wings than heroic love; others
5 1, 2 | snare,~Lest he besmear his wings, let him beware.~TANS. To
6 1, 3 | divine impetus which lends it wings, with which, drawing nearer
7 1, 3 | Since I have spread my wings to my desire,~The more I
8 1, 3 | beauty and goodness, with the wings of the intellect and rational
9 1, 4 | Plato signifies by the two wings, and he commits him to the
10 2, 1 | but rather does it lend wings to arrive at these, when
11 2, 1 | form of a heart with four wings, two of which have eyes
12 2, 1 | the glue which smears his wings, chains which bind fast
13 2, 1 | an eagle, which with two wings cleaves the sky; but I do
14 2, 1 | power and appulsion in the wings, which are the intellect,
15 2, 1 | depicted with a pair of wings, by means of which it is
16 2, 1 | evermore~He holds my fleet wings in restrainment.~Meanwhile
17 2, 1 | primal good. So again, the wings, which used to be so fleet
18 2, 1 | the sky spreads out his wings~And wafts of his approach
19 2, 2 | but for those that have wings. We see that pedantry has
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