Part, Dialogue
1 1, Int| in which he would be no longer at liberty to work and teach.~
2 1, Int| about him, and he could no longer ignore the peril of his
3 1, 2 | lamentations; and like him who no longer belongs to himself, he loves
4 1, 3 | and makes it appear no longer beautiful as before. The
5 1, 4 | visible, but thinkable; no longer dividual, but individual;
6 1, 4 | dividual, but individual; no longer classed among things in
7 1, 4 | sun. Leave me now, for no longer do my eyes weep tears; neither
8 1, 5 | it is manifest that he no longer felt more pleasure than
9 1, 5 | which he declares are no longer tempered by him in the Æolian
10 1, 5 | it seems to me, requires longer and special consideration.~
11 2, 1 | one, it feels itself no longer solicited by various objects,
12 2, 2 | into stags; for they are no longer hunters, but that which
13 2, 2 | of matter, whence they no longer see their Diana as thro 1
14 2, 4 | precipice, so that he may no longer endure this contempt and
15 2, 4 | him, so that he should no longer feel it; that he might become
16 2, 4 | sixth blind man.~Eyes, no longer eyes, fountains no longer
17 2, 4 | longer eyes, fountains no longer founts,~Ye have wept out
18 2, 4 | turned to flame, he is no longer himself, because the fire
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