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 1      I,    86    |      and fiery meteors from the sky~ ~
 2      I,   284    |             Beneath the Eastern sky, or frozen North,~ ~
 3      I,   441    |         such a clamour rent the sky as when~ ~
 4      I,   590    |      thunderbolt from cloudless sky~ ~
 5      I,   721    |    Kindled his lurid fires, the sky had poured~ ~
 6      I,   732    |     course: Mars only holds the sky.~ ~
 7     II,    68    |                     Let all the sky, fierce Parent, be dissolved~ ~
 8     II,   219    |    Famine and Sword, the raging sky and sea,~ ~
 9     II,   329    |                  When stars and sky fall headlong, and when
10     II,   450    |      mid Italia; nearest to the sky~ ~
11     II,   517    |        to him, though cloud and sky~ ~
12     II,   783    |         shone the Virgin in the sky~ ~
13     II,   819    |  approaching tinged the eastern sky~ ~
14    III,   285    |       giant forest rises to the sky.~ ~
15    III,   366    | ignorant of the fortunes of the sky,~ ~
16    III,   584    |        from the waters, and the sky was clear,~ ~
17    III,   607    |             Or darkened all the sky or, in their fall,~ ~
18     IV,    57    |      winds, controlling all the sky,~ ~
19     IV,    61    |      that stretched towards the sky~ ~
20     IV,    74    |                Bedim the Orient sky, or rising suns~ ~
21     IV,    85    |       till pressed by weight of sky~ ~
22     IV,    91    |                    Embraced the sky and drank the ocean waves,~ ~
23     IV,   112    |      Phoebus' rise, for all the sky~ ~
24     IV,   116    | never-ending winters, where the sky~ ~
25     IV,   587    |                             The sky to dip the stars below the
26      V,   458    |        heed the portents of the sky:~ ~
27      V,   481    |                   Has seized on sky and ocean, firm its hold;~ ~
28      V,   524    |         but cloudless shone the sky,~ ~
29      V,   644    |        flaming furrows from the sky: nay, more;~ ~
30      V,   653    |    tumble. Judged by clouds and sky~ ~
31      V,   672    |                      But on the sky and ocean; and our bark~ ~
32      V,   681    |      this tumult of the sea and sky~ ~
33      V,   714    |     ocean knew no limit but the sky.~ ~
34      V,   720    |                         720 The sky lay on the deep; within
35      V,   725    |                  That holds the sky was shaken. Nature feared~ ~
36      V,   817    |     figures 34 first ascend the sky;~ ~
37     VI,   263    |                     Glad to the sky arose; no greater joy~ ~
38     VI,   486    |         s loftier peak amid the sky~ ~
39     VI,   533    |                Of the revolving sky or starry pole~ ~
40     VI,   559(33)|       of wind, hath knocked the sky." -- Ben Jonson, "Masque
41     VI,   575(34)|                             The sky was supposed to move round,
42     VI,   576    |              Men saw the moving sky. All beasts most fierce~ ~
43    VII,     3    |                   Forced by the sky revolving, 2 up the heaven,~ ~
44    VII,   159    |                     And sun and sky descend upon the earth~ ~
45    VII,   219    |                     Neath every sky, struck by mysterious dread~ ~
46    VII,   229    |                     Or else the sky discordant o'er the space~ ~
47    VII,   239    |                             The sky records their fates: in
48    VII,   500    |          till day and night and sky~ ~
49    VII,   601    |   countless shafts till all the sky~ ~
50   VIII,   190    |         the heavens; how by the sky~ ~
51   VIII,   332    |      Called Caspian; on another sky than ours~ ~
52   VIII,   416    |     warrior's death; but as the sky~ ~
53     IX,     4    |   sprang forth 1 and sought the sky~ ~
54     IX,    96    |    drifts up across the eastern sky~ ~
55     IX,   382    |                  Black from the sky rushed down a southern gale~ ~
56     IX,   484    |         Libya; yet by winds and sky she yields~ ~
57     IX,   550    |        regions of the boundless sky;~ ~
58     IX,   576    |      downwards hid the Northern sky.~ ~ ~ ~
59     IX,   617    |    Solstitial divides in middle sky 15~ ~
60     IX,   633    |       vision through the middle sky.~ ~ ~ ~
61     IX,   760    |        could threat the sea and sky~ ~
62     IX,   803    |        his wings and sought the sky.~ ~
63     IX,   812    |       soil, and loftiest on the sky 22~ ~
64     IX,   812(22)|       its shadow highest on the sky: and that the moon becomes
65     IX,  1000    |    heavenly cause, and from the sky~ ~
66     IX,  1023    |        land, what region of the sky,~ ~
67      X,   239(10)|    restrained the motion of the sky in its revolution. (See
68      X,   240    |         240 The movement of the sky, with adverse force~ ~
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