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| Alphabetical [« »] skins 1 skirts 1 skull 1 sky 68 slacked 1 slackened 1 slain 51 | Frequency [« »] 72 night 72 stream 68 saw 68 sky 67 man 65 bear 65 been | Marcus Annaeus Lucanus The Civil War Concordances sky |
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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~ ~