Book, Verse
1 1, 247 | succeeds; a bed of wither’d leaves~
2 1, 431 | with two pointed darts, he leaves his friends,~
3 3, 639 | Leaves you no farther wish. My
4 4, 204 | Like fair Apollo, when he leaves the frost~
5 4, 642 | With leaves and falling mast they spread
6 4, 706 | She stops the torrents, leaves the channel dry,~
7 5, 279 | And leaves her callow care, and cleaves
8 5, 440 | And leaves the crowd: applauding peals
9 5, 683 | She leaves her life aloft; she strikes
10 6, 117 | To flitting leaves, the sport of ev’ry wind,~
11 6, 211 | The ductile rind and leaves of radiant gold:~
12 6, 302 | And dancing leaves, that wanton’d in the wind.~
13 6, 428 | Thick as the leaves in autumn strow the woods,~
14 8, 483 | The stuffing leaves, with hides of bears o’erspread.~
15 8, 601 | He leaves his lowly bed: his buskins
16 9, 749 | Springs to the walls, and leaves his foes behind,~
17 10, 212 | And leaves a rich manure of golden
18 10, 401 | And those he leaves, to keep the city pent.~
19 11, 98 | Strew’d leaves and funeral greens the bier
20 11, 1048| And leaves her horse at large among
21 11, 1301| He leaves the hilly pass, the woods
22 12, 423 | Peace leaves the violated fields, and
23 12, 494 | He leaves behind a lane of slaughter’
24 12, 742 | Their lifeless trunks he leaves upon the place;~
25 12, 1016| Soon leaves the taken works and mounted
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