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  1     I|               flaming ramparts of the world, until~ He wandered the
  2     I|              bodies, as primal to the world.~ ~ I fear perhaps thou
  3     I|               eld the works along the world,~ Destroy entire, consuming
  4     I|              known to be~ In this our world, are yet invisible:~ The
  5     I|           cones of whirlwind down the world:~ The winds are sightless
  6     I|          other, of some region of the world.~ Add, too, had been no
  7     I|              of empty and inane,~ The world were then a solid; as, without~
  8     I|            fill the places held,~ The world that is were but a vacant
  9     I|            assault soever through the world -~ For without void, naught
 10     I|              stuff for plenishing the world.~ ~ So primal germs have
 11     I|         builded up for plenishing the world.~ But mark: infallibly a
 12     I|       breaking down of this corporeal world,~ Yet must all bodies of
 13     I|              out of nothing would the world be formed.~ For change in
 14     I|            persist unharmed~ Amid the world, lest all return to naught,~
 15     I|                 From them for thee no world can be create -~ No thing
 16     I|             the stars of the ethereal world -~ Which in no wise at all
 17     I|              pass~ That nowhere can a world's-end be, and that~ The
 18     I|           Then would the abundance of world's matter flow~ Together
 19     I|         downward to the bottom of the world,~ Nor aught could happen
 20     I|               side, whatever sum of a world~ Has been united in a whole.
 21     I|               those elements whence a world derives,~ Room and a time
 22     I|            And thus the nature of the world stands firm~ With never
 23     I|              centre none can be where world is still~ Boundless, nor
 24     I|          flames,~ The ramparts of the world should flee away,~ Dissolved
 25    II|              power and mastery of the world.~ O wretched minds of men!
 26    II|            kings and lords of all the world~ Mingles undaunted, nor
 27    II|          world-stuff beget the varied world,~ And then forever resolve
 28    II|             of those ultimates of the world;~ And so, since those themselves
 29    II|             no wise the nature of the world~ For us was builded by a
 30    II|            which can flee~ Out of the world matter of any kind,~ Nor
 31    II|             Break in upon the founded world, and change~ Whole nature
 32    II|               Yea, if through all the world in finite tale~ Be tossed
 33    II|            entomb~ The welfare of the world; nor, further, can~ Those
 34    II|               The vital forces of the world - or fall.~ Mixed with the
 35    II|          grain began~ Through all the world. To her do they assign~
 36    II|               still we wish under the world to lay~ Immortal ground-works,
 37    II|             on the composition of the world,~ And in their turn inquire
 38    II|              the eternal atoms of the world.~ ~ Why, even in these our
 39    II|           without the ramparts of the world,~ Toward which the spirit
 40    II|                Seeing, moreover, this world too hath been~ By Nature
 41    II|            otherwhere,~ Like this our world which vasty ether holds~
 42    II|            The seeds together in this world of ours,~ 'Tmust be confessed
 43    II|           since the birth-time of the world, ere since~ The risen first-born
 44    II|               author and ender of the world,~ Hath led all things to
 45    II|            the ramparts of the mighty world~ On all sides round shall
 46   III|             flee, the ramparts of the world~ Dispart away, and through
 47   III|               the search~ To endure a world of toil, O this it is~ To
 48    IV|              the serene vision of the world,~ Stroking the air with
 49    IV|             to seek the nature of the world~ And set it down, when once
 50     V| pronouncements all~ The nature of the world.~ ARGUMENT OF THE BOOK AND
 51     V|        massive form and fabric of the world~ Sustained so many aeons!
 52     V|               regions of this mundane world;~ Indeed, the nature of
 53     V|           They willed to prepare this world's magnificence,~ And that '
 54     V|           archetype for gendering the world~ And the fore-notion of
 55     V|              Nature, artificer of the world, bring forth~ Aboundingly
 56     V|             all things for all.~  THE WORLD IS NOT ETERNAL~ ~ And first,~
 57     V|               the whole nature of the world itself~ Must be conceived
 58     V|            and the parts of this~ Our world consumed and begot again,~ '
 59     V|             tremendous quaking of the world,~ Or rivers in fury, after
 60     V|              Exists the nature of the world, because~ In things is intermingled
 61     V|             there a void;~ Nor is the world yet as the void, nor are,~
 62     V|               lo, the ramparts of the world~ Can yet be shivered. Or
 63     V|               most mighty members the world,~ Aroused in an all unholy
 64     V|           rather they~ Who menace the world with inundations vast~ From
 65     V|           ever-blazing lampion of the world,~ And drave together the
 66     V|             in torrid atmospheres the world.~ And whilom water too began
 67     V|            checked.~ FORMATION OF THE WORLD AND~ ASTRONOMICAL QUESTIONS~ ~
 68     V|          constellations of the mighty world,~ Nor ocean, nor heaven,
 69     V|              join, and to block out a world,~ And to divide its members
 70     V|            and ramparts of the mighty world -~ For these consist of
 71     V|               All of the slime of the world, heavy and gross,~ Had run
 72     V|              In the mid-region of the world, it needs~ Must vanish bit
 73     V|          linked unison with the vasty world's~ Realms of the air in
 74     V|              first origin of this the world,~ As a fixed portion of
 75     V|          bounden fast~ Unto the great world's realms of air and sky:~
 76     V|       glittering stars of the eternal world;~ Or that another still
 77     V|           these is cause~ In this our world 'tis hard to say for sure;~
 78     V|               exhalations steeps~ The world at large. For it may be,
 79     V|        well-spring of the whole~ Wide world from here hath opened and
 80     V|             exhalations~ From all the world around together come,~ And
 81     V|             transverse regions of the world,~ Of which the one may thrust
 82     V|              And where, even from the world's first origin,~ Thuswise
 83     V|               him opposite across the world,~ She hath with full effulgence
 84     V|             one quarter of the mighty world~ Grow weak and weary, whilst
 85     V|            blue regions of the mighty world, -~ How we can know what
 86     V|               do now~ Return unto the world's primeval age~ And tell
 87     V|             nature of~ The whole wide world, and all things needs must
 88     V|              nature of the whole wide world, and earth~ Taketh one status
 89     V|          those days also the telluric world~ Strove to beget the monsters
 90     V|               time when this telluric world~ First poured the breeds
 91     V|           freshness of the rank young world~ Produced, enough for those
 92     V|               a lack of little in the world.~ But men wished glory for
 93     V|             skiey vaults of yon great world~ And ether, fixed high o'
 94     V|              ever a birth-time of the world,~ And whether, likewise,
 95     V|               far the ramparts of the world can still~ Outstand this
 96     V|           moon, those watchmen of the world,~ With their own lanterns
 97    VI|               ve taught thee that the world's great vaults~ Are mortal
 98    VI|               levels of the spreading world~ A sound on high, as linen-awning,
 99    VI|             wide reaches of the upper world~ There on the instant to
100    VI|               unnumbered particles -~ World's rougher ones, which can,
101    VI|            the procreant atoms of the world.~ Now come, and what the
102    VI|              The nature of the mighty world a time~ Of doom and cataclysm,
103    VI|               wrack and wreckage of a world.~ EXTRAORDINARY AND PARADOXICAL~
104    VI|       breathes them out into the open world~ And into the visible regions
105    VI|          Beyond 'thas stolen into our world.~ And tempests, gathering
106    VI|          totters awry the axis of the world),~ Or in what else to differ
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