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  1     I|            And leap the wild herds round the happy fields~ Or swim
  2     I|           Fill with thy holy body, round, above!~ Pour from those
  3     I|       slain.~ She felt the chaplet round her maiden locks~ And fillets,
  4     I|          flow and pile destruction round,~ Even as the water's soft
  5     I|        with a hundred rains, beats round the piers,~ Crashes with
  6     I|           All solid matter must be round the same;~ Nor, by true
  7     I|          go right on to loose from round the mind~ The tightened
  8     I|        entire, or reach unmeasured round~ And downward an illimitable
  9     I|          force of matter all sides round.~ ~ And in these problems,
 10    II|        forth~ Thy legions swarming round the Field of Mars,~ Rousing
 11    II|         mites of matter are darted round about,~ Recall to mind how
 12    II|            forth in all directions round.~ Since this stands certain,
 13    II|          thither in all directions round.~ Lo, all their shifting
 14    II|           mighty legions, marching round,~ Fill all the quarters
 15    II|        breed of birds abroad~ Flit round the trackless forests, with
 16    II|            sun's effulgence widens round the sky.~ ~ Nor to pursue
 17    II|         fires will leap from under round~ The roofs of houses, and
 18    II|         from peak of heaven~ Sheds round to every quarter its large
 19    II|            green woodland pastures round,~ Knows well the footprints,
 20    II|           elements more smooth and round - because~ Their globules
 21    II|          smooth its atoms are~ And round, with painful rough ones
 22    II|       though not all of smooth and round)~ Be yet co-linked with
 23    II|           arms and leap in measure round~ With bloody mirth and by
 24    II|          find,~ Off to all regions round, on either side,~ Above,
 25    II|         Have many seeds been added round about,~ Which the great
 26    II|      abroad forthwith to all sides round~ More bodies, sending them
 27    II|         mighty world~ On all sides round shall taken be by storm,~
 28   III|            leap dismay and terror; round these haunts~ Be blandishments
 29   III|        must of seeds consist~ Most round, most tiny, that they may
 30   III|            so smooth, so fine, and round.~ For the light breeze that
 31   III|    exceeding small~ And smooth and round. Which fact once known to
 32   III|          More small and smooth and round. That first transmits~ Sense-bearing
 33   III|      Wholly the ball, but, cutting round the pupil,~ Leavest that
 34   III|            just as children totter round about~ With frames infirm
 35   III|         And its diffused fire gone round the veins,~ Why follows
 36   III|            A tangle of the legs as round he reels,~ A stuttering
 37   III|            his limbs~ With tossing round. No marvel, since distract~
 38   III|          salt sea boil the billows round~ Under the master might
 39   III|          severed fragment writhing round~ With its fresh wound, and
 40   III|       touch of ill, when all sides round~ To battle came the Carthaginian
 41   III|       those primordial germs~ Roam round our members, at that time,
 42   III|              And wanderest reeling round, with mind aswim."~ If men,
 43    IV|          go right on to loose from round the mind~ The tightened
 44    IV|           modes,~ To every quarter round, upon the moment,~ The many
 45    IV|           That ye might think that round about all murk~ Had parted
 46    IV|        sent about~ To every region round; and Nature grants~ Nor
 47    IV|         again~ Returns and changes round unto the left.~ Again, those
 48    IV|        like objects near and truly round,~ But with a semblance to
 49    IV|           sun, whenever~ In moving round we get within its way,~
 50    IV|        have stopped their spinning round,~ The halls still seem to
 51    IV|          Which all are in a hubbub round about,~ Astir with sound.
 52    IV|          their members bounds them round,~ Each differing kind by
 53    IV|           squared, and many others round,~ And certain of them many-angled
 54    IV|         many modes to every region round -~ So thin that easily the
 55    IV|       their arms and other members round~ In rhythmic time - and
 56    IV|       pores, and thus is sprinkled round~ Unto all smallest places
 57    IV|             Whilst being scattered round through all the veins;~
 58    IV|            view the dancers moving round~ Their supple limbs, and
 59    IV|        pains, and fill all regions round~ With mighty cries and wild,
 60    IV|         fresh, by wandering freely round~ After the freely-wandering
 61    IV|          love,~ Who links her body round man's body locked~ And holds
 62     V|            the Hesperides,~ Coiled round the tree-trunk with tremendous
 63     V|            their perennial courses round,~ Timing their motions for
 64     V|            Of multitudinous waters round about~ Declareth this. But
 65     V|            now look at This, which round, above,~ Contains the whole
 66     V|           of seeds more smooth and round~ And of much smaller elements
 67     V|          whirl their living bodies round,~ And ever to dure as parts
 68     V|        sphere of heaven~ Revolveth round, then needs we must aver~
 69     V|            illuminate~ The regions round with bastard beams, or throw~
 70     V|           and sidereal years~ Roll round in mighty orbits, may be
 71     V|            a fixed order they come round~ In sequence also.~ Likewise,
 72     V|           unequally, and adds,~ As round he's borne, unto the one
 73     V|          ere comes the many-rayed~ Round Badge of the day. Or else
 74     V|              Thence by slow stages round and back she whirls,~ Withdrawing
 75     V|          breast that ranges raving round about~ Upon the mighty mountains
 76     V|          days some man apportioned round~ To things their names,
 77     V|        with voices all the regions round.~ And when with fondling
 78     V|           puppies, or do toss them round with paws,~ Feigning with
 79     V|         rolls, with varied motion, round and round~ The far white
 80     V|           varied motion, round and round~ The far white constellations.
 81     V|          art of hedging the covert round~ With net or stirring it
 82     V|           the roar,~ And rein them round to front the foe. With spring~
 83     V|          their mounts, and twining round them, bring~ Tumbling to
 84     V|       goodly fruit-trees and hedge round~ With thriving shrubberies
 85     V|           of jollity~ Would circle round; for then the rustic muse~
 86     V|            pass their life, hedged round~ By the strong towers; and
 87    VI|            sepulchred on all sides round:~ Then canst thou know their
 88    VI|          hour the horizon lightens round~ Without the hideous terror
 89    VI|            scorched scars exhaling round~ The heavy fumes of sulphur.
 90    VI|           That we might think that round about all murk~ Had parted
 91    VI|           lands the people shudder round~ And seek for cover. Therefore,
 92    VI|           lofty heap,~ To shut the round sun off. Nor could the clouds,~
 93    VI|           belly of the cloud spins round~ In narrow confines, and
 94    VI|            forky light~ All places round. And followeth anon~ A clap
 95    VI|  Tumultuously rage. And when rolls round~ The latest heat mixed with
 96    VI|           a column, as if pushed,~ Round which the surges seethe,
 97    VI|        have gathered suddenly,~ As round they flew, unnumbered particles -~
 98    VI|           and through, and, raging round,~ Hath made the earth and
 99    VI|              With pick-axe probing round the hidden realms~ Deep
100    VI|        torch will kindle and flare round~ Along its waves, wherever '
101    VI|           water and disparts~ From round itself the salt waves; and,
102    VI|        sent about~ To every region round; and Nature grants~ Nor
103    VI|          corselet of the sky girds round~ ~ And at same time, some
104    VI| contrariwise, there must~ Fly many round bringing disease and death.~
105    VI|            men roll their eyeballs round,~ Staring wide-open, unvisited
106    VI|       brawling with much bloodshed round about~ Rather than quit
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