Book

 1     I|          love -~ And there, with eyes and full throat backward
 2     I|    miserably crushed~ Before all eyes beneath Religion - who~
 3     I|     opposing dared~ Raise mortal eyes that terror to withstand,~
 4     I|      most to see with reasonable eyes~ Of what the mind, of what
 5     I|          every part,~ Before our eyes it might be snatched away~
 6     I|       not my words,~ Because our eyes no primal germs perceive;~
 7     I|    nostrils see them come;~ With eyes we view not burning heats,
 8     I|     about in bits~ Too small for eyes to see. Another case:~ A
 9     I|       however keen~ Of these our eyes hath watched and known.
10     I|        divers modes,~ Before our eyes we mark how much may move,~
11     I|          force before our gazing eyes.~ But my appeal is to the
12     I|          Lastly, before our very eyes is seen~ Thing to bound
13    II|       age-old time, and from our eyes~ How eld withdraws each
14    II|          type goes on before our eyes~ Present each moment; for
15    II|   pressed by cloven hoofs,~ With eyes regarding every spot about,~
16    II|        Of things which feast our eyes, as those which sting~ Against
17    II|           To nostrils, ears, and eyes, and taste of tongue,~ Would
18    II|         objects shining to thine eyes~ Are gendered of white atoms,
19    II|     since we behold not all with eyes,~ 'Tis thine to know some
20   III|        peak because before their eyes~ That man is lordly, that
21   III|       man than hand and foot and eyes are parts~ Of one whole
22   III|       whose nature's palpable to eyes.~ But what's so agile must
23   III|         seems minished naught to eyes,~ Thereby, nor aught abstracted
24   III|       rage, and flashes from the eyes~ More swiftly fire; there
25   III|       life-time. Or, to say that eyes~ Themselves can see no thing,
26   III|        saying; since the feel in eyes~ Says the reverse. For this
27   III|    forces into the pupils of our eyes~ Our consciousness. And
28   III|   refulgent things,~ Because our eyes are hampered by their light -~
29   III| undertake the toil.~ Besides, if eyes of ours but act as doors,~
30   III|          an intellect besoaked,~ Eyes all aswim, and hiccups,
31   III|          tumble down~ Before our eyes, and sputter foam, and grunt,~
32   III|         remains, like ears,~ And eyes, and every sense which pilots
33   III|         so endowed.~ But neither eyes, nor nose, nor hand, alone~
34   III|      vital countenance~ And open eyes, until 't has rendered up~
35   III|          rip. We have before our eyes~ Here in this life also
36   III|      left~ The sunshine with his eyes, in divers things~ A better
37    IV|       those images~ Which to our eyes in mirrors do appear,~ In
38    IV|     begin to grow~ Too small for eyes to note, learn now in few~
39    IV|       their sphered heart, their eyes, their limbs,~ The skeleton? -
40    IV|           Bodies that strike the eyes, awaking sight.~ From certain
41    IV|          be the same~ As that by eyes perceived within the light~
42    IV|        do perceive alone through eyes,~ It follows hence that
43    IV|        space~ Betwixt it and our eyes. And thus this air~ All
44    IV|     brushing breeze~ Against our eyes, the farther off removed~
45    IV|     films which strike~ Upon the eyes cannot be singly seen,~
46    IV|       comes brushing through our eyes,~ Then other air, then objects
47    IV|        space~ Betwixt it and our eyes, and brings to pass~ That
48    IV|       again~ Comes back unto our eyes, and driving rolls~ Ahead
49    IV|  viewless winds,~ And strike the eyes, disordering their joints.~
50    IV|   piecing lustre often burns the eyes,~ Because it holdeth many
51    IV|        fire~ Which, working into eyes, engender pain.~ Again,
52    IV|          and possessed~ The open eyes this nearer darkling air,~
53    IV|        in, which purges then the eyes~ And scatters asunder of
54    IV|    blockades the pathways of the eyes~ That there no images of
55    IV|        thrown in and agitate the eyes.~ ~ And when from far away
56    IV|       don't at all concede~ That eyes be cheated. For their task
57    IV|        not this fault of mind to eyes,~ Nor lightly think our
58    IV|         wheresoe'er~ We cast our eyes across, all objects seem~
59    IV|          have power to blame the eyes,~ Or yet the touch the ears?
60    IV|       shall the nose confute~ Or eyes defeat it? Methinks not
61    IV|      those places (through which eyes cannot~ View objects manifest)
62    IV|        seeds, which, into lions' eyes~ Injected, bore into the
63    IV|          have free exit from the eyes~ As soon as penetrating,
64    IV|       thus~ They cannot hurt our eyes in any part~ By there remaining.~
65    IV|      images which take a hold on eyes~ And smite the vision, since
66    IV|         mind as well as with the eyes~ Must come to pass in fashion
67    IV|    idol-films~ Such as assail my eyes, 'tis thine to know~ Also
68    IV|           nor more nor less than eyes do see~ (Except that it
69    IV|      hast thou not observed~ How eyes, essaying to perceive the
70    IV|   presuming the clear lights~ Of eyes created were that we might
71    IV|         seeing ere the lights of eyes were born,~ No speaking
72    IV|      appear~ Floating before the eyes, that even awake~ They think
73    IV|         what to first enjoy with eyes and hands.~ The parts they
74    IV|          he thinks she darts her eyes~ Too much about and gazes
75     V|        Subject it to the view of eyes for him~ Nor put it into
76     V|        seem to be~ Which we with eyes of ours perceive. For all~
77     V|       Full to the sight and open eyes of men;~ Thence by slow
78    VI|        we get~ The thunder after eyes behold the flash,~ Because
79    VI|      ears~ More tardily than the eyes - as thou mayst see~ From
80    VI|      mists do form, ere ever the eyes~ Can there behold them (
81    VI|          teeth, attacks the very eyes;~ Out-breaks the sacred
82    VI|           Bodies that strike the eyes, awaking sight.~ From certain
83    VI|       held,~ Linked by hooks and eyes, as 'twere; and this~ Seems
84    VI|         And in Achaean lands the eyes. And so~ The divers spots
85    VI|        nose's tip~ A very point, eyes sunken, temples hollow,~
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