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 1     I|      exists not of itself; but sense~ Reads out of things what
 2     I|       are palpably as clear to sense -~ To me a thought inept
 3     I|        another differs both in sense~ And ring of sound - so
 4    II|        by stage emerges to our sense,~ Until those objects also
 5    II|      who~ Is there can mark by sense that naught can swerve~
 6    II|      the universe;~ Not in the sense that only few are furnished~
 7    II|      in.~ In short all good to sense, all bad to touch,~ Being
 8    II|       a shape which charms our sense was made~ Without some elemental
 9    II|       rather than to wound the sense -~ And of which sort is
10    II|   whereby to sting~ Our body's sense, the touch of each gives
11    II|      is indeed the body's only sense -~ Be't that something in-from-outward
12    II|   tumult and confusion all the sense -~ As thou mayst find, if
13    II|     once to roll, and rasp the sense.~ And that the more thou
14    II|     whate'er we see possessing sense~ Must yet confessedly be
15    II|     yet unable to gender vital sense.~ And, therefore, 'twill
16    II|        they make them; for all sense is linked~ With flesh, and
17    II|  forever on:~ They'll have the sense that's proper to a part,~
18    II|       else be judged to have a sense the same~ As that within
19    II|       never feel,~ For all the sense in every member back~ To
20    II|      each part~ With the vital sense; and so they're bound to
21    II|      inside a body,~ Their own sense and another sense take on,~
22    II|    Their own sense and another sense take on,~ What, then, avails
23    II|            But if one say that sense can so far rise~ From non-sense
24    II|       goes confounding all the sense~ Of body and mind. For of
25    II|      must be furnished with no sense.~ ~ Once more, if thus,
26    II|        needful 'tis to assign~ Sense also to its elements, what
27    II| intermixed seeds quite void of sense?~ INFINITE WORLDS~ ~ Once
28   III|     fear the plague upon their sense of shame,~ And this that
29   III|  creature. But some hold~ That sense of mind is in no fixed part
30   III|  because thereby~ We live with sense, though intellect be not~
31   III|        it), so they place~ The sense of mind in no fixed part
32   III|       frame~ At random void of sense, a something else~ Is yet
33   III|      ye everything,~ But vital sense and exhalation hot.~ Thus
34   III|       Suffice not for creating sense - since mind~ Accepteth
35   III|    apart, and air apart,~ Make sense to perish, by disseverment.~
36   III|        have sensation; but our sense, enkindled~ Along the vitals,
37   III|    this motion which we title "sense"~ He battles in vain indubitable
38   III|    parted,~ Body's without all sense." True! - loses what~  Was
39   III|     ears,~ And eyes, and every sense which pilots life;~ And
40   III|       they take on~ Motions of sense, which, after death, thrown
41   III|        since we mark the vital sense to be~ In the whole body,
42   III|  losing limb by limb the vital sense;~ First nails and fingers
43   III|       all the members draw the sense away,~ Why, then, that place
44   III|         should greater seem in sense.~ But since such place is
45   III|       and more in every region sense~  Fails the whole man, and
46   III|     the body duly throngs with sense.)~ But public fact declares
47   III|      be formed no interplay of sense~ Common to each.~ Again,
48   III|   frame, it loses the life and sense~ It had before. Or how can
49   III|     the self-succession of our sense~ Has been asunder broken.
50   III|      projecting there~ His own sense, as he stands beside it:
51    IV|         Have quite escaped the sense, the stones appear~ As rubbed
52    IV|        say, to injure faith in sense -~ In vain, because the
53    IV|        sprung~ From some false sense, prevail to contradict~
54    IV|        thus it is~ That no one sense can e'er convict another.~
55    IV|        another.~ Nor shall one sense have power to blame itself,~
56    IV|     And injure primal faith in sense, and wreck~ All those foundations
57    IV|     into ears, they strike the sense~ With their own body. For
58    IV|    Because they're able on the sense to strike.~ Besides voice
59    IV|        They sting and pain the sense with their assault,~ According
60    IV|   nature of mind and smite the sense.~ Thus, Centaurs and the
61    IV|      of soul~ Exist in us this sense, and when by slumber~ That
62    IV|      and when by slumber~ That sense is thwarted, we are bound
63    IV|     many ashes, whence~  Could sense amain rekindled be in members,~
64    IV|       the paths;~ And thus the sense, its motions all deranged,~
65     V|      the living motion, living sense.~ For sure 'tis quite beside
66     V|       whit are furnished~ With sense divine, since never can
67     V|       Would men more strong in sense, more wise in heart,~ Teach
68     V|      the beauty, strength, and sense of each -~ For beauty then
69     V|        objects, as each divers sense~ Might prompt? - since even
70     V|     these~ Would men attribute sense, because they seemed~ To
71    VI|  Beyond a doubt, fact plain to sense declares:~ To wit, at such
72    VI|        with same qualities for sense,~ Nor be for all things
73    VI|     and the toil which then~ A sense of honour and the pleading
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