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 1     I|     Lull to a timely rest~ O'er sea and land the savage works
 2     I|     seed required. Men from the sea~ Might rise, and from the
 3     I|      water-springs, beneath the sea,~ Or inland rivers, far
 4     I|    bodies sweeping through~ The sea, the lands, the clouds along
 5     I|      germs do put together sky, sea, lands,~ Rivers, and sun,
 6     I|        hedge air; land ends the sea,~ And sea in turn all lands;
 7     I|         land ends the sea,~ And sea in turn all lands; but for
 8     I|     Immeasurably forth....~ Nor sea, nor earth, nor shining
 9     I|        and water (liquid of the sea,~ And the big billows from
10    II|       swarm, deploying down the sea:~ For then, by such bright
11    II|     where, with soft waves, the sea~ Beats on the thirsty sands
12    II|         things - the earth, the sea, the sky,~ And race of living
13    II|         risen first-born day of sea, earth, sun,~ Have many
14    II|      hither, that from them the sea and lands~ Could grow more
15    II| generations to the fields;~ Nor sea, nor breakers pounding on
16   III|     vomit soul,~ As on the salt sea boil the billows round~
17   III|        should fall~ By land and sea, thus when we are no more,~
18   III|      earth confounded were with sea,~ And sea with heaven. But
19   III|  confounded were with sea,~ And sea with heaven. But if indeed
20   III|        paved a highway down the sea,~ And gave his legionaries
21    IV|       of the day, and fly~ O'er sea and lands and flood the
22    IV|         salt taste, when by the sea~ We roam about; and so,
23    IV|       to gazers ignorant of the sea,~ Vessels in port seem,
24    IV|   desire - if heart prefer~ The sea, the land, or after all
25    IV|         like the billows of the sea -~ Aye, from the ploughshare'
26     V|    Atlantic shore and wastes of sea? -~ Where neither one of
27     V|   suppose~ Lands, sun, and sky, sea, constellations, moon,~
28     V|          Nor clouds in the salt sea, nor in the fields~ Can
29     V|      desert fens, and wastes of sea~ (Which sunder afar the
30     V|     feed and foster on land and sea~ The dreadful breed of savage
31     V|          And for the rest, that sea, and streams, and springs~
32     V|         unplumbed chasms of the sea.~ But vain - since winds (
33     V|       Of mighty things - earth, sea, and sky, and race~ Of living
34     V|       the lands, and cause~ The sea to spread with waters separate,~
35     V|          Which were to form the sea, the stars, the sun,~ And
36     V|       the Pontus proves -~ That sea which floweth forth with
37     V|     soft seductions of a serene sea~ Could lure by laughing
38     V|   fierce force of fury-winds at sea~ Sweepeth a navy's admiral
39     V| boundaried; already,~ Would the sea flower and sail-winged ships;~
40    VI|       deep streams or the great sea~ Breaks the loud surf. It
41    VI|          full often also out at sea~ A blackest thunderhead,
42    VI|         reason shoots he at the sea? -~ What sacrilege have
43    VI|       there~ And rouses all the sea with monstrous roar,~ Constraining
44    VI|         lifts from over all the sea~ Unnumbered particles. Whereby
45    VI|       bear them o'er the mighty sea,~ Like hanging fleeces of
46    VI|         on the land, and in the sea~ Engulfed hath sunken many
47    VI|   tempests, which spatter every sea~ And every land bedew; add
48    VI|      tis less a marvel that the sea,~ The mighty ocean, increaseth
49    VI|       all with wet;~ And many a sea, and far out-spread beneath,~
50    VI|        fierce typhoons can over sea and lands~ Go tearing on,
51    VI|    these, with sky and land and sea to boot,~ Are all as nothing
52    VI|   Besides, in mighty part,~ The sea there at the roots of that
53    VI|     surf.~ And grottos from the sea pass in below~ Even to the
54    VI|         penetrate from the open sea,~ And to out-blow abroad,
55    VI|  against his onward waves, when sea,~ Wild in the winds, tumbles
56    VI|     There is at Aradus amid the sea,~ Which bubbles out sweet
57    VI|         salt taste, when by the sea~ We roam about; and so,
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