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| Alphabetical [« »] scythed 1 scythes 2 se 1 sea 57 sea-beast 1 sea-gulls 1 sea-pools 1 | Frequency [« »] 57 borne 57 know 57 parts 57 sea 56 matter 56 pass 55 seen | Titus Lucretius Carus On the Nature of Things Concordances sea |
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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,