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 1     I|     with fruits; and hence in turn~ The race of man and all
 2     I|  known will serve thee many a turn,~ Nor will not leave thee
 3     I|    they feign~ That fire will turn into the winds of air,~
 4     I|     things can be produced in turn.~ ~ Now let us also take
 5     I|     ends the sea,~ And sea in turn all lands; but for the All~
 6    II|    increase those to which in turn they come,~ Constraining
 7    II|    reason too 'tis fit~  Thou turn thy mind the more unto these
 8    II|   Whole nature of things, and turn their motions about.~ ATOMIC
 9    II|         Can lure her mind and turn the sudden pain;~ Nor other
10    II|         tis seen forthwith to turn~ Glowing and white. But
11    II|      a white sheen,~ Or swans turn black from seed of black,
12    II|     be create, and these,~ In turn, from others that are wont
13    II|   their powers of thought and turn again~ From very doorways
14    II|      the world,~ And in their turn inquire what elements~ They
15    II|   other seeds~ Which in their turn are doing just the same.~
16   III|  honours, and in bitter case~ Turn much more keenly to religion.~
17   III|       the mind, forthwith~ In turn it hits and drives the body
18   III|     state of man~ To rule and turn, - what yet could never
19   III|     combine and leap apart in turn.~ But mind is more the keeper
20   III|       and fingers of the feet turn blue,~ Next die the feet
21   III|    more to add - which in its turn~ Will perish foully and
22    IV|      change appearance and to turn~ Into new outlines of all
23    IV|    whatever face of things we turn~ The mirror, things of form
24    IV|       hence that whitherso we turn~ Our sight, all things do
25    IV|  curved surface teaches it to turn~ To usward. Further, thou
26    IV|       know and not-to-know in turn,~ And what created concept
27    IV|       construction then~ Must turn out faulty - shelving and
28    IV|   they put each supple arm in turn~ With speedy motion, and
29    IV|      the mind.~ Next, soul in turn strikes body, and by degrees~
30    IV|   around~ So great a body and turn this weight of ours;~ For
31    IV| whatever feeds thy love;~ And turn elsewhere thy mind; and
32    IV|    and kind,~ Do thou, in thy turn, overlook the same,~ And
33     V|     not~ Itself be touched in turn can never touch.~ Wherefore,
34     V|      air;~ And did not air in turn restore to things~ Bodies,
35     V|   ruins, asking us,~ In their turn likewise, if we don't believe~
36     V|      among the first, able to turn~ The same into ancestral
37     V|     that all of us~ Sicken in turn with those same maladies~
38     V|         as we see~ The rivers turn the wheels and water-scoops.~
39     V|    lands compels~ Him then to turn his course beneath the lands.~
40     V|      sun, and day by day~ May turn unto our gaze her light,
41     V|       And why should earth in turn~ Have power to rob the moon
42     V|    then~ Would Nature thither turn the pores of earth~ And
43     V|     veil, still to be seen to turn~ Fronting a stone, and ever
44     V|     to clear rich fields~ And turn the countryside to pasture-lands,~
45    VI|      the murky ether seems to turn~ Now into rain, and, as
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