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 1     I|        What things can rise to being, what cannot,~ And by what
 2     I| wherewith to view~ The core of being at the centre hid.~ And
 3     I|      The nature of first body: being thus~ Not self-existent,
 4     I|       things~ Forevermore have being and go on.~ CONFUTATION
 5     I|       thing create~ Its proper being.~ But these men begin~ From
 6     I|        else the one or other,~ Being unbounded by the other,
 7     I|       should move;~ But since, being many and changed in many
 8    II|        to face: not strange -~ Being most hard, and solid in
 9    II|     there, and they, each one~ Being one unit from nature of
10    II|        our joints,~ And, after being forward cast, to be~ Reined
11    II|      sense, all bad to touch,~ Being up-built of figures so unlike,~
12    II|        the least~ The whole in being externally a cube;~ But
13    II|       and keep~ The whole from being of one resultant hue.~ Then,
14   III|      impulse just the least -~ Being create of little shapes
15   III|   Besides we feel that mind to being comes~ Along with body,
16   III|    Since we behold the same to being come~ Along with body and
17   III|        the more 'twill perish, being thus~ With body fused -
18   III|        Tis hard to say, since, being free of body,~ They flit
19   III|      then demands his self~ Or being. Well, this sleep may be
20    IV|        much more swiftly too,~ Being less subject to impediments,~
21    IV|  strange glints,~ The daylight being withdrawn. And therefore,
22    IV|     virtue of that smoothness, being sure.~ 'Tis therefore that
23    IV|      er we watch~ The wormword being mixed, its bitter stings.~
24    IV|    same result as air,~ Whilst being scattered round through
25    IV|     sometimes offspring can to being come~ In likeness of their
26     V| Without the body, nor have its being far~ From thews and blood.
27     V|         even now some arts are being still~ Refined, still increased:
28     V|  increased: now unto ships~ Is being added many a new device;~
29     V|       a time when things~ Were being taxed by maladies so great,~
30     V|      the earthy particles~ (As being heavy and intertangled)
31     V|    outer edges (so that then,~ Being thus beat upon, 'twas all
32     V|     whirl that bears her on,~ (Being, indeed, still lower than
33     V|    things so many~ Can come to being thus at fixed time.~ ~ Likewise,
34     V|     were in their glory then,~ Being more new and strange. And
35    VI|       the free horizons.~ Into being~ The clouds condense, when
36    VI|   rainy moisture thickens into being~ In the lofty clouds, and
37    VI|      in the clouds condense to being - all,~ Snow and the winds,
38    VI|    country's name (its origin~ Being in country of Magnesian
39    VI|      er we watch~ The wormwood being mixed, its bitter stings.~
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