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 1     I| contrariwise, they teach~ How the thin air, and with it the hot
 2    II|          and these supply~ For us thin air and splendour-lights
 3    II|          waters fall,~ Or through thin air, must their descent,~
 4    IV|           than others tenuous and thin,~ No power has man to open
 5    IV|          body's surface~ Flow off thin textures and thin shapes
 6    IV|        Flow off thin textures and thin shapes of things.~ Thus
 7    IV|          every region round -~ So thin that easily the one with
 8    IV|          subtle nature and fabric thin.~ In the same fashion others
 9    IV|        else by far too watery and thin.~ Because the thin is powerless
10    IV|     watery and thin.~ Because the thin is powerless to cleave~
11    IV|          our members,~ And others thin them out and waste away.~
12    VI|         the clouds~ Grow rare and thin along the sky; for, when~
13    VI|          members light enough and thin~ For shift of aid - but
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