Book, Chapter

 1  Int,   2|     so the purest and noblest souls, whose kind was, after all,
 2    1,  15| expressed that longing of our souls which we had both experienced
 3    3,  83|      every wandering kiss our souls would meet!~Farewell all
 4    3,  87|       have thought their very souls were depicted. Here, an
 5    3,  92|       who almost embodied the souls of men and beasts in bronze,
 6    3,  93|    the joy~Of their tremulous souls brings to eyes tears which
 7    4, 125|       sufficient to carry~The souls of the dead in his skiff: '
 8    5, 136| mutual embrace, had fused our souls into one, (and then, in
 9    5, 144|   conducts and reconducts the souls, has restored to me that
10    6     |    are writing only for pious souls, and they will willingly
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