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Spring
cave

    s stalactites laid open to t.  the various shades of

    t

    iron colors, brown, gray, yellowishe flowing

    mass reac t of t spreads out

    flatter into strands, te streams losing their

    semi-cylindrical form and gradually becoming more flat and broad,

    running toget, till t

    flat sand, still variously and beautifully s in which you

    can trace tation; till at lengthe

    er itself, ted into banks, like those formed off

    tation are lost in the

    ripple marks on ttom.

    ty to forty feet high, is

    sometimes overlaid his kind of foliage, or sandy

    rupture, for a quarter of a mile on one or bothe produce

    of one spring day.   makes ts

    springing into existence the one side

    t bank -- for ts on one side first -- and on the

    ot foliage, tion of an ed

    as if in a peculiar sense I stood in tory of tist

    work,

    sporting on trewing his fresh

    designs about.  I feel as if I o tals of the

    globe, for thing such a foliaceous mass

    as tals of the very sands

    an anticipation of table leaf.  No  th

    expresses itself out so labors he idea

    inoms

    by it.  ts prototype.  Internally,

    thick lobe, a

    o the leaves of

    fat (jnai, labor, lapsus, to flow or slip downward, a lapsing;

    jiais, globus, lobe, globe; also lap, flap, and many other words);

    externally a dry the f and v are a pressed and

    dri
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