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round, with an intervention of other words between them, such as this:
Came the foam [which] the plain filters,
Came the ox through fifty warriors;
[So] came the keen, active lad,
[Whom] brown Cu Dinisc A proper name, likely referring to a historical or legendary figure left.
But “reduplication” is, namely, “refolding;” that is, “doubling,” as in this:
I ask, I ask, after long, long,
To be in pain, pain, not peace, peace:
Like each, each, till judgment, judgment,
In each time, time, though fatigue, fatigue.
There are two divisions of these in this forespeech: “return to a usual sound,” and “renarration-mode;” but “renarration-mode” is found only in the body of the hymn.
GOD, GOD—I HAVE ASKED HIM BEFORE I COME TO HIS FACE. That is: I implore God, or I ask of God before I come to His face, or the time, or the period I come original: ".1." is an abbreviation for the Latin "id est," meaning "that is".
FOR CHARIOTS THROUGH BATTLE.—“Obscuration” original: "obscuratio," referring to a deliberate poetic darkening or complexity of language, or “superabundance,” is used here; and so that appearances of “obscuration” might not exist, the “be-heading,” “bi-heading,” and “head-changing” have been established, as some persons say. “Neit” An Old Irish word for a wound or battle-god also means wound, as is said:
May your monument at the dawn-breeze be,
After your death-wound, a sail ever to be driven;
May she be borne in a chariot after a horse,
Your wife, O hero, to her beautiful church.
That is: just as a serrated chariot goes through battle, may it be so that my soul shall go through the battle of demons to heaven.
“Obscuration” is used here in a special way, for cul An Irish root word is the usual word; but the poet added u here to fill out the poetry; or to make the words difficult to recognize through diminution, increase, and change being made in them. And there are three forms of it [of “obscuration”], that is, “be-heading,” “bi-heading,” and “head-changing.” “Be-heading” is to cut off its own head The removal of the initial letter or syllable of a word.