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 1     I|         all times hearken, never age outwear.~ ~ XXXVII~The French
 2     I|         and trees o'ergrown with age,~Nor aught withstands his
 3     I|      with this new thought,~With age and years that weakened
 4   III|          for no labor yield,~His age was full of puissance and
 5    IV|          long agone,~This latter age hears little truth or none.~ ~
 6    IV|      reign, even from his tender age;~Yet of this war he could
 7    IV|       piece, for beauty, sex and age,~The sun was sunken underneath
 8    IV|     guard?~My sex too weak, mine age was all to young,~To undertake
 9     V|          how I in mine unbridled age~Was wronged, yet I would
10     V|        his doating and his dying age.~ ~ LXXIV~Oh how contentment
11    VI|    Although I withered seem with age and years,~Yet are not these
12   VII|       and with content~My latter age here have I quiet spent."~ ~
13   VII|        day,~Or that thy hair for age shall turn to gray;~ ~ XXXIII~"
14   VII|         I were in prime of lusty age,~Like you that this adventure
15   VII|        courage still remain;~For age or years these members shall
16   VII|        like thee of valor and of age,~Among these legions I could
17   VII|         faithful child of tender age;~Like grace, O Lord, like
18  VIII|     which the holy men of future age,~To view our graves shall
19    IX|       semblant bore~Of one whose age was great, whose looks were
20    IX|      bliss, and joys of youthful age.~ ~ XXXIV~But Picus yet
21    IX|      chin the spring-time of his age~Yet blossomed out her flowers,
22     X|          you beseem, whom graver age~And long experience hath
23    XI|          men, and boys of tender age,~To fire of angry war still
24   XII|      case,~Their feeble sex, his age, deserveth grace."~ ~ VII~
25   XII|      loss prepared,~That my weak age, nor tears that down distil,~
26   XII|        passed the August of mine age,~When more than half my
27   XII|       true,~Which from my cradle age thou taught me hast;~I will
28   XIV|         flowering green of lusty age,~For glory vain, or virtue'
29    XV|          sing,~Of thee to future age let this suffice,~That of
30    XV| flourished in the antique golden age,~Here needs no law, here
31   XVI|          As the fierce steed for age withdrawn from war~Wherein
32  XVII|       grew unfit for war through age,~He sheathed his sword and
33  XVII|    upheild~And state, as his old age and empire crave,~So Phidias
34  XVII|        commit, now in his graver age.~With stately grace the
35  XVII|          want in number, sex and age;~For far above each sceptre,
36  XVII|          Nor time shall end, nor age that seed shall kill.~ ~
37  XVII|       light.~ ~ XCI~"His younger age foretokens true shall yield~
38  XVII|        bays.~ ~ XCII~"His graver age, as well that eild it fits,~
39 XVIII|         habiliment,~A nymph, for age able to go to man,~An hundred
40 XVIII|     LXXXII~As an old rock, which age or stormy wind~Tears from
41    XX|        and weakness of his eild,~Age is not fit to bear strokes
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