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 1     I|         gracious eyes upon this labor bend:~To you these tales
 2     I|        diet spare, untired with labor long;~Ready to charge, and
 3    II|     plough of virtue eared,~Her labor goodness; godliness her
 4    II|    hungry wolves in charge,~But labor's virtues watching, ease
 5   III|         of all defence;~An easy labor harmless blood to spill,~
 6   III|       graver years would for no labor yield,~His age was full
 7   III|      for in vain he thought the labor spent,~To assail those parts
 8    VI|   cunning smiths, sweating with labor long;~While thus the careful
 9    VI|         LII~"Man goeth forth to labor with the sun,~But with the
10    VI|             XCIII~Oh, with what labor did her shoulders bear~That
11   VII|      said, "I have not spilt~My labor then, if thou his place
12    IX|      almost~In heavy sleep, the labor half is done~To send them
13    IX|      that his greedy mates with labor light,~Amid the tents, a
14     X|      for Titan bright~To wonted labor summons every wight."~ ~
15    XI|  returns to fight,~But lost his labor, for day lost his light.~ ~ ~
16    XI|     forth it went.~ ~ LXXII~His labor vain, his art prevailed
17  XIII|        to flight the men, whose labor would~To their dark shades
18  XIII|       high attempts him led,~No labor would he shun, no danger
19  XIII|         His soldiers, weak with labor, faint with sweat:~ ~ LIII~
20 XVIII|         high,~Through sweat and labor gainst those rocks sublime~
21 XVIII|     instrument,~Nor aught their labor interrupts or stays;~The
22   XIX|       night delayed~Doth little labor bring, less doubt, no fear,~
23    XX| victories,~The danger none, the labor will be small,~Let not the
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