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  1   T-I|          you instead should keep my fate in mind.~No brittle pumice
  2   T-I|          couldnt be informed of my fate.~Wherever you chanced, grief
  3   T-I|         thought it right to make my fate your own~who were the first,
  4   T-I|      fortune~never to be in need, a fate dissimilar to mine. ~Still,
  5   T-I| constellations apart~I’m carried by fate to Getic, and Sarmatian
  6  T-II|             how can you forgive?~My fate has given you the chance
  7  T-II|             accusation.~Nor was the fate of those on trial wrongly
  8  T-II|          his own hounds’ prey.~Even fate must be atoned for, among
  9  T-II|             under your name,~but my fate interrupted work dedicated
 10 T-III|           love.~Such is my author’s fate he shouldnt try,~the wretch,
 11 T-III|        books.~Our wretched author’s fate engulfs his children,~and
 12 T-III|            I beg you, drive my slow fate onwards~forbid the doors
 13 T-III|         that isnt sad.~Still if my fate’s fulfilled its destined
 14 T-III|             a foreign shore,~and my fate will be desolate as the
 15 T-III|             saw you grieving for my fate, with such a look~as I believe
 16 T-III|            never,~touched by a like fate, have to make the same request.~~
 17 T-III|         through your advice.~But my fate was dragging me surely to
 18 T-III|          there’s no way to overcome fate,~Oh, you, closest to me
 19 T-III|             style?~Since nature and fate gave you modest ~manners,
 20 T-III|             you.~But I fear lest my fate holds you back,~and that
 21 T-III|            ache.~The nature of that fate I must view clings to me,~
 22 T-III|           and my place of exile.~My fate might seem sad enough to
 23 T-III|           my fault:~remember mortal fate that lifts a man and crushes
 24 T-III|          you’ve nothing to fear: my fate’s most miserable,~Caesar’
 25 T-III|              given the nature of my fate.~ ~The End of Tristia Book
 26  T-IV|           Euxine shore.~But my evil fate’s no easier since I arrived:~
 27  T-IV|              from where to where my fate has carried me,~often my
 28  T-IV|             songs no better than my fate.~~ Book TIV.II:1-74 Tiberius’
 29  T-IV|      terrible, indifferent to their fate.~Some people will ask for
 30  T-IV|            my gloom,~and the public fate will outweigh the private.~~
 31  T-IV|             misfortune,~weep for my fate: there’s a release in weeping,~
 32  T-IV|            itself, in adversity.~My fate grants you the opportunity
 33  T-IV|              Let me not remember my fate:~Let me not touch and open
 34  T-IV|            s wrath.~Be warned by my fate, too, to make yourselves
 35  T-IV|       Virgil I only saw: and greedy fate granted ~Tibullus no time
 36  T-IV|         surrounds me,~I ease my sad fate with such song as I can.~
 37   T-V|             will be like its poet’s fate:~no sweetness will visit
 38   T-V|              And how little of this fate is in my poetry.~Happy the
 39   T-V|             words mine, they are my fate’s.~But if you restore me
 40   T-V|        caused it,~or whether a dark Fate attended my birth,~you,
 41   T-V|          Sisters, the Mistresses of Fate,~ordain is no longer wholly
 42   T-V|             by a difficult, an iron fate in life.~I’ve fallen no
 43   T-V|         stars:~be here, and ease my fate, loveliest of the gods,~
 44   T-V|            Ah, how much better your fate than mine!’ ~He wrote me
 45   T-V|           different in colour to my fate:~let them erect a green
 46   T-V|      contagion~might spread from my fate to poison hers as well.~~
 47   T-V|       rather effort ~and trouble, a fate your character didnt deserve,~
 48   T-V|            not so wholly crushed by fate’s adversity~that my mind’
 49   T-V|              you should consider my fate:~there’s no place for any
 50   T-V|             health, ~one part of my fate retains its brightness.~
 51   T-V|             where you trample on my fate?~I saw a man who laughed
 52   T-V|      aggrieved, not so much that my fate is spoken of ~with malice,
 53   T-V|           exile’,~stop burdening my fate with that lying name!~~
 54   T-V|             could be sadder than my fate.~You’re urging Priam to
 55   T-V|           friend.~The threads of my fate are not so dark as that.~
 56   T-V|         pyre.~Though your husband’s fate might make you seem~one
 57  ExII|             arrows, and with my own fate.~My tears are endless, unless
 58  ExII|           the enduring nature of my fate, I weaken,~and slight hope
 59  ExII|              ones who endured their fate with firm minds.~Admire
 60  ExII|       though it’s no easier than my fate.~When I read it, I’m ashamed
 61  ExII|        single word to judgement?~Is fate not tormenting me enough
 62  ExII|          with a distant world?~What fate has granted me, let that
 63  ExII|         have not been altered by my fate.~~ Book EI.VII:1-70 To Messalinus:
 64   ExI|             clear sky: I’ve cheated fate.~Even if Caesar doesnt
 65   ExI|           safety: the most wretched fate’s ~the safest, since fear
 66   ExI|          possess you.~No part of my fate can be so devoid of brightness.~
 67   ExI|       chance, surrender a friend to fate,~and deny he’s yours unless
 68   ExI|           It’s clear to me now that fate, keeping its first course,~
 69   ExI|          scarcely possible to cheat fate.~Fortune takes care to destroy
 70   ExI|         face to face.~Since hostile fate has begrudged me that,~I
 71 ExIII|             dont show care for me.~Fate has exposed me to the public
 72 ExIII|             These are the riches my fate serves up for you.~~ Book
 73 ExIII|             cruel enemy behind: let fate be enemy enough.~More comes
 74 ExIII|            was given (such is human fate!) was her brother.~So, without
 75 ExIII|           of your speech.~But since fate preferred I leave you and
 76 ExIII|          from here is prohibited by fate,~then take from me, Maximus,
 77 ExIII|          comrade,~easing his bitter fate with gentle words.~Why do
 78 ExIII|         misfortune,~and dreading my fate, not my judge’s anger,~I
 79 ExIII|             whom the cruel usage of fate is customary.~I’ve reached
 80 ExIII|          die among them,~and let my Fate end as it has begun.~It
 81 ExIII|      leniency in my case?~Surely my fate was clear enough to me?~
 82 ExIII|             the bitter aspect of my fate confronts me,~and it seems
 83  ExIV|              undeterred by my~swift fate, offers my life, and will
 84  ExIV|             tough brambles.~A heavy fate makes nothing so miserable~
 85  ExIV|            you’d not wish, wretched fate has willed.~Ah me, it has
 86  ExIV|           you see anyone wounded by fate’s injustice,~no woman’s
 87  ExIV|         here meriting shame,~except fate: she was blind where I was
 88  ExIV|             d been born to a better fate,~and my wheels had run on
 89  ExIV|        around you,~if only a kinder fate granted me entrance to the
 90  ExIV|             t endure the anxiety of fate throughout,~and there were
 91  ExIV|            south winds cold,~and my fate have the power to be gentler,~
 92  ExIV|            effect, or whether~harsh fate orders me to die beneath
 93  IBIS|          face offensive to your own fate.~And let no reason fail,
 94  IBIS|           Maledictions: His Enemy’s Fate~ ~You were born unfortunate (
 95  IBIS|             poet who will sing your fate.’~I am that poet: from me
 96  IBIS|       serpents.~Or, as in Ariadne’s fate, may raging liquid rush~
 97  IBIS|           sails approaching:~such a fate as Irus, too, that beggar
 98   Ind|          His wife’s response to his fate brought about her fame.~
 99   Ind|       Danaus. Learning of his sonsfate at the hands of the Danaids,
100   Ind|           response to her husband’s fate brought about her fame.~
101   Ind|             Made more famous by his fate.~ ~Amyntor~Ibis:251-310
102   Ind|           310 This a variant of her fate.~ ~Aristaeus~The son of
103   Ind|          His wife’s response to his fate brought about her fame.~
104   Ind|             Made more famous by his fate.~Ibis:465-540 Blasted by
105   Ind|        c279-276BC.~Ibis:413-464 His fate.~ ~Castor~The son of Tyndareus
106   Ind|            209-250 She spins Ibis’s fate.~ ~Clytaemnestra, Clytaemestra,
107   Ind|         Mentioned.~Ibis:465-540 His fate.~ ~Elysium~Elysium or the
108   Ind|            38 Fortune as chance and fate.~Book TV.VIII:1-38 Book
109   Ind|          passion. ~Ibis:541-596 His fate.~ ~Haemonia~The ancient
110   Ind|           response to her husband’s fate brought her fame.~Book EIII.
111   Ind|         Ovid speculates that a dark Fate was present at his birth.~
112   Ind|           response to her husband’s fate.~Book EIII.1:105-166 She
113   Ind|       Thebes. Tiresias foretold his fate at the hands of the Maenads (
114   Ind|             Made more famous by his fate.~ ~Philomela~The daughter
115   Ind|           wrote about Mark Antony’s fate.~Book EIV.XVI:1-52 A poet
116   Ind|          his lust.~Ibis:413-464 The fate of Itys.~ ~Teucer~The son
117   Ind|            in law.~Ibis:413-464 His fate.~ ~Tyndareus~The husband
118   Ind|          His wife’s response to his fate brought about her fame.~
119   Ind|             Made more famous by his fate.~Book EIII.VI:1-60 Ibis:
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