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 1   T-I|        clouded by sudden miseries.~Verse asks for a writer with leisure
 2   T-I|          the sea.~Every fear harms verse: I’m lost and always~afraid
 3   T-I|            But enter quietly so my verse wont hurt you,~it’s not
 4   T-I|          live, for all time, in my verse.~~ Book TI.VII:1-40 His
 5   T-I|          the ship: still I spun~my verse, such as it is, with shaking
 6  T-II|           away, also: I charge the verse with guilt.~Here’s the reward
 7  T-II|         himself to be the theme of verse,~and when the battles are
 8  T-II|          aloud to you,~so that the verse that honours you in my books~
 9  T-II|      crushes the innocent.~So with verse, read with a virtuous mind~
10  T-II|           no crime to unroll sweet verse: the chaste~read many things
11  T-II|         this – I’m fit~for lighter verse, adequate for humble music:~
12  T-II|          character’s other than my verse –~my life is modest, my
13  T-II|  belittling brave actions with his verse.~Aristides associated himself
14  T-II|            of Ticidas’ or Memmiusverse~in which things are named,
15  T-II|           hurt anyone with caustic verse,~my poetry’s never accused
16 T-III|        wouldnt want a place in my verse.~You did before: it was
17 T-III|         source of fear to none.~My verse gives no hints that drag
18 T-III|      shared studies,~write learned verse, though not in your father’
19 T-III|            Do you still protect my verse, excepting that poem~about
20 T-III|           managed to persevere ~at verse at all, with sorrow’s hand,
21 T-III|            instead.~If I recite my verse, there’s no one about,~to
22  T-IV|          tribute offered you by my verse~have power to harm you,
23  T-IV|        being mentioned often in my verse,~nor can he prevent it,
24  T-IV|             he used to speak of my verse with that eloquence~which
25  T-IV|           with fame.~But I fear my verse of thanks might harm you,~
26  T-IV|            were free of metre.~But verse came, of itself, in the
27  T-IV|       angry with my studies and my verse.~Soft, and never safe from
28   T-V|         state is mournful so is my verse,~the writing’s appropriate
29   T-V|       seeks the delights of wanton verse,~that’s not what this writing
30   T-V|           s thoughts now to public verse,~and instructed them to
31   T-V|        filled with delight.~But my verse will never play as it once
32   T-V|         let your name be set in my verse~how often you’d have been
33   T-V|          write because at first my verse~went well, so as to follow
34   T-V|            nothing more to do with verse,~one shipwrecked I ought
35   T-V|           to, make some worthwhile verse:~therefore my effort’s thrown
36  ExII|             Why should I polish my verse with anxious care?~Because
37  ExII|       fleeing:~It’s fitting I make verse witness to a rare spirit,~
38   ExI|            triumph also perhaps in verse~if only my lifespan equals
39   ExI|          my words with my self:~my verse is allowed to exist in your
40   ExI|         first urged me to grant my verse a public ~hearing: he was
41   ExI|          peace. ~Yet you read this verse composed amid fierce battles,~
42   ExI|           So you’re right to think verse borders on your studies,~
43   ExI|     Graecinus,~greets you sadly in verse, from Black Sea waters.~
44   ExI|            all in autobiographical verse,~a whole Iliad could be
45 ExIII|      whenever you’re praised in my verse~he who reads that praise
46 ExIII|       themselves would have fed my verse,~and the royal faces, surest
47 ExIII|          news gets here, and hasty verse is written~and, once made,
48 ExIII|           are spoken~against their verse! My Muse speaks only for
49 ExIII|       though I’m absent.~So let my verse be sealed with your approval~
50 ExIII|            I not address you in my verse?~You can learn how great
51 ExIII|            someone’s carping at my verse,~because the same sentiment’
52 ExIII|        seems to me a man who makes verse and bothers~to correct it,
53  ExIV|           of friendship.~It’s only verse I’ve not given you, witness
54  ExIV|            acquire fame through my verse.~As long as my ship rested
55  ExIV|            shores, I sent you~such verse as I could write concerning
56  ExIV|           you frowned reading this verse,~and felt shame at being
57  ExIV|       tribute rendered by a poet’s verse.~Poetry acts everywhere
58  ExIV|             Virtue’s kept alive by verse, and, escaping ~the tomb,
59  ExIV|          name wasnt present in my verse.~Since I remember that you
60  ExIV|    worthier of that honour –~if my verse happened to confer any honour.~
61  ExIV|            no way you can be in my verse.~I’d be ashamed to split
62  ExIV|           The style and form of my verse can act as immediate~witness
63  ExIV|      complained to you recently in verse:~and in these lines, except
64  ExIV|       public anger’s stirred by my verse.~Shall I never stop being
65  ExIV|        reputation in both forms of verse:~and he who had Ulysses
66  ExIV|            of a sea of sails whose verse you’d think~composed by
67  IBIS|            name of Ibis:~and as my verse will reflect something of
68  IBIS|           spoken of just now in my verse, ~drink the aphrodisiac
69   Ind|            friends, from his early verse. He agreed if he could retain
70   Ind|         421-470 His dubious erotic verse.~ ~Antaeus~Ibis:365-412
71   Ind|    Augustan poet who wrote elegiac verse, otherwise unknown.~Book
72   Ind|         Book TII:421-470 His light verse.~ ~Catullus~Caius Valerius
73   Ind| Hellenistic Alexandria. His erotic verse was addressed to Lesbia,
74   Ind|            His erotic and explicit verse.~ ~Cayster~The major river
75   Ind|       Cinyras. He also wrote light verse. Mistaken for one of the
76   Ind|          421-470 His dubious light verse.~ ~Cinyphus~The river Cinyps
77   Ind|         suggests a girl learned in verse. From this and a possible
78   Ind|         Book TII:421-470 His light verse.~ ~Coroebus~Ibis:541-596
79   Ind|      celebration of Lycoris in his verse.~Book TIV.X:41-92 Senior
80   Ind|      poetry. ~Book TII:421-470 His verse.~ ~Hyades~The daughters
81   Ind|           of the De Rerum Natura a verse treatise in six books on
82   Ind|           difficult work in iambic verse. In ancient times his tragedies
83   Ind|        Book TII:421-470 His erotic verse.~ ~Memnon~The son of Tithonus
84   Ind|         Mentioned as a subject for verse in Ovid’s list of his lesser
85   Ind|           He acknowledges that his verse (Amores, Ars Amatoria etc)
86   Ind|         Mentioned as a subject for verse in Ovid’s list of his lesser
87   Ind|        Book TII:421-470 His risqué verse.~Book TIII.III:47-88 Note
88   Ind|          Mentioned as a subject of verse in Ovid’s list of his lesser
89   Ind|      poetess.~Book TII:421-470 His verse.~ ~Sestos~The Greek town
90   Ind|           Muse of comedy and light verse, used symbolically for poetry
91   Ind|            of Ovid’s early lighter verse.~ ~Thamyris~Ibis:251-310
92   Ind|          Tūtĭcānus in elegiac verse. It can only be done by
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