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 1   T-I|         t do harm, while you’ve power to help –~since my hope
 2   T-I|        was safe through Venus’s power.~Fierce Neptune often challenged
 3   T-I|         from them,~who denies a power to me, against the angry
 4   T-I|       obey.~Now Eurus storms in power from the purple east,~now
 5   T-I|     your help in this.~He has a power, not to be grudged, over
 6   T-I|       be driven back,~with what power the waves pound at her sides!~
 7   T-I|        far as my praise has any power,~you will still live, for
 8   T-I|          on my own behalf, have power for you!~You’ll have many
 9  T-II|       able to hold~the reins of power with greater moderation.~
10  T-II|       by sea, by heaven’s third power, I swear,~and by you, a
11  T-II|    think they’d set aside their power:~so my fears vanish, change,
12  T-II|          that you can turn your power to foolish games,~examining
13  T-II|     poems,~that fell before the power of the Greeks?~Why silent
14 T-III|       place, I dread the man of power,~and my writing wavers with
15 T-III| far-flung journeys have had the power to kill me:~my spirit matched
16 T-III|         and my dry tongue, deny power to dictate it.~Accept the
17 T-III|       the gods always grant you power to defend your own,~and
18 T-III|       did wish so, have you the power.~Since, while it was right,
19 T-III|       and, if favour grants you power,~prove it on my behalf,
20 T-III|        my genius:~Caesar has no power over that.~Let whoever will
21 T-III|    lingers there two years.~The power of Aquilo’s northern gales
22 T-III|        then.~Whether the savage power of wild Boreas~freezes the
23  T-IV|       can I do, now? Their very power holds me,~and, maddened,
24  T-IV|    offered you by my verse~have power to harm you, I think, with
25  T-IV|   suffered more from the divine power’s wrath.~Be warned by my
26   T-V|        That god, in whom Rome’s power is rooted,~was often merciful
27   T-V|      you, at least, with divine power, should have aided~one of
28   T-V|      longer wholly in the god’s power?~You yourself were admitted
29   T-V|       try to influence Caesar’s power with your own.~You too,
30   T-V|      down, ~nor do you fear the power of Fortune’s precarious
31   T-V|        it true, that, though no power conquers him,~he has a tender
32   T-V|         native hearth.~Caesar’s power proved lenient to me,~as
33   T-V|    strengthened by the vigorous power ~they say Socrates had,
34   T-V|          would have had~no more power to write in this situation.~
35   T-V|         of fame grants no small power~to the mind: desire for
36  ExII|    gains the means to live.~The power of the divine being itself
37  ExII|       herself will lose all her power.~In living I never lose
38  ExII|         skill,~felt the healing power ease his wound,~So I, low
39  ExII|         shouldnt be closed: no power is strong enough~to accept
40  ExII|        Achilles had limited his power~the Pelian spear he hurled
41   ExI|     plant, feel the fertilising power,~and am often benefited
42   ExI|     shone brightly,~by heaven’s power, and the day matched ~the
43   ExI|     supported Pelion,~I had the power to touch the bright stars
44   ExI|    aimed my spear at any divine power.~My offence is grave but
45   ExI|         to salute, the heavenly power.~Even if you offered me
46   ExI|        be equal to your spirit.~Power is never active in a better
47   ExI|      your nearness offer me~the power to live in safety in this
48   ExI|          Oh, since I’ve not the power, may the gods show~gratitude!
49 ExIII|          no Circe born with the power to alter forms,~no Medusa
50 ExIII|       it.~The strong have inner power, and need no Machaon. ~It’
51 ExIII|     such reading,~it’s by their power, not their novelty, that
52  ExIV|         I’ll still not have the power to forget you.~I beg you’
53  ExIV|        audience stirs interest: power grows ~with praise, and
54  ExIV|          Who’s not heard of the power of Croesus’s wealth?~Yet
55  ExIV|      for so great a man.~Divine power toys with human affairs,
56  ExIV|          my eyes wont have the power to enjoy these things!~What’
57  ExIV|   willed.~Ah me, it has greater power than your prayers.~I’ve
58  ExIV|      Caesar. Please your divine power,~Germanicus, truly no altar’
59  ExIV|        I’ll bear witness to the power of the divinity.~I’ll not
60  ExIV|        lowly censer~has no less power than that from a great man’
61  ExIV|     VIII:49-90 To Suillius: The Power of Poetry~ ~Virtue’s kept
62  ExIV|         and nothing has greater power than time.~Writing survives
63  ExIV|     stand beside him, no less a power now he’s become a god.~So
64  ExIV|       so I foretell your divine power will yield to them:~not
65  ExIV|       is his home, and he gains power from the location.~But Notus,
66  ExIV|      refuses, Nile, to yield in power even to you.~The spoil of
67  ExIV|         the sea maintaining its power.~Indeed, like a still pool
68  ExIV|      cold,~and my fate have the power to be gentler,~than your
69  ExIV|       by well-known features.~A power we know to be worthy of
70  ExIV|   attempt was helped by a god’s power.~I tell how the body of
71  ExIV|          Seal it, Citizens!~The power of the law’s not needed:
72  IBIS|       this grief might have the power to vanish in a moment,~and
73  IBIS|         leader. ~Nor let divine power be prompt to your relief,
74  IBIS|         beg someone to test the power of the god,~serve you as
75  IBIS|         I ask, and multiply the power of my prayers.~You’ll read
76   Ind|     time as Potidaea. He seized power with the help of a band
77   Ind|       probably overestimate his power, and underestimate the distaste
78   Ind|        deification, and had the power to renew life. She was the
79   Ind|     sacred tree. His emblems of power are the sceptre and lightning-bolt.
80   Ind|   children, but exercised great power over him and the succession,
81   Ind|        II:1-52 Ibis:541-596 Her power to transform those she looked
82   Ind| Pelopidas destroyed Alexander's power in the battle of Cynoscephalae,
83   Ind|         as the source of Rome’s power.~Book TV.VI:1-46 Officials (
84   Ind|      wine. It was a major naval power in the 6th century BC, under
85   Ind|  support for Persia, but gained power over Boeotia in the Peloponnesian
86   Ind|   blinded by Juno but given the power of prophecy by Jupiter.~
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