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 1   T-I|      blots: he who sees them~will know they were caused by my tears.~
 2   T-I|         you lack a title, they’ll know the style:~though wishing
 3   T-I|         summit fell on my head.~I know there are merciful powers
 4   T-I|        places –~and still, as all know, they teach how to love.~
 5   T-I|      winds.~The ocean waves dont know what lord to obey.~Now Eurus
 6   T-I|       never deceive the gods,~you know that crime was absent from
 7   T-I|          my fault.~~  ~Ah, if you know it, if my error has misled
 8   T-I|           s author knows what you know, too.~If the god is content
 9   T-I|       desire for death,~truly you know whom I mean, by these tokens
10   T-I|         knew from old examples,~I know now to be true from my own
11   T-I|     Odyssey~ ~If anyone wishes to know all my misfortunes,~he asks
12   T-I|          to my brow.~Hide it, yet know it, I say this to you, best
13   T-I|         What, didnt you not only know me in Rome,~but in so many
14   T-I|          life’s known to you. You know their author’s~conduct held
15   T-I|           arts at a distance:~you know those verses were the fun
16  T-II|        made men and women want to know me,~but that was no happy
17  T-II|            and the cultured crowd know Ovid well,~and dare count
18  T-II|           but great Homer’s do we know~of Calypso and Circe, goddesses
19 T-III|          the land itself, I dont know why, displeases.~There’s
20 T-III|         forgetting me?~Not you, I know it. Dearest, it’s clear
21 T-III|        lasting monument,~those, I know, though they’ve injured
22 T-III|           the sorrowing dust will know your faithful care.~I’d
23 T-III|          away in a distant place,~know you’re always present in
24 T-III|        absence –~dear friend, you know that ‘dear’ might stand
25 T-III|           A guest from Colchis, I know the sail.’~While the Argonauts
26 T-III|        city now I’m gone,~let him know that, beneath the stars
27 T-III|          you should have tried to know me for the last time,~and
28  T-IV|          will answer, though they know little.~‘He, who shines
29  T-IV|      dangerous paths.~~ Who would know of Hector, if Troy had been
30  T-IV|          revealing your name!~You know it though, and, touched
31  T-IV|          weigh more heavily now I know them better.~It’s no little
32  T-IV|           from here.~If you dont know it, Caesar has left me all
33  T-IV|           own age only, that will know it was you,~you’ll be guilty
34  T-IV|          was born: if you want to know the date,~it was when both
35  T-IV| proclaimed in the courts of Styx,~know, I beg you ( it would be
36  T-IV|     studious spirits, who wish to know the facts of my life.~~
37   T-V|        his lips.~Whoever seeks to know the cause of his sadness,~
38   T-V|        life, and on yours,~that I know he holds no less dear than
39   T-V|    yourself ~how I am, though you know, even if I’m silent.~I’m
40   T-V|         so.~Are you interested to know what the people round Tomis~
41   T-V|           for the theatre,~as you know yourself, my Muse isnt
42   T-V|       possible I’d wish no one to know of me.~Or do you urge me
43  ExII|          household.~You’d like to know where to put them, without
44  ExII|           alms?~No such thing, we know, is done at Diana’s command,~
45  ExII|         exile.~For Caesar doesnt know, though a god knows all, ~
46  ExII|        soil draws all of us, by I know not ~what sweetness, and
47  ExII|      Bulls seek the pastures they know, and lions –~despite their
48  ExII|      wiser of us two,~it’s that I know myself better than any doctor
49  ExII|     suddenly saw me, you wouldnt know me,~such is the ruin that’
50  ExII|           than Pylian Nestor.~You know how the sturdy oxen are
51  ExII|         Graecinus, but if I truly know you it must have been sad.~
52  ExII|         and Via Flaminia.~I dont know who I’ve cultivated them
53  ExII|           substance.~You’d hardly know my features if you saw them,~
54  ExII|           by excess drinking:~you know that water’s almost the
55   ExI|     savagery of Scythian lands.~I know it’s difficult, but virtue
56   ExI|           even wish to be seen to know me,~only two or three brought
57   ExI|    Maximus: The Disclosure~ ~If I know you well, if you’re still
58   ExI|        air on quivering wings,~or know how many fish swam in the
59   ExI|         art created,~so men might know the gods the deep heavens~
60   ExI|        sin further? Dont seek to know,~so my guilt can hide beneath
61   ExI|           s ~width, you can still know that I remember you.~I’d
62 ExIII|            if you truly desire to know. ~It’s not enough to wish:
63 ExIII|  Sarmatians and the Getae already know ~of you, and the savage
64 ExIII|             Good stranger, we too know the name of friendship,
65 ExIII|       taught you, wanton.~Yet you know, and could swear with a
66 ExIII|         charges, as in this! ~You know there’s another thing that
67 ExIII|            the wreath itself will know that familiar brow:~and
68 ExIII|           a Getic arrow,~(and you know how near punishment is if
69 ExIII|        case, if you dont already know.~If I were forced to judge
70 ExIII|            I suppose.~You already know what my letter brings, though~
71 ExIII|      being saved, completely,~and know you’re lost, once and for
72  ExIV|          slide away,~now that you know your help is really needed.~
73  ExIV|           t want to be thought to know me,~‘Who’s that?’ you ask,
74  ExIV|          one who was the first to know your serious ~thoughts,
75  ExIV|           one, traitor, you dont know if I’m still alive,~whom
76  ExIV|          May your enemies come to know how fierce you are~in conflict,
77  ExIV|        years. Through writing you know~of Agamemnon, and all who
78  ExIV|         for or against him.~Who’d know of Thebes and the seven
79  ExIV|        singing voice.~It’s how we know that Chaos, that mass of
80  ExIV|         lengthy way.~and so you’d know how much little things impress
81  ExIV|      received among the gods, you know and see it,~for certain,
82  ExIV|       desire,~and I dont exactly know what would benefit me.~Believe
83  ExIV|   well-known features.~A power we know to be worthy of Hercules ~
84  ExIV|           had made it so it might know hope~of sweet peace, and
85  ExIV|      exile is getting on:~let him know I owe my life to the Caesars,
86  IBIS|      nearly his own ruin.~May you know what Phoenix knew, and,
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