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 1   T-I|         let that be: the Leader’s anger done,~grant me the right
 2   T-I|        you see all’s calm, if his anger’s lost its bite,~if, while
 3   T-I|        you, add to great Caesar’s anger!~Often when one god presses,
 4   T-I|     granted~by Caesar’s relenting anger, to the chosen place.~If
 5   T-I|       your fleeing ship.~Caesar’s anger drives you to leave your
 6   T-I|         less than Jove,~Jupiter’s anger oppressed me, Neptune’s
 7   T-I|          unless the wounded god’s anger lessens.~~ Book TI.VI:1-
 8   T-I|           city, ~Tomis, where the anger of an injured god has sent
 9  T-II|          the Muse who stirred the anger also calm it:~song often
10  T-II|          let my skill soften your anger.~It’s justified indeed:
11  T-II|        that ends the war ends its anger, for you,~and both sides
12  T-II|         time will mellow Caesar’s anger, ~whose mercy in punishing
13  T-II|          My life was spared, your anger stopped short of death,~
14  T-II|          only you might calm your anger for a while~and order some
15 T-III|           cruelty,~sharers of the anger one god feels,~I beg you,
16 T-III|        greater a man the more his anger can be placated,~and a noble
17 T-III|          to show not merely human anger turned to mildness,~Juno’
18 T-III|     behalf, I beg you,~lessen the anger of the injured god,~and
19 T-III|       Perhaps, sometime, when his anger’s sated,~I need to pray
20 T-III|            I complain of Caesar’s anger,~who did not avenge his
21 T-III|           I love:~if I endured no anger but Caesar’s naked anger,~
22 T-III|          anger but Caesar’s naked anger,~then is our Caesar’s naked
23 T-III|        then is our Caesar’s naked anger not enough?~Yet still there’
24 T-III|         compared to me,~Neptune’s anger was much slighter than Jove’
25 T-III|          most miserable,~Caesar’s anger brings with it every ill.~
26 T-III|         with Pontus? Did Caesar’s anger~send you, as well, to the
27  T-IV|        when time has softened his anger.~For now I beg him to order
28  T-IV|            it even softens fierce anger, little by little,~it lessens
29  T-IV|        did I drive him to hostile anger,~the most gracious man in
30  T-IV|         the edge of the earth,~my anger will still reach out to
31  T-IV|           when a wounded prince’s anger ordered me~to Tomis on the
32   T-V|            If invincible Caesar’s anger were milder to me,~then
33   T-V|       will be enough.~Indeed your anger is moderated, you grant
34   T-V|           d earned them:~yet your anger is lighter than my offence.~
35   T-V|       home.~Whether chance or the anger of the gods caused it,~or
36   T-V|         horse.~He hopes the god’s anger wont last forever~conscious
37   T-V|      waves.~So check the swell of anger, it’s inappropriate,~don’
38   T-V|          worse,~when the Prince’s anger tore me away from you.~Still
39   T-V|          such misfortune:~a god’s anger’s more powerful than human
40  ExII|          experienced the prince’s anger,~dont think I’d not wish,
41  ExII|           no access to water.~The anger of a merciful man wouldn’
42  ExII|           t compel him to do:~his anger even stops short of what
43  ExII|       Thessaly’s border.~Caesar’s anger harmed me, at whom earth
44  ExII|          needed,~often a prince’s anger can be turned aside by weeping.’~
45  ExII|       wealth from me, nor, if his anger~might be overcome by your
46  ExII|          Caesar might temper ~his anger, and your villa entertain
47  ExII|         often he said: ‘The godsanger is not implacable:~live,
48  ExII|         and request that Caesar’s anger not be final:~He’ll exert
49  ExII|         If any fear that Caesar’s anger sits too lightly on me~I
50  ExII|          to lessen, his justified anger against me.~ ~The End of
51   ExI|        fail to believe the divine anger could lessen ~towards me,
52   ExI|       after I’d deserved Caesar’s anger:~such is your loyalty to
53   ExI|   defeated by my offence,~and his anger was forced to display its
54   ExI|         shoulders.~It’s true your anger was justified at first,
55   ExI|          you wished that Caesar’s anger towards me ~might be eased,
56   ExI| expression in his portrait one of anger, ~is his face somehow grim
57   ExI|        prove true,~that the god’s anger lessens, even if it’s just.~~
58   ExI|        Whatever it is, my judge’s anger was moderate,~who took nothing
59 ExIII|            But dont let Caesar’s anger at me be implacable,~who’
60 ExIII|      guise of error,~your judge’s anger was no more than you deserved.~
61 ExIII|       forget your fears: Caesar’s anger will relent,~and a gentler
62 ExIII|           is, in the midst~of his anger, from my case, if you don’
63 ExIII|           my fate, not my judge’s anger,~I was even terrified of
64 ExIII|          asked.~Assuming Caesar’s anger doesnt forbid it me,~I’
65 ExIII|          gods to lessen Caesar’s ~anger, and my bones to be buried
66  ExIV|       gratitude.~Please dont let anger bear down on my loyal service.~
67  ExIV|           an end ~to my ills, the anger of the sacred house be lessened. ~
68  ExIV|        you could ask the prince’s anger to relent, for me!~May a
69  ExIV|        for such words,~and public anger’s stirred by my verse.~Shall
70  ExIV|    interpretation rouses people’s anger ~against me, accuses my
71  IBIS|           treacherous mouths,~and anger and grief act out their
72  IBIS|        you: death will not end my anger, rather~among the shades
73  IBIS|         fall on you, ~you whom my anger rightly heaps with curses.~
74  IBIS|       grandson, killed by Venus’s anger,~may you an exile, be dragged
75   Ind|    Agamemnon leading to Achillesanger and the dispute that begins
76   Ind|       Ibis:597-644 Fuelled by the anger of the giants beneath it.~ ~
77   Ind|        Book TI.II:1-74 Augustus’s anger. Augustus did not judge
78   Ind|           s sea to avoid Boreas’s anger. Neptune saved him.~ ~Eupolis~
79   Ind|           Book TIII. XI:39-74 His anger against Ovid is greater
80   Ind|           own children, driven by anger through slighted love.~Book
81   Ind|       chased by Orion rousing the anger of Artemis to whom they
82   Ind|      opponent, incurring Athene’s anger. She allowed him to die
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