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 1   T-I|       the blade, at least~your body rests on the solid ground,
 2   T-I|      is in the place.~Drive my body on swiftly, winds – why
 3   T-I|    half seemed severed from my body.~So Mettus grieved when,
 4   T-I|    filthy dust,~and lifted her body from the cold ground,~she
 5   T-I|       the gods.~He had a tough body, enduring toil:~my powers
 6  T-II|    there’s no weak part in the body of Empire~though nothing
 7 T-III|     spirit matched my ills: my body borrowed~strength from it
 8 T-III|        as the place itself:~my body wont grow weak on a familiar
 9 T-III|    souls might vanish with the body,~so no part of me escapes
10 T-III|  Antigone buried~her brother’s body under the earth, despite
11 T-III|  Though the fire transforms my body to ash,~the sorrowing dust
12 T-III|         you dared to touch the body Jove’s lightning struck,~
13 T-III|    perpetual weakness grips my body!~Whether the disease of
14 T-III|       them,~and no strength of body brings relief,~and I never
15 T-III|       m no fitter in mind than body, rather both~are ill and
16 T-III|    sister cut up her brother’s body.~~ Book TIII.X:1-40 Winter
17 T-III|     alone appears of the whole body.~Often their hair tinkles
18 T-III|     poets,~do so, and keep my ‘body’ of work in the city.~Exile
19  T-IV|    bones ache in your troubled body?~I dont doubt these and
20  T-IV|      bore me would have had my body:~and, in short, I’d have
21  T-IV|   enough to cover my bones.~My body’s troubled, but my mind
22  T-IV|        neither the strength of body, nor aptitude of mind~for
23   T-V|      Dont worry, I’m well: my body that was weak ~before, and
24   T-V|   Scythian air, might leave my body,~before your heart’s wounded
25   T-V|     drawn the sickness into my body,~so no part of me might
26  ExII|      vigour ebb in my weakened body,~the games of youth that
27  ExII|      sturdy oxen are broken in body~by the stubborn earth –
28  ExII|    time.~Leisure nourishes the body, the mind’s fed by it as
29  ExII|      and, clasping your slight body in my arms,~say: ‘It’s love
30  ExII|        laziness spoils an idle body,~how water acquires a tang
31  ExII|       I’ve granted the time my body needs for sleep~how should
32  ExII|        stronger than my slight body.~When you’ve thought deeply
33  ExII|       the bier, or anoint your body,~the whole world separates
34  ExII|        cares, has weakened ~my body, wont allow it to exercise
35  ExII|      is food itself to a frail body,~fails to provide my useless
36  ExII|    fails to provide my useless body with its nurture.~I lie
37   ExI|      no ground to be ploughed.~Body and mind are helped by a
38   ExI|        all:~It even causes the body to acquire strength.~To
39 ExIII| services will only die~when my body’s consumed and turned to
40 ExIII|       posterity.~The bloodless body’s destined for a mournful
41  ExIV|     unscarred.~Unhappily, your body can’t escape every blow:~
42  ExIV|        s power.~I tell how the body of our father, Augustus,
43  IBIS|        with a trembling mouth.~Body never free of ills, mind
44  IBIS|    long to leave your tortured~body, and interminable delay
45  IBIS|      loved) a quarrel for your body, among the wolves.~May you
46  IBIS|       another give your scored body to her hellish snakes:~the
47  IBIS|  mother’s foul ~womb, his vile body lay on Cinyphian soil,~a
48  IBIS|    Eurylochuscrown,~let your body be food for ravenous serpents.~
49  IBIS|    safe, circled~them with his body, they not long surviving
50  IBIS| avenging horses drag your vile body.~May some rock pierce your
51  IBIS|         like a man who’s whole body is a single wound:~as Dryas’
52  IBIS|      warning,~who purifies his body in a shower of water~And
53  IBIS|     blood ebbed from Herculesbody:~so may the baleful venom
54  IBIS|      baleful venom devour your body.~As his Athenian child avenged
55   Ind|       Apollo from his mother’s body and given to Chiron the
56   Ind|        lion’s head, she-goat’s body and serpent’s tail. Its
57   Ind|     killed by Achilles and his body dragged round the walls
58   Ind|   round the walls of Troy. His body was yielded to Priam for
59   Ind|      364 Book EIV.XVI:1-52 His body was dragged three times
60   Ind|        bull’s head and a man’s body. ~Ibis:41-104 Named as a
61   Ind|       by insomnia, and weak in body.~Book TIII. X:41-78 Book
62   Ind| Alexiroë. He ransomed the dead body of his son Hector from Achilles,
63   Ind|        56 Achilles gave up the body of Hector.~Book TV.I:49-
64   Ind|    usually female), and lion’s body. Imported from Egypt, and
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