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 1   T-I|          it is, with indulgence.~Set Homer, the Maeonian, in
 2   T-I|        who would credit it? –~to set my sails for the Sarmatian
 3   T-I|         said, deceptively, I’d a set time,~an appropriate one
 4   T-I|         she overhauls boats that set out long before.~She weathers
 5   T-I| Alcathous’s walls~who, they say, set their gods down in this
 6  T-II|           and you’d think they’d set aside their power:~so my
 7  T-II|        post~and read poetry I’ve set going on limping feet?~The
 8  T-II|     company:~how a small board’s set with threestones’ a side,~
 9 T-III|        what is possible,~may you set out to prove, I beg, that
10 T-III|     realise, high on a rock,~she set the bloodless hands, and
11  T-IV|        to my gifts,~and though I set many above myself, people
12   T-V|        those~who deserve it: why set foot where you trample on
13   T-V|        if you’d let your name be set in my verse~how often you’
14   T-V|        how often you’d have been set there by me!~Remembering
15   T-V|        allowed it, my work would set these things~in the brightest
16   T-V|          I have now,~and wish to set words on their proper feet,~
17  ExII|      grant me to see you so,~and set fond kisses on your altered
18  ExII|       loyalty of service to you.~Set me in whatever place you
19   ExI|     weapons,~and not refusing to set her head beneath Caesar20   ExI|        laurel of merit’s rightly set on an honoured brow.~O happy
21 ExIII|        clear air.~They say Diana set her down in these regions,
22 ExIII|     board a ship~with sails, and set their feet on our shores.~
23 ExIII|          to me:~you guided me to set elegiac pentameter to hexameter.~
24 ExIII|     which you might more readily set me, since I,~who have long
25  ExIV|    others,~my hand, unwittingly, set your name in the wax!~The
26  ExIV| impoverished vein.~If anyone had set Homer down in this place,~
27  ExIV|        our mutual rite,~and have set my hand to the same studies:~
28  ExIV|      barred to such a wretch, be set down~in any place not so
29  ExIV|   certain, since the earth’s now set beneath your gaze.~You,
30  ExIV|           where savage words are set to Italian metres.~My theme,
31  ExIV|       crown,~that popular favour set there, against my will.~
32  ExIV|         needed: I say it myself.~Set me down, a humble possession,
33  ExIV|      letters of their own accord set the theme.~Whether your
34  IBIS|         among the shades it will set a cruel weapon in my hands.~
35  IBIS|      spoke, as follows:~‘We have set these tears flowing for
36  IBIS|      visage.~Or like he who once set out from olive-rich Sicyon,~
37  IBIS|      savage enemy.~Or may Abdera set you apart for certain days,~
38   Ind|          and one of the burghers set apart for that purpose was
39   Ind|         Aeetes was reluctant and set Jason demanding tasks as
40   Ind|          or together. They never set.~Book TI.II:1-74 The circum-polar
41   Ind|       Bacchus, and her crown was set among the stars as the Corona
42   Ind|      stars, the Corona Borealis, set in the sky by Bacchus.~Ibis:
43   Ind|       with the notorious Juliasset (the younger Julia, Augustus’
44   Ind|          She hid Hippolytus, and set him down at Aricia (Nemi),
45   Ind|         horns of a wild bull and set it loose.~ ~Dodona~The town
46   Ind|          with his comrades to be set up over his grave. His ashes
47   Ind|           son of Jupiter. He was set in the sky as the constellation
48   Ind| subservient to him. Hercules was set twelve labours by Eurystheus
49   Ind|   Cynthia, the moon-goddess) who set him down in the sacred grove
50   Ind|          have been linked to her set, and a clandestine and unacceptable
51   Ind|   because his daughter Hypsipyle set him adrift in an oarless
52   Ind|        elder Julia or one of her set, who aided Ovid after the
53   Ind|    Myrtilus into the sea. He was set among the stars as the constellation
54   Ind|          was turned to stone and set on top of a mountain in
55   Ind|          indicates that a second set of six was drafted for the
56   Ind|       when besieged by the Medes set fire to his palace killing
57   Ind|   because his daughter Hypsipyle set him adrift in an oarless
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