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 1   T-I|     fades away through the long years.~May the gods favour you,
 2   T-I|         a narrow space for many years,~between the palaces of
 3   T-I|       honoured by you all those years,~teaches you to be the model
 4  T-II|   joined with you, complete her years,~worthy of no other husband
 5 T-III|       Caesar, aware of the long years,~will be less harsh to him
 6 T-III|        s fulfilled its destined years,~and the end of my life’
 7 T-III|       Live unenvied, pass sweet years, unknown,~form friendships
 8 T-III|       in your girlhood’s tender years,~when I was your friend
 9 T-III|        sacred calling.~The long years will spoil those precious
10 T-III|      parts it lingers there two years.~The power of Aquilo’s northern
11 T-III|       why here, in the wretched years of exile?~You should, instead,
12  T-IV|     bleaching my dark hair.~The years of frailty, and the inertia
13  T-IV|          I deserved to spend my years like that.~The gods did
14  T-IV|      bringing ease ~to my early years, pain to the later ones.~
15  T-IV|        crushed, in the harshest years of life:~not far from the
16  T-IV|  towards oratory from his early years:~he was born to the harsh
17  T-IV| Meanwhile, as the silent-footed years slipped by,~my brother and
18  T-IV|      just doubled his first ten years of life,~when he died, and
19  T-IV|        fated time,~after adding years to years till he was ninety.~
20  T-IV|     time,~after adding years to years till he was ninety.~I wept
21  T-IV|     come, driving away ~my best years, flecking my ageing locks,~
22   T-V|   troubles are lightened by the years:~the pain of great ones
23   T-V|    increases with time.~For ten years Philoctetes nursed the foul
24   T-V|  already~for as long as the ten years Troy knew the Greek host.~
25  ExII|     loved her from~her earliest years, counted her among her companions,~
26  ExII|    praised by them.~I too lived years that are gone without a
27  ExII|         of my life.~I admit the years have done it, but there’
28  ExII|        been spread over as many years~believe me, I’d be older
29   ExI|         House from his earliest years,~Ovid, driven to the Black
30   ExI|    courage, is greater than his years,~and Drususenergy is no
31   ExI|     your House from my earliest years,~that makes me an old responsibility
32   ExI|     companion from his earliest years,~a friend of old, pleasing
33   ExI|    father reach Pylian Nestor’s years, your mother~those of the
34   ExI|    vanished.~You owe it to long years of friendship,~to the fact
35 ExIII|      wrong: it will outlast the years of my life,~if I’m still
36 ExIII|        over the shrine for many years,~performing the sad rites
37 ExIII|      was wonderful: though many years ~have passed, they still
38  ExIV|        prayers.~I’ve spent five years of one Olympiad in Scythia:~
39  ExIV|      time.~Writing survives the years. Through writing you know~
40  ExIV|    woman or child, in all these years,~has had any reason to complain
41  ExIV|        was tossed about for ten years, on dangerous seas:~yet,
42  ExIV|   fondle lovely Calypso~for six years, and share a bed with a
43  ExIV|       the ranks of all the many years we’ve seen,~no less beloved
44  IBIS|     wish, I’m exhausted by long years,~whether I’m dissolved in
45  IBIS|      When you wish to return to years of youth, may you ~be deceived
46   Ind|      42BC and consecrated forty years later.)~Ibis:251-310 Scene
47   Ind|      her island for a number of years. Odysseus was impatient
48   Ind|    honour of the god every four years, and from 395BC a drama
49   Ind|       aqueducts in 11, and nine years later proposed the title
50   Ind|     Olympiad~The period of five years covering successive Games
51   Ind|    Birthday in Tomis. He was 52 years old in the spring of AD10,
52   Ind|  between Olympic Games, of five years each.~ ~Pleiades~The Seven
53   Ind|      wall. He reigned for forty years and then vanished, becoming
54   Ind|     Theban sage who spent seven years as a woman and decided the
55   Ind|        siege and war lasted ten years.~Book EII.II:1-38 Aeneas’
56   Ind|  chastity and served for thirty years. They enjoyed enormous prestige,
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