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 1   T-I|           which I once knew from old examples,~I know now to
 2  T-II|        and rule this Empire when old, with one older,~and may
 3  T-II|        singing of love.~What did old Anacreon’s lyric Muse teach~
 4  T-II|  foreseeing it, hurts me now I’m old.~Late vengeance in excess
 5 T-III|           and the fire, here was old Numa’s tiny palace.’~Then,
 6 T-III|       sword:~and all that men of old and new times thought,~with
 7 T-III|       high in the empty air,~and old Pythagoras of Samos’s words
 8 T-III|      scarcely two or three of my old friends did.~I saw your
 9 T-III|      seemed longer than those of old,~and the Ram that failed
10  T-IV|        my hands in play:~now I’m old I strap a sword to my side,
11  T-IV|           and my heart feels the old wounds, like new,~and the
12  T-IV|         inhospitable’, by men of old,~since its waters are troubled
13  T-IV|          recent troubles.~Indeed old bullocks often resist the
14  T-IV|        little squall shatters an old one.~I too once endured,
15  T-IV|        swan’s plumage,~and white old age is bleaching my dark
16  T-IV|        lacking a master,~growing old with my lady’s devotion,
17  T-IV|     Lares.~Since the slowness of old age is sapping my strength~
18  T-IV|          to live peacefully when old,~The Fates were hostile,
19  T-IV|      existed so many gods.~Often old Macer read to me about those
20  T-IV|      remained with me till I was old,~who’s lived to be the bride
21  ExII|        woes,~and am forced to be old before my time.~Leisure
22  ExII|          weapons, forgetting his old wound.~The shipwrecked sailor
23  ExII|       than will Graecinus let an old friend down.~All things
24  ExII|       written while on watch.~An old city stands on the banks
25  ExII|          ask what’s become of my old complexion.~No strength
26   ExI|          years,~that makes me an old responsibility of yours.~
27   ExI|     forgiven, ~you think of your old friend in his misfortunes~
28   ExI|     foolishness,~and defend your old comrade, with constant loyalty, ~
29   ExI|      earliest years,~a friend of old, pleasing by talent as well
30   ExI|          no kind of help~to your old friend in such a wretched
31 ExIII|   Sarmatian) ~it chanced that an old man, standing in the circle, ~
32  ExIV|         being driven towards the old reef again,~into the waters
33  IBIS|         presence, all you gods, ~old and new, from out the ancient
34  IBIS|  punishments.~The torment in the old tales be transferred to
35  IBIS|        be blind as Tiresias, the old man famous for Apollo’s
36  IBIS|  deceived like Pelias, Admetus’s old father-in-law.~Or may you
37  IBIS|  daughter-in-law of Calliope and old Oeagrus:~than Hypsipyle’
38   Ind|     refers as we shall see to an old friend not the recent friend
39   Ind|          An Athenian poet of the Old Comedy, he flourished at
40   Ind|      lodging.~Book TIV.VIII:1-52 Old weapons dedicated to them.~
41   Ind|  serpents and plants, and was an old man in Ovid’s day.~Book
42   Ind|       for the Greek god Ares. An old name for him is Mavors or
43   Ind|     daughter of Phorcys the wise old man of the sea. She is represented
44   Ind|          an Augustan form of the old Togatae. He was a protégé
45   Ind|         He compiled jokebooks in old age.~Book EIV.XVI:1-52 A
46   Ind|        in Tomis. He was 52 years old in the spring of AD10, see
47   Ind|          of Niobe.~ ~Penates~The old Latin household gods, two
48   Ind|       League against Laconia. In old age he fought the Messenians,
49   Ind|         Sacra~The Via Sacra, the old street running south-east
50   Ind| astrology a maleficent planet of old age, duty, grief and cold.~
51   Ind|          in northern Greece. Its old name was Haemonia, hence
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