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 1   T-I|       fault a crime,~so my pain’s author knows what you know, too.~
 2   T-I|        the work cut short by it’s author’s sad flight.~Leaving, mournful,
 3   T-I|          volumes, bereft of their author,~at least let them have
 4   T-I|      known to you. You know their author’s~conduct held those same
 5  T-II|          more permissive than its author.~A book’s not evidence of
 6  T-II|         words:~it didnt harm one author to show an effeminate ~Achilles,
 7  T-II|     powers.~Yet Virgil, the happy author of your Aeneid,~brought
 8 T-III|    teaches about love.~Such is my author’s fate he shouldnt try,~
 9 T-III|         better turned out than my author:~if the writing’s streaked
10 T-III|         except those indeed~their author wishes he had never written.~
11 T-III|       learned books.~Our wretched author’s fate engulfs his children,~
12 T-III|       injured him~will give their author fame and enduring life.~
13 T-III|         they didnt deserve their author’s sentence.~Often a father’
14 T-III|        verses snatched from their author’s funeral rites.~That work
15  T-IV|           if there’s any harm its author can be blamed.~I always
16   T-V|           of sudden doom,~and the author himself is his own theme.~
17   T-V|          hurt no one except their author.~‘But it’s poor stuff.’
18   T-V|         see,~only worthy of their author’s age and situation.~Lastly,
19   T-V|         Amatoria, that ruined its author,~who anticipated no such
20   T-V|          might detract from their author,~you’ll still be made glorious
21  ExII|     public library,~in case their author’s closed the doors to them.~
22  ExII|       ones that have harmed their author,~who admired the writings
23  ExII|         that’s no pleasure to the author.~What benefit to you in
24  ExII|           are: fame fled with the author from his true city.~And
25  ExII|         Does the place reveal the author? And, if the name’s not
26   ExI|          Wife’s Uncle~ ~Ovid, the author of the unfortunate Ars Amatoria~
27 ExIII|           task~even for the noble author of the Aeneid.~Anyway, weak
28 ExIII|           the region’s named, the author should appear ~to you, Ovid
29 ExIII|           more than is right.~The author praises the work: so once
30  ExIV|       perhaps, how I myself, your author, am.~I want you to reply
31  ExIV|         Hercules ~will reveal the author, so suited to the one you
32  ExIV|        invective equably,~and the author’s wild speech did him no
33  ExIV|           of writing:~Trinacrius, author of his Perseid, and Lupus~
34  ExIV|         of his Perseid, and Lupus~author of Helen’s return with Menelaus:~
35  IBIS|           no one but myself: ~the author’s own life was ruined by
36  IBIS|        shut in a cave, ~like that author of unprofitable stories.~
37  IBIS|            And like dull Myrrha’s author, Cinna, harmed by his name,~
38   Ind|       Sparta.~ ~Aristides (2)~The author (2nd century BC) of the
39   Ind|            Hemitheon~The probable author of the Sybaritica, tales
40   Ind|           Smyrna?), supposed main author of the Iliad and Odyssey.~
41   Ind|    greatest poet.~Book EII.X:1-52 Author of the Iliad, an immortal.~
42   Ind|           Roman didactic poet and author of the De Rerum Natura a
43   Ind| apparently died there.~ ~Ovid~The author, Publius Ovidius Naso, born
44   Ind|      involved in the error. (This author favours the view that Ovid
45   Ind|           since it has ruined its author. ~Life At Tomis~Book TI.
46   Ind|     Sisenna, praetor in 78BC, and author of a Roman history praised
47   Ind|            bucolic and epic poet, author of the Eclogues, Georgics,
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