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 1   T-I|      done,~grant me the right to die in my native country.~Though
 2   T-I|      double death!~Now, though I die, since she is free from
 3   T-I|      stacked pyre,~and wanted to die, to end those feelings by
 4   T-I|          care for me she did not die.~May she live, and, since
 5   T-I|      innocent books, that had to die with me,~my vital parts,
 6 T-III|           now life’s given me to die in exile.~So I’ll die far
 7 T-III|         to die in exile.~So I’ll die far away then, on a foreign
 8 T-III|      their farms and homes.~some die wretchedly pierced by barbed
 9  T-IV|        be yours, earth, though I die today.~Whether I’ve won
10  ExII|        mind:~he who grieves will die sooner than the grief.~If
11  ExII|         god:~in short, that if I die, I might be buried in a
12  ExII|           He returned home: I’ll die in this land,~if the heavy
13  ExII|       someone,~but hope will not die though the pulse grows faint.~
14   ExI|         poetry’s not destined to die,~you’ll often be on the
15   ExI|          should ~a fallen victim die, in front of Jupiter’s temple?~
16 ExIII|      pyre.~But you dont need to die, dont need Penelope’s weaving.~
17 ExIII|          your services will only die~when my body’s consumed
18 ExIII|        own city.~“Let one of you die, a victim of these rites,”
19 ExIII|       intent on being the one to die, orders his dear Orestes~
20 ExIII|        even now?~As for me may I die, pierced by a Getic arrow,~(
21 ExIII|        drowned?~When the bravest die in battle, even Mars’~tithe
22 ExIII|          the Getic lands: let me die among them,~and let my Fate
23 ExIII|          and to beg that I might die in a pleasanter place?~I
24  ExIV|          harsh fate orders me to die beneath the frozen pole,~
25  IBIS|       born of horned Jupiter.~Or die suspended like the captive
26  IBIS|      over the roads of Ambracia.~Die driven through by javelins
27  IBIS|       Ancient Torments~ ~May you die like the young men of Pisa,
28  IBIS|         no renown.~I want you to die like those born from the
29  IBIS|      flames,~so, I pray, may you die by the fire of the divine
30  IBIS|         the same way he did.~And die as tamely, as whoever delighted
31  IBIS|         rock, or, as books tell, die Socratesdeath:~as Aegeus
32  IBIS|       Athens with endless ~song, die hated through a deficiency
33  IBIS| Agamemnonian Orestes~may you too die of an envenomed sting.~May
34  IBIS|    riches.~And may all your race die with you, as they say~his
35  IBIS|          the stormy sea,~may you die on touching land, like Palinurus.~
36  IBIS|       pray that you may live and die in this place,~between the
37   Ind|        of Alcestis who agreed to die on his behalf.~Book TII:
38   Ind|        Admetus, who consented to die in place of her husband
39   Ind|        The place he is likely to die in.~Book EIV.VII:1-54 Vestalis
40   Ind|          101-150 His wish not to die at Getan hands.~Book EI.
41   Ind|         soldiers must conquer or die in the field. (Polybius
42   Ind|         ashore at Troy, fated to die on landing. She was granted
43   Ind|          VII:1-40 He is fated to die in exile.~ ~Parrhasius~See
44   Ind|       young and was condemned to die by drinking hemlock. See
45   Ind|        anger. She allowed him to die for his barbarity, having
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