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 1   T-I|      hurrying.’~Ah! How often I said, deceptively, I’d a set
 2   T-I|        my intent.~Often, having saidFarewell’, I spoke again
 3   T-I|         my dear ones.~At last I said: ‘Why hurry? I’m off to
 4   T-I|   Straightaway, feeling this, I said to you:~‘My friend, a great
 5 T-III|         obeyed, and guiding me, said: ‘This is Caesar’s~Forum,
 6 T-III|        is this Jove’s house?’ I said, a wreath of oak~prompting
 7 T-III|      owner, ‘No error there,’ I said,~this is truly the house
 8 T-III|         life of the world:~I’ve said nothing: a pure tongue has
 9 T-III|        Aeetes ship far-off,~and said: ‘A guest from Colchis,
10 T-III|        now of his presence, she said: ‘I have it:~his death will
11 T-III|      city, ~you too should have said a sadFarewell.’~What have
12  T-IV|       her work.~My father often said: ‘Why follow useless studies?’~
13   T-V|    bards round your altar,~have said: ‘One of my worshippers
14   T-V|     roads,~to whom, weeping, he said: ‘You, go look on Rome,~
15   T-V|        heaps.~I remember I once said it was impossible, ~and,
16   T-V|         drowned~in the sea, and said: ‘The waves were never more
17   T-V|      complains that someone has said~that you’re ‘an exile’s
18   T-V|       firm, so no one thinks it said thoughtlessly,~support me
19  ExII|        them.~Ah, the times I’ve said: ‘You teach nothing shameful:~
20  ExII|       own death!~O how often he said: ‘The godsanger is not
21 ExIII|   replied in this way to what I said: ~‘Good stranger, we too
22 ExIII|         for her slow delay,~she said: “Youths, I am not cruel (
23 ExIII|     victim of these rites,” she said,~“let the other carry the
24  ExIV|   willing to make the change.~I said to myself: ‘Let him see
25  ExIV|    present times.~If anyone had said to me: ‘You’ll travel to
26  ExIV|         Getic arrows,’~I’d have said: ‘Go and drink a potion
27  ExIV|         laughed at, and rightly said to have no taste.~That was
28  ExIV|      from Getic mouths.~And one said: ‘Since you write all this
29  ExIV|      dominions.’~That’s what he said: but already, my Carus,~
30  IBIS|     prophecy with her lips,~she said: ‘There’ll be a poet who
31  IBIS|       you by your parent.~Or be said to have been killed by a
32  IBIS|       Leucon fell to an avenger said to be holy.~~ Ibis:311-364
33  IBIS| deficiency of food.~And as it’s said the poet of the grim lyre
34   Ind|     Book EI.I:1-36 Augustus was said to be (spuriously) descended
35   Ind|        Iliad II:449). They were said (falsely) to sing their
36   Ind|        a fabled people who were said to live in caves in perpetual
37   Ind|    mythological variants. He is said to have appeared to the
38   Ind|        by Vipsania, whom she is said to have poisoned in 23 at
39   Ind|  hundred of the Fabii clan were said to have fought and only
40   Ind|   Turkish Bey.). The spring was said never to fail. It was also
41   Ind|        to the Greek camp. He is said to have healed Philoctetes,
42   Ind|         call, mourning Itys, is said to be ‘Itu! Itu!’ which
43   Ind|    entering his camp, and he is said to have wept at this death
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