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 1   T-I|           dont you be a second cause for punishment!~Yet when
 2   T-I| suddenly altered from before,~a cause of weeping now, though,
 3   T-I|      liberal arts –~well, every cause is made good by your eloquence.~
 4   T-I|        dont abandon~a friend’s cause: always go on as well as
 5  T-II|      been banished with greater cause,~no one’s assigned a remoter
 6  T-II|   though Lucretius explains the cause of impetuous fire,~and predicts
 7 T-III|         at the world’s end,~the cause of whose punishment, which
 8 T-III|         of salvation,~since the cause of my punishment’s not stained
 9 T-III|         heart,~an error was the cause of my offence.~What chance
10 T-III|    limbs,~or this region is the cause of my misfortune,~I’m vexed
11 T-III|    relief,~and I never lack the cause of grievous pain.~I’m no
12  T-IV|          I’m troubled to be the cause of your grief:~Not sad?
13  T-IV|        by every tongue.~So your cause is safe, given these two
14  T-IV|         sin to deceive you)~the cause of the exile decreed was
15  T-IV|      left of the Black Sea.~The cause, too well known to all,
16   T-V|       Whoever seeks to know the cause of his sadness,~must need
17   T-V|         for Ovid~that he has no cause of sorrow to make him grieve!~
18   T-V|        you exiled, with greater cause:~after my first wish that’
19   T-V|          as to think that I’m a cause of shame to you, to whom ~
20   T-V|        nine of you are the main cause of my exile.~As Perillus,
21  ExII|       himself is the most just,~cause kindly earth to create nothing
22  ExII|         it, but there’s another cause,~my anguish of spirit and
23  ExII|    restrained my hands ready to cause my own death!~O how often
24  ExII|        me, and there’s a deeper~cause, the anxiety of spirit that’
25   ExI|     ventured to destroy me, not cause greater sin.~I can only
26   ExI|      for my request, take up my cause:~though no case with my
27   ExI|         that when you heard the cause ~of my disaster, you groaned
28   ExI|        never active in a better cause~than in not letting such
29 ExIII|    spoke these words:~‘Boy, the cause of your deceived master30  ExIV|       the gods,~(he’ll give you cause why you should often repeat
31  ExIV|        the weapon can be a dual cause of death.~Would that this
32  ExIV|    harmed me,~and was the prime cause of this wretched exile.~
33  ExIV|        of the gods),~promote my cause, my health, as much as you
34  IBIS|         who found a saw was the cause of his death:~as the envious
35  IBIS|       native fields, and be the cause of a death like Phalaecus’.~
36  IBIS|       to your right hand be the cause of ruin.~And as a serpent
37   Ind|      Muse’, and his ‘Muse’ as a cause of exile. EIII.IX:1-56 again
38   Ind|  elsewhere. He repeats that the cause of his ruin was an error,
39   Ind|     intriguing comment that the cause of his exile was only too
40   Ind|        association, so that the cause of his exile was known to
41   Ind|       Rome. ~Book TI.V:1-44 The cause of Nisus and Euryalus’s
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