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 1  T-II|    writing:~a fault that’s not new earns new punishment:~I’
 2  T-II|     fault that’s not new earns new punishment:~I’d published
 3  T-II|    also sang bodies changed to new forms, ~though my efforts
 4 T-III|        all that men of old and new times thought,~with learned
 5 T-III|     house despaired of.~You, a new friend, not one known by
 6 T-III|    time, and thinking of it is new shame,~and whatever is able
 7 T-III|       would be delayed by this new grief,~gathering those lifeless
 8 T-III|     with cold:~and across this new bridge over the sliding
 9 T-III|        you can, connoisseur of new poets,~do so, and keep my ‘
10  T-IV|      anxious place, where I, a new colonist,~am hidden away:
11  T-IV|     feels the old wounds, like new,~and the rain of sorrow
12  T-IV|        by you.~And I commit no new offence in speaking to you,~
13  T-IV| beforehand by time’s ills.~The new wrestler, on the yellow
14   T-V|    well,~so long as there’s no new fault to find in me,~and
15   ExI|      to a freshly made poem,~a new Muse was submitted to your
16   ExI|   until I’ve hardly room for a new wound.~The ploughshare’s
17 ExIII|        you read your friends a new made poem,~or, as you often
18 ExIII|        in sea, war or fire,~no new day can bring them back
19 ExIII|       and draws his neck away, new to the harsh yoke:~for long
20  ExIV|       you ~than any other, the new year will be happy and bright.’~
21  ExIV|        from me in the midst of new joys,~and the hostile harshness
22  ExIV|     could write concerning the new god.~May this respectful
23  ExIV|      sent off, about ~you, the new god, may reach you there,
24  ExIV|      me: I speak of Caesar.~My new attempt was helped by a
25  IBIS|      the same part of the sky:~new harmony rise with smoke,
26  IBIS|       on your birthday, and at new ~year, by anyone whose lips
27  IBIS|         all you gods, ~old and new, from out the ancient chaos,~
28  IBIS|       weight to roll:~now your new limbs will turn Ixion’s
29  IBIS|     Myrtilus,~died, who gave a new name to Myrtoan waters:~
30  IBIS|     the hidden cave changed to new monstrous shapes, ~never
31  IBIS|       life: so Eupolis and his new bride died.~And as they
32  IBIS|        was held captive by her new crown,~and the bride’s father,
33   Ind|     also make his birth at the new year, a week after the winter
34   Ind|      of Corinth, and married a new bride Glauce. Medea in revenge
35   Ind|    celebrated dramatist of the New Comedy he wrote on romantic
36   Ind|      accession he embraced the new regime, proposing a gold
37   Ind| proposing a gold statue of the new Emperor for the temple of
38   Ind| regeneration of Rome under the new regime. It was promoted
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