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 1   T-I|       high through the liberal arts –~well, every cause is made
 2   T-I|   studies.~Just as the serious arts serve you, eloquent one,~
 3   T-I|    eloquent one,~so dissimilar arts have injured me.~Yet my
 4   T-I|        conduct held those same arts at a distance:~you know
 5  T-II|      made you hate me, for the arts,~you were sure, troubled
 6  T-II|        he’s checked by his own arts.~Often he recalls how he
 7  T-II|      such affairs,~and by what arts a wife can cheat her spouse.~
 8  T-II|        546 His Plea: The Other Arts~ ~What if I’d written lewd
 9 T-III|   idleness,~return to the true arts and your sacred calling.~
10  T-IV|    distinguished in the city’s arts.~My brother tended towards
11  ExII|       aided by Cupid’s cunning arts:~I wish Amor had not learnt
12  ExII|     your pursuits.~The liberal arts, for which you care the
13   ExI|   practitioners of the liberal arts.~The thyrsus fails to aid
14   ExI|      All~ ~Fame in the liberal arts is sought by many of us:~
15   ExI|  constant study of the liberal arts~civilises the character,
16   ExI|       more time to the gentler arts.~Your poetry’s a witness,
17   ExI|    been given to your father’s arts,~and their military task
18 ExIII|       t be inexperienced in my Arts.~The reward of exile was
19 ExIII|       nothing criminal in your arts.~I wish I could defend you
20 ExIII|       have not yet learned the arts of Pallas.~Instead of spinning
21  ExIV|   serve his holy hands,~so the arts of prince and scholar never
22   Ind|    TIII.II:1-30 The god of the arts, including poetry.~Book
23   Ind|       to Apollo the god of the Arts.~Book EIII.II:1-110 His
24   Ind|    olive-cultivation, domestic arts (spinning, weaving, and
25   Ind|       for her beauty and magic arts and lived on the ‘island’
26   Ind|      makes him a patron of the arts. (Tacitus apart, he probably
27   Ind|      was famed for his healing arts.~ ~Erebus~The Underworld (
28   Ind|        s poem ‘Musée des Beaux Artsreferring to Brueghel’s
29   Ind|        Goddess of the domestic arts. Her cult absorbed the other
30   Ind| statesman and supporter of the arts, a patron of Ovid and Tibullus,
31   Ind|        of the mind and women’s arts (also a goddess of war and
32   Ind|     goddess of handicrafts and arts, she was early identified
33   Ind|     are the patronesses of the arts. Clio (History), Melpomene (
34   Ind|      ruled there, teaching the arts of peace. His wife was Egeria,
35   Ind|        Goddess of the domestic arts, for example spinning wool.~
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