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 1   T-I|        walk among them on what ‘feet’ I can.~If, in the crowd,
 2   T-I|       back~three times, even my feet slow to match my intent.~
 3   T-I|         friend~lie beneath your feet, a worthless thing?~What
 4   T-I|      tranquil city,~the city my feet must never more re-enter,~
 5  T-II|    disease –~I’m turning my sad feet to those heights again:~
 6  T-II|         ve set going on limping feet?~The weight of Rome’s name
 7 T-III|    couldnt be entered by these feet.~Nor did Liberty allow me
 8 T-III|      run life’s course on sound feet,~and enjoy a brighter destiny
 9 T-III|         to fit with alternating feet.~Say: ‘Do you still cling
10 T-III|       to the sea below the ice:~Feet cross now, where boats went
11 T-III|       with the surface under my feet.~~ Book TIII.X:41-78 Barbarian
12  T-IV|         seated sorrowing at the feet of the undefeated leader.~
13  T-IV|     time passing,~on its silent feet, except my troubles.~Since
14  T-IV|      twice trampled under naked feet.~But the long space of time
15   T-V|       set words on their proper feet,~no verses are composed,
16   ExI|        flow under the trampling feet.~It’s because he plans for
17 ExIII|         towards those deathless feet.~Then ask for nothing except
18 ExIII|       with sails, and set their feet on our shores.~They were
19 ExIII|   touched by ribbons, nor their feet by the long robe.~Say, I
20  ExIV|        top beneath her unsteady feet.~She’s less certain than
21  ExIV|         s a long road, and your feet wont balance,~and the land
22  ExIV|      Getae heaped wherever your feet stood.~The lower ranks followed
23  ExIV|       walks without wetting his feet.~~ Book EIV.X:35-84 To Albinovanus:
24  IBIS|     every ill, and on stumbling feet,~and cloak all your bodies
25  IBIS|     disparately shod on his two feet,~or as Oetean Hercules was
26  IBIS|     sand washes from under your feet,~so may your fortune always
27  IBIS|   tongue lie there, before your feet,~as Philomela, her own sister’
28   Ind|      with many arms and serpent feet, who made war on the gods
29   Ind|    Gargaros rising to over 4500 feet and commanding a fine view
30   Ind|        Cyllenius. He has winged feet, and a winged cap, carries
31   Ind|       with six heads and twelve feet. Each head had three rows
32   Ind| Mavroneri, plunging six hundred feet down the cliffs of the Chelmos
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