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 1   T-I|       The Poet to His Book: Its Nature~ ~Little book, go without
 2  T-II|        some of your ancestors’.~Nature, grudgingly, shut me in
 3 T-III|        V:1-56 His Error and its Nature~ ~My friendship with you
 4 T-III|      your father’s style?~Since nature and fate gave you modest ~
 5 T-III|       endure a double ache.~The nature of that fate I must view
 6 T-III|    favour and pardon, given the nature of my fate.~ ~The End of
 7  T-IV|      the offerings, of whatever nature, to her goddess.~Later,
 8  T-IV|         though still~similar in nature, it’s grown and deepened
 9   T-V|      Tibullus, with his winning nature, would be better.~Ah, why
10   T-V|        days any shorter.~Surely nature’s been altered, in my case,~
11  ExII|        EI.I:1-36 To Brutus: The Nature of His Book~ ~Ovid sends
12  ExII|         When I see the enduring nature of my fate, I weaken,~and
13  ExII|         though my position, the nature of my circumstances,~was
14   ExI|       you, who dont allow your nature to be altered by fame,~cherished
15   ExI|         prayer, because of that nature of yours,~and none the less
16 ExIII|         performs the rites.~The nature of the sacrifice, as our
17  ExIV|       were both to be punished.~Nature made you kind to the wretched:
18  ExIV|   gaining no advantage from the nature of its site.~Since it’s
19  ExIV|       Chaos, that mass of early~nature, separated out to acquire
20  ExIV|   honour.~Metric rules, and the nature of your name, prevent~the
21   Ind| wrenched off the gold. (‘On the Nature of the Gods, Bk III 82).
22   Ind|   colonists at Circei. (‘On the Nature of the Gods’, Bk III 47)~(
23   Ind|      and Paullus, of a literary nature. There is no concrete evidence
24   Ind|        tribes and aggressive by nature.~Book TI.V:45-84 Book TIII.
25   Ind|   statement again regarding the nature of his offence, that is
26   Ind|      his sentence, based on the nature of his error, and Augustus’
27   Ind|        100 A reiteration of the nature of his offence, judged by
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