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 1  T-II|        wise I’d rightly hate the learned Sisters,~goddesses ruinous
 2  T-II|      marriage-beds.~But no bride learned deception from my teaching,~
 3  T-II|          shelved with records of learned men,~and are open to the
 4 T-III|          new times thought,~with learned minds, is open to inspection
 5 T-III|       the first that was open to learned books.~Our wretched author’
 6 T-III|        neither you, you crowd of learned Muses, ~nor you Apollo have
 7 T-III|        our shared studies,~write learned verse, though not in your
 8 T-III|        writings how to love.~So, learned girl, reject every reason
 9 T-III|         and revered supporter of learned men,~what are you doing,
10  ExII|           and Marcus Brutus, the learned, has shelves waiting.~I’
11  ExII|        defendants,~and with your learned tongue’s accustomed sweetness~
12   ExI|          more moved by my ills, ~learned friend, due to the circumstances
13   ExI|       creates the expectation of learned speech.~Then when the pause
14   ExI|      enemy blood,~just as you’ve learned to hurl javelins with a
15 ExIII|         penned what an eager ear learned, with difficulty,~from hearsay,
16 ExIII|        and I ask what you’ve all learned by heart, I suppose.~You
17 ExIII|     women ~of Tomis have not yet learned the arts of Pallas.~Instead
18 ExIII|          Forgive the confession, learned ones, but that wasnt the
19  ExIV|          verses, to the Consul’s learned ear,~carry a message for
20  ExIV| repeating the trite words of the learned to you:~I suspect your grieving
21  ExIV|          he, by his own witness, learned the harshness of the place.~
22   Ind|     Pindar. This suggests a girl learned in verse. From this and
23   Ind|          mysteries to Attica. He learned the mysteries from Demeter
24   Ind|      Musemay have been a reallearned girl’, perhaps Julia the
25   Ind|        Phrygian flute-player who learned his art from Marsyas.~Book
26   Ind|         the barbarians. Ovid has learned to speak Sarmatian and his
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