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 1  T-II|       among enemies, patiently I suffer the extremes,~no exile’s
 2  T-II|        any man of Roman blood~to suffer barbarian chains while Caesars
 3 T-III|      children,~and from birth we suffer the exile he endures.~Perhaps
 4 T-III|        Achilles?~But he couldnt suffer aged Dardanian Priam’s tears.~
 5   T-V|          in her waves,~or let me suffer the flames, in the fires
 6   T-V|           but I beg that I might suffer somewhere safer.~ ~Book
 7   T-V|   misfortunes you yourself might suffer?~My troubles, which would
 8   ExI|    misfortune~often causes me to suffer baseless fears.~Forgive
 9 ExIII|         t reduce the sentence, I suffer, one iota.~He doesnt forbid
10 ExIII|        remain in my writings?~To suffer a disease and cure it are
11  ExIV|         you are~in conflict, and suffer the sharp weapons of your
12  ExIV|     harmed by poetry,~and always suffer for my outspoken art?~Shall
13  IBIS|        the worst of ills,~you’ll suffer more. And be, what’s rare,
14  IBIS|         the Trojans,~and may you suffer pain as great as Philoctetes, ~
15  IBIS|          horses:~or you yourself suffer what the man, who thought
16  IBIS|      shower of water~And may you suffer as many wounds as they say ~
17  IBIS| sacrifice.~And lest Limon should suffer his punishment alone,~may
18  IBIS|        you, accursed.~Or may you suffer the three-pronged bolts
19  IBIS|        of Crotopus. ~Nor may you suffer less from a poisonous snake~
20  IBIS|         safely than Elpenor,~and suffer the effects of wine in the
21  IBIS|        desire for death.~May you suffer death shut in a cave, ~like
22  IBIS|          in a noose.~And may you suffer starvation behind your own
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