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 1   T-I|       with industrious leisure ~delight the reader, serve as a reminder
 2  T-II|         bringing many things to delight the ear.~Or Accius would
 3 T-III|     from me.~still I follow and delight in my genius:~Caesar has
 4  T-IV|        of his mistake.~I too, I delight in books, though they harmed
 5  T-IV|         can do (and it’s safe): delight in this inwardly,~that I’
 6   T-V|     give you poetry filled with delight.~But my verse will never
 7  ExII|         d deserved it.~The gods delight in instances of such testimony,~
 8  ExII|       known to him.~He wouldnt delight in me, or any Roman, being
 9  ExII|         that pleased, no longer delight.~If you suddenly saw me,
10  ExII|      unwilling hand.~There’s no delight in setting the mind to such
11  ExII|         their own pursuits,~and delight in spending time on their
12   ExI|      exile only made a mistake,~delight in virtue and duty for their
13   ExI|       on earth,~that takes less delight in the fruits of Augustan
14   ExI|       fitting for a man to take delight in saving man,~and there’
15 ExIII|        hardly come to mind,~and delight in anything seems novel
16 ExIII|          so my mind was slow to delight.~Novelty’s the most dearly-loved
17  ExIV| silently steals by,~and I can’t delight in renewing earth by cultivation,~
18  ExIV|        at a time like that.~I’d delight in gazing at the order of
19  IBIS|          let men and women take delight in your adversity.~Let hatred
20  IBIS| Palamedes~was punished, and not delight in what you did not earn.~
21   Ind|         Theseus, to Ceres great delight.~ ~Ceres~The Corn Goddess.
22   Ind|       obscure.~Ibis:365-412 Her delight at the death of Cercyon.~
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