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 1   T-I|         bosses, ‘horns’ to your darkbrow’.~Happier books are
 2   T-I|       see three hide far off in dark places –~and still, as all
 3   T-I|        itself is exposed to the dark waters.~Let the storm defeat
 4 T-III|        the door in front,~their dark leaves circling the august
 5 T-III|       he prevents war.~And when dark winter shows its icy face,~
 6 T-III|         the winds hardening its dark flow,~and winds its way
 7  T-IV|       staining the light,~while dark blood spurts over the earth,
 8  T-IV|         old age is bleaching my dark hair.~The years of frailty,
 9   T-V|         caused it,~or whether a dark Fate attended my birth,~
10   T-V|     rest of her life be free of dark clouds.~May she live, and
11   T-V|   threads of my fate are not so dark as that.~Still, beware of
12 ExIII|      liquid can’t be altered to dark pitch,~nor can shining ivory
13  ExIV|     like making gestures in the dark. ~An audience stirs interest:
14  ExIV|     whose waters were once~dyed dark red with Getic blood, at
15  IBIS| sequence of your days be wholly dark.~Have this read to you on
16  IBIS|       the day of your birth was dark and impure,~overcast with
17  IBIS|       future, ~and she spun the dark fateful thread with her
18  IBIS|    return from the house of the dark one:~like those whose bodies
19  IBIS|      when she was hidden in the dark because of murder,~so may
20  IBIS|       of Clinias, surrounded by dark fires,~may you bear your
21   Ind|       58 Ovid speculates that a dark Fate was present at his
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