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 1  T-IV|         been happy?~The road to virtue’s paved with public ills.~
 2  T-IV|       idle if men are well.~The virtue that’s hidden and remains
 3   T-V|      over your empty bed.~Truly virtue schooled in adversity offers~
 4   T-V|       as long as I’m read, your virtue will be read,~nor can you
 5   T-V|      While I was untouched your virtue was free ~of vile accusations,
 6   T-V|      you, by our ruin:~let your virtue build a house here for all
 7   T-V|        that’s wedded love.~That virtue not governed by Fortune
 8   T-V|      she vanishes.~Yet whenever virtue itself is the prize it seeks,~
 9  ExII| remembering the mighty race his virtue adds to,~arrived there at
10   ExI|        know it’s difficult, but virtue aims for the heights,~and
11   ExI|        a thousand~who considers virtue to be its own reward.~If
12   ExI|      made a mistake,~delight in virtue and duty for their own sake.~
13   ExI|      son, like you the model of virtue,~who can be seen from his
14 ExIII|        their house no less with virtue than with duty.~Do what
15 ExIII|      troops fighting hard.~Your virtue is known and established
16 ExIII|       courage be less than your virtue.~You dont have to raise
17 ExIII|     need to pray to,~who by her virtue shows that ancient times~
18  ExIV| Suillius: The Power of Poetry~ ~Virtue’s kept alive by verse, and,
19  ExIV|       is equal to his father in virtue, taking ~up the reins of
20   Ind|     spirits in bliss, rewarding virtue in life.~ ~Electra~The daughter
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