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 1  T-II|      This is the furthest land subject to Italian law,~barely clinging
 2  T-II|       scarcely checks,~so your subject can’t be captured by the
 3  T-IV|    that it’s not inferior, and subject, to a god.~And though I
 4   T-V|      you add centuries,~it’s a subject for admiration, wherever
 5 ExIII|         plays ~variations on a subject, that he’s shaped for himself.~
 6  ExIV|    justice to the fame of your subject,~and imitating the hero
 7  ExIV|       led in chains, provide a subject for your art: and may~his
 8   Ind|   Black Sea south of Tomis and subject to Apollonia further north.
 9   Ind|      mysterious enemy of Ovid, subject of his curse-poem Ibis based
10   Ind|    eventually was drowned. The subject of a poem by Musaeus (5th
11   Ind|       her father.~Ibis:465-540 Subject of a poem by Cinna.~ ~Myrtilus~
12   Ind|        XVI:1-52 Mentioned as a subject for verse in Ovid’s list
13   Ind| standards was not too clever a subject for Ovid to raise.~ ~Pasiphae~
14   Ind|        XVI:1-52 Mentioned as a subject for verse in Ovid’s list
15   Ind|        XVI:1-52 Mentioned as a subject of verse in Ovid’s list
16   Ind|      was a border garrison and subject to constant attack, and
17   Ind|        EIV.XVI:1-52 A suitable subject for epic poetry.~Book TII:
18   Ind|  son-in-law.~Book EIV.XVI:1-52 Subject of a poem by one of Ovid
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