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 1   T-I|        my head.~I know there are merciful powers on those heights~
 2  T-II|         each age sees only once.~Merciful Caesar, I plead these as
 3  T-II|          me, gazing at you, most merciful prince,~and fails me when
 4   T-V|       power is rooted,~was often merciful to his enemy in victory.~
 5   T-V|        dusk~contains no one more merciful than him it obeys.~Isnt
 6  ExII|         bones. ~When I think how merciful Augustus is, I believe~a
 7  ExII|         to water.~The anger of a merciful man wouldnt have sent me
 8  ExII|       sent as advocate to such a merciful hearing,~ask that my place
 9   ExI|          me, when I see the gods merciful to an enemy?~Germanicus,
10   ExI|       protect you:~only beg that merciful deity, who’s rightly angered
11   ExI|       your words,~but a calm and merciful father, inclined to pardon,~
12 ExIII|          of his bed.~May they be merciful to you as is their way,~
13 ExIII|         And truly, as I wish the merciful gods to lessen Caesar’s ~
14  ExIV|          she gave ~no man a more merciful heart than you, Brutus:~
15  IBIS|        may I always deal with so merciful a heart.~Pontus might hear
16   Ind|  Augustus’s reputation for being merciful to his enemies.~Book EI.
17   Ind| gratitude’ to Augustus for being merciful.~Book EIV.IV:1-50 News of
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