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 1   T-I|      inadequate to sing your worth! –~if I had any inborn vigour
 2   T-I|    too, if you think they’re worth~placing at the very front
 3   T-I|      of my youth:~though not worth praising, they were still
 4 T-III|     a modest fortune, though worth a great one,~but imagine
 5 T-III|      words:~‘There’s greater worth in my gift than it seems,
 6 T-III|   this book may be, think it worth your ~favour and pardon,
 7  T-IV|   believe me: and my life~is worth defending in all its actions
 8   T-V|  think the recent ones to be worth no less.~So, as you may
 9   T-V|     and I seem to be rightly worth less to you.~I’m not so
10   ExI|     time enough to show your worth.~I pray it will come about:
11   ExI|     about: a poet’s oracle’s worth something,~since the god
12   ExI|   you, for showing such true worth.~But if I’m only to echo
13   ExI|  helped, regardless of their worth:~and you wished that Caesar’
14 ExIII|      prayers might have some worth.’~He spoke, and either he
15 ExIII|      my work’s reputation is worth less than my own salvation.~
16  ExIV| whoever knew nothing of your worth in court cases,~would hardly
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