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 1   T-I|    flower of my genius.~The judge’s duty is to search out
 2   T-I| merit,~my fault, even to my judge, does not deserve death.~~  ~
 3 T-III|   not profound enough for a judge.~~ Book TIII.XI:39-74 Exile
 4   T-V|   address Jupiter.~Imperial judge, through whom the security~
 5  ExII|    hostile mind.~You be the judge. I’ll dare to confess I’
 6  ExII|    my sorrows,~whenever the judge is as mild as I too found
 7  ExII|    a heavy blow.~So when my judge’s decision supports me, ~
 8   ExI|   alone.~Whatever it is, my judge’s anger was moderate,~who
 9 ExIII|    the guise of error,~your judge’s anger was no more than
10 ExIII|   know.~If I were forced to judge what I deserve, myself,~
11 ExIII|    dreading my fate, not my judge’s anger,~I was even terrified
12  IBIS|    art,~after he’d acted as judge of the godsplayful quarrel:~
13   Ind|     anger. Augustus did not judge Ovid’s fault (culpa) to
14   Ind|     exordium to placate the judge, a propositio outlining
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