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 1  T-II|      and for himself to be the theme of verse,~and when the battles
 2  T-II|        was a great and fertile theme.~A little boat shouldnt
 3  T-IV|    wife to me,~and drown a sad theme with your virtues:~glory
 4   T-V|        1-48 To The Reader: His Theme~ ~Devoted reader, add this
 5   T-V|   writing’s appropriate to the theme.~Untouched and happy I toyed
 6   T-V|      author himself is his own theme.~As the swans of Cayster,
 7   T-V| schooled in adversity offers~a theme for praise in the saddest
 8  ExII|    ones that went before.~Same theme, different title: and each
 9  ExIV|      set to Italian metres.~My theme, you ask? You’d praise me:
10  ExIV|       their own accord set the theme.~Whether your influence
11   Ind|       brother Macareus was the theme of EuripidesAeolus.~Book
12   Ind|    Picasso’s variations on the theme in the Vollard Suite)~Book
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