Part

1 Int|        s imperially extravagant desires, Aeneas found his amatory
2   3|       if we can but satisfy our desires.~ ~ ‘Now I am a married
3   3| Lucretia, for men to kill their desires, and many have said of your
4   5|    fortune did not favour their desires. Her mother guessed that
5   6|      careless and opposed to my desires. However, now that you offer
6   6|       worse, than to oppose our desires. If once we have known each
7  13|          that they have as many desires as a tree has leaves. For
8  14|         as a surfeit of what it desires. There have been many men
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