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 1   T-I|     sought the planks from my shipwreck.~As a wolf raging with the
 2   T-V|    feared it,~and gazed at my shipwreck from a high hill,~and gave
 3  ExII|  shore might be granted to my shipwreck.~When I see the enduring
 4   ExI|     hostile to me.~Welcome my shipwreck on a gentle shore:~dont
 5 ExIII|      60 To An Unknown Friend: Shipwreck~ ~Ovid sends this brief
 6  IBIS| fights for the planks from my shipwreck:~this robber, who ought
 7   Ind|   gods is consistent with the shipwreck imagery earlier in the poem.~
 8   Ind|     TV.IX:1-38 The imagery of shipwreck again and the perceived
 9   Ind|    Caphereus, the site of the shipwreck of the Greek fleet.~Ibis:
10   Ind|   gods is consistent with the shipwreck imagery earlier in the poem.~ ~
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