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 1   T-I| pleasures, happy Nile.~I ask for favourable winds – who would credit
 2   T-I|        this ship were borne on a favourable breeze,~perhaps your faithfulness
 3   T-I|         routes, let the one~find favourable winds, no less than the
 4   T-V|        hidden, as you’d wish,~if favourable winds failed my sails.~Yet,
 5   ExI|  something,~since the god gave a favourable answer to my prayer.~You
 6   ExI|         read it, approve it with favourable words,~and you praise my
 7 ExIII|         bounds, and enjoy a more favourable land? ~Why did I ever hope
 8   Ind|     storm-wind.~Book TI.X:1-50 A favourable wind for navigating the
 9   Ind|         father at Aulis, to gain favourable winds for the passage to
10   Ind|       Augustus) is safe/lives/is favourable like an omen, that Ovid
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