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 1   T-I|         turned away from Euboean waters:~and my vessel, shattered
 2   T-I|        gave his name to the salt waters.~It’s hard to say from here,
 3   T-I|           I’ll swallow the fatal waters.~But my loyal wife grieves
 4   T-I|     wished to send me to Stygian waters,~he wouldnt have needed
 5   T-I|         Book TI.IV:1-28 Troubled Waters~ ~Bootes, the guardian of
 6   T-I|        gone down to the infernal waters.~That Phocean Pylades was
 7   T-I|         gone, drowned in Lethe’s waters?~I dont think of you as
 8   T-I|       wide Pontus,~and reach the waters she seeks, by the Getic
 9   T-I|     plough through the Bistonian waters.~Though we take different
10   T-I|    itself is exposed to the dark waters.~Let the storm defeat the
11 T-III|       and horseshooves beat on waters hard with cold:~and across
12 T-III|       credit:~I’ve seen the vast waters frozen with ice,~a slippery
13 T-III|   Barbarian Incursions~ ~If such waters had once been yours, Leander,~
14 T-III|          no wave on the besieged waters.~The ships stand locked
15 T-III|        safely ploughed the local waters.~It’s rare for sailors to
16  T-IV|     never sink below the western waters,~and your orbit, circling
17  T-IV|         by men of old,~since its waters are troubled by immoderate
18  T-IV|       consign the act to Lethe’s waters,~and my clemency will be
19  T-IV|          land, and over the deep waters,~and my lament will find
20   T-V|        River Ganges,~and all the waters the dusky Indian drinks.~
21   T-V|         the wide Danube adds its waters to the sea.~If you are still
22   T-V|          Euboea~dares to run the waters of Cape Caphereus.~Yet I
23   T-V|        runs too, with its meagre waters.~And you, the one whose
24   T-V|    separated from its accustomed waters too long.~Give up hope for
25  ExII|       points the sure way to the waters of the Styx.~Let Aesculapius
26  ExII|       than the land,~the sunless waters ever heaving with the winds’
27  ExII|      sacred ship sailed~Colchian waters, was exiled from Haemonia
28  ExII|        waves’,~then takes oar in waters where, just now, he swam.~
29   ExI|        doesnt sail through calm waters.~Let others seek safety:
30   ExI|         death from those Stygian waters?~Orestes, maddened, was
31   ExI|          Lethe’s care-dispelling waters. ~Sooner will the longest
32   ExI|   Lucifer rises from the Eastern waters.~As he stands there, silent,
33   ExI|         in verse, from Black Sea waters.~This is an exile’s voice:
34   ExI|        the sea didnt offer calm waters for my journey~why should
35   ExI|        Anapus joins Cyane to his waters.~Not far from there the
36   ExI|    stands high above the flowing waters,~I see you in the only way
37 ExIII|      Scylla terrorising Sicilian waters,~no Circe born with the
38 ExIII|          better known, by Euxine waters.~They say that while he
39 ExIII|      wild Danube gathers its icy waters?~What’s the reason for your
40 ExIII|          banished to the Danube,~waters that the as yet un-pacified
41 ExIII|    broken ~reeds, bear along its waters fouled with blood.~Captive
42 ExIII| terrified of cruel reefs in calm waters?~I scarcely think that I
43  ExIV|    reproach before.’~Give me the waters of Lethe that numb the heart,
44  ExIV|     driven like a wreck to Getic waters,~still found a reason there
45  ExIV|           in the clouds, and the waters of the Ionian Sea,~in less
46  ExIV|       Danube wont deny it whose waters were once~dyed dark red
47  ExIV|        would, from the Black Sea waters:~once sent, may the gods
48  ExIV|         so my ship can leave the waters of the Styx.~Flaccus commanded
49  ExIV|   courage,~and stained the river waters with savage blood.~Ask him
50  ExIV|         Propontis sends to these waters.~Your brother too, who had
51  ExIV|        you.~The spoil of so many waters adulterates the waves~it
52  ExIV|         old reef again,~into the waters where my ship was wrecked?~
53  IBIS|    thumbs,~and you the stream of waters, not to be named in vain, ~
54  IBIS|       Tiber flows with its clear waters,~I’ll wage war on you: death
55  IBIS|        your head, covered by the waters.~And like Prometheus, pinned
56  IBIS|      witness to the gold-bearing waters.~Or like Achillesscion,
57  IBIS|       hurled alive into shrouded waters.~And may the weapons sent
58  IBIS|        and the waves,~so may the waters that drown you be helped
59  IBIS|       gave a new name to Myrtoan waters:~as those who sought in
60  IBIS|      Punic leader drowned in the waters~of the well, making the
61  IBIS|          and stained the Euboean waters with his blood.~Or like
62  IBIS|         your name to the flowing waters,~like Evenus or Tiberinus,
63  IBIS|         while ~swimming, may the waters of Styx choke your mouth.~
64   Ind|        sets in the stormy winter waters.~Book TI.XI:1-44 Winter
65   Ind|     Medea.~Book EI.III:49-94 Its waters sailed by the Argonauts.~ ~
66   Ind|   Bacchus.~Ibis:135-162 Its warm waters.~ ~Ganymede~The son of Tros,
67   Ind|      Rome.~Ibis:135-162 Its cold waters.~Book EIV.VI:1-50 The delta
68   Ind|         Underworld, Hades, whose waters bring forgetfulness.~Its
69   Ind|         32 ~Book EII.IV:1-34 The waters of oblivion.~Book EIV.I:
70   Ind|    oblivion.~Book EIV.I:1-36 The waters of forgetfulness.~ ~Leucadia,
71   Ind|        163-208 Extensive coastal waters.~ ~Lichas~Ibis:465-540 The
72   Ind|         able to bring about calm waters.~Book EIII.VI:1-60 Caused
73   Ind|     towards Lechaeum, into whose waters the Corinthian bronzes were
74   Ind|          She terrorised Sicilian waters.~Ibis:365-412 She attacked
75   Ind|         TV.II:45-79 The Scythian waters he has sailed.~Book TV.VI:
76   Ind|      Echidna. Pausanias says the waters of the river dissolve glass
77   Ind|        Being sent to the Stygian waters a synonym for being put
78   Ind|         135-162 Ibis:209-250 The waters of oblivion, and (spiritual
79   Ind|          gods swore oaths on the waters of Styx.~Book EIV.VIII:49-
80   Ind|     yellow sands, carried by the waters.~Ibis:135-162 Its waters.~
81   Ind|         waters.~Ibis:135-162 Its waters.~Ibis:465-540 King Tiberinus
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