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 1   T-I|       revive,~I spoke to my sad friends at the end on leaving,~the
 2   T-I|     that faithful home,~and the friends that I’ve loved like brothers,~
 3   T-I|        named the first among my friends,~you above all who thought
 4   T-I|        was circled by crowds of friends.~And this, which I once
 5   T-I|         two or three of so many friends, are left me:~the rest were
 6   T-I|       flight, am deserted by my friends.~Joyful in victory, he sought
 7   T-I|          Your courage, with our friends, drove them off, bravely,~
 8   T-I|        drove them off, bravely,~friends I can never thank as they
 9   T-I|       for you!~You’ll have many friends while you’re fortunate:~
10   T-I|        for an empty granary:~no friends gather round when your wealth
11 T-III|       too cling to my heart, my friends, ~whom I’d like to mention
12 T-III|     gives no hints that drag my friends from hiding.~Let him who
13 T-III| scarcely two or three of my old friends did.~I saw your expression
14 T-III|  openness of heart to your dear friends –~is well known to the man
15 T-III|       in the house I left, true friends,~and above all my dear wife’
16 T-III|      the last time,~and like my friends, as I was leaving the city, ~
17  T-IV|    goddesses, who ease my ills,~friends of my anxious flight, Muses
18  T-IV|         the foremost of my dear friends,~who proved the sole altar
19  T-IV|      the city’s absent, my dear friends, absent,~and my wife’s absent,
20  T-IV|        my lady’s devotion, dear friends,~and at peace in my native
21  T-IV|  testimony of mine.~Why tell of friendswickedness and servants’
22   T-V|         country, and of you,~my friends: that I sing of existence
23  ExII|        speak with you, honoured friends,~and sometimes, at length,
24  ExII|       was not the least of your friends~asks you to read his words
25  ExII|        from you?~Do any of your friends, except myself, who pray
26  ExII|      recall in thought my sweet friends sometimes,~sometimes I think
27  ExII|        it’s right you have many friends,~if it’s true that character
28  ExII|        pays the debt he owes to friends who’ve died,~let him count
29   ExI|        once fortified with many friends,~while the favouring breeze
30   ExI|         by the intercession ~of friends: all kindness has been silent
31   ExI|       no stormier for Ulysses’.~Friendstrue loyalty might have
32 ExIII|     sinew.~And you must win our friends, so others help,~wife, and
33 ExIII|       its proximity?~Some of my friends too deserted me because~
34 ExIII|         my honesty excuses dear friends,~and favours them so they’
35 ExIII|          You few are the better friends who though it wrong~not
36 ExIII|         of your spirit with me, friends:~I cherish you now in that
37 ExIII|       of me.~When you read your friends a new made poem,~or, as
38 ExIII|   forbid anyone to remember his friends,~nor prevent me writing
39 ExIII|        EIII.VII:1-40 To Unknown Friends: Resignation~ ~Words fail
40 ExIII|         the stream. ~Forgive me friends: I hoped so much from you:~
41 ExIII|         better if it is that my friends’ zeal has waned,~than that
42 ExIII|       you dont dare to ask, my friends:~yet there’d have been one
43 ExIII|      havent addressed the same~friends, and one voice of mine seeks
44  ExIV|     when the larger part ~of my friends denied all knowledge of
45  ExIV|        I’d be counted among the friends around you,~if only a kinder
46  ExIV|    Carus, counted among my true~friends, you who are truly what
47   Ind|    three lines, disliked by his friends, from his early verse. He
48   Ind|     story from Pedo, one of the friends, and Ovid may be referring
49   Ind|    pseudonym for another of his friends.~Book TI.V:1-44 Carus is
50   Ind|       displayed in dragging his friends into his misfortunes. ~Book
51   Ind|    Celsus~One of Ovid’s closest friends. Possibly Albinovanus Celsus
52   Ind|        he could believe in this friends disloyalty.~Ibis:365-412
53   Ind|        he could believe in this friends disloyalty.~ ~Cercyon~Ibis:
54   Ind|        he could believe in this friends disloyalty.~ ~Chiron~One
55   Ind|        he could believe in this friends disloyalty.~ ~Getae~A Thracian
56   Ind|        he could believe in this friends disloyalty.~Book EIV.VIII:
57   Ind|        he could believe in this friends disloyalty.~ ~Hadria~Book
58   Ind|        he could believe in this friends disloyalty.~ ~Hebrus~The
59   Ind|        he could believe in this friends disloyalty.~Book EI.II:1-
60   Ind|        he could believe in this friends disloyalty.~Ibis:365-412
61   Ind|        the two Julias via their friends (Julia the Elder was still
62   Ind|       VII:1-40 Distant from his friends.~ ~Natalis~Book TIII.XIII:
63   Ind|    rights were retained. Ovid’s friends were not formally tainted
64   Ind|  triggered by the wickedness of friends’ and the harm done him by
65   Ind|     might have been betrayed by friends and servants. (the servants
66   Ind|        early autumn, i.e. AD14.~Friends and Patrons: references~
67   Ind|        III:1-46 Ovid’s faithful friends were probably Brutus, Atticus,
68   Ind|        he could believe in this friends disloyalty. It suggests
69   Ind|      the poets in his circle of friends, his poems to Corinna, his
70   Ind|     trying to make contact with friends of Germanicus. The death
71   Ind|        he could believe in this friends disloyalty.~Book EIII.1:
72   Ind|        he could believe in this friends disloyalty.~Ibis:365-412
73   Ind|     wept at this death of loyal friends.~ ~Turranius~An Augustan
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