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 1   T-I|      brittle pumice to polish your two edges,~so you’re seen ragged,
 2   T-I|         end on leaving,~the one or two, of so many once, who remained.~
 3   T-I|          own troubles.~You, barely two or three of so many friends,
 4   T-I|         passed the Isthmus and its two gulfs on my way,~and boarded
 5  T-II|          Carmen et Error’~ ~Though two charges, carmen et error,
 6  T-II|        Haemon, or Alcmena for whom two nights were one?~Why tell
 7  T-II|         line,~when a piece between two enemy pieces is lost,~how
 8 T-III|              gave me what scarcely two or three of my old friends
 9 T-III|           me, my country lost, you two, and my home,~and everything,
10 T-III|        many parts it lingers there two years.~The power of Aquilo’
11  T-IV|         cause is safe, given these two deities,~of whom one’s seen
12  T-IV|         they were a single mind in two bodies.~They were brought
13   T-V|           loyal,~if one might call two or three others a few.~Though
14   T-V|      command,~separate darkly into two distinct heaps.~I remember
15  ExII|             fled to Sparta:~of the two places it’s uncertain which
16  ExII|        because I’m the wiser of us two,~it’s that I know myself
17   ExI|      followed him, attended by you two brothers,~like the Twins
18   ExI|           be seen to know me,~only two or three brought help when
19 ExIII|        with unwilling hands:~until two young men arrived on board
20  ExIV|         And the Don~that separates two continents, Asia and Europe,~
21  ExIV|          to split your name across two lines,~ending the first
22  ExIV|          free of war and cold,~the two things hateful Pontus offers
23  ExIV|            husband is unclear:~and two sons, a powerful help to
24  ExIV|      tasteful Numa, along with the two Prisci:~and Montanus, master
25  IBIS|         before the event:~like the two sons of Phineus, from whom
26  IBIS|            disparately shod on his two feet,~or as Oetean Hercules
27  IBIS|         human entrails:~like those two Centaurs, Nessus, and Eurytion,
28  IBIS|        Irus, too, that beggar with two names, and those~who haunt
29  IBIS|           had the same name as the two I’ve mentioned.~May you
30   Ind|          was a major influence for two centuries.~Book EIV.I:1-
31   Ind|      friend to whom Ovid addresses two of the poems.~Book EII.IV:
32   Ind|          Caesares, the Caesars, of two or more members of the Imperial
33   Ind|            gave their names to the two major stars of the constellation
34   Ind| Symplegades, the ‘clashing rocks’. Two rocky islands at the entrance
35   Ind|        sister, had entertained the two gods. Macelo’s husband offended
36   Ind|          Seven against Thebes. The two brothers killed each other.
37   Ind|        considers them a merging of two tribes and aggressive by
38   Ind|            their brother Phaethon. Two of them are named. Lampetia
39   Ind|       Circe and Calypso. (the last two in Odyssey V:13, X:133)~
40   Ind|          in 22BC, the first of the two reached on climbing the
41   Ind|          daughter of Pelasgos, and two of the cities of Thessaly
42   Ind|      helped his journey, maybe the two Julias via their friends (
43   Ind|     Agrippina the Elder united the two branches of the Imperial
44   Ind|         TIV.VI:1-50 Ovid has spent two full summers away from Rome,
45   Ind|         preceding poem that covers two full summers also.).~Book
46   Ind|           Enna, where a temple and two lakes were sacred to them.
47   Ind|          old Latin household gods, two in number, whose name derives
48   Ind|      obtain the Golden Fleece. The two winged sons chased the Harpies
49   Ind|          wife Idaea persecuted his two children by his first wife,
50   Ind|            gave their names to the two major stars of the constellation
51   Ind|         god of Lampsacus.~ ~Prisci~Two Augustan poets, one of whom
52   Ind|            name before. Either the two poems are out of chronological
53   Ind|            Ernle Bradford suggests two triplets: Thelxinoë, the
54   Ind|             and somewhat less than two hundred miles south of Tomis. ~
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