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 1   T-I|        but this way of dying’s wretched.~Save me from drowning,
 2   T-I|      god is content I can’t be wretched.’~I spoke to the gods in
 3   T-I|        to go on living~when my wretched heart was filled with desire
 4   T-I|      one who’s as true as he’s wretched,~if such a witness carries
 5  T-II|  weapon, ah, too well known to wretched me! ~Spare me, father of
 6 T-III|     open to learned books.~Our wretched author’s fate engulfs his
 7 T-III|    direction,~and call on your wretched husband’s empty name?~Don’
 8 T-III|    Harsh one, why here, in the wretched years of exile?~You should,
 9  T-IV|    reality to be believed,~how wretched to be living among Bessi
10  T-IV|    there on people’s lips!~How wretched to defend my life, at gate
11  T-IV|     That one now who fixes his wretched gaze on the ground,~did
12  T-IV|        Asks For Her Help~ ~I’m wretched if, when they call you an
13  T-IV|      comes to your cheeks!~I’m wretched, if you think it a disgrace
14  T-IV|       to be married to me!~I’m wretched if you’re ashamed to be
15   T-V|       one thing that links the wretched and the blessed,~that it’
16  ExII|        repent! If anything the wretched say’s believed,~I repent,
17  ExII|      Whether day gazes on this wretched life,~or whether Night urges
18  ExII|    just speak kind words for a wretched exile.~For Caesar doesn’
19  ExII|    this greeting,~if one who’s wretched can be anyone’s friend.~
20   ExI|   others seek safety: the most wretched fate’s ~the safest, since
21   ExI|    grant a gentler land for my wretched exile.~It’s a good time
22   ExI|      drive a friend away who’s wretched,~or prevent him being one
23   ExI|        you still think of your wretched friend at all,~or has your
24   ExI|    hard for you to imagine the wretched being pleased.~As long as
25   ExI|      your old friend in such a wretched state,~it would be wrong
26   ExI|      proofs,~but because every wretched thing is fearful, and because~
27 ExIII|         So let others hurt the wretched, and choose to be feared,~
28 ExIII|        rites in common:~if the wretched are allowed to be of your
29 ExIII|  powers, believe me, spare the wretched,~and dont always, endlessly
30  ExIV|       But what you’d not wish, wretched fate has willed.~Ah me,
31  ExIV|    Nature made you kind to the wretched: she gave ~no man a more
32  ExIV|       barely believe all this.~Wretched the man who suffers things
33  ExIV|        first thing to flee the wretched,~and sense and judgement
34  ExIV|        the prime cause of this wretched exile.~But, by the mutual
35  ExIV|   Enemy: His Fame~ ~Why attack wretched Ovid’s poetry, jealous man?~
36  IBIS| violently, in my fall,~be made wretched for it! I’ll be your dearest
37  IBIS|      captive Acheus who hung~a wretched witness to the gold-bearing
38  IBIS|       drenched by the blood of wretched princes, ~as that cruel
39  IBIS|     ended, bringing aid to the wretched Argolis.~Like Hippolytus,
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