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 1   T-I|    reach the gods.~So the same winds drive my sails and prayers ~
 2   T-I|        roar and humming of the winds.~The ocean waves dont know
 3   T-I|      vast seas,~pursued by the winds, she doesnt see death nearing.~
 4   T-I|     the seas quieten, and kind winds blow,~though you spare me,
 5   T-I|     Nile.~I ask for favourable winds – who would credit it? –~
 6   T-I|      Drive my body on swiftly, winds – why linger here? –~Why
 7   T-I|   through my fear.~Ah me! What winds swell the waves,~and throw
 8   T-I|       Unless Aeolus alters the winds he’s sent~I’ll be carried
 9   T-I|        vain, lost in the ocean winds?~Is it all gone, drowned
10   T-I|        the one~find favourable winds, no less than the other.~~
11  T-II|       no constant fury,~in the winds that agitate the air,~but
12 T-III|      of my wit!~While the warm winds still blow, the Danube between~
13 T-III|     many mouths,~congeals, the winds hardening its dark flow,~
14 T-III|   hardening its dark flow,~and winds its way to the sea below
15 T-III|       Danube’s levelled by dry winds,~the barbarian host attack
16  T-IV|     are troubled by immoderate winds,~and there are no quiet
17  T-IV|      be Ovid’s land.~O let the winds, that carried Orestes home,~
18   T-V|      you’d wish,~if favourable winds failed my sails.~Yet, you
19   T-V|     are blown about by hostile winds,~and nothing could be sadder
20  ExII|   waters ever heaving with the windsmadness.~Wherever you look
21  ExIV|     gifted him ~with following winds so the breeze filled his
22  ExIV|        me, sooner ~might north winds be warm, south winds cold,~
23  ExIV|     north winds be warm, south winds cold,~and my fate have the
24  ExIV|   steadily grows,~see that the winds of hope dont desert my
25  IBIS|        sky bring east and west winds too,~warm south winds blow
26  IBIS|     west winds too,~warm south winds blow out of the frozen pole:~
27  IBIS|    rivers their waves,~let the winds and the breezes deny you
28  IBIS|       the sand driven by south winds bury your face.~Like those
29   Ind|      Hippotes, and king of the winds. His cave was on the islands
30   Ind|     Book TI.IV:1-28 God of the winds.~Book TI.X:1-50 The grandfather
31   Ind|       helped Ulysses with fair winds, however Homer says Odysseus’
32   Ind|     crew opened the bag of the winds given him by Aeolus and
33   Ind|        1-74 The warring of the winds.~Book TIII. X:1-40 Book
34   Ind| daughter of Aeolus, God of the Winds and Enarete. Her ill-fated
35   Ind|        1-74 The warring of the winds.~ ~Euryalus~The beautiful
36   Ind|      Aulis, to gain favourable winds for the passage to Troy
37   Ind| daughter of Aeolus, god of the winds. The significance of frater
38   Ind|       away.~The warring of the winds.~Book EII.I:68 Book EIV.
39   Ind|        1-74 The warring of the winds.~Book TIII. XII:1-54 The
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