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 1   T-I|      to the doves your talons wounded.~Nor does the lamb dare
 2   T-I|    only that man can help who wounded me.~Only see you dont do
 3   T-I|       no offence of mine ~has wounded, be content now with my
 4   T-I|       up the shield too late, wounded,~free this banishment from
 5   T-I|       mine.~So, O few, aid my wounded state all the more,~and
 6   T-I|     to me forever,~unless the wounded god’s anger lessens.~~ Book
 7  T-II|      the powers that be,~to a wounded god chance is no excuse.~
 8  T-IV|      I love song, though song wounded me. ~So the strange lotus-flowers,
 9  T-IV|     the Olympic prize,~when a wounded prince’s anger ordered me~
10   T-V|    sickness,~if the hand that wounded him had not brought relief.~
11   T-V|       and never a book’s been wounded by my criticism:~if, though
12   T-V|     body,~before your heart’s wounded through my fault,~and I
13  ExII|  wound,~So I, low in spirits, wounded by a bitter blow,~began
14  ExII|      their favourite art.~The wounded gladiator swears off fighting,
15   ExI|        bringing hope that the wounded god might be softened.~Then
16   ExI|       true help in error.~The wounded limb shrinks from a gentle
17 ExIII|        to you, Ovid the poet, wounded by his own talent.~He offers
18 ExIII| always, endlessly oppress the wounded.~No god is more lenient
19  ExIV|     and live in fear of being wounded by Getic arrows,’~I’d have
20  ExIV| person.~But if you see anyone wounded by fate’s injustice,~no
21  ExIV|      one still alive has been wounded by my lips.~And even if
22  IBIS|  shameful desire, and the son wounded by the cruel sword.~Let
23  IBIS|   gentler than his master,~be wounded and buried under a pile
24  IBIS| destruction.~And like him who wounded Athens with endless ~song,
25  IBIS|     of ruin.~And as a serpent wounded Agamemnonian Orestes~may
26   Ind|    Book EII.II:1-38 His spear wounded and healed Telephus.~Book
27   Ind|   Lemnos.~Book EII.II:1-38 He wounded Venus and Mars in the Trojan
28   Ind|      Mount Parthenius. He was wounded and healed by the touch
29   Ind|  Achilles might heal where he wounded.~Book TII.I:1 Poetry might
30   Ind|       might heal where it too wounded.~Book TV.II:1-44 Needed
31   Ind|       by Achillesspear that wounded him. King of the Mysians.~ ~
32   Ind|      against Thebes. Mortally wounded he gnawed on the skull and
33   Ind|  Diomedes the Greek hero, who wounded Venus and Mars in the Trojan
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