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 1   T-I|   ocean winds?~Is it all gone, drowned in Lethe’s waters?~I don’
 2  T-IV|        can save, unless~he who drowned it lifts it from the Stygian
 3   T-V|     who laughed at shipwrecks, drowned~in the sea, and said: ‘The
 4   T-V|      ship was wrecked, but not drowned and sunk,~and though deprived
 5 ExIII|        how many deserved to be drowned?~When the bravest die in
 6 ExIII|    more easily, who’s suddenly drowned by the waves,~than he who
 7  IBIS|    like those the Punic leader drowned in the waters~of the well,
 8  IBIS|   father-in-law.~Or may you be drowned, as you ride, sucked down ~
 9  IBIS|      like Evenus or Tiberinus, drowned in the rushing river.~May
10   Ind|         the wax melted, and he drowned in the Icarian Sea and was
11   Ind|     Idas stole her, and Evenus drowned himself in the river Lycormas
12   Ind| indicates another Glaucus, who drowned in honey. This was Glaucus
13   Ind|      Glaucus son of Minos, who drowned in a jar of honey in the
14   Ind|    Jupiter, for which the gods drowned Ceyx in a storm. Alcyone
15   Ind|      fell into the sea and was drowned, giving her name to the
16   Ind|   visit her and eventually was drowned. The subject of a poem by
17   Ind|      Neptune caused Ceyx to be drowned, and him and his wife Alcyone
18   Ind|       whose Greek admixture is drowned by the Getic semi-nomadic
19   Ind|       the sea while asleep and drowned. See Virgil’s Aeneid.~Book
20   Ind|      any project.~Ibis:541-596 Drowned in sight of land according
21   Ind|       after King Tiberinus who drowned there.~Book TV.I:1-48 Noted
22   Ind|    Ibis:465-540 King Tiberinus drowned there.~ ~Thyestes~The son
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