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 1  T-II|     my parents~educate me, or letters entertain my eyes?~This
 2  T-II|    fingers,~and traced silent letters on the table’s surface:~
 3 T-III|     carve these lines in fine letters on the marble~for the hurried
 4  T-IV| thousand reasons why frequent letters,~from you, should rarely
 5   T-V|       34 Ill, And Wishing For Letters~ ~This ‘Good healthOvid
 6   T-V|       us, while we talked,~so letters now should bear our silent
 7  ExII|  reason,~undoes the work your letters have achieved.~Whether you
 8  ExII|      Claims For Remembrance~ ~Letters instead of spoken words
 9   ExI|  aloud at my error.~Then your letters began to bring me comfort,~
10   ExI|     This is an exile’s voice: letters grant me a tongue,~and I’
11   ExI|  master,~do you recognise the letters shaped by my hand?~Or is
12 ExIII|    names dear to him, to your letters.~It will be shameful for
13  ExIV|      yet about your name.~Yet letters without metre have never
14  ExIV|   fingers are rarely drawn to letters.~That sacred impulse, that
15  ExIV|     complaint about you in my letters.~I moan about the cold,
16  ExIV|      to speaking the same:~my letters of their own accord set
17   Ind|     exile, from which he sent letters.~Book TV.X:1-53 The sea
18   Ind|       XI:1-30 One of the many letters to her, as she lived the
19   Ind| contemporaries wrote Ulyssesletters home to her, presumably
20   Ind| Augustus.~Book TV.II:1-44 His letters home to his wife from there.~
21   Ind|   home.~Book EIV.XVI:1-52 His letters home written by poet in
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