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 1   T-I|          of Pontus:~I complain my flight from my native land’s too
 2   T-I|         true companions:~I, in my flight, am deserted by my friends.~
 3   T-I|        short by it’s author’s sad flight.~Leaving, mournful, I threw
 4   T-I| discreetly turned away, in shared flight.~No surprise, since they
 5   T-I|           left, or the cry~or the flight of some bird I observed,
 6   T-I|          and guide, of my anxious flight,~made safe by the divine
 7   T-I|           straits, she carried in flight so insecurely,~that separate
 8 T-III|         wish for wings to beat in flight, ~either yours Perseus,
 9 T-III|         suffered so many evils in flight by land and sea~I think
10  T-IV|           remained a friend to my flight:~she alone was unafraid
11  T-IV|       ills,~friends of my anxious flight, Muses of Helicon,~who now
12  ExII|          separated from all in my flight.~I ploughed the vast seas
13   ExI|           s stormy everyone takes flight.~Look at me, once fortified
14   ExI|          the wrist,~and guide the flight of your galloping horse,~
15 ExIII|        forgive those~who’ve taken flight along with Fortune.~Though
16 ExIII|    columns,~and you enter it by a flight of forty steps.~The story
17   Ind|     Aeneid, the story of Aeneas’s flight from Troy and the origins
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