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 1   T-I|           gentler pursuits.~A god crushed me, and no one eased my
 2   T-I|        effort to visit a comrade, crushed by a mighty blow,~and comfort
 3  T-II| seven-mouthed Hister’s delta,~I’m crushed beneath virgin Callisto’
 4  T-IV|        century without stain,~I’m crushed, in the harshest years of
 5   T-V|          the gods as examples,~am crushed by a difficult, an iron
 6   T-V|        Lycurgus the axe-bearer be crushed,~and Pentheusimpious shade
 7   T-V|         to you.~I’m not so wholly crushed by fate’s adversity~that
 8   T-V|        Anytus,~wisdom still falls crushed by the weight of such misfortune:~
 9  ExII|          death is life.~Let me be crushed by war on the ground, cold
10  ExII|          did not leave until he’d crushed the bold spirit~of that
11  ExIV|          d not complain if I were crushed, it would be~pleasant to
12  IBIS|           died:~or the strong men crushed in that Antaeus’s arms,~
13  IBIS|           or as cruel Cacus died, crushed, in his cave,~given away
14  IBIS|          as that noisy throat was crushed in the wooden Horse,~so
15   Ind|        the Tiber. The Romans were crushed by the Gauls under Brennius
16   Ind|      wrestled with travellers and crushed them to death. He was served
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