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 1   T-I|      there’s one, perhaps, who asks how I am,~say I’m alive,
 2   T-I|     whomever it is no ill,~who asks the gods to be kind to suffering:~
 3   T-I|      by sudden miseries.~Verse asks for a writer with leisure
 4   T-I|    know all my misfortunes,~he asks for more than circumstance
 5  T-IV|      III:49-84 To His Wife: He Asks For Her Help~ ~I’m wretched
 6  ExII|      the least of your friends~asks you to read his words to
 7   ExI|       harm you.~All your House asks it, nor can you deny~that
 8 ExIII|       he who reads that praise asks if you’re worthy of it.~
 9 ExIII|   Tomis, to you, Rufinus, ~and asks you, to befriend his ‘Triumph’ ~
10 ExIII| occasion:~but such as it is he asks you to defend it.~The strong
11  ExIV|  Augustus.~If any in the crowd asks who you are, and where ~
12  ExIV|      salt admixture.~If anyone asks why I relate all this to
13  ExIV|         be well, as the public asks of the gods),~promote my
14  ExIV|     not forgotten ~me, and who asks how Ovid the exile is getting
15   Ind|      100 Book EI.II:101-150 He asks Paullus to plead for him
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