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 1 T-III|       sin’s that of possessing sight.~True I can’t entirely defend
 2  T-IV|       its ills, endlessly.~The sight of the city’s absent, my
 3  T-IV|       I owned,~and enjoyed the sight of men, and the city, again.~
 4   T-V|      fear them, you’d hate the sight~of their sheepskins, their
 5   T-V|       That I’m deprived of the sight of my country, and of you,~
 6  ExII|      altar.~Another, robbed of sight for a similar reason,~shouted,
 7  ExII|    punishments and restore the sight~they’ve taken, when they
 8   ExI|         Often a lamb flees the sight of a distant dog,~thinks
 9 ExIII| torment’s worse: recalling the sight of places~renews the bitterness
10  ExIV|      of home, country, and the sight~of my own, driven like a
11  IBIS|   Phoenix knew, and, robbed of sight, ~find your perilous way
12   Ind|        in Athene’s temple. The sight of her face turned the onlooker
13   Ind|        Ibis:541-596 Drowned in sight of land according to Ovid.~ ~
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