Work-Book

 1   T-V|      whoever lives on having offended Caesar, will be so.~Are
 2   T-V| either on the grounds that I offended without crime, ~and my fault,
 3   T-V|   worst punishment is having offended him,~and I wish the hour
 4  ExII|    arrange things so I never offended either.~So it’s no wonder
 5  ExII|  member.~Woe is me if you’re offended by these words,~and deny
 6  ExII|  long as Caesar’s godhead is offended with me.~Let each of you
 7   ExI|     his, who was justifiably offended by me.~The pain that distressed
 8   Ind|     I:49-80 Achilles was not offended by Priam’s tears over Hector.~
 9   Ind|   two gods. Macelo’s husband offended the gods, and they were
10   Ind|  crime’, i.e. something that offended Augustus rather than something
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License