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Alphabetical [« »] fated 3 fateful 2 fates 9 father 179 father-in-law 4 fatherland 3 fathers 2 | Frequency [« »] 182 name 181 d 181 eii 179 father 171 wife 170 too 169 tiii | Publius Ovidius Naso Poems from Exile Concordances father |
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1 T-I| you’ve any care for your father,~don’t love any of those 2 T-II| s right to call him the father and ruler of the gods,~it’ 3 T-II| also, since you’re called father and ruler of the land,~should 4 T-II| youth, emulate your and your father’s deeds,~may Victory, always 5 T-II| wretched me! ~Spare me, father of the country, don’t take 6 T-II| if she hadn’t shorn her father’s hair, through love.~Who 7 T-II| might move your will,~O father, O guardian, and salvation 8 T-III| Danaids, and their savage father with naked sword:~and all 9 T-III| d sufficed Phaethon as a father.~You too, always fear what 10 T-III| verse, though not in your father’s style?~Since nature and 11 T-III| was your friend and guide, father to daughter.~And if the 12 T-III| wicked Medea, fleeing the father she’d left,~in the Argo, 13 T-III| cried:~‘We’re caught: my father must be delayed by some 14 T-III| many places.~And lest her father did not realise, high on 15 T-III| blood-stained head,~so her father would be delayed by this 16 T-III| author’s sentence.~Often a father’s exiled to a foreign shore,~ 17 T-III| guardian the longer they lack a father.~Three of my offspring have 18 T-IV| a fine son worthy of his father. ~This with broken horns 19 T-IV| was not born of some other father than Cadmus,~because she 20 T-IV| whose mind mirrors your father’s brilliance,~yet does not 21 T-IV| wit is eloquent in your father’s tongue,~bettered by no 22 T-IV| with our just prince.~The Father of the Country himself – 23 T-IV| I always honoured your father from my earliest days -~ 24 T-IV| it was not you~but your father before you was deceived.~ 25 T-IV| tender age, and, through~our father’s care, went to men distinguished 26 T-IV| secretly to her work.~My father often said: ‘Why follow 27 T-IV| me a grandfather.~And my father had already completed his 28 ExII| When Aeneas carried his father on his shoulders,~they say 29 ExII| Aeneas’s scion?~Indeed one’s father of a country, the other 30 ExII| voice than before.~Your father didn’t repudiate my friendship,~ 31 ExI| fires~purely to placate his father’s Justice,~which always 32 ExI| victory, by a happy Rome:~your father will see his son’s mature 33 ExI| anxious defendants.~Your father’s fluent tongue lives in 34 ExI| loyal sons worthy of their father and the names granted~them, 35 ExI| my place of exile.~Your father wishes this, if his eloquent 36 ExI| but a calm and merciful father, inclined to pardon,~who 37 ExI| responsibility of yours.~That father of yours, with an eloquence ~ 38 ExI| grandsons, worthy of their father and grandfather, ~who make 39 ExI| triumphant horses:~so may your father reach Pylian Nestor’s years, 40 ExI| Cotys, son worthy of your father~should benefit one who’s 41 ExI| Alcinous’s character?~Your father’s no tyrant from Cassandrea 42 ExI| time’s been given to your father’s arts,~and their military 43 ExIII| Volesus, founder of your father’s line, would recognise, ~ 44 ExIII| while you rejoice, great father of our leader and our land,~ 45 ExIII| perhaps Agrius,~Thersites’ father, might have called his son 46 ExIV| grandmother’s side, one by his father’s.~I offer incense to them 47 ExIV| take the gentle name of Father.~~ Book EIV.X:1-34 To Albinovanus: 48 ExIV| tell how the body of our father, Augustus, was mortal,~but 49 ExIV| Tiberius is equal to his father in virtue, taking ~up the 50 ExIV| a powerful help to their father,~have given true pledges 51 ExIV| side, Messallas on your father’s)~and with them, if it’ 52 IBIS| Aegyptos.~Tantalus, Pelop’s father, always reaches for the 53 IBIS| viewed gold sinfully,~the father giving them as funeral gifts 54 IBIS| son-in-law, ~Orestes Tisamenus’s father, and Alcmaeon Callirhoe’ 55 IBIS| Thyestes, Myrrha to her father, Nyctimene to hers.~Nor 56 IBIS| pious and careful of her father’s life~than yours was Pterelaus, 57 IBIS| trampling and crushing her father’s limbs under the wheels.~~ 58 IBIS| Sinis and Sciron and his father Procrustes:~and the Minotaur, 59 IBIS| And like Erysichthon, the father of Mestra who changed her 60 IBIS| the ones that delayed a father’s pursuit.~May you imitate 61 IBIS| Capaneus, or Dexithea’s father,~or Autonoe’s sister, Semele, 62 IBIS| carved in pieces, enter your father’s gut.~May the cruel sword 63 IBIS| for his grandfather, ~that father’s son, by whose crime his 64 IBIS| s depths like Psamathe’s father, Crotopus, because of what 65 IBIS| new crown,~and the bride’s father, and with the father the 66 IBIS| bride’s father, and with the father the household:~as the thinning 67 IBIS| brought to death sadly ~to her father, may your throat be bound 68 IBIS| own locked door~like the father who punished himself according 69 IBIS| drives from his rites:~as her father himself, from duty, brought 70 Ind| VII:1-70 He wielded his father Peleus’s spear. Given him 71 Ind| The son of Myrrha by her father Cinyras, born after her 72 Ind| Perse, brother of Circe, and father of Medea. See Ovid’s Metamorphoses 73 Ind| limbs about to delay her father’s pursuit.~ ~Aegeus~Ibis: 74 Ind| Aegeus~Ibis:465-540 The father of Theseus and king of Athens. 75 Ind| Thracians of King Rhoemetalces, father of Cotys.~ ~Aegisthus~The 76 Ind| EI.I:1-36 He carried his father Anchises out of Troy on 77 Ind| Greek god of medicine, the father of Machaon and Podalirius 78 Ind| Iolchos, son of Cretheus, father of Jason. His half-brother 79 Ind| throne.~Book EI.IV:1-58 Father of Jason.~ ~Aesonides~Book 80 Ind| husband of Clytaemnestra, father of Orestes, Iphigenia, and 81 Ind| 46 Book EII.VI:1-38 The father of Orestes, the son being 82 Ind| Agenor~King of Sidon. The father of Phineus, and Cadmus.~ 83 Ind| Cadmus.~Book EI.III:49-94 Father of Cadmus.~Book EI.IV:1- 84 Ind| Cadmus.~Book EI.IV:1-58 Father of Phineus.~ ~Agenorides~ 85 Ind| Germany in AD10.~ ~Agrius~The father of Thersites the ugliest 86 Ind| Troy.~Book EIII.IX:1-56 Father of Thersites.~ ~Ajax~The 87 Ind| Ulysses was washed ashore. The father of Nausicaa. One of his 88 Ind| causing the death of his father, and was maddened by the 89 Ind| of Tegea in Arcadia, and father to Auge, who bore Telephus 90 Ind| Hunt. The son of Oecleus, father of Alcmaeon, and husband 91 Ind| Anchises~The son of Capys, and father of Aeneas by the goddess 92 Ind| as guide to her blinded father Oedipus.~ ~Antilochus~The 93 Ind| altars.~Ibis:541-596 The father of Linus.~ ~Appia (Via)~ 94 Ind| brother of Thyestes. The father of Agamemnon and Menelaüs. 95 Ind| the title pater patriae: Father of the Country on 2nd February 96 Ind| of (Boeotian)Thebes. The father of Semele.~Book TIV.III: 97 Ind| sun, Alpha Centauri. The father of Ocyroë, by Chariclo the 98 Ind| incest between Myrrha and her father Cinyras. He also wrote light 99 Ind| Ibis:541-596 The Argive father of Psamathe who killed her 100 Ind| Tiberius Claudius Nero). The father of Germanicus. ~Book TIV. 101 Ind| fine son worthy of his father’, may be a dig at Augustus, 102 Ind| Dryops~Ibis:465-540 The father of Theiodamas, who ruled 103 Ind| of Thebes, in Mysia, and father of Andromache, Hector’s 104 Ind| s wife.~Book TV.V:27-64 Father of Andromache.~ ~Elba, Ilva~ 105 Ind| hurled there.~ ~Eumedes~The father of Dolon.~Book TIII.IV:1- 106 Ind| Chione hurled him into his father Neptune’s sea to avoid Boreas’ 107 Ind| effects of poison. He was the father of Caligula. Ovid re-dedicated 108 Ind| Sisyphus and Merope, and father of Bellerephon, who lived 109 Ind| for Thessaly, from Haemon father of Thessalos.~Book TI.X: 110 Ind| calm by Aeolus, Alcyone’s father. (The kingfisher actually 111 Ind| Hera-Juno, born without a father. She was the wife of Hercules 112 Ind| husband of Andromache and father of Astyanax. After killing 113 Ind| Book TV.IV:1-50 Priam his father grieving at his death.~Book 114 Ind| Achilles’ chariot.~Ibis:541-596 Father of Astyanax.~ ~Helen~The 115 Ind| Tyndareus was her putative father), sister of Clytemnaestra, 116 Ind| Alcides from Amphitryon’s father Alceus. Called also Amphitryoniades. 117 Ind| Icarius~Book TV.V:27-64 The father of Penelope. ~Ibis:541-596 118 Ind| Also Icarius or Icarus the father of Erigone, killed by drunken 119 Ind| of Daedalus for whom his father fashioned wings of wax and 120 Ind| her off after killing her father, causing Deianeira to give 121 Ind| She was sacrificed by her father at Aulis, to gain favourable 122 Ind| his flesh served to his father at a banquet. ~Book TII: 123 Ind| 208 King of the Lapithae, father of Pirithoüs, and of the 124 Ind| travel etc. Jupiter was the father of Mercury, by Maia.~Ibis: 125 Ind| Laertes~Book TV.V:1-26 The father of Ulysses, and son of Arcesius.~ ~ 126 Ind| his place. Ordered by her father to burn the figure she threw 127 Ind| Learchus, at the hand of his father, she leapt into the sea, 128 Ind| later Emperor and Drusus the father of Germanicus, who was Octavian’ 129 Ind| to cleanse the world. The father of Callisto who was changed 130 Ind| medicine, who inherited his father’s skills along with his 131 Ind| one legend, or because his father was Maion.~Book TI.I:1-68 132 Ind| husband of Clymene. Putative father of Phaethon.~Book TIII.IV: 133 Ind| Book TIII.IV:1-46 Putative father of Phaethon, and his sisters.~ ~ 134 Ind| addressed him as the son of his father, brother of his friend Cotta, 135 Ind| s relationship with his father, Messalla.~Book EII.II:1- 136 Ind| the title pater patriae: Father of the Country for Augustus. 137 Ind| influential of Ovid’s patrons. The father of Messalinus and his younger 138 Ind| Messalinus.~Book EI.VII:1-70 Father of Messalinus, and patron 139 Ind| Messalla.~Book EIV.XVI:1-52 Father of Cotta.~ ~Mestra~Ibis: 140 Ind| Adonis, incestuously, by her father.~Ibis:465-540 Subject of 141 Ind| life.~Book EII.IV:1-34 The father of Antilochus.~ ~Nilus~The 142 Ind| unknowingly slept with her father. She fled to the woods and 143 Ind| 465-540 The Thracian king, father of Orpheus by Calliope the 144 Ind| who unwittingly killed his father and married his mother. 145 Ind| Elis, son of Ares and the father of Hippodameia. He caused 146 Ind| avenged the murder of his father by killing Clytmenestra 147 Ind| Pandion~A king of Athens, father of Procne and Philomela. 148 Ind| Called Menoetiades from his father.~Book EI.III:49-94 A fugitive 149 Ind| found refuge with Achilles’ father Peleus, after killing Cleitonymus, 150 Ind| gods at a banquet by his father to test their divinity. 151 Ind| sea in a wooden box by her father Acrisius, son of Abas, King 152 Ind| Ethiopian king Merops. His true father is Sol, the sun-god ( Phoebus). 153 Ind| courts of the Sun to see his father who granted him a favour. 154 Ind| Merops was his putative father.~Book TIV.III:49-84 Book 155 Ind| Philip I of Macedonia, the father of Alexander.~Book EIV.XV: 156 Ind| Tereus. She convinced her father to allow her to visit her 157 Ind| Amyntorides, blinded by his father and cursed with childlessness, 158 Ind| 365-412 Or Polypemon, the father of Sinis, who used to cut 159 Ind| his place. Ordered by her father to burn the figure she threw 160 Ind| bore Linus to Apollo. Her father’s hounds killed the boy.~ ~ 161 Ind| Amphitryon, betrayed her father and caused his death by 162 Ind| Orpheus.~ ~Rhoemetalces~The father of Cotys.~ ~Roma, Rome~The 163 Ind| to Tarturus. He was the father also of Juno, Ceres and 164 Ind| Ibis:251-310 Castrated his father, Uranus.~Ibis:365-412 Great 165 Ind| and red legs, while her father was changed into the sea 166 Ind| Book TIV.III:49-84 Her father rescued the child.~Book 167 Ind| Sulpicius Rufus, and so the father or brother of Sulpicia the 168 Ind| Book TIV.III:49-84 The father of Phaethon.~ ~Sphinx~The 169 Ind| Bellerephon.~ ~Strophius~The father of Pylades.~Book EII.VI: 170 Ind| Phrygia, son of Jupiter, father of Pelops and Niobe. He 171 Ind| TII:361-420 Ibis:413-464 Father of Pelops.~Ibis:163-208 172 Ind| unwittingly killed his own father Ulysses in one variant of 173 Ind| driven into exile by his father for failing to avenge Ajax. 174 Ind| with her in the temple. His father had hidden a sword, and 175 Ind| Called Aegides from his father.~Book EIII.II:1-110 His 176 Ind| the wrong signal to his father on returning from Crete.~ ~ 177 Ind| Lemnos, son of Andraemon, and father of Hypsipyle. Thoas was 178 Ind| brother of Atreus, and father of Aesgithus. The feud between 179 Ind| The King of Calydon and father of Diomedes, and one of