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  1   T-I|          is no ill,~who asks the gods to be kind to suffering:~
  2   T-I|        can, gaze at Rome.~If the gods could grant now that I were
  3   T-I|    august place and that place’s gods forgive me!~A lightning
  4   T-I|     heights~but I still fear the gods who bring us harm.~Hawks,
  5   T-I|          Journey: Storm at Sea~ ~Gods of the sea and sky – since
  6   T-I|         let my prayers reach the gods.~So the same winds drive
  7   T-I|     sentence drown the innocent?~Gods above, and you of the green
  8   T-I|        actions never deceive the gods,~you know that crime was
  9   T-I|         was my intent, spare me, gods!~If not, may a towering
 10   T-I|       eyes will never see again,~gods who possess this great city
 11   T-I|        wretched.’~I spoke to the gods in prayer like this,~my
 12   T-I|          and strikes the painted gods.~The pine planks echo, the
 13   T-I|         at her sides!~Mercy, you gods of the blue-green sea, mercy,~
 14   T-I|          the long years.~May the gods favour you, grant you good
 15   T-I|          place of Empire and the gods.~He had a tough body, enduring
 16   T-I|        failed to reach the harsh gods,~on my own behalf, have
 17   T-I|         who, they say, set their gods down in this place.~From
 18  T-II|       often influences the great gods. Caesar himself~ordered
 19  T-II|          father and ruler of the gods,~it’s right the wide world
 20  T-II|           His Prayer~ ~So by the gods, who grant and will grant
 21  T-II|        the high auspices and the gods,~and so are half-present,
 22  T-II|      though we believe the great gods~have often granted more
 23  T-II|       Jove, who watches over the gods, as well as~the high heavens,
 24 T-III|        show me the way.~‘May the gods grant, what they denied
 25 T-III|         him and to us.~~ I pray, gods, or rather – since I shouldn’
 26 T-III|   overwhelm an ill-starred life?~Gods, I’ve found too constant
 27 T-III|        difficult was it, O great gods, to spare the dying,~so
 28 T-III|    absent from my heart.~May the gods always grant you power to
 29 T-III|           it specified, as home?~Gods, let Caesar not will my
 30 T-III|          incense to unresponsive gods,~fine words dont rise to
 31  T-IV|         s not aware of the angry gods.~As if I were drinking soporific
 32  T-IV|        me!~Since the rest of the gods are of great Caesar’s party,~
 33  T-IV|        the temples of the benign gods,~are being prepared for
 34  T-IV|       son’s safety,~to the noble gods, and the women with her,
 35  T-IV|     sacrificed captives to their gods, gifts often refused.~These
 36  T-IV|         s remotest,~that men and gods shun, that’s nearest mine:~
 37  T-IV|         contained your name?~The gods grant that you have indeed
 38  T-IV|    humble house with its ancient gods,~and the fields I inherited,
 39  T-IV|          my years like that.~The gods did not see it so, who have
 40  T-IV|      deserves to be equal to the gods.~~ Book TIV.IX:1-32 To An
 41  T-IV|       bards that existed so many gods.~Often old Macer read to
 42   T-V|          the security~of all the gods of the Roman people is assured,~
 43   T-V|       chance or the anger of the gods caused it,~or whether a
 44   T-V|        if it’s right to take the gods as examples,~am crushed
 45   T-V|        my fate, loveliest of the gods,~remembering that I am one
 46   T-V|          am one of your own.~The gods traffic between themselves.
 47   T-V|          serpent’s bite.~May the gods grant such circumstances
 48   T-V|        failed my sails.~Yet, you gods, and Caesar, destined to
 49   T-V|     following the example of the gods he’ll join,~when he remits
 50   T-V|        to thank, after the great gods.~He gave life: you preserve
 51   T-V|     remember.~May Caesar and the gods always befriend you:~no
 52   T-V|       their abilities:~I beg the gods, rightly, to close the gates
 53   T-V|          not reached me yet.~The gods grant that my complaint’
 54  ExII|       fierce weapons against the gods,~In short Caesar, though
 55  ExII|     before Cybele, Mother of the gods, ~sounds the curved horn,
 56  ExII|       that he’d deserved it.~The gods delight in instances of
 57  ExII|        than suffering it.~If the gods favoured me, and he most
 58  ExII|    sooner than the grief.~If the gods above, whose I am, believe
 59  ExII|       what I deserve.~So may the gods, of whom he himself is the
 60  ExII|         left the city.~O let the gods grant me to see you so,~
 61  ExII|          I deserve, so the great gods have willed.~And I doubt
 62  ExII|        error involving the great gods a sin?~Graecinus, all hope
 63  ExII|     limits of the world?~May the gods will that all who revere
 64  ExII|       you should desire,~ask the gods that you might give more
 65  ExII|          how often he said: ‘The godsanger is not implacable:~
 66  ExII|          house as you~revere the gods who are masters of this
 67  ExII|         ambrosia and nectar, the godsfood and drink~be served
 68  ExII|          suppliants implore your gods not to end, ~but merely
 69   ExI|      this one joy on us all.~The gods, so as to be worshipped
 70   ExI|       towards me, when I see the gods merciful to an enemy?~Germanicus,
 71   ExI|          clever placing.~May the gods grant you long life, you’
 72   ExI|       taking up arms against the gods of the world,~nor as the
 73   ExI|    favour, carry my words to the gods of Rome,~worshipped no less
 74   ExI|      your race flourish,~may the gods above and the Caesars protect
 75   ExI|          used to ask that of the gods, first of all,~when you
 76   ExI|          part, and weakened?~The gods are not so harsh to me that
 77   ExI|          opened,~you’d swear the gods are accustomed to speak
 78   ExI|          its familiar track:~the gods are watching in case anything’
 79   ExI|       sent me Cotta Maximus: the gods:~and Livia is there, joined
 80   ExI|        It’s something to gaze at gods, and consider them present,~
 81   ExI|       you than yourself,~and the gods who are never deaf to your
 82   ExI|    clothed in purple.~O, kindest gods, assent to my timorous prayers.~
 83   ExI|        not phantoms,~and see the godstrue features, face to
 84   ExI|   created,~so men might know the gods the deep heavens~conceal,
 85   ExI|        that nobility born of the gods.~Eumolpus the famous founder
 86   ExI|  ancestor advise it.~You and the gods have this in common, both
 87   ExI|         its usual honour, if the gods lacked the will to help?~
 88   ExI|      mutual prayers to the ocean gods,~and to have done things
 89   ExI|        ve not the power, may the gods show~gratitude! As they
 90 ExIII|         favour,~you can move the gods in that way, or not at all.~
 91 ExIII|         with peace,~then may the gods grant you the chance to
 92 ExIII|         and incense to the great gods.~Worship divine Augustus
 93 ExIII|      went in fear of the hostile gods.~They might seem over cautious
 94 ExIII|       praised:~I divine that the gods will be content with that.~
 95 ExIII|        often, and so often will.~Gods, by whose prophecy I speak
 96 ExIII|         to exist among the happy gods.~When I’m here again, I
 97 ExIII|       reverence for the Augustan gods offensive?~We see things,
 98 ExIII|           as I wish the merciful gods to lessen Caesar’s ~anger,
 99  ExIV|        so at all against supreme gods.~You too should be afraid,
100  ExIV|    Tarpeian holy places,~and the gods begin to be receptive to
101  ExIV|         wish deeply that all the gods ~might favour you, Jupiter
102  ExIV|     thanks due to Caesar and the gods,~(he’ll give you cause why
103  ExIV|         the dear consul.~May the gods allow my name to come to
104  ExIV| reverences him next to the great gods.~But as soon as he’s free
105  ExIV|          friendship can stir the gods by asking.~Even if you offered
106  ExIV|  achieved by praying,~exhort the gods you worship, with a suppliant’
107  ExIV|    Incense a poor man offers the gods from his lowly censer~has
108  ExIV|   happened before and since?~The gods too, if it’s right to say
109  ExIV|       waters:~once sent, may the gods have it find you in the
110  ExIV|          by my eyes as well.~The gods wont consider it, and perhaps
111  ExIV|       Caesar, received among the gods, you know and see it,~for
112  ExIV|        to complain of!~The cruel gods were not pleased it should
113  ExIV|     absent, as it is.~But by the gods, and He is the surest of
114  ExIV|        as the public asks of the gods),~promote my cause, my health,
115  ExIV|         native land.~If only the gods had made it so it might
116  ExIV|     comfort~to Sextus. After the gods he’ll be supreme to me.~
117  ExIV|        Given that it’s up to the gods, try and woo those powers ~
118  ExIV|        composed by the sea-green gods themselves:~he who spoke
119  IBIS|      deserves my misfortune!~The gods are kinder! And to me He’
120  IBIS|      lips have no need for lies.~Gods of earth and sea, who maintain
121  IBIS|         in our presence, all you gods, ~old and new, from out
122  IBIS|      name no less, nor the great gods be less inclined to stir:~
123  IBIS|          left.~I’ll consider the gods influenced by what I vow,
124  IBIS|       were born unfortunate (the gods willed it so), ~and no star
125  IBIS|     learn your torments,~let the gods grant you strength according
126  IBIS|          d acted as judge of the godsplayful quarrel:~and as
127  IBIS|     brother-in-law. ~And may the gods grant you have such joy
128  IBIS|         by their favour, may the gods ~grant more than I ask,
129   Ind|             On the Nature of the Gods, Bk III 82). Asclepius himself
130   Ind|      that Ovid’s naming of these gods is consistent with the shipwreck
131   Ind|             On the Nature of the Gods’, Bk III 47)~(See John Melhuish
132   Ind|          Rhea, the mother of the gods. Her consort was Attis,
133   Ind|      living on Ceos, angered the gods by blighting the fruits
134   Ind|          had entertained the two gods. Macelo’s husband offended
135   Ind|    Macelo’s husband offended the gods, and they were both destroyed.~ ~
136   Ind|        feet, who made war on the gods by piling up the mountains,
137   Ind|       and Jupiter, for which the gods drowned Ceyx in a storm.
138   Ind|          X:1-44 Cupbearer to the gods.~ ~Hector~The Trojan hero,
139   Ind|    Jupiter, and the queen of the gods. A representation of the
140   Ind|     ruler of the heavens and the gods.~Book TV.III:1-58 Jupiter
141   Ind|      images of Jupiter and other gods.~Book EII.IX:1-38 Ritual
142   Ind|     coupled with the Penates the gods of the larder.~Book TI.III:
143   Ind|       Book EI.VII:1-70 Household gods.~Book TIII. XII:1-54 Book
144   Ind|     Vulcan the blacksmith of the gods. Philoctetes was bitten
145   Ind|           a generic term for the gods of the lower world and later
146   Ind|      mainland). The ‘rest of the godsbeing also the rest of
147   Ind|         hubris) on behalf of the gods. Her shrine was at Rhamnous
148   Ind|        every fault involving the gods is a crime.~Book EII.II:
149   Ind|     exaltation of the Caesars as gods towards the end of Book
150   Ind|     story of the war between the gods and the giants. If so written
151   Ind|         pieces and served to the gods at a banquet by his father
152   Ind|       piece of the shoulder. The gods gave him life again and
153   Ind|          The old Latin household gods, two in number, whose name
154   Ind|          III:47-102 The deserted gods he leaves behind.~Book TI.
155   Ind|         45-84 Book TIV.VIII:1-52 Gods of the household, and synonymous
156   Ind|    Apollo. He was blinded by the gods for prophesying the future
157   Ind|          changed to stars by the gods. The Pleiades are the star
158   Ind|      that Ovid’s naming of these gods is consistent with the shipwreck
159   Ind|           He stole fire from the gods. He was tormented by Jupiter,
160   Ind|       the seat of Empire and the gods. He is civilised man going
161   Ind|    Castor and Pollux, the patron gods of travellers, were worshipped
162   Ind|       honour of Apollo and other gods as a symbol of the regeneration
163   Ind|        the Styx.~Ibis:41-104 The gods swore oaths on the waters
164   Ind|     served his son Pelops to the gods at a banquet and was punished
165   Ind| Supported and opposed by various gods in the war.~Book TI.III:
166   Ind|          Giants who attacked the gods, who was buried beneath
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