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Alphabetical [« »] dearer 6 dearest 9 dearly-loved 1 death 152 deathless 2 deathly 1 deaths 7 | Frequency [« »] 156 still 155 like 154 place 152 death 151 life 150 poet 148 been | Publius Ovidius Naso Poems from Exile Concordances death |
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1 T-I| the winds, she doesn’t see death nearing.~It’s good that 2 T-I| wretch, would endure a double death!~Now, though I die, since 3 T-I| Save me from drowning, and death will be a blessing.~A natural 4 T-I| be a blessing.~A natural death or dying under the blade, 5 T-I| Assume I deserve such a death, I’m not the only~traveller 6 T-I| judge, does not deserve death.~~ ~If Caesar had wished 7 T-I| weary spirit from a cruel death,~if one already lost may 8 T-I| was filled with desire for death,~truly you know whom I mean, 9 T-I| companion~of her husband in death, exceeds you in probity.~ 10 T-I| nothing but the shadow of a death~I fear with anxious mind, 11 T-I| wants to win notice by my death.~A barbarous coast to port, 12 T-II| your anger stopped short of death,~O Prince, how sparingly 13 T-II| deceitful woman brought near to death?~Why speak of Hermione, 14 T-II| and predicts the triple death of earth, water, air,~yet 15 T-III| onwards~forbid the doors of death to close!~~ Book TIII.III: 16 T-III| delayed till the hour of death,~or swift death might have 17 T-III| hour of death,~or swift death might have anticipated exile.~ 18 T-III| a familiar couch,~at my death there’ll be no-one there 19 T-III| an earlier and a deeper death.~Now if you can – but you 20 T-III| many of my ills end with my death.~This you can do, ease the 21 T-III| not be an exile still in death.~No one forbids that: Theban 22 T-III| and what I was,~my love of death is such, I complain of Caesar’ 23 T-III| she said: ‘I have it:~his death will be the means of my 24 T-III| would not be guilty of your death.~Since the dolphins can’ 25 T-IV| TIV.III:1-48 To His Wife: Death Would be Better~ ~Ursa Major 26 T-IV| had to grieve for was my death~and not my life, that you’ 27 T-IV| yet neither of them feared death, but each~grieved for the 28 T-IV| but each~grieved for the death that came to the other.~ 29 T-IV| him her embrace, not his death.~Joyfully, she carried off 30 T-IV| troubles will not outlast my death.~~ Book TIV.VII:1-26 Request 31 T-V| its banks,~mourn their own death with a fading cry,~so I, 32 T-V| was not prevented by his death,~when others fled the contagion 33 T-V| and I wish the hour of my death had come before.~Still my 34 T-V| urging Priam to dance at the death of his sons,~and Niobe, 35 ExII| exists forever.~At least death will make me, when it comes, 36 ExII| no longer an exile:~but death can’t arrange things so 37 ExII| they double the chance of death from a cruel wound, ~by 38 ExII| them:~and a lethargy like death grips my thoughts.~Though 39 ExII| flames.~I often pray for death, yet un-pray that same death,~ 40 ExII| death, yet un-pray that same death,~lest Sarmatian soil should 41 ExII| Getae to bring about my death.~But he found no reason 42 ExII| he found no reason for my death in any of my actions,~and 43 ExII| idleness: wasted time’s like death to me.~I don’t enjoy lying 44 ExII| stopped from dying~by the death they chose, as they tied 45 ExII| if owning to a sort of death is life.~Let me be crushed 46 ExII| Maximus: News Of Celsus’ Death~ ~Your letter that came 47 ExII| to me concerning Celsus’s death~was immediately made moist 48 ExII| hands ready to cause my own death!~O how often he said: ‘The 49 ExI| does this state differ from death? –~by not turning away from 50 ExI| this life of mine is like death.~Theseus went with Pirithous 51 ExI| waves:~how far distant is my death from those Stygian waters?~ 52 ExI| avenger of his brother’s death, clothed in purple.~O, kindest 53 ExIII| Livia~ ~Had you to redeem my death, a detestable idea,~Alcestis, 54 ExIII| writings are made pleasing by death, since envy~hurts the living, 55 ExIV| Brutus: After Augustus’s Death~ ~Brutus, the letter you’ 56 ExIV| think I’m reason~for his death (though I can’t be so important)~ 57 ExIV| truly finished with his death.~Augustus was beginning 58 ExIV| weapon can be a dual cause of death.~Would that this place had 59 ExIV| destroys all other things:~but death delays, conquered by my 60 ExIV| abandoning his Troien to swift ~death, the incomplete effort of 61 IBIS| life be forced to shun the death you long for:~and your spirit 62 IBIS| by expectation of your death.~And first let that day, 63 IBIS| waters,~I’ll wage war on you: death will not end my anger, rather~ 64 IBIS| whether I’m dissolved in death by my own hand:~whether 65 IBIS| Maledictions: His Enemy After Death~ ~Your funeral will not 66 IBIS| entrails.~Let no second death end the torments of this 67 IBIS| end the torments of this death,~let there be no final hour 68 IBIS| cold be the causes of your death.~Or like the Atarnean may 69 IBIS| altars,~as Theudotus suffered death from a savage enemy.~Or 70 IBIS| books tell, die Socrates’ death:~as Aegeus who saw the deceptive 71 IBIS| saw was the cause of his death:~as the envious girl who 72 IBIS| fields, and be the cause of a death like Phalaecus’.~May the 73 IBIS| Broteas did in his desire for death.~May you suffer death shut 74 IBIS| for death.~May you suffer death shut in a cave, ~like that 75 IBIS| petrifying face,~that dealt death to many of the Cephenes.~ 76 IBIS| virtuous daughter brought to death sadly ~to her father, may 77 IBIS| harbour. ~Or may you pay by death for a false charge, as Palamedes~ 78 IBIS| his comrades before him on death’s road:~like those that 79 IBIS| half-burned bones to a Stygian death.~Or like Remus who dared 80 Ind| that purpose was stoned to death as a scapegoat. He was excommunicated 81 Ind| Medea. Remembered for his death at Jason’s hands during 82 Ind| Patroclus, weeping for him after death and carrying out extensive 83 Ind| Temple E at Selinus – the Death of Actaeon – Palermo, National 84 Ind| Titian’s painting – the Death of Actaeon – National Gallery, 85 Ind| and Aegeus leapt to his death in sorrow.~ ~Aegides~Theseus, 86 Ind| where she starved herself to death in 33AD. Caligula was one 87 Ind| Eriphyle for causing the death of his father, and was maddened 88 Ind| inheritance at Julius Caesar’s death, despite his will, and who 89 Ind| sources say leapt to his death.~ ~Atalanta ~The daughter 90 Ind| against her on penalty of death for losing. She fell in 91 Ind| to be deserving of the death sentence.~Book TI.IV:1-28 92 Ind| allowed to fight to the death in Augustus’s presence. ( 93 Ind| 361-420 Brought near to death by Stheneboea.~ ~Bessi~A 94 Ind| falsely) to sing their own death song. See Ovid’s Metamorphoses 95 Ind| Ovid concerning Celsus’ death.~ ~Cenchreae~The eastern 96 Ind| travellers and crushed them to death. He was served in the same 97 Ind| 365-412 Her delight at the death of Cercyon.~Ibis:413-464 98 Ind| uncle in 19AD after Ovid’s death. (Rhoemetalces had been 99 Ind| had previously caused the death of Talos, his nephew, the 100 Ind| The Odyssey describes his death when he tumbles from the 101 Ind| TV.V:27-64 Their mutual death.~ ~Eubius~An unknown writer. ~ 102 Ind| succeeded to the throne on their death. He taught Hercules the 103 Ind| Hyrtacus, who avenged his death by killing Volcens, before 104 Ind| who had herself burned to death on her husband’s funeral 105 Ind| over birth marriage and death. ~Book TV.X:1-53 Lachesis 106 Ind| to him after Augustus’s death.~Book TII:155-206 Ovid offers 107 Ind| about it before his own death sometime in the period lateAD16-AD18. ( 108 Ind| of help after Augustus’s death.~Book EIV.IX:89-134 As Tiberius’ 109 Ind| committed suicide at her death.~Book TII:361-420 A victim 110 Ind| his father grieving at his death.~Book TV.XIV:1-46 Andromache, 111 Ind| He was then tormented to death by the shirt of Nessus.~ 112 Ind| bow and arrows after his death, destined to be needed at 113 Ind| against her, on penalty of death for failure.By means of 114 Ind| was attacked and bitten to death by a serpent. ~ ~Hyrtacides~ 115 Ind| effectively had her starved to death (officially she committed 116 Ind| hours with him after his death when Hermes escorted him 117 Ind| Maddened by Tisiphone, and the death of her son Learchus, at 118 Ind| Augustus, and after his death her first cousin Drusus 119 Ind| alternative myth of Dryas’s death if this is the Lycurgus 120 Ind| 60 The god who determines death in battle.~Ibis:209-250 121 Ind| inadvertently causing his death. This story led to a suggestion 122 Ind| been a reason for Paullus’s death, though playing down his 123 Ind| Ethiopians, or Cephenes after her death when Perseus wielded her 124 Ind| judged by Augustus to merit death. He accepts guilt but denies 125 Ind| Augustus not to merit the death penalty. ~Book EI.VI:1-54 126 Ind| AD14, but before Augustus’ death in the August of that year.~ 127 Ind| revised in AD14, at Augustus’s death, to re-dedicate the work 128 Ind| wrongfully had stoned to death, after making it appear 129 Ind| Achilles’ beloved friend whose death, at the hands of Hector, 130 Ind| and brought him to his death. (See Racine’s play – Phaedra, 131 Ind| general’s bones after his death, is lost: see also Pausanias 132 Ind| 360 The brothers’ mutual death.~Ibis:1-40 The smoke of 133 Ind| friends of Germanicus. The death of Augustus has occurred 134 Ind| 50 His grief at Hector’s death.~Book TV.XII:1-68 The death 135 Ind| death.~Book TV.XII:1-68 The death of his sons.~ ~Priapus~The 136 Ind| who wrote a lament on the death of Germanicus, and was later 137 Ind| Germanicus, and was later put to death in 21AD for having read 138 Ind| to ladies lamenting the death of Drusus while Drusus was 139 Ind| hours with him after his death when Hermes escorted him 140 Ind| her father and caused his death by pulling out the golden 141 Ind| after Actium, and an epic On Death. He edited the Aeneid after 142 Ind| the Aeneid after Virgil’s death with Plotius Tucca.~Book 143 Ind| underworld or the state of death itself. Arethusa passed 144 Ind| synonym for being put to death.~Book TIV.V:1-34 Book TV. 145 Ind| spiritual or physical) death.~Book TIV.X:41-92 The forum 146 Ind| him leap from Ossa to his death. Alternatively, but less 147 Ind| son of Medea, who escaped death after Medea sacrificed her 148 Ind| said to have wept at this death of loyal friends.~ ~Turranius~ 149 Ind| resulted in whipping and death. There were twenty recorded 150 Ind| present at Germanicus’s death in Antioch, and prosecutor 151 Ind| Actium, and the subsequent death of Cleopatra, Octavian ( 152 Ind| Present at Germanicus’s death in Antioch he helped to