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  1   T-I|          breakers will crush this life of mine, with lips~praying
  2   T-I|     unhappy man, let me carry the life that’s granted~by Caesar’
  3   T-I|        not to be grudged, over my life:~he’ll take away what he’
  4   T-I|          to save this wretch,~the life that’s ruined can’t now
  5   T-I|          a towering wave drown my life!~Am I wrong, or do heavy
  6   T-I|       lightning,~who lives, whose life’s unknown to the man himself.~
  7   T-I|         an eternal debtor for the life that’s mine,~and my spirit
  8   T-I|          friendship~in our mutual life and our continuing love?~
  9   T-I|     without malice,~may you reach life’s goal without hindrance.~
 10   T-I|         character, or a faultless life,~no one could be more highly
 11   T-I|           have injured me.~Yet my life’s known to you. You know
 12  T-II|          better than I feared.~My life was spared, your anger stopped
 13  T-II|          your powers!~Then, as if life were too slight a gift,
 14  T-II|           and will grant you long life,~if only they love the name
 15  T-II|           her meant for unmarried life,~there was no other you
 16  T-II|          other than my verse –~my life is modest, my Muse is playful –~
 17  T-II|          book’s not evidence of a life, but a true impulse~bringing
 18 T-III|           was more wanton than my life,~since I’ve suffered many
 19 T-III|          overwhelm an ill-starred life?~Gods, I’ve found too constant
 20 T-III|          while I’m anxious for my life, ~do you pass happy hours
 21 T-III|          years,~and the end of my life’s here, so quickly,~how
 22 T-III|        now,~when I was whole, now life’s given me to die in exile.~
 23 T-III|           few brief moments to my life:~no parting instructions,
 24 T-III|          author fame and enduring life.~But you, forever, bring
 25 T-III|       anything from a friend whom life has taught,~live for yourself,
 26 T-III|            Since you ought to run life’s course on sound feet,~
 27 T-III| everything by attacking ~Caesar’s life, which is the life of the
 28 T-III|       Caesar’s life, which is the life of the world:~I’ve said
 29 T-III|         Let whoever will end this life with a cruel blade,~yet
 30 T-III|     Boreas and the snow constrain life under the Bears,~those tribes
 31  T-IV|        ambush, or the risks to my life,~real, but too serious for
 32  T-IV|         How wretched to defend my life, at gate and wall,~scarcely
 33  T-IV|           was my death~and not my life, that you’d been left widowed,
 34  T-IV|        sinless as I lived.~Now my life is shamed by this punishment.~~
 35  T-IV|        deceit, believe me: and my life~is worth defending in all
 36  T-IV|         this the god knows: so my life was not taken,~nor my possessions
 37  T-IV|        god’s appeased:~and save a life that no one can save, unless~
 38  T-IV|          in the harshest years of life:~not far from the winning
 39  T-IV|         by my wrongdoings,~yet my life has not been forfeit, for
 40  T-IV|     Tisiphonean madness from your life.~If not, if your heart still
 41  T-IV|    doubled his first ten years of life,~when he died, and I went
 42  T-IV|           to know the facts of my life.~~ Book TIV.X:93-132 Ovid’
 43  T-IV|          Forgetting myself and my life of leisure~I grasped the
 44   T-V|           moderated, you grant me life,~I’m not deprived of a citizen’
 45   T-V|        savage Getae.~I, who led a life of ease, free of labour, ~
 46   T-V|        difficult, an iron fate in life.~I’ve fallen no less heavily
 47   T-V|            swearing it on his own life, and on yours,~that I know
 48   T-V|      husband,~let the rest of her life be free of dark clouds.~
 49   T-V|         studies.~So I drag out my life, and time, so I retreat
 50   T-V|           the great gods.~He gave life: you preserve what he gave,~
 51   T-V|          While I see the light of lifeoh, let the time be brief –~
 52   T-V|          s more this period of my life that’s hard?~I’m trapped
 53   T-V|    granted a shorter thread to my life.~That I’m deprived of the
 54   T-V|           I also deserved to lose life itself.~~ Book TV.XI:1-30
 55   T-V|         floats.~He didnt take my life, my wealth, my civil rights,~
 56   T-V|         love,~when you protect my life in every way,~do you sin
 57  ExII|           make an end. Not before~life itself will these pangs
 58  ExII|       Paullus Fabius Maximus: His Life In Exile~ ~Maximus, you
 59  ExII|        day gazes on this wretched life,~or whether Night urges
 60  ExII|           whom he himself granted life.~He didnt choose to destroy
 61  ExII|          sword~shouldnt take the life granted me by a living god:~
 62  ExII|           stain:~though my recent life must be passed over in silence.~
 63  ExII|      Passing~ ~Now the decline of life is on me, whitening my hair,~
 64  ExII|       ruin that’s been made of my life.~I admit the years have
 65  ExII|         divine powers defended my life. ~He was aided by Cupid’
 66  ExII|         do? I’m not one to lead a life~of idleness: wasted time’
 67  ExII|      owning to a sort of death is life.~Let me be crushed by war
 68  ExII|        restraint.~He took neither life nor wealth from me, nor,
 69  ExII|         much the comforts of city life~that Ovid looks for, though
 70  ExII|        they’d been the last of my life,~when my house suddenly
 71  ExII|  frustrating saviour of my bitter life,~he restrained my hands
 72  ExII|          my weariness with my sad life,~Maximus: take care that
 73  ExII|         those he granted to me in life when I was fleeing:~It’s
 74  ExII|          who could do so, whom in life you ~thought godlike, carried
 75   ExI|         Most of them were granted life and pardon,~among them Bato,
 76   ExI|           the gods grant you long life, you’ll do the rest,~so
 77   ExI|         no fierce Getan steals my life with a sword.~If your laurels
 78   ExI|           so that I can enjoy the life he granted me:~and when
 79   ExI|           Ars Amatoria.~Nor is my life, if you except its recent
 80   ExI|          me to the last day of my life –~for how does this state
 81   ExI|          think, that to live this life of mine is like death.~Theseus
 82   ExI|           the last moment of your life,~and he, who holds the reins
 83   ExI|          through my own gifts.~My life before was free of fault,
 84   ExI|        great storm overwhelmed my life.~Who wouldnt dread even
 85   ExI|      warns me against aversion to life, losing heart.~And you give
 86   ExI|        honesty,~and proves by her life that she’s of your blood.~
 87 ExIII|          me, while the last of my life is left:~What I’d provide
 88 ExIII|           outlast the years of my life,~if I’m still read by thoughtful
 89 ExIII|           mother, and by Caesar’s life, I’ve learnt ~nothing save
 90 ExIII|        day can bring them back to life again,~but Caesar reprieves
 91  ExIV|           to you, Sextus, for his life.~If you dont stop me setting
 92  ExIV|          my~swift fate, offers my life, and will offer it, aid.~
 93  ExIV|          as those cattle, true to life, are a masterpiece by Myron:~
 94  ExIV|           he, a captive, have his life spared by his enemy?~Dionysius,
 95  ExIV|          acknowledges he owes his life to you,~which he holds above
 96  ExIV|            Caesar, if there’s any life left in my skill,~it will
 97  ExIV|           at the price of half my life, if they were offered.~And
 98  ExIV|         on:~let him know I owe my life to the Caesars, and my comfort~
 99  ExIV|        all the days of my unhappy life,~none of them has been devoid
100  ExIV|          lost everything: only my life remains,~to grant me feeling
101  IBIS|         myself: ~the author’s own life was ruined by his ‘Art’.~
102  IBIS|           enjoy that peace, while life remains to me,~that lies
103  IBIS|           wont seek your hateful life at once:~I’ll not speak
104  IBIS|         many, for your dying:~yet life be forced to shun the death
105  IBIS|       slow for me,~take away this life, often sought to excess
106  IBIS|        will be your punishment in life.~~ Ibis:163-208 The Litany
107  IBIS|          tears: you’ll forgo your life, unlamented: and the mob
108  IBIS|        the pyre,~an ending to his life that Sardanapalus knew.~
109  IBIS|   punishment,~so, when that hated life has departed your limbs,~
110  IBIS|           careful of her father’s life~than yours was Pterelaus,
111  IBIS|           himself saw restored to life:~like Sinis and Sciron and
112  IBIS|     marriage be the last ~of your life: so Eupolis and his new
113  IBIS|      Isindius, the host, took the life of Aethalos,~whom even now
114  IBIS|          a simple spear take your life. ~Last, I pray that you
115   Ind|         for restoring the dead to life. His cult was celebrated
116   Ind|          was linked to Meleager’s life, and which she had once
117   Ind|          Hippolytus and others to life. He saved Rome from the
118   Ind|        was killed and restored to life by Jupiter-Zeus.~Ibis:365-
119   Ind|        despite the sparing of his life. A subtle doubtle-entendre
120   Ind|         time wealthy he ended his life in poverty.~Book TII:421-
121   Ind|       Hypermnestra, who saved the life of Lynceus because he preserved
122   Ind|        bliss, rewarding virtue in life.~ ~Electra~The daughter
123   Ind|         Underworld to ask for her life, but lost her when he broke
124   Ind|       exposed to the hardships of life in exile.~Book TI.III:1-
125   Ind|          to her, as she lived the life of an exile’s wife in Rome,
126   Ind|          the thread of each human life. Clotho (the Spinner) spins
127   Ind|   Lachesis measured the thread of life.~Book EI.VIII:1-70 Ibis:
128   Ind|         Spinners of the thread of life.~ ~Fauns~Woodland spirits.~
129   Ind|        whom Polyeidus restored to life.~ ~Gorgo, Gorgons, see Medusa~
130   Ind|        and had the power to renew life. She was the cupbearer of
131   Ind|           sea’. He was brought to life again by Aesculapius, and
132   Ind|        She measured the thread of life.~ ~Laertes~Book TV.V:1-26
133   Ind|          with Thracian girls. His life was spared because his daughter
134   Ind|          at the end of Augustus’s life in the spring of 14AD, the
135   Ind|           EII.VIII:37-76 His long life.~Book EII.IV:1-34 The father
136   Ind|         on his head, on which his life, and the safety of his kingdom,
137   Ind|          to Hades, to ask for her life to be renewed. Granted it,
138   Ind|         68 Book TIV.VIII:1-52 His life is a gift of Augustus’s,
139   Ind|       Ovid maintains that his own life and conduct were other than
140   Ind|          Augustus personally, his life was spared, he was not brought
141   Ind|   susceptible heart but blameless life, his three marriages, his
142   Ind|           has ruined its author. ~Life At Tomis~Book TI.X:1-50
143   Ind|         VII:1-68 A description of life in Tomis among the barbarians.
144   Ind|       shoulder. The gods gave him life again and an ivory shoulder.
145   Ind|       wife Thebe (see Plutarch’s: Life of Pelopidas)~ ~Phidias,
146   Ind|  Megalopolis (c253-182BC: see the life by Plutarch: a life by Polybius,
147   Ind|           the life by Plutarch: a life by Polybius, who carried
148   Ind|       Lesbos, where she spent her life apart from a short period
149   Ind|     safety of his kingdom and his life. Minos rejected her and
150   Ind|           EII.VIII:37-76 Her long life.~ ~Sicily~Sicania, Trinacri.
151   Ind|          with Thracian girls. His life was spared because his daughter
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