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  1   T-I|         middle orders.~Seeking too great a height on fragile wings~
  2   T-I|           dont, I beg you, add to great Caesar’s anger!~Often when
  3   T-I|          tears.~If one might use a great example for a lesser,~this
  4   T-I|       again,~gods who possess this great city of Quirinus, ~I relinquish,
  5   T-I|           absence from which is no great punishment,~but Rome, that
  6   T-I|           to compare the small and great,~Livia, first lady, honoured
  7   T-I|             Alas, my poetry has no great powers,~my lips are inadequate
  8   T-I|         said to you:~‘My friend, a great stage awaits your talents.’~
  9  T-II|          song often influences the great gods. Caesar himself~ordered
 10  T-II|        impetuous,~still my name is great throughout the world,~and
 11  T-II|           his right senses, than a great man’s displeasure,~but a
 12  T-II|          be done that you deny me.~Great hope fills me, gazing at
 13  T-II|      return, though we believe the great gods~have often granted
 14  T-II|       unworthy of being read by so great a prince:~but that doesn’
 15  T-II|           plough:~while that was a great and fertile theme.~A little
 16  T-II|         act?~On whose evidence but great Homer’s do we know~of Calypso
 17  T-II|         with grave speech –~Ennius great in talent, primitive in
 18  T-II|            hesitate to follow such great names?~Sisenna did Aristides
 19 T-III|            how difficult was it, O great gods, to spare the dying,~
 20 T-III|         and keep far away from the great.~Live for yourself, as far
 21 T-III|      impulses.~It’s enough for the great lion to bring down his quarry:~
 22 T-III|            fortune, though worth a great one,~but imagine yours the
 23 T-III|    Meanwhile something less, but a great gift to me,~would be to
 24 T-III|       though her mind retained its great courage,~there was a pallor
 25 T-III|       enter.~This then, though the great world stretches wide,~is
 26 T-III|            a long neglect.~I’ve no great supply of books here, to
 27  T-IV|            rest of the gods are of great Caesar’s party,~heaping
 28  T-IV|           allowing them to lose so great a good:~and my spirit will
 29  T-IV|            preferred – I seemed so great to you –~no other man you
 30  T-IV|            which was a part of his great nobility.~If your house
 31  T-IV|            have been an effort too great for my powers.~I’d neither
 32  T-IV|           age of ours has produced great poets,~fame has not been
 33   T-V|          by the years:~the pain of great ones increases with time.~
 34   T-V|     harmless? Go, and ask him:~the great globe has no one kinder
 35   T-V|             Often he remembers how great the god’s mercy is,~accustomed,
 36   T-V|            barely civilised Getae.~Great hordes of Sarmatians and
 37   T-V|           need to thank, after the great gods.~He gave life: you
 38   T-V|          when you’ve given me such great proof of love,~when you
 39   T-V|          Of His Wife~ ~You see how great a monument I’ve reared~to
 40  ExII|         who fill the measure of so great a name,~and match your ancestry
 41  ExII|        hope subsides, conquered by great fear.~Yet I neither hope
 42  ExII|          isolated place is in.~The great burden of public affairs
 43  ExII|          kindness comes to me~as a great gift, and I’m well counselled
 44  ExII|          and lighter than mine,~if great fame didnt merely hide
 45  ExII|      theatre:~as I deserve, so the great gods have willed.~And I
 46  ExII|      friend who would have been my great support.~Everything that
 47  ExII|          every error involving the great gods a sin?~Graecinus, all
 48  ExII|            to my merits~still I’ve great hopes, given the kindness
 49  ExII|       brother, joined to you by as great a love~as that which joined
 50  ExII|        most often was: ‘Think,~how great a help Maximus can be to
 51  ExII|            exequies and rituals of great honour,~and poured the spices
 52   ExI|           The pain that distressed great Caesar’s feelings,~you swore
 53   ExI|            our love, was always as great, dearest friend,~as that
 54   ExI|             Lately, when news of a great triumph arrived,~I dared
 55   ExI|             I was absent when this great storm overwhelmed my life.~
 56   ExI|         and grandfather, ~who make great strides under your command,~
 57   ExI|            it’s appropriate for as great a hero as yourself.~It’s
 58   ExI|         fitting to your rank: that great as it is~can scarcely be
 59   ExI|         then, makes god and humans great,~by their support and their
 60   ExI|         fail.~I call those tears a great service that flowed~over
 61   ExI|          solace of a grieving mind great service,~when you granted
 62 ExIII|            on you in my books is a great one:~you’re spoken of as
 63 ExIII|        wandered less:~Philoctetesgreat fame derived from his wound.~
 64 ExIII|            wine and incense to the great gods.~Worship divine Augustus
 65 ExIII|            passed, they still have great fame here in Scythia.’~After
 66 ExIII|            my mind was free for no great undertaking,~while I sang
 67 ExIII|        rejoice,~while you rejoice, great father of our leader and
 68 ExIII|           seek the doctor’s skill.~Great poets dont require indulgent
 69 ExIII|         together in writing of the great triumph,~and I suspect people
 70 ExIII|           sacrificial ox.~It was a great enough thing too to make
 71 ExIII|           t carry the weight~of so great a triumph on their disparate
 72 ExIII|           verse?~You can learn how great Caesar’s mercy is, in the
 73 ExIII|           worthless.~Indeed it’s a great thing you dont dare to
 74  ExIV|         may things shameful for so great a man.~Divine power toys
 75  ExIV|    debating affairs fitting for so great a Consul:~or he’ll be bearing
 76  ExIV|         reverences him next to the great gods.~But as soon as he’
 77  ExIV|           meagre gift indeed for a great service,~if it’s words I
 78  ExIV|        less power than that from a great man’s dish.~The new-born
 79  ExIV|          fame hadnt called you to great affairs,~you’d have been
 80  ExIV|          glories,~and tell of your great actions with least delay.~
 81  ExIV|   slaughtered at your command,~the great god that sits in the midst
 82  ExIV|           will succeed you in that great honour.~The office that
 83  ExIV|         house.~Though the honour’s great, and martial Rome perceives~
 84  ExIV|        times.~Though his deeds are great, and he’s shown by you~as
 85  ExIV|            given to train, to your~great credit, be well, as the
 86  IBIS|        alone (and this itself is a great wrong) ~wont grant me the
 87  IBIS|       false ~name no less, nor the great gods be less inclined to
 88  IBIS|          that bright Maia bore ~to great Jove, offer his fires in
 89  IBIS|         and may you suffer pain as great as Philoctetes, ~heir to
 90  IBIS|           stroke become one of the Great Mother’s cattle,~turned,
 91  IBIS|   foster-child Polydorus, for ~his great wealth, may a host murder
 92  IBIS|          to drive the horses, that great Achilles drove.~May you
 93   Ind|            defeat.~ ~Alexander the Great~Alexander III of Macedon (
 94   Ind|           founded by Alexander the Great and the site of his tomb.~
 95   Ind|           Syracuse inland from the Great Harbour.~Book EII.X:1-52
 96   Ind|     Achilles.~Book EII.IV:1-34 His great friendship with Achilles. ~ ~
 97   Ind|           painter to Alexander the Great, who depicted Venus Aphrodite,
 98   Ind|              Appia (Via)~The first great Roman Road from Rome to
 99   Ind|         twin constellations of the Great and Little Bear, Ursa Major
100   Ind|             Book TI.III:47-102 The Great Bear is Parrhasian, from
101   Ind|     Philopator and Director of the great library. He retired to Cyprus
102   Ind|          Coronis and Apollo, hence great grandson of Saturn, and
103   Ind|         Jupiter-Zeus.~Ibis:365-412 Great grandson of Saturn, via
104   Ind|            supposedly stood in the great square at Constantinople
105   Ind|    Atlantian is an epithet for the Great Bear, since Callisto represented
106   Ind|            god, the consort of the Great Goddess. He castrated himself
107   Ind|          the Waggon, or Plough, or Great Bear. He holds the leash
108   Ind|          35-84 Associated with the Great Bear and the north.~Book
109   Ind|           Her constellation is the Great Bear.~Book TI.XI:1-44 Her
110   Ind|            III:1-48 Ursa Major the Great Bear was used by the Greeks
111   Ind|       there.~ ~Campus (Martis)~The great recreation ground of ancient
112   Ind|           way by Theseus, to Ceres great delight.~ ~Ceres~The Corn
113   Ind|            a representation of the Great Goddess of Neolithic times,
114   Ind|          Cybele, Rhea~The Phrygian great goddess, Magna Mater, the
115   Ind|          goddess, Magna Mater, the Great Mother, personifying the
116   Ind|         son of Apollo and Hyrie, a great hunter of Tempe. He is turned
117   Ind|       Danuvius, Danube, Hister~The great river of south-eastern Europe,
118   Ind|          defeated by Alexander the Great at Issus. Alexander subsequently
119   Ind|          TIII.V:1-56 Alexander the Great of Macedonia.~ ~Enceladus~
120   Ind|            1-46 An epithet for the Great Bear from Callisto the Arcadian
121   Ind|          by Jupiter because of his great beauty. Jupiter, in the
122   Ind|            and a descendant of the great Gracci. ~Book EIV.XVI:1-
123   Ind|         for assuming the name of a great god.~Book EIV.V:1-46 Ovid
124   Ind|          Hannibal~Ibis:251-310 The great Carthaginian commander,
125   Ind|            cult absorbed the other great goddesses and spread through
126   Ind|           she searched for, in the great vegetation myth of Egypt.
127   Ind| representation of the pre-Hellenic Great Goddess. (See the Metope
128   Ind|     Temples on the Capitoline. The great temple was augmented by
129   Ind|          is a manifestation of the Great Goddess in her archetypal
130   Ind|            children, but exercised great power over him and the succession,
131   Ind|           Zeus then precipitated a great flood to cleanse the world.
132   Ind|           who was changed into the Great Bear, hence the north pole
133   Ind|             Book TI.III:47-102 The Great Bear is Parrhasian.~Book
134   Ind|     Gradivus.~Book TII:253-312 His great temple in Rome was that
135   Ind|          his mother. See Sophocles great trilogy The Theban Plays.~
136   Ind|     singing.~Book EII.IX:39-80 The great poet of Thrace.~Book EIII.
137   Ind|           descendant of Pompey the Great, was related to Augustus,
138   Ind|          only woman to survive the Great Flood. Daughter of the Titan
139   Ind|         for assuming the name of a great god. The scene of the triennial
140   Ind|        famous for its Heraion, the great sanctuary of the goddess
141   Ind|     Assyrian Nineveh, who lived in great luxury, and who when besieged
142   Ind|       father, Uranus.~Ibis:365-412 Great grandfather of Asclepius (
143   Ind|           embodiment of the Cretan Great Goddess, Car, Ker or Q’re,
144   Ind|       named Karia, and Kar built a great hall to Demeter (Ceres)
145   Ind|         Destroyed by Alexander the Great after a revolt (335) the
146   Ind|          Son of Neocle. He was the great Athenian leader who defeated
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