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  1   T-I|          even alive is a gift from a god.~Otherwise, be silent –
  2   T-I|              s anger!~Often when one god presses, another brings
  3   T-I|             to me, against the angry god?~A wretch, I’m wasting idle
  4   T-I|           what you know, too.~If the god is content I can’t be wretched.’~
  5   T-I|             obeys, with me, a mighty god.~While I speak, fearful
  6   T-I|             faithfulness offends the god!~Often Caesar praises loyalty
  7   T-I|             in case the wrath of the god can be lessened.~~ Book
  8   T-I|          used to gentler pursuits.~A god crushed me, and no one eased
  9   T-I|          forever,~unless the wounded god’s anger lessens.~~ Book
 10   T-I|              Shades,~they say Pluto, god of Tartarus, was grieved.~
 11   T-I|               protected by the rural god, Priapus,~and virgin Helle’
 12   T-I|              the anger of an injured god has sent me.~If that comes
 13  T-II|        should follow the ways of the god with the same title.~~ Book
 14  T-II|              a present and a visible god,~this heart supported you,
 15  T-II|              wit than mine:~but as a god’s won by red blood of a
 16  T-II|         powers that be,~to a wounded god chance is no excuse.~On
 17  T-II|             man’s displeasure,~but a god’s sometimes known to be
 18  T-II|       shrined, how many mothers that god has made:~as she enters
 19 T-III|       weapons, and a house fit for a god.~‘And is this Jove’s house?’
 20 T-III|             sharers of the anger one god feels,~I beg you, drive
 21 T-III|           the desolating will of the god can be mollified.~Whether
 22 T-III|             the anger of the injured god,~and lessen my punishment
 23 T-III|           Augustus,~and petition the god you’ve known, in the proper
 24 T-III|      Birthday in Tomis~ ~Behold, the god of my birth, comes, on his
 25  T-IV|               the other’s thought, a god.~Though I wont need to,
 26  T-IV|      connected with my sin:~this the god knows: so my life was not
 27  T-IV|             returning sails, and the god be appeased.~~ Book TIV.
 28  T-IV|              a softer breeze and the god’s appeased:~and save a life
 29  T-IV|          inferior, and subject, to a god.~And though I brought a
 30   T-V|              as it ought to be.~That god, in whom Rome’s power is
 31   T-V|       suppliant, I address a distant god,~if it’s allowed for mortals
 32   T-V|             offered to the Leucadian god.~What I ask is punishment:
 33   T-V|           III:1-58 His Prayer to the God Bacchus~ ~This is the day,
 34   T-V|              no longer wholly in the god’s power?~You yourself were
 35   T-V|         unbroken horse.~He hopes the god’s anger wont last forever~
 36   T-V|              remembers how great the god’s mercy is,~accustomed,
 37   T-V|             short it’s a gift of the god that he’s alive.~Yet you (
 38   T-V|             Caesar, destined to be a god, ~but only when your days
 39   T-V|             my hope of placating the god’s not wholly dead,~either
 40   T-V|          still, and will you to be a god, separate from them.~So
 41   T-V|         weight of such misfortune:~a god’s anger’s more powerful
 42   T-V|           avoid the clouds, when the god thunders,~that’s loyalty
 43  ExII|          about me, admit praise of a god,~and accept my poetry after
 44  ExII|       claimed by me, but by a mighty god.~Because I’ve earned and
 45  ExII|        Caesar doesnt know, though a god knows all, ~what state this
 46  ExII|          life granted me by a living god:~in short, that if I die,
 47  ExII|             who must be treated as a god.~You’ll appeal, not to Theromedon,
 48  ExII|            rightly each comes to the god they honour - and begs,~
 49  ExII|            heavy wrath of an injured god endures.~No doubt you’ve
 50  ExII|            given the kindness of the god.~Graecinus, pray he’s not
 51   ExI|           worth something,~since the god gave a favourable answer
 52   ExI|              to seek the help of the god they’ve injured.~Some might
 53   ExI|              throw myself before the god himself,~Be the priest:
 54   ExI|              carry my request to the god you worship,~while adding
 55   ExI|       bringing hope that the wounded god might be softened.~Then
 56   ExI|   presentiments prove true,~that the god’s anger lessens, even if
 57   ExI|               Advantage, then, makes god and humans great,~by their
 58 ExIII|        shield on your feeble arm. ~A god’s to be entreated, not that
 59 ExIII|               this is the voice of a god, a god is in my heart,~this
 60 ExIII|             is the voice of a god, a god is in my heart,~this I prophesy,
 61 ExIII|            this I prophesy, led by a god’s command.~Livia, why hesitate,
 62 ExIII|              oppress the wounded.~No god is more lenient than our
 63 ExIII|            for any crime.~Though the god of the sea has overwhelmed
 64  ExIV|             write concerning the new god.~May this respectful act
 65  ExIV|          suppliant’s voice.~Let your god be young Caesar. Please
 66  ExIV|              your command,~the great god that sits in the midst of
 67  ExIV|              power now he’s become a god.~So none of his House are
 68  ExIV|        celebrate the birthday of the god,~with what show I can, at
 69  ExIV|             off, about ~you, the new god, may reach you there, too.~
 70  ExIV|              attempt was helped by a god’s power.~I tell how the
 71  IBIS|            for.~May you love Plutus, god of wealth, Ceresson, in
 72  IBIS|             to test the power of the god,~serve you as Tantalus’s
 73  IBIS|             words to the unconquered god.~May a brooding lioness
 74   Ind|              such he is a vegetation god born from the heart of the
 75   Ind|              Sicily.~Book TI.IV:1-28 God of the winds.~Book TI.X:
 76   Ind|    Aesculapius (Asclepius)~The Greek god of medicine, the father
 77   Ind|            mother of Hercules by the god Jupiter. Jupiter caused
 78   Ind|         Ambracia.~ ~Amor (Cupid)~The god of love, son of Venus (Aphrodite).
 79   Ind|            Book TV.I:1-48 The archer god of love.~Book EI.IV:1-58
 80   Ind|            III:1-108 A vision of the god of Love.~ ~Amphiaraus~A
 81   Ind|             Artemis), born on Delos. God of poetry, art, medicine,
 82   Ind|            for a giant statue of the god that Lucullus had transported
 83   Ind|            there was a temple to the god at Leucadia nearby. The
 84   Ind|                Book TIII.II:1-30 The god of the arts, including poetry.~
 85   Ind|            46 Book TIV.III:49-84 The god of medicine.~Book TIV.II:
 86   Ind|       soldiers.~Book TV.III:1-58 The god of poetry, who empowers
 87   Ind|             was sacred to Apollo the god of the Arts.~Book EIII.II:
 88   Ind|              Diana.~Ibis:105-134 The god of prophecy.~Book EIV.VIII:
 89   Ind|              Book EIV.VIII:49-90 The god of both strings, those of
 90   Ind|          Aquilo~The north wind. As a god he is Boreas.~Book TI.XI:
 91   Ind|           She was loved by the river god Alpheus and pursued beneath
 92   Ind|               and becomes a resident god. (His cult centre was Epidaurus
 93   Ind|            there was a statue of the god with a golden beard. Cicero
 94   Ind|        incarnation of the vegetation god, the consort of the Great
 95   Ind|              ecstatic worship of the god.~Book TIV.I:1-48 They celebrated
 96   Ind|                Bacchus, Dionysus~The god Dionysus, the ‘twice-born’,
 97   Ind|      Dionysus, the ‘twice-born’, the god of the vine. The son of
 98   Ind|             with Liber the fertility god. See EuripidesBacchae.
 99   Ind|             VII:1-40 The ivy-crowned god.~Book TI.X:1-50 Dionysopolis
100   Ind|             1-48 His thyrsus wand. A god of inspiration.~Book TV.
101   Ind|              of inspiration from the god. Here apparently poetic
102   Ind|             IX:1-38 Book EIV.II:1-50 God of the grape, and the vine.
103   Ind|              The daughter of Aeolus, God of the Winds and Enarete.
104   Ind|          arrows.~Book EI.IV:1-58 The god of love helped Jason.~ ~
105   Ind|           Aesculapius. The pre-Greek god Maleas was later equated
106   Ind|          were games in honour of the god every four years, and from
107   Ind|        Erebus~The Underworld (also a god of darkness).~Ibis:209-250
108   Ind|       Salamis, daughter of the river god Asopus, from the throne
109   Ind|             where he became a marine god. See Metamorphoses VII:179~ ~
110   Ind|         assuming the name of a great god.~Book EIV.V:1-46 Ovid is
111   Ind|           seven daughters of the Sun god and Clymene. They mourned
112   Ind|        midwinter, making him a solar god. His mother’s seven night
113   Ind|             by Hercules.~ ~Hymen~The god of marriage who lived on
114   Ind|            Romulus and Remus, to the god Mars. ~Book TII:253-312
115   Ind|              50 The Roman two-headed god of doorways and beginnings,
116   Ind|     equivalent to the Hindu elephant god Ganesh. The Janus mask is
117   Ind|             Is Augustus seen to be a god or only believed to be one?~
118   Ind|          where he was the ram-horned god.~Ibis:311-364 Cambyses sent
119   Ind|           the worship of the phallic god Priapus.~Book TI.X:1-50
120   Ind|            there was a temple to the god there.~Book TV.II:45-79
121   Ind|             Bacchus~An ancient rural god of Italy who presided over
122   Ind|            and tried to cut down the god’s vines. Lycurgus was driven
123   Ind|             of Aesculapius the Greek god of medicine, who inherited
124   Ind|              ecstatic worship of the god. Dionysus brought terror
125   Ind| contemporaries.~ ~Mars, Ares~The war god, son of Jupiter, the Roman
126   Ind|             Roman name for the Greek god Ares. An old name for him
127   Ind|     incarnate.~Book EIII.VI:1-60 The god who determines death in
128   Ind|              was flayed alive by the God when he was defeated. (An
129   Ind|                Mercury~The messenger god, Hermes, son of Jupiter
130   Ind|           the birthday. The birthday god.~ ~Nemesis, Rhamnusia~The
131   Ind|          hubris.~ ~Neptune, Poseidon~God of the sea, brother of Pluto
132   Ind|        Cyclops)~Book EII.IX:1-38 The god of the sea, able to bring
133   Ind|              the daughter of Aeolus, god of the winds. The significance
134   Ind|         Nilus~The river Nile and its god. The river was noted for
135   Ind|              gift of Augustus’s, the god, who has mitigated his punishment.
136   Ind|           ordered the capture of the god. He was torn to pieces by
137   Ind|               Dis, Hades, Plutus~The God of the Underworld, elder
138   Ind|             Plutus the son of Ceres, god of riches.~Book TI. IX:1-
139   Ind|             riches.~Book TI. IX:1-66 God of Tartarus, the Underworld.~
140   Ind|          mercy.~ ~Poseidon~The Greek god of the sea, equated to Neptune.~ ~
141   Ind|             goddess Aphrodite-Venus. God of gardens and vineyards.
142   Ind|             Book TI.X:1-50 The local god of Lampsacus.~ ~Prisci~Two
143   Ind|      Originally the name of a Sabine god.~Book TI.III:1-46 Book TI.
144   Ind|         assuming the name of a great god. The scene of the triennial
145   Ind|         vanished, becoming the Roman god Quirinus.~ ~Rufinus~A friend
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