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  1   T-I|             s duty is to search out time~and circumstance. You’re
  2   T-I| circumstance. You’re safe regarding time.~Fine-spun verses come from
  3   T-I|        breeze: take advice from the time and place.~If you can be
  4   T-I|       furthest shores.~There wasnt time or desire enough to prepare ~
  5   T-I|      receive my salutation, for all time.~And though I take up the
  6   T-I|              deceptively, I’d a set time,~an appropriate one for
  7   T-I|            will still live, for all time, in my verse.~~ Book TI.
  8   T-I|           the man! Yet, at the same time,~let him halt the music
  9  T-II|         hurled his lightning, every time men sinned,~it wouldnt
 10  T-II|         they say, in our ancestorstime~distinguished, inferior
 11  T-II|            can rise again, ~if only time will mellow Caesar’s anger, ~
 12  T-II|            the high heavens, hasnt time to notice lesser things,~
 13  T-II|            as I wish, you’d had the time~you’d have read nothing
 14  T-II|            Ganymede the Trojan boy.~Time will fade if I repeat all
 15  T-II|            that precious thing, our time.~Look, this man tells of
 16  T-II|         remote the penalty from the time of guilt.~~ Book TII:547-
 17 T-III|           it’s not now, for a first time, I’m taken from you, mea
 18 T-III|             you’ve known for a long time.~If only our souls might
 19 T-III|           my mind shrinks~from that time, and thinking of it is new
 20 T-III|          not eased by any length of time:~and still I return to the
 21 T-III|           those precious looks,~and time’s wrinkles mar your furrowed
 22 T-III|           these Getic lands.~It’s a time of ease there, and a string
 23 T-III|             to know me for the last time,~and like my friends, as
 24 T-III|             him first ~remember the time and place that it was made.~
 25 T-III|         that he knows~was done in a time of exile, a barbarous place;~
 26  T-IV|              accept my excuse: this time when they were written.~
 27  T-IV|           to be mine!~Where is that time when you used to boast~of
 28  T-IV|             his name?~Where is that time – unless you dont wish
 29  T-IV|             lift its head.~Use this time, in which the chance is
 30  T-IV|            this exile ~one day when time has softened his anger.~
 31  T-IV|           young.~ ~Book TIV.VI:1-50 Time Passing~ ~In time the ploughman’
 32  T-IV|           VI:1-50 Time Passing~ ~In time the ploughman’s ox is made
 33  T-IV|             of the curving yoke:~in time the fiery horse endures
 34  T-IV|             in its gentle mouth:~in time the rage of African lions
 35  T-IV|             servitude, conquered by time.~Time makes the grapes swell
 36  T-IV|       servitude, conquered by time.~Time makes the grapes swell on
 37  T-IV|       barely hold the juice inside:~time ripens the seed into white
 38  T-IV|              All can be lessened by time passing,~on its silent feet,
 39  T-IV|         feet.~But the long space of time hasnt granted me patience,~
 40  T-IV|             grown and deepened with time.~My ills were not so well
 41  T-IV|             exhausted beforehand by time’s ills.~The new wrestler,
 42  T-IV|          been multiplied by passing time!~Believe me, I’m failing,
 43  T-IV|       bodily powers, there’s little time left for these ills.~I’ve
 44  T-IV|        reaching Pisces.~In all that time why hasnt your hand ~stirred
 45  T-IV|       endure my weakness.~Now’s the time when, my labour ended, ~
 46  T-IV|             sapping my strength~its time now for me to receive the
 47  T-IV|      gladiator’s wooden sword.~It’s time I no longer breathed foreign
 48  T-IV|        first honours,~since at that time I was one of the tresviri.~
 49  T-IV|           fate granted ~Tibullus no time for my friendship.~He came
 50  T-IV|             after them, in order of time.~And the younger poets cultivated
 51  T-IV|         already completed his fated time,~after adding years to years
 52  T-IV|            been buried at the right time,~dying before the days of
 53  T-IV|        unaccustomed weapons of that time:~and I suffered as many
 54   T-V|           it gains no strength from time,~and the effect on my spirits
 55   T-V|           great ones increases with time.~For ten years Philoctetes
 56   T-V|       remembers, as he laments that time,~grieving it was not prevented
 57   T-V|           to drop it at a difficult time for me.~Do you abandon ship,
 58   T-V|             I drag out my life, and time, so I retreat from~and banish
 59   T-V|         light of lifeoh, let the time be brief –~my spirit will
 60   T-V|             Greek host.~You’d think time stood still, it moves so
 61   T-V|          tedious as my cares.~Or is time running its course in the
 62  ExII|            Tomis.~Brutus, if you’ve time, welcome these foreign books~
 63  ExII|             will form in sufficient time:~the raw wound quivers at
 64  ExII|             to be erased by passing time.~When your advice has strengthened
 65  ExII|             EI.IV:1-58 To His Wife: Time Passing~ ~Now the decline
 66  ExII|          forced to be old before my time.~Leisure nourishes the body,
 67  ExII|             and delight in spending time on their favourite art.~
 68  ExII|            life~of idleness: wasted time’s like death to me.~I don’
 69  ExII|        hands.~When I’ve granted the time my body needs for sleep~
 70  ExII|            I was stunned for a long time, unable to think –~I felt
 71  ExII|           which you spend so little time.~Now Umbria calls you home,
 72  ExII|       distaste, complain, when it’s time to eat hated food.~Serve
 73   ExI|            rest,~so long as there’s time enough to show your worth.~
 74   ExI|            39-74 To Messalinus: The Time Is Propitious~ ~Kindest
 75   ExI|         wretched exile.~It’s a good time for petitions. He’s safe
 76   ExI|       impulse endure for lengths of time.~Though you do, I’ll still
 77   ExI|     neighbours.~It’s sweet to spend time cultivating the fields:~
 78   ExI|             fall.~The hope too that time might soften the prince’
 79   ExI|     equipped in them,~or given more time to the gentler arts.~Your
 80   ExI|      galloping horse,~so when ample time’s been given to your father’
 81   ExI|             order that your leisure time’s not lost in idle sleep,~
 82   ExI|   recognition denied you by passing time,~so your eyes cannot recall
 83 ExIII|            enemies and snow,~will a time come when Ovid is ordered
 84 ExIII|             and established for all time:~dont let your courage
 85 ExIII|            Choose a well-considered time to ask,~lest your boat sets
 86 ExIII|            dont suggest you pick a time when she’s idle:~she barely
 87 ExIII|          Visit~ ~If you’ve a little time to give to an exiled friend,~
 88 ExIII|            scared at the delay, the time we wish is near,~and the
 89 ExIII|          read them widely, for some time.~The thirsty reader drank
 90 ExIII|            re-reading, and never ~a time when they werent more pleasing
 91 ExIII|            I sing in sadness:~every time is suited to its own particular
 92  ExIV|           those usual ways in which time silently steals by,~and
 93  ExIV|    Germanicus Caesar will claim the time left by all ~of this: he
 94  ExIV|             be your servant for all time,~so thanks can be rendered
 95  ExIV|            one Olympiad in Scythia:~time’s moving onwards into a
 96  ExIV|           that love has grown in my time of trouble.~Anyone who saw
 97  ExIV|             yours endure lengths of time,~and your loyalty not grow
 98  ExIV|      nothing has greater power than time.~Writing survives the years.
 99  ExIV|           be jostled by people at a time like that.~I’d delight in
100  ExIV|        approval by Augustus for all time.~Still when your concerns
101  ExIV|              how I spend this cruel time.~ ~Book EIV.IX:89-134 To
102  ExIV|          and words of prayer,~every time the sun rises in the East.~
103  ExIV|            s pressure.~So devouring time destroys all other things:~
104  ExIV|          say: ‘I’ve whiled away the time, held off care.~That’s the
105  ExIV|            thought, by the lapse of time. ~While your letter was
106  ExIV|   consolation belongs to a definite time,~when grief’s in train,
107  ExIV| Two-tea-car-nus, by extending it in time.~If I dared to distort your
108  IBIS|         these tears flowing for all time, in you,~and they’ll always
109  IBIS|        prayers.~You’ll read more in time, containing your true name,~
110   Ind|             from the flames, at the time of the Fates prophecy to
111   Ind|             flourishing town in the time of Trajan (98-117), and
112   Ind|      prematurely, and then a second time after being nourished sewn
113   Ind|             is less powerful by the time it reaches Rome.~ ~Borysthenes~
114   Ind|             Book EIV.X:1-34 An easy time for Ulysses.~ ~Camena~A
115   Ind|     peninsula, known in Thucydides’ time as Potidaea. He seized power
116   Ind|           century BC. Though at one time wealthy he ended his life
117   Ind|    Rhoemetalces I, was ruler at the time of Ovid’s exile. He shared
118   Ind|        Comedy, he flourished at the time of the Peloponnesian War (
119   Ind|            versatile figures of his time, general, statesman and
120   Ind|          the spring equinox at that time.~ ~Hemitheon~The probable
121   Ind|             attributes. (In Sulla’s time a college of priests had
122   Ind|        State approval in Augustus’s time, due to his concern to revive
123   Ind|          Ulysses (Odysseus). At the time of the Odyssey thickly wooded. ~
124   Ind|          and dashed the cup away in time. Medea vanished in a mist
125   Ind|         more civilised after Ovid’s time, with Latin as a lingua
126   Ind|            also lived nearby at one time, and saw the rock.) See
127   Ind|       therefore a useful measure of time. ~Book EIV.VI:1-50 Ovid
128   Ind|        decapitated her. At the same time his brother Chrysaor the
129   Ind|            taken to Carthage at the time of the Carthaginian conquest
130   Ind|             The King of Troy at the time of the Trojan War, the son
131   Ind|          coast of Acarnania) at the time when Amphitryon ravaged
132   Ind|            losing Eurydice a second time, hence Rhodopeius an epithet
133   Ind|             Book EIV.VI:1-50 At the time of the fatal banquet the
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