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  1   T-I|            Look at the title: I’m not love’s master:~that work’s already
  2   T-I|               know, they teach how to love.~Avoid them, or if you’ve
  3   T-I|           care for your father,~dont love any of those three, though
  4   T-I|           their unknown world.~If you love me, hold back these breakers,~
  5   T-I|                What could I do? Sweet love of country held me,~but
  6   T-I|               was an instance of true love~was due to the Furies, sad
  7   T-I|         friend Ovid is from us!’~Your love is a comfort. Yet my verses
  8   T-I|               life and our continuing love?~What, didnt you share
  9  T-II|               long life,~if only they love the name of Roman,~by our
 10  T-II|        grateful city, may the debt of love ~be paid you that your acts
 11  T-II|             does my book tempt one to love?~Nothing for it but to confess
 12  T-II|               punished for singing of love.~What did old Anacreon’s
 13  T-II|           Muse teach~but a mixture of love and plenty of wine?~What
 14  T-II|         Lesbian, teach the girls, but love?~Yet Sappho was acceptable,
 15  T-II|         playful Menander’s is free of love,~yet he’s commonly read
 16  T-II|               s away, for the sake of love?~Who but Homer tells of
 17  T-II|          always deals with matters of love.~What’s in the Hippolytus
 18  T-II|           passion?~Canace’s famed for love of her brother.~Again, didn’
 19  T-II|               by the pain of slighted love.~Passion suddenly changed
 20  T-II|            her father’s hair, through love.~Who reads of Electra and
 21  T-II|           with her, he broadcast many love poems,~in which he confessed
 22  T-II|             show the sin of forbidden love,~in which a smart seducer
 23  T-II|             various forms and acts of love.~Not only does Ajax sit
 24  T-II|            work’s more read~than that love joined in an improper union.~
 25 T-III|              this paper teaches about love.~Such is my author’s fate
 26 T-III|           HERE, WHO TOYED WITH TENDER LOVE,~OVID THE POET BETRAYED
 27 T-III|    friendships equal to your own,~and love the name of Ovid, the only
 28 T-III|          lightens them by her gift~of love, and her strength in enduring
 29 T-III|         hiding.~Let him who loved me, love in secret still.~But though
 30 T-III|           closer to you than me:~that love was so truly witnessed by
 31 T-III|             from your writings how to love.~So, learned girl, reject
 32 T-III|               I am and what I was,~my love of death is such, I complain
 33 T-III|             wife, my country, those I love:~if I endured no anger but
 34  T-IV|                   Book TIV.I:1-48 His Love of Poetry~ ~Reader, if you
 35  T-IV|            holds me,~and, maddened, I love song, though song wounded
 36  T-IV|          though they harmed me,~and I love the weapon that dealt my
 37  T-IV|                 Book TIV.I:49-107 His Love of Poetry~ ~So, it’s right
 38  T-IV|               things occur,~that your love shows the marks of sorrow’
 39  T-IV|            every gift, ~and your fond love added others to the real
 40  T-IV|            friend, an example of true love:~and they were a single
 41  T-IV|               s of your blood,~always love you, with the love of Pollux
 42  T-IV|             always love you, with the love of Pollux for Castor:~so
 43   T-V|              s lands,~the player with Love’s quiver is exiled.~I’ve
 44   T-V|        transferred~from here, if your love for me were as it ought
 45   T-V|             clouds.~May she live, and love her husband, though forced~
 46   T-V|          given me such great proof of love,~when you protect my life
 47   T-V|         loyalty indeed, that’s wedded love.~That virtue not governed
 48  ExII|               so long as it’s not for love!~You’ll find, though the
 49  ExII|            your mind’s defences,~then love of my country, stronger
 50  ExII|           Whether you wish to call it love or unmanly tenderness,~I
 51  ExII|           body in my arms,~say: ‘It’s love for me that’s made you thin,’~
 52  ExII|               that all who revere and love you~stay far from any acquaintance
 53  ExII|           joined to you by as great a love~as that which joined the
 54  ExII|                and, though he’s dead, love pictures him still living.~
 55   ExI|               let that influence, the love of an eternal prince~wins
 56   ExI|        torrent of water.~There’s only love for those whom fortune follows:~
 57   ExI|            friend at all,~or has your love played its part, and weakened?~
 58   ExI|         adjoining seats.~In short our love, was always as great, dearest
 59   ExI|          laurel’s for me,~and yet the love is bound to be in us both:~
 60   ExI|              I need to fear you~whose love has granted me a thousand
 61   ExI|              I wrote a stupidArt of Love’:~that prevents my hands
 62   ExI|             and seal,~so long as your love for me hasnt vanished.~
 63   ExI|                passing on ~the art of love, sadly won the prize for
 64 ExIII|              the stronger.~Our mutual love and our marriage vows urge
 65 ExIII|               their boat.~The youthslove was wonderful: though many
 66 ExIII|               Paullus Fabius Maximus: Love’s Visit~ ~If you’ve a little
 67 ExIII|             anxious mind.~There stood Love, but not with the aspect
 68 ExIII|             that’s a thing of danger, love me secretly.~~ Book EIII.
 69 ExIII|        judgement,~I dont immediately love what I produce.~So why,
 70  ExIV|           always granted me your true love,~still that love has grown
 71  ExIV|            your true love,~still that love has grown in my time of
 72  ExIV|           passable:~but you must show love, not difficult for the willing.~
 73  ExIV|              these attentions,~but my love will perform them with added
 74  IBIS|          murdered ~servant, joined in love with her brother-in-law. ~
 75  IBIS|            you dare hope for.~May you love Plutus, god of wealth, Ceres’
 76  IBIS|           happier than Haemon in your love:~or may you possess your
 77   Ind|              420 Book TV.XIV:1-46 Her love for him.~Book TV.V:27-64
 78   Ind|     Metamorphoses X:681 Venus fell in love with him, but he was killed
 79   Ind|               Amor (Cupid)~The god of love, son of Venus (Aphrodite).
 80   Ind|              I:1-48 The archer god of love.~Book EI.IV:1-58 Ovid regrets
 81   Ind|            his role as the teacher of Love.~Book EIII.III:1-108 A vision
 82   Ind|            108 A vision of the god of Love.~ ~Amphiaraus~A Greek seer,
 83   Ind|             TI.VI:1-36 Mirrors Ovid’s love for his wife.~ ~Antiphates~
 84   Ind|              Ars Amatoria (The Art of Love) a contributory reason for
 85   Ind|               for losing. She fell in love with Hippomenes. He raced
 86   Ind|          Battus.~Book TII:361-420 His love poetry.~Book TV.V:27-64
 87   Ind|          their beauty. Byblis fell in love with Caunus and wooed him
 88   Ind|         manikin’~Book TII:421-470 His love poetry.~ ~Calydon~The town
 89   Ind|            and Enarete. Her ill-fated love for her brother Macareus
 90   Ind|              Ibis:311-364 Her illicit love.~ ~Capaneus~The son of Hipponous
 91   Ind|            Book EI.IV:1-58 The god of love helped Jason.~ ~Cyane~A
 92   Ind|             Trying to revive Hercules love for her she unwittingly
 93   Ind|              Wife of Hercules, and in love with him.~ ~Deidamia~The
 94   Ind|              a paragon of loyalty and love.~ ~Evenus~Ibis:465-540 Son
 95   Ind|            Book TV.I:1-48 A writer of love poetry.~ ~Ganges~The sacred
 96   Ind|          Diomede son of Tydeus was in love with her before her abduction.
 97   Ind|                killed Nessus, fell in love with Iole, daughter of Eurytus
 98   Ind|              play dealing with illict love.~Ibis:541-596 Venus made
 99   Ind|            596 Venus made him fall in love with Phaedra. He died when
100   Ind| Great-grandson of Neptune. Falling in love with Atalanta, he determined
101   Ind|           wife Electra. Ceres fell in love with him and lay with him
102   Ind|               supposedly mixed with a love potion but in fact the Hydra’
103   Ind|          compares his wife to her for love and loyalty.~Book TV.V:27-
104   Ind|              Dardanelles) who fell in love with Hero, the priestess
105   Ind|             Sappho the poetess, whose love of women gave rise to the
106   Ind|           recounting Ovid’s vision of Love.~Book EIII.VIII:1-24 Probably
107   Ind|             by anger through slighted love.~Book TII:497-546 Her intention
108   Ind|             Caused by Amor to fall in love with Jason.~ ~Medusa, Gorgo~
109   Ind|               420 His plays contained love scenes but were basically
110   Ind|        Calliope (Epic Poetry), Erato (Love Poetry), Urania (Astronomy),
111   Ind|              son Iphitus, and fell in love with Iole. He had to appease
112   Ind|              her, and turned from the love of women to that of young
113   Ind|             what is lawful’ for ‘safe love’.~Book TII:253-312 He defends
114   Ind|         tribute by Ovid to his wife’s love and her faithfulness to
115   Ind|           Book TII:361-420 Her illict love.~ ~Phaethon~Son of Clymene,
116   Ind|             TI.VI:1-36 Mirrors Ovid’s love for his wife.~ ~Philippus,
117   Ind|            Book TV.I:1-48 A writer of love poetry.~ ~Propontis~The
118   Ind|            Comaetho, having fallen in love with the besieger Amphitryon,
119   Ind|        Lesbian. ~Book TII:361-420 Her love poetry.~Book TIII.VII:1-
120   Ind|      Amphitrite, jealous of Neptune’s love for her changed her into
121   Ind|              did what she did through love of Minos.~ ~Scythi, Scythia~
122   Ind|            poet of Thrace who fell in love with Hyacinthus the Spartan
123   Ind|            Book TV.I:1-48 A writer of love poetry.~ ~Tibur~The modern
124   Ind|               as well as epigrams and love poems in which he celebrated
125   Ind|        Perilla. ~Book TII:421-470 His love poetry.~ ~Tiphys~The son
126   Ind|                  Venus~The Goddess of Love. The daughter of Jupiter
127   Ind|     beneficent planet, ruling wealth, love etc.~Ibis:541-596 Insulted,
128   Ind|               made Hippolytus fall in love with Phaedra.~ ~Vergilius,
129   Ind|                 He refers to Aeneas’s love affair with the Tyrian Queen
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