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  1   T-I|       me, you, who can, gaze at Rome.~If the gods could grant
  2   T-I|         1-46 The Final Night in Rome: Preparation~ ~When the
  3   T-I|       47-102 The Final Night in Rome: Departure~ ~Now vanishing
  4   T-I|         to Scythia,~I’m leaving Rome. Both are good reasons for
  5   T-I|        no great punishment,~but Rome, that sees the world from
  6   T-I|     world from her seven hills,~Rome, the place of Empire and
  7   T-I|         you not only know me in Rome,~but in so many sorts of
  8  T-II|      binding cold.~So far north Rome extends, west of the Euxine
  9  T-II|     limping feet?~The weight of Rome’s name is not so light,~
 10  T-II|       to teach the daughters of Rome.~And so you can’t doubt
 11  T-II|        the seven gates?~Warring Rome didnt deny me matter,~it’
 12 T-III|        1-46 His Book Arrives in Rome~ ~‘I come in fear, an exile’
 13 T-III|          here’s Jupiter Stator, Rome was first founded here.~
 14 T-III|     melting snow in springtime.~Rome’s in my thoughts, and home,
 15 T-III|         this a country too near Rome for me.~~ Book TIII.VII:
 16 T-III|         read as long as warlike Rome ~looks, in victory, from
 17  T-IV|       forgiveness.~And you too, Rome, denied me, take them ~in
 18   T-V|      barbarous than this place.~Rome should not compare me with
 19   T-V|        to be.~That god, in whom Rome’s power is rooted,~was often
 20   T-V|       he said: ‘You, go look on Rome,~who can do so. Ah, how
 21  ExII|         the most part, glorious Rome, these people neither care~
 22  ExII|        To Rufinus: Yearning For Rome~ ~Rufinus, your friend Ovid
 23  ExII|     forget.~Where’s better than Rome? Where’s worse than cold
 24  ExII|   Thessaly’s nearer Pontus than Rome the Danube’s mouth,~and
 25  ExII|   granted me, let that place be Rome.~My luckless Muse is happy
 26  ExII|      than that, as now,~warring Rome, and mighty Caesar, should
 27  ExII|        thing of mine allowed in Rome.~I couldnt accompany the
 28   ExI|       on the leader’s face:~and Rome whose vast walls compass
 29   ExI|     Rock in victory, by a happy Rome:~your father will see his
 30   ExI|         my words to the gods of Rome,~worshipped no less by you
 31   ExI|      and sees~that your powers, Rome, which he fashioned, are
 32   ExI|        seem myself to be seeing Rome:~since he embodies the features
 33  ExIV|          under whose consulship Rome was so often victorious,~
 34  ExIV|       far as this place is from Rome,~from where I might celebrate
 35  ExIV|     honour’s great, and martial Rome perceives~nothing higher
 36  ExIV|          in bitter writing: and Rome itself was accused of guilt: ~
 37  ExIV|      was accused of guilt: ~yet Rome accepted the lying invective
 38  ExIV|        spoke of Libya’s armies, Rome’s battles:~and Marius, skilled
 39  IBIS|       to be free ~by disgracing Rome, endured from the Carthaginian
 40   Ind|       Epidaurus and imported to Rome in 293BC (See Ovid’s Metamorphoses
 41   Ind|      Ascanius, and not far from Rome.~Book EI.VIII:1-70 Severus
 42   Ind|    Tegea that Augustus moved to Rome after the defeat of Antony,
 43   Ind|      the capture and sacking of Rome. It was a day of national
 44   Ind|          Anadyomene, brought to Rome from Cos by Augustus and
 45   Ind|     Lucullus had transported to Rome.~Book TII.I:1 Patron of
 46   Ind|     first great Roman Road from Rome to Capua (132miles) built
 47   Ind|       Ariadne – Farnese Palace, Rome)). The Northern Crown, the
 48   Ind|        others to life. He saved Rome from the plague, and becomes
 49   Ind|    machine.~Book EIV.VIII:49-90 Rome, the Ausonian city.~ ~Auster~
 50   Ind| Daesitiatae, who fought against Rome AD 6-9. He obtained immunity
 51   Ind| powerful by the time it reaches Rome.~ ~Borysthenes~The Dneiper.~
 52   Ind|    recreation ground of ancient Rome, the Field of Mars, just
 53   Ind|       of the Capitoline Hill of Rome, but used as a name for
 54   Ind|        Siren’. He flourished at Rome in the second half of the
 55   Ind|         Her most famous cult in Rome was on the Aventine, and
 56   Ind|      Maximus~The huge circus in Rome between the Palatine and
 57   Ind|    Clodia (Via)~A major Road in Rome. ~Book EI.VIII:1-70 Mentioned.
 58   Ind|    providing military help, and Rome later had helped drive the
 59   Ind|       worship was introduced at Rome in 204BC. She wore a many-turretted
 60   Ind|     Cyzicenes’. It was held for Rome against Mithridates in 74BC,
 61   Ind|      Annales an epic history of Rome including the Punic and
 62   Ind|    reaching Athens in 420BC and Rome (as Aesculapius) in 293BC.~
 63   Ind|         sensibly left behind in Rome, probably to work on his
 64   Ind|      life of an exile’s wife in Rome, loyally defending his estate.~
 65   Ind|         the Tiber north-west of Rome, beyond Mount Soracte, captured
 66   Ind|      Mount Soracte, captured by Rome in 241BC. It was famous
 67   Ind|        the Roman road, ran from Rome to Ariminum (Rimini) on
 68   Ind|        Traditionally brought to Rome by Servius Tullius perhaps
 69   Ind|      but later summoned back to Rome.~Book EIV.XI:1-22 This letter
 70   Ind|         was appointed to govern Rome’s eastern provinces and
 71   Ind|       conquered and pacified by Rome.~Book EII.II:39-74 He would
 72   Ind|        retracing the journey to Rome.~ ~Halcyone, Alcyone~The
 73   Ind|        Galleria d’Arte Moderna, Rome). He had asked his son Hyllus,
 74   Ind|        Its estuary is nearer to Rome by sea, by a few hundred
 75   Ind|     Book EIII.II:1-110 Far from Rome.~Ibis:135-162 Its cold waters.~
 76   Ind|     priests had been founded in Rome and there was a shrine by
 77   Ind|       journey was longer, since Rome is further from the Danube
 78   Ind|    Marius. He died in prison at Rome in 104BC.~Book EIV.III:1-
 79   Ind|         and Fulvia, educated at Rome by Augustus’s sister Octavia.
 80   Ind|       Central Italy, containing Rome. (The modern Lazio region.
 81   Ind|         etc. When Sulla entered Rome in 88BC, Marius hid in the
 82   Ind|         312 His great temple in Rome was that of Mars Ultor,
 83   Ind|         was city prefect in 25, Rome’s first overseer of aqueducts
 84   Ind|      100 BC. He was called the ‘Rome Hater’. He later transferred
 85   Ind|       to the temple of Peace in Rome.~ ~Myrrha~Ibis:311-364 The
 86   Ind|     Isis in the Campus Martius, Rome)~Book TI.II:75-110 The region
 87   Ind|         snowSee Freya Stark ‘Rome on the Euphrates’ p9. Pausanias
 88   Ind|   Pompilius, the second king of Rome (trad. 715-673BC). He searched
 89   Ind|     Thracian tribe, friendly to Rome, who spread as far as the
 90   Ind|         ninety miles or so from Rome. ~His Crime, ‘Carmen et
 91   Ind|         a certain distance from Rome. ~Book TII.I:1 Tristia II
 92   Ind|      two full summers away from Rome, so we are in the autumn
 93   Ind|  Palatium~The most important of Rome’s seven hills and traditionally
 94   Ind|         was eventually taken to Rome by Aeneas, and housed in
 95   Ind|      become a friendly state to Rome in 20BC under Tigranes.
 96   Ind|     Book EIII.II:1-110 Far from Rome.~Book EIII.V:1-58 Metaphorically
 97   Ind|     VIII:1-50 Book EI.V:43- 86 ~Rome is Quirinus’s city.~ ~Rabirius~
 98   Ind|   Romulus was building to found Rome, in derision, and Romulus
 99   Ind|        father of Cotys.~ ~Roma, Rome~The city on the Tiber, capital
100   Ind|        the city’, i.e. close to Rome.~Book TIII. XII:1-54 Book
101   Ind|       Augustus as the source of Rome’s power.~Book TV.VI:1-46
102   Ind|    loves most.~Book EI.V:43- 86 Rome, as the city of the heart.~
103   Ind|         55-88 The consulship as Rome’s highest honour.~ ~Romulus~
104   Ind|         The mythical founder of Rome with his twin brother Remus.
105   Ind|        were later absorbed into Rome. ~Book TI.V:1-44 The cause
106   Ind|   Romanum and the Capitoline in Rome, with the Palatine on its
107   Ind|   symbol of the regeneration of Rome under the new regime. It
108   Ind|         about ninety miles from Rome. Modern Sulmona.~Book TIV.
109   Ind| Tarpeian Rock~The cliff-edge in Rome from which certain criminals (
110   Ind|        the River Tiber on which Rome is situated, after King
111   Ind|        miles east-north-east of Rome in a bend of the River Anio
112   Ind|     knowledge of the region, in Rome.~Book EI.VI:1-54 Book EIII.
113   Ind|  capital was at Ardea, south of Rome, near modern Anzio. See
114   Ind|      district of Italy north of Rome, extending from Etruria
115   Ind|         Troy and the origins of Rome. Virgil was born near Mantua
116   Ind|         educated at Cremona and Rome. He became Augustus’s ‘offical’
117   Ind|        high priest the ‘king of Rome’, e.g. Julius Caesar. See
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