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 1   T-I|    Achilles’s fashion,~only that man can help who wounded me.~
 2   T-I|         your threats:~an unhappy man, let me carry the life that’
 3   T-I|       exile.~I was as dazed as a man struck by Jove’s lightning,~
 4   T-I|      whose life’s unknown to the man himself.~But when grief
 5   T-I|         Let the storm defeat the man! Yet, at the same time,~
 6  T-II|       right senses, than a great man’s displeasure,~but a god’
 7  T-II|       enemy.~Justice forbids any man of Roman blood~to suffer
 8  T-II|         sits close to an unknown man.~Why’s any portico open,
 9  T-II|      thing, our time.~Look, this man tells of various kinds of
10  T-II|         your Aeneid,~brought the man and his arms to a Tyrian
11 T-III|     dread the place, I dread the man of power,~and my writing
12 T-III|    quietly lives well,~and every man should be happy with his
13 T-III|          do – how I am, a ruined man, on these shores,~I’m led
14 T-III|         effective.~The greater a man the more his anger can be
15 T-III|   friends –~is well known to the man you cultivate.~You concealed
16 T-III|       fear, Perilla: only let no man or woman~learn from your
17 T-III|          the edge of war,~and no man ploughs the soil with curving
18 T-III|        region, ah, that no happy man should enter.~This then,
19 T-III|         the ghost, here, of that man remains.~Why attack a ghost
20 T-III|         opened?~You can thrust a man in here, whom you would
21 T-III|         mortal fate that lifts a man and crushes him,~and fear
22 T-III|         O endlessly blessed that man~who’s not forbidden, and
23  T-IV|       misfortune.~That’s why the man in shackles, digging ditches,~
24  T-IV|         among Bessi and Getae,~a man who was always there on
25  T-IV|          great to you –~no other man you wished for as a husband.~
26  T-IV|         say out loud: ‘I am that man.’~If you’d allow it, I’d
27  T-IV|       armour, is better~than the man with weapons stained by
28  T-IV|        hands, the Minotaur, half man, half bull.~I’d rather believe
29  T-IV|         anger,~the most gracious man in all the world?~Has his
30  T-IV|        yourselves worthy~of that man who deserves to be equal
31  T-IV|        retreat, Muse,~while that man’s still able to hide his
32   T-V|          in my poetry.~Happy the man who can count his sufferings!~
33   T-V|          this book: it’s not the man’s fault but this place.~
34   T-V|      trample on my fate?~I saw a man who laughed at shipwrecks,
35   T-V|    middle of the streets.~So the man who dares to farm the fields
36   T-V|    before~I can even become that man I was, once more.~My talent’
37  ExII|          The anger of a merciful man wouldnt have sent me here,~
38  ExII|      when young, having killed a man,~and became Achillesguest
39  ExII| god-forsaken earth.~She lets the man digging ditches live, shackled
40  ExII|           and hung on a cross, a man still utters prayers.~How
41   ExI|          take second place to no man.~He’ll celebrate this day
42   ExI|    Forgive me. I’m a shipwrecked man, afraid of every sea.~~
43   ExI|     Request~ ~It’s fitting for a man to take delight in saving
44   ExI|        to take delight in saving man,~and there’s no better way
45   ExI|          the wishes of an absent man~with faithful care, and
46 ExIII|   Fortune.~Though it strikes one man, it’s not only one the lightning ~
47 ExIII|          the place.~What fearful man doesnt avoid contagious
48 ExIII|           it chanced that an old man, standing in the circle, ~
49 ExIII|           It ensures that a poor man’s welcome at the altars:~
50 ExIII|         me,~and it seems to me a man who makes verse and bothers~
51  ExIV|      needing the aid of a single man.~Marius, famed for his triumphs
52  ExIV|          shameful for so great a man.~Divine power toys with
53  ExIV|   message for that distinguished man to read.~It’s a long road,
54  ExIV|       the wretched: she gave ~no man a more merciful heart than
55  ExIV|      criminals.~In fact the same man, though it seems perverse
56  ExIV|         its ends.~Incense a poor man offers the gods from his
57  ExIV|     power than that from a great man’s dish.~The new-born lamb,
58  ExIV|      powerful than right,~and no man, woman or child, in all
59  ExIV|   believe all this.~Wretched the man who suffers things too harsh
60  ExIV|       dying to answer,~if a dead man can be dying, but it’s difficult
61  ExIV|   constantly avoided:~though the man who wrote it had been born ~
62  ExIV|  wretched Ovid’s poetry, jealous man?~The last day never harms
63  IBIS|        me the title of an honest man.~Whoever it is (for I’ll
64  IBIS|      weapons.~He wont let me, a man banished to the frozen ~
65  IBIS|          disturbs the wound of a man~seeking peace, bandies my
66  IBIS|       blind as Tiresias, the old man famous for Apollo’s art,~
67  IBIS|     playful quarrel:~and as that man, Phineus, by whose command
68  IBIS|         to Ulysses, that cunning man, whom Ino, Semele’s sister,~
69  IBIS|         yourself suffer what the man, who thought to be free ~
70  IBIS|       driven by frenzies,~like a man who’s whole body is a single
71  IBIS|        example:~like the impious man who having poor grass ~for
72  IBIS|           and the Minotaur, half man and half bull:~Sinis, who
73  IBIS|           and like Attis, once a man, become not man or woman,~
74  IBIS|           once a man, become not man or woman,~and strike the
75   Ind|         of Thersites the ugliest man among the Greeks at Troy.~
76   Ind|       near Scorpius, depicting a man entwined in the coils of
77   Ind|           Book TIII.VI:1-38 ‘The man’ is Augustus.~Book EI.I:
78   Ind|     friend of Catullus. He was a man of small stature with a
79   Ind|   homosexuality in a letter to a man who might just appreciate
80   Ind|         Delos.~ ~Leander~A young man of Abydos on the narrows
81   Ind|       and plants, and was an old man in Ovid’s day.~Book TIV.
82   Ind|          of Phorcys the wise old man of the sea. She is represented
83   Ind|          his friend Cotta, and a man of influence with the regime.~
84   Ind|   spiritual counterpart of every man that watches over him, worshipped
85   Ind|       defend Tomis as an elderly man.~Book TIV.VII:1-26 Ovid
86   Ind|         with a bull’s head and a man’s body. ~Ibis:41-104 Named
87   Ind|        the gods. He is civilised man going among the barbarians.~
88   Ind|           I sing of arms and the man’. He refers to Aeneas’s
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