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 1   T-I|  Palatine, to climb to Caesar’s house.~That august place and that
 2   T-I|     sanctum,~and reach your own house, the curved bookcase,~you’
 3   T-I| humblest may I’ve favoured that House,~if Augustus’s statutory
 4   T-I|        the Capitol,~close to my house, though that was no use
 5   T-I|        denied to me forever,~my house, and the sweet ones in that
 6   T-I|          While I stood firm, my house was crowded enough,~indeed,
 7  T-II|        myself.~When a shattered house begins to settle,~the whole
 8  T-II|     unlucky error misled me,~my house, humble, without stain,
 9  T-II|      either way.~But even if my house is lowly in means and origin,~
10  T-II|      Plea: The Sentence~ ~So my house, though pleasing to the
11 T-III|        tell me what place,~what house to seek, a book strange
12 T-III|         gleaming weapons, and a house fit for a god.~‘And is this
13 T-III|        god.~‘And is this Jove’s house?’ I said, a wreath of oak~
14 T-III|         said,~this is truly the house of mighty Jove.’~But why
15 T-III|        ones?~Is it because this house earned unending triumph,~
16 T-III|      pray, that, some day, your house makes peace with him~who
17 T-III|      vain, the guard, from that house~that commands the holy place,
18 T-III|          displeases.~There’s no house here suitable for a patient,
19 T-III|        touch the threshold of a house despaired of.~You, a new
20 T-III|     earth,~and the faces in the house I left, true friends,~and
21 T-III|       be an instant guest in my house.~Ah, is Ovid’s house, now,
22 T-III|         my house.~Ah, is Ovid’s house, now, in the Scythian world?~
23  T-IV|        that name,~so that their house will rule the world for
24  T-IV|         great nobility.~If your house made me welcome, it was
25  T-IV|       studies,~keeping a humble house with its ancient gods,~and
26   T-V|         threshold of a stricken house,~remembers how you and a
27   T-V|         let your virtue build a house here for all to see.~It’
28  ExII|       granted a bride from your house.~Marcia approved of her,
29  ExII|   enough if you dont deny your house was open to me.~Even if
30  ExII|        d rather then your whole House was closed to me.~But it
31  ExII|     fortune.~Yet your brother’s house did not experience the same~
32  ExII|         I was always under your House’s protection.~Such is your
33  ExII|        m not a stranger to your house:~and as for Ovid’s troubles,
34  ExII|        last of my life,~when my house suddenly fell in total ruin~
35  ExII|   revered the sanctuary of your house as you~revere the gods who
36   ExI|        as my powers allow: that House can’t be a private one.~
37   ExI|    Error~ ~He who honoured your House from his earliest years,~
38   ExI|       trust herself to a nearby house~when she’s running in terror
39   ExI|       shining eloquence of your house appear,~with which you’ve
40   ExI|       sons, and the rest of his House are whole.~~ Book EII.II:
41   ExI|        might harm you.~All your House asks it, nor can you deny~
42   ExI|     able to bring shame on your House.~May the sanctuaries of
43   ExI|        Since I’ve honoured your House from my earliest years,~
44   ExI|   deities have entered a single house. ~Happy are those who see
45 ExIII|     esteem you, to adorn ~their house no less with virtue than
46 ExIII|          faces,~when Augustus’s house, to be revered as the Capitol,~
47 ExIII|  personal needs.~When the whole House is filled with revered senators,~
48 ExIII|     added to your natal line, a house and name~that would perish
49 ExIII|    everyone with joy.~While the house, the children, their mother
50 ExIII|   dipped in bitter poison:~Your house, at least, is used to helping
51  ExIV|         familiar friend of your house, by frequent custom,~I’m
52  ExIV|       by the whole senate,~your house scarcely big enough for
53  ExIV|    imperial city.~Then Pompey’s house should be your first objective:~
54  ExIV|         the anger of the sacred house be lessened. ~O, I can swear
55  ExIV|        honour witnessed by your house.~Though the honour’s great,
56  ExIV|    become a god.~So none of his House are absent, Drusus and Germanicus,~
57  ExIV|         in Macedonia,~like your house next to the Forum of Augustus,~
58  IBIS|         can be no peace in your house.~Cruel whips, and twining
59  IBIS|        never to return from the house of the dark one:~like those
60  IBIS|      you be buried in a falling house, like the offspring~of Aleus,
61   Ind|         46 The doorposts of his house on the Palatine were hung
62   Ind|        the younger women of the house, and granddaughters include
63   Ind|         members of the Imperial house. ~Book EI.IV:1-58 Here Augustus
64   Ind|        EIV.XV:1-42 The Imperial House.~ ~Calamis, Calamus~An Athenian
65   Ind|         Book TI.III:1-46 Ovid’s house is located near the Capitol.~
66   Ind|        from the roof of Circe’s house, the morning after a heavy
67   Ind|       wife was a bride from the House of the Fabii but it is not
68   Ind|        She was a bride from the house of Paullus Fabius. The lines
69   Ind|          public areas etc. Each house had a Lararium where the
70   Ind|    flows from the depths of the House of Sleep, and induces drowsiness
71   Ind|        a relative of the Fabian house, and editors have dubbed
72   Ind|         Paullus, and the Fabian House, and Ovid’s realisation
73   Ind|     senatorial province. Ovid’s house was situated near the Capitoline
74   Ind|        a relative of the Fabian house, and editors have dubbed
75   Ind|       Augustus lived there in a house that had belonged to the
76   Ind|       Genius of the head of the house and represented as a serpent,
77   Ind|        Etruscan guardian of the house) and Penates. At meals they
78   Ind|        ancestress to the Julian House.~Book TI.II:1-74 Friendly
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