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 1   T-I|    alive here at the end~of the earth, in a land that’s far away
 2   T-I|      reverse his wheeling team,~earth will bear stars, and skies
 3  T-II|       forces opposed to you.~By earth, by sea, by heaven’s third
 4  T-II|    excuse for sin~when the hard earth’s covered with Mars’s sand!~
 5  T-II|    predicts the triple death of earth, water, air,~yet wanton
 6 T-III|       been covered by my native earth?~If sentence might have
 7 T-III|        brother’s body under the earth, despite the king.~and,
 8 T-III|    falls to rise again from the earth he touched,~but poor Elpenor
 9 T-III|  Erymanthian Bear~imprisons me, earth gripped with freezing cold.~
10 T-III|         I am to the ends of the earth!~And my country’s far away,
11 T-III|        d see my country’s sweet earth,~and the faces in the house
12 T-III|      from here.~Sky, and water, earth and air dont suit me:~ah
13 T-III|     shows its icy face,~and the earth is white with marbled frost,~
14 T-III|        or fears him unseen:~the earth lies idle, abandoned to
15 T-III|      their tender tips from the earth.~Wherever the vine grows,
16 T-III|         farthest stretch of the earth,~Pontus, falsely named Euxine,
17  T-IV|      dark blood spurts over the earth, from the throat~of the
18  T-IV|     reaches~stands clear of the earth it never touches,~gaze at
19  T-IV|        ancestorstomb,~and the earth that bore me would have
20  T-IV|       is the region, nearly the earth’s remotest,~that men and
21  T-IV|         who have driven me~over earth and sea, and landed me in
22  T-IV|        I am, to the edge of the earth,~my anger will still reach
23  T-IV|     scatters sand,~and paws the earth, already, with its angry
24  T-IV|  prophecies,~I’ll not be yours, earth, though I die today.~Whether
25   T-V|       rule –~so may you live on earth, and heaven long for you,~
26   T-V|       day, or is covered by the earth,~swearing it on his own
27   T-V|        hero, at the ends of the earth ~perhaps, once spent his
28   T-V|         could be sadder on this earth,~if at the people, they
29   T-V|        for admiration, wherever Earth’s paths extend.~Do you see
30  ExII|         most just,~cause kindly earth to create nothing greater
31  ExII|         under his rule, may the earth stay under~a Caesar, passed
32  ExII|      not be covered by Scythian earth,~nor my ashes, ill-interred,
33  ExII|         world,~where the buried earth carries perpetual snowfall.~
34  ExII|         in body~by the stubborn earth – and what’s stronger than
35  ExII|        anger harmed me, at whom earth trembles~from the sun’s
36  ExII|       alone on the god-forsaken earth.~She lets the man digging
37  ExII| scattering seed in the furrowed earth.~I wouldnt hesitate to
38   ExI|       find a place, anywhere on earth,~that takes less delight
39   ExI|       even to exiles:~Black Sea earth is open to hostile neighbours.~
40   ExI|         of our age,~lord of the earth that you make your care.~
41   ExI|       from me, except my native earth.~Since I’m bereft of that
42   ExI|       greatest glory of Fundi’s earth.~ ~The End of Ex Ponto Book
43 ExIII|    horses were swallowed by the earth.~Ulysses would have been
44 ExIII|      being blind:~than whom the earth holds nothing more glorious,~
45 ExIII|        a hidden snake along the earth.~Your mind towers high above
46 ExIII|       wretchedly is like dying, earth delays ~me, and my destiny
47  ExIV|       can’t delight in renewing earth by cultivation,~though I’
48  ExIV|          for certain, since the earth’s now set beneath your gaze.~
49  IBIS|         see to it too,~that the earth nearest me acts as my witness.~
50  IBIS|       no need for lies.~Gods of earth and sea, who maintain the
51  IBIS|        weight with you:~and you earth itself, and the waves of
52  IBIS|        throat to my knives.~Let earth deny its fruits to you,
53  IBIS|    offer themselves to you,~nor earth or ocean grant you a way.~
54  IBIS|        deign to place me in the earth,~or give my corpse in vain
55  IBIS|        from you:~let the honest earth reject your hated corpse.
56  IBIS|        unsupported on the naked earth,~they propped his tender
57  IBIS|       sent bent pine-trees from earth to air,~to gaze at the Isthmus’
58  IBIS|      and buried under a pile of earth. ~Or like the infant Perseus,
59   Ind|       swallowed up alive by the earth.~Book EIII.1:1-66 Made more
60   Ind|       Lybia, son of Neptune and Earth, whom Hercules defeated
61   Ind|        in the underworld and on earth. Her most famous cult in
62   Ind|    voracious daughter of Mother Earth and Neptune, hurled into
63   Ind|         he was carrying fell to earth.~ ~Cotta Maximus~Marcus
64   Ind|        Mother, personifying the earth in its savage state, worshipped
65   Ind|     blighting the fruits of the earth. Zeus and Poseidon (or Apollo)
66   Ind|       and Diana the huntress on earth. (Skelton’s ‘Diana in the
67   Ind|        mother (or born from the Earth after Hephaestus the victim
68   Ind|  Monsters, sons of Tartarus and Earth, with many arms and serpent
69   Ind|        a giant, child of mother Earth, by lifting him from the
70   Ind|    Jupiter in order to save the earth from being consumed by fire.
71   Ind|        thunderbolt to avoid the earth being consumed.~ ~Phalaris~
72   Ind|       to be buried in Sarmatian earth.~Book EI.V:43- 86 Ibis:597-
73   Ind|     murex dyes.~ ~Saturn~Son of Earth and Heaven (Uranus) ruler
74   Ind|       in the Golden Age. Mother Earth persuaded her sons to attack
75   Ind|        to be buried in Scythian earth.~Book EI.III:1-48 The place
76   Ind|      Tityus~A giant, son of Ge (Earth) whose home was traditionally
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