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 1   T-I|            accusers,~or because the poem was rough and still unfinished.~
 2  T-II|         charges, carmen et error, a poem and an error,~ruined me,
 3  T-II|        adultery, by means of a vile poem.~So, it’s possible somehow
 4  T-II|             my ‘Art’.~I confess the poem was written without a serious ~
 5  T-II|          how to do wrong from every poem.~If she’s partial to what’
 6  T-II|             harmed by every sort of poem.~Yet every book’s not guilty
 7  T-II|             you.~And I gave a royal poem to the tragic stage,~in
 8 T-III|            my verse, excepting that poem~about the ‘Art’, that did
 9   ExI|          listened to a freshly made poem,~a new Muse was submitted
10   ExI|             To Salanus: An Abortive Poem~ ~I send words composed
11 ExIII|           also ensured by a foolish poem~that you wouldnt be inexperienced
12 ExIII|             IV:1-56 To Rufinus: His Poem On The ‘Triumph’~ ~Ovid
13 ExIII|             your friends a new made poem,~or, as you often used to,
14 ExIII|               Ovid sends this brief poem from the Euxine Sea to his ~
15  ExIV|     Dilatoriness~ ~Pompey, accept a poem composed by one~who’s indebted
16  ExIV|      misfortunes:~or that writing a poem you can’t read to anyone~
17  ExIV| Two-tick-a-nus.~Nor can you enter a poem disguised as Tutti-car-nus,~
18  ExIV|             who gave Latium a royal poem,~and tasteful Numa, along
19  IBIS|           like him I’ve involved my poem with hidden matters:~I’ve
20   Ind|            by Sisenna.~ ~Ars~Ovid’s poem Ars Amatoria (The Art of
21   Ind|            Sea region in 8AD for ‘a poem and a mistake’ (carmen et
22   Ind|               carmen et error). The poem probably the Ars Amatoria,
23   Ind|            is the occasion for this poem. He was born prematurely,
24   Ind|             Ibis:41-104 Ovid used a poem of Callimachus as a model
25   Ind|      possibly the addressee of this poem based on the carissime in
26   Ind|            Book TIII.V:1-56 A third poem addressed to Carus based
27   Ind|    shipwreck imagery earlier in the poem.~Book EII.II:75-126 Their
28   Ind|        court.)~Book TIV.V:1-34 This poem probably addressed to Cotta,
29   Ind|            content of the preceding poem, probably addressed to Messalinus.~
30   Ind|         suggests that as above this poem may be to Cotta.~Book EI.
31   Ind|               Book EII.IX:1-38 This poem addressed to him explicitly.~ ~
32   Ind|             XI:1. (See also Rilke’s poem, ‘Orpheus, Eurydice, Hermes’,
33   Ind|      Tiberius. ~Book EI.X:1-44 This poem addressed to him explicitly. ~
34   Ind|            appear to have written a poem about it before his own
35   Ind|          EIV.XIII:1-50 Ovid wrote a poem in Getic.~Book EIV.XIV:1-
36   Ind|            have intended to write a poem about the war. He appears
37   Ind|           10. ~Book EI.VI:1-54 This poem addressed to him explicitly.~
38   Ind|           Book EII.VI:1-38 A second poem explicitly addressed to
39   Ind|           Augustan poet who wrote a poem on hunting Cynegetica, and
40   Ind|          curse-poem Ibis based on a poem of Callimachus’s. TIV.IX
41   Ind|           Icaria. ( See W H Auden’s poem ‘Musée des Beaux Artsreferring
42   Ind|           drowned. The subject of a poem by Musaeus (5th century
43   Ind|       Philadelphus. His only extant poem Cassandra or Alexandra,
44   Ind|               Book TIV.IV:1-42 This poem addressed to him. It is
45   Ind|           Book EI.VII:1-70 A second poem addressed to him, playing
46   Ind|            Book EII.II:1-38 A third poem addressed to him, focusing
47   Ind|     reference to him, assuming this poem is addressed to Messalinus.~
48   Ind|           Ibis:465-540 Subject of a poem by Cinna.~ ~Myrtilus~Ibis:
49   Ind|        Sonnets to Orpheus – and his Poem - Orpheus, Eurydice and
50   Ind|      promoting adultery through the poem (Ars Amatoria) suggests
51   Ind|             and given the preceding poem that covers two full summers
52   Ind|            56 This and the previous poem probably addressed to ‘Carus’
53   Ind|             Book TIII.XIV:1-52 This poem is probably addressed to
54   Ind|          Phyllis (2)~The title of a poem by Tuscus.~Book EIV.XVI:
55   Ind|    shipwreck imagery earlier in the poem.~ ~Polymestor~Ibis:251-310
56   Ind|           in 21AD for having read a poem to ladies lamenting the
57   Ind|          some of Ovid’s Heroides, a poem on the calendar (perhaps)
58   Ind|            reconcile with the later poem’s statement that Ovid has
59   Ind|      Severus.~Book EIV.II:1-50 This poem explicitly addressed to
60   Ind|            the language and wrote a poem in Getic. The country round
61   Ind|           the delta, and possibly a poem by Sabinus on its capture
62   Ind|           EIV.XVI:1-52 Subject of a poem by one of Ovid’s lesser
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