Work-Book

 1   T-I|       right to die in my native country.~Though you obey, book,
 2   T-I|       could I do? Sweet love of country held me,~but this was the
 3   T-I|        drives you to leave your country,~loyalty orders me. Loyalty
 4  T-II|       the name of Roman,~by our country, of which I was just now
 5  T-II|         Spare me, father of the country, dont take away~all hope
 6  T-II|     virtuous work to tell one’s country’s tale.~Lastly, since you’
 7 T-III|      over,~and I’ve reached the country of my punishment,~only grieving
 8 T-III|       ends of the earth!~And my country’s far away, my dear wife’
 9 T-III|      distant place:~call this a country too near Rome for me.~~
10 T-III|        and mind.~Look at me, my country lost, you two, and my home,~
11 T-III|        and suddenly, I’d see my country’s sweet earth,~and the faces
12 T-III|         the scant wealth of the country, herds~and creaking carts,
13 T-III|    deprived~of my dear wife, my country, those I love:~if I endured
14 T-III|    followed me beyond my native country,~and there, where you first
15  T-IV|      while I’ll be in my native country.~Yet the happy people will
16  T-IV|       prince.~The Father of the Country himself – and who is milder~
17  T-IV| murderous rites,~if a barbarian country can be Ovid’s land.~O let
18  T-IV|       and at peace in my native country.~Youth once hoped for such
19  T-IV|        punishment is to lose my country.~My country: I even hope
20  T-IV|       is to lose my country.~My country: I even hope for that from
21   T-V|         if you restore me to my country, and my dear wife,~my face
22   T-V|        O glory, O symbol of the country that prospers~through you,
23   T-V|         Euryalus.~He misses his country and the many things ~in
24   T-V|         the many things ~in his country whose absence he feels, ~
25   T-V|      home, her daughter and her country~- enough that they’ve been
26   T-V|        have been absent from my country already~for as long as the
27   T-V|     deprived of the sight of my country, and of you,~my friends:
28   T-V| situation.~If I could forget my country, and forget you,~if all
29  ExII|        Indeed one’s father of a country, the other only of a hero. ~~
30  ExII|       defences,~then love of my country, stronger than all reason,~
31  ExII|      Aristides, driven from his country, fled to Sparta:~of the
32  ExII|         I forget the ways of my country and, drawn~to the skills
33  ExII|    landscapes of the Paelignian country,~or those gardens sited
34  ExII|    Appian Way leads you ~to the country on flashing wheels heading
35  ExII|        opportunity in the Getic country.~My strength’s not wasted
36   ExI|       whole world apart from my country,~I can’t throw myself before
37   ExI|         the borders of your own country:~The furthest lands, the
38   ExI|        that I inhabit part of a country near to yours,~kindest of
39   ExI|        because he plans for his country so well,~that we ask Caesar
40 ExIII|    living on in this barbarian ~country, to be buried in the soil
41 ExIII|     land (I’m not ashamed of my country):~it’s people worship a
42 ExIII|         the name ~of her native country, found them to be men of
43 ExIII|    preferred I leave you and my country,~to live among the uncivilised
44  ExIV|      See how I, bereft of home, country, and the sight~of my own,
45  ExIV|        observe, in person, what country I’m stuck in, and you~will
46  ExIV|          at the last,~and if my country’s barred to such a wretch,
47  ExIV|        often criticise your own country.~Hesiod, ancient farmer,
48  ExIV|    reviling one exiled from his country,~stop scattering my ashes
49  IBIS|        I would say, in Cilician country,~nor winter shudder as much
50  IBIS|        brooding lioness of your country, attack you~in your native
51   Ind|    pater patriae: Father of the Country on 2nd February 2BC.~Book
52   Ind|   treated as the saviour of the country. The oak was sacred to Jupiter
53   Ind|      serpent’s tail. Its native country is Lycia (or Caria) in Asia
54   Ind|     Book XI:573-649 where their country is the home of Somnus, Sleep.~ ~
55   Ind|      Latium~Book EIV.XVI:1-52 A country in Central Italy, containing
56   Ind|        over the betrayal of her country for him.( See Gustave Moreau’
57   Ind|    pater patriae: Father of the Country for Augustus. Noted for
58   Ind|       Mysians~The people of the country of Mysia in Asia Minor containing
59   Ind|        a mountain in her native country of Lydia where she weeps
60   Ind|      its king, Ovid implies the country is too barbarous for good
61   Ind|      wrote a poem in Getic. The country round Tomis is flat and
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License