Work-Book

 1   T-I|       kind to me now~for you to take account of any praise.~Secure,
 2   T-I|  whether to use~oars or breeze: take advice from the time and
 3   T-I|    grudged, over my life:~he’ll take away what he’s given, when
 4   T-I|      for all time.~And though I take up the shield too late,
 5   T-I|      too, the far off land will take me:~my going will add little
 6   T-I|  likeness, an image of my face,~take the ivy, Bacchus’s crown,
 7   T-I|     Bistonian waters.~Though we take different routes, let the
 8  T-II|          only now is it banned.~Take my work away, and you take
 9  T-II|      Take my work away, and you take the accusation~against me
10  T-II|  enriched by wealth ~or honours take up weapons against you:~
11  T-II|    father of the country, dont take away~all hope of placating
12  T-II|   whatever she touches.~Let her take the Annals – nothing’s coarser
13  T-II|     made Ilia pregnant.~Let her take Lucretius, she’ll ask straight
14 T-III|         hands, if it’s allowed, take up~my poetry, dismayed by
15 T-III|        with noiseless step~will take possession of all your beauty:~
16 T-III|   already broken.~It’s brave to take citadels and standing walls:~
17 T-III|  rescind the charge against me,~take your unfeeling hands from
18 T-III|        thought it possible,~you take the greatest of interest
19  T-IV|       you too, Rome, denied me, take them ~in good part, songs
20  T-IV|        Age~ ~My temples already take on the colour of swan’s
21   T-V|         on the Sarmatian shore,~take care my funeral will not
22   T-V|         I too, if it’s right to take the gods as examples,~am
23   T-V|         still floats.~He didnt take my life, my wealth, my civil
24   T-V|      strength remains.~Yet if I take up a writing tablet, as
25   T-V|     giving you wealth:~the rich take nothing to the ancestral
26  ExII|       Roman language,~in mercy, take up the advocacy of this
27  ExII|       become a good one ~if you take it, just speak kind words
28  ExII|       his naked sword~shouldnt take the life granted me by a
29  ExII|         husband’s funeral might take place nearer home.~~ Book
30  ExII|         be to you.~Maximus will take the trouble: such is his
31  ExII|      with my sad life,~Maximus: take care that they were not
32   ExI|       are hurt.~But even if you take up arms and threaten me~
33   ExI|      ambassador for my request, take up my cause:~though no case
34   ExI|       affection,~in these he’ll take second place to no man.~
35   ExI|      what’s profitable is dear: take hope of gain ~from a greedy
36   ExI|        so devoid of brightness.~Take care that this faith of
37   ExI|       It’s fitting for a man to take delight in saving man,~and
38   ExI|       when events demand it,~to take up arms and stain your hands
39   ExI|         lost in idle sleep,~you take the Musespath to the bright
40 ExIII|       the model of a good wife.~Take care you dont slip from
41 ExIII|       put off your attempt,~and take care not to ruin my chances
42 ExIII| strengthened by your sincerity:~take that away and I’d think
43 ExIII|         s more pleasing.~And to take the fruit we’ve pulled from
44 ExIII|        prohibited by fate,~then take from me, Maximus, this unprofitable
45 ExIII|        poor,~still I beg you to take pleasure in their being
46  ExIV|        if it’s right to say it, take on existence~through poetry,
47  ExIV|      people,~allow my letter to take its master’s place,~and
48  ExIV|       still to stay here.~Dont take my word for this: there
49  ExIV|          not without reason you take the gentle name of Father.~~
50  ExIV|       others, whose names would take too long ~to mention, whose
51  IBIS|        forces my novice hand to take up weapons.~He wont let
52  IBIS|       too, in the meantime, can take the name of Ibis:~and as
53  IBIS|         pity:~let men and women take delight in your adversity.~
54  IBIS|     that comes too slow for me,~take away this life, often sought
55  IBIS|    ancients to be at peace.~You take Sisyphus’s place: he’ll
56  IBIS|       walls, may a simple spear take your life. ~Last, I pray
57   Ind|     through it, leaving Ovid to take his alternative route to
58   Ind|         cries of animadvertite: take note.~Book EI.II:53-100
59   Ind|       Attica. Ceres sent him to take the gift of her crops to
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