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 1   T-I|        of Tomis in their unknown world.~If you love me, hold back
 2   T-I|          but Rome, that sees the world from her seven hills,~Rome,
 3  T-II|        thundered, and scared the world with noise,~he scatters
 4  T-II|        gods,~it’s right the wide world owns nothing greater than
 5  T-II|          is great throughout the world,~and the cultured crowd
 6  T-II|         so as you gaze round the world that depends on you,~inferior
 7  T-II|          since you’ve filled the world with deeds,~some part of
 8  T-II|        your eyes, that the whole world employs,~you’ve calmly watched
 9  T-II|          having started from the world’s ~first origin, I bring
10 T-III|      land and sea from a distant world.’~He obeyed, and guiding
11 T-III|         the peace it’s given the world?~Does it possess everlasting
12 T-III|          away, and hidden at the world’s end,~the cause of whose
13 T-III|         which is the life of the world:~I’ve said nothing: a pure
14 T-III|       from her hills, on all the world.~You also: may a happier
15 T-III|      This then, though the great world stretches wide,~is the place
16 T-III|      house, now, in the Scythian world?~Does my sentence assign
17 T-III|         farthest land of the icy world?~I suppose you expect the
18 T-III|      comes to you from a distant world.~Whoever reads it - if anyone
19  T-IV|          driven through the wide world,~a wretch who sought the
20  T-IV| submitted, ~like the rest of the world, on bended knee, to the
21  T-IV|        their house will rule the world for ever:~and Livia, with
22  T-IV|       from Italy~to this distant world, to tell me what I long
23  T-IV|          because the king of the world quelled fire with fire.~
24  T-IV|          gracious man in all the world?~Has his mercy been quenched
25  T-IV|          be known throughout the world.~What I relate will travel
26   T-V|       most alien in all~the wide world, a place encircled by cruel
27   T-V|        you, O hero equal to that world you rule –~so may you live
28   T-V|      odium,~or because the whole world from dawn to dusk~contains
29  ExII|       the furthest shores of the world,~where the buried earth
30  ExII|   contend in fame with a distant world?~What fate has granted me,
31  ExII|       the furthest limits of the world?~May the gods will that
32  ExII|          who are masters of this world.~Believe me, though it’s
33  ExII|      anoint your body,~the whole world separates me from your tomb.~
34   ExI|      vast walls compass the wide world,~scarcely had room to hold
35   ExI|          against the gods of the world,~nor as the rash hand of
36   ExI|        alters the empire and the world,~ask that I might not be
37   ExI|      strength.~Since I’m a whole world apart from my country,~I
38   ExI|       who holds the reins of the world, succeed:~which is the people’
39   ExI|         s no harsher race in the world than the Getae,~yet even
40   ExI|  furthest lands, the ends of the world, hold me.~Caesar, your laurel
41   ExI|        in virtues than ~the vast world, reign in your justified
42   ExI|          re separated by a whole world’s ~width, you can still
43  ExIV|         all the countries of the world obeyed,~ended by needing
44  ExIV|      mindless error:~he left the world, and my hopes, bereft together.~
45  ExIV|         that passes in the whole world is hidden.~Caesar, received
46  ExIV|          Danube,~or wherever the world holds that’s deeper than
47   Ind|     ritual of the rebirth of the world from winter was enacted.
48   Ind|       central point of the known world. It continued as a shrine,
49   Ind|       widely through the ancient world reaching Athens in 420BC
50   Ind|          from Hades to the upper world.~He fought with Acheloüs
51   Ind|         through the Graeco-Roman world as far as the Rhine. Isis
52   Ind|        Jupiter, the ruler of the world mirrors the ruler of the
53   Ind|       great flood to cleanse the world. The father of Callisto
54   Ind|        for the gods of the lower world and later for the shades
55   Ind|       till she reaches the upper world, he faltered, and she was
56   Ind|      Zeus, and released into the world by a blow from Haephaestus’
57   Ind|        and she vowed to tell the world of his crime. He severed
58   Ind|        people, in their ‘unknown world’.~Book TI.X:1-50 The Minerva
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