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 1   T-I|         noisy funeral.~Women and men, children too, cried at
 2   T-I|          taken.~Now the cries of men and dogs grew silent:~the
 3   T-I|          deceptions of waves and men,~and sword and sea double
 4  T-II|   punishment enough?~Poetry made men and women want to know me,~
 5  T-II|        his lightning, every time men sinned,~it wouldnt be long
 6  T-II|       supported you, greatest of men,~and what I could be alone,
 7  T-II|          with records of learned men,~and are open to the public
 8  T-II|       names of well-known living men.~I confess I’d no fear that
 9 T-III|        naked sword:~and all that men of old and new times thought,~
10 T-III|        and blows away the roofs.~Men keep out the dreadful cold
11 T-III|         lands far and wide.~Some men flee: and, with their fields
12 T-III|        circling hoops:~now young men, when they’re slick with
13 T-III|     revered supporter of learned men,~what are you doing, to
14  T-IV|        lotus-flowers, Odysseus’s men tasted,~gave pleasure by
15  T-IV|         shaggy hair,~trapped our men in a treacherous place.~
16  T-IV|       art of medicine is idle if men are well.~The virtue that’
17  T-IV|       Axenus, ‘inhospitable’, by men of old,~since its waters
18  T-IV|          sea.~Those you hear of, men delighting in human blood,~
19  T-IV|       the earth’s remotest,~that men and gods shun, that’s nearest
20  T-IV|         and enjoyed the sight of men, and the city, again.~So,
21  T-IV|       our father’s care, went to men distinguished in the city’
22   T-V|        noble writings of ancient men,~I still think the recent
23   T-V|         gift received.~When most men had a horror of my downfall,~
24  ExII|         compare myself with such men:~still, I’ve not employed
25  ExII|        or King Diomedes who made men food for horses,~but to
26   ExI|    barbarian towns with defeated men,~rivers, mountains and battles
27   ExI|          Propitious~ ~Kindest of men, allow my tears an audience,
28   ExI|        portraits art created,~so men might know the gods the
29 ExIII| unwilling hands:~until two young men arrived on board a ship~
30 ExIII|        country, found them to be men of her own city.~“Let one
31 ExIII|   tree-trunk stand above chained men:~and towns in ivory be circled
32 ExIII|  Phalaris who used to incinerate men in his bronze bull.~Stop
33  ExIV|       fitting for the leaders of men~than the tribute rendered
34  ExIV|         among you~shows how kind men of Greek extraction are.~
35  IBIS|         yet let no one pity:~let men and women take delight in
36  IBIS|        flames that snatch at all men, flee from you:~let the
37  IBIS|       May you die like the young men of Pisa, whose face ~and
38  IBIS|           to the high pyre, aged men, and then women:~like those
39  IBIS|        Diana:~like the terrified men that ravening Scylla, and~
40  IBIS|          had died:~or the strong men crushed in that Antaeus’
41  IBIS|        head eaten by your fellow men,~or may you give your burning
42  IBIS|        where Socrates, wisest of men,~accused by Anytus, once
43   Ind|       Thebes. The Sparti or sown men were born from the soil,
44   Ind|    Pontus.~Ibis:365-412 Ulyssesmen caught in the whirlpool.~ ~
45   Ind|        She transformed Ulysses’s men into beasts. Mercury gave
46   Ind|        married her and freed his men, staying for a year on her
47   Ind|          witch able to transform men into beasts.~ ~Circus Maximus~
48   Ind|       The Dulichians, Odysseus’s men, were drugged by the food
49   Ind|      with the Senate. One of the men sent broke his oath to return,
50   Ind|         ate several of Ulysses’s men. Traditionally located in
51   Ind|        365-412 Attacked Ulyssesmen.~ ~Lampsacus~A Greek town
52   Ind|        of women to that of young men. He was killed by the Maenads
53   Ind|         Blinded by Ulysses whose men he had attacked and some
54   Ind|           She threatened Ulysses men and destroyed six of them,
55   Ind|        412 She attacked Ulyssesmen.~ ~Scylla (2)~The daughter
56   Ind|          Curetes were the ‘young men with shaved hair’ the devotees
57   Ind|         1-34 They lured Ulyssesmen with their singing.~ ~Sisenna~
58   Ind|   acclaimed him as the wisest of men, which he took to mean that
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