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 1  T-II|        wound and cure me,~and the Muse who stirred the anger also
 2  T-II|         Character~ ~But why is my Muse so wildly wanton,~why does
 3  T-II|             my life is modest, my Muse is playful –~and most of
 4  T-II|          did old Anacreon’s lyric Muse teach~but a mixture of love
 5  T-II|          who’s been ruined by his Muse – they picked on me.~~ Book
 6 T-III|         without real sin,~that my Muse was more wanton than my
 7  T-IV|         rocks to his singing.~The Muse helped me too, when I sailed
 8  T-IV|         my sentence!~Yet still my Muse suffers me to return to
 9  T-IV|          want. Sound the retreat, Muse,~while that man’s still
10  T-IV|       rites delighted me,~and the Muse was drawing me secretly
11  T-IV|          as I the elder,~since my Muse, Thalia, was not slow to
12  T-IV|        days,~is thanks to you, my Muse: you grant me solace,~you
13   T-V|         be better.~Ah, why was my Muse ever playful?~But I pay
14   T-V|          as you know yourself, my Muse isnt eager for applause.~
15   T-V|       eloquent books:~even now my Muse, though ordered to be silent,~
16   T-V|      confess the truth to you, my Muse~can’t be prevented from
17  ExII|           prevent it:~my obliging Muse comes against your will.~
18  ExII|         such things,~nor does the Muse come to the harsh Getae
19  ExII|        place be Rome.~My luckless Muse is happy with that theatre:~
20   ExI|          freshly made poem,~a new Muse was submitted to your criticism.~
21 ExIII|           against their verse! My Muse speaks only for herself.~
22 ExIII|          If I’d not sinned, if my Muse hadnt caused my exile,~
23 ExIII|        are the books,~such is the Muse, Maximus, that flourishes
24 ExIII|         If that’s the only way my Muse has sinned, that’s fine.~
25 ExIII|          s shaped for himself.~My Muse, also, is only too true
26  ExIV|        mine, has all vanished.~My Muse barely plays her part, when
27  ExIV|           never fail you,~and the Muse is bound up with Jupiter
28  ExIV|         you sing. ~And perhaps my Muse can be detected ~in her
29  ExIV|           not penned by my native Muse,~and the last page came
30  ExIV|      place beneath the sky~(if my Muse travels well beyond the
31  ExIV|           s lyre:~and Turranius’s Muse, the tragically shod:~and
32  ExIV|           not wrong to say so, my Muse’s ~bright name, she too
33  IBIS|        reached my fifties,~all my Muse’s poetry has been harmless:~
34   Ind|    contemporaries.~ ~Calliope~The Muse of epic poetry. The mother
35   Ind|           Book TII:547-578 Ovid’s Muse. Calliope often represents
36   Ind|           Muses, being the primal Muse.~Ibis:465-540 The mother
37   Ind|           Camena~A Roman term for Muse.~ ~Camerinus~An Augustan
38   Ind|         Julia the Younger and the Muse, I would suggest the speculation,
39   Ind|         harsh place to expect the Muse to visit.~Book EI.V:43-
40   Ind|     artistic skill, his personalMuse’. There is perhaps a hint
41   Ind|           here, that the helpfulMusemay have been a reallearned
42   Ind| adulterous lightness (why was ‘my Muse’ ‘playful’, iocosa, in Ars
43   Ind|        she ‘play around’) of his ‘Muse’, and his ‘Muse’ as a cause
44   Ind|           of his ‘Muse’, and his ‘Muse’ as a cause of exile. EIII.
45   Ind|           a slight hint of a real Muse and witness, behind the
46   Ind|           TII:361-420 Anacreon’s ‘Muse’.~Book TIII.II:1-30 Book
47   Ind|      family.~Book TV.VII:1-68 His Muse is not eager for applause,
48   Ind|         poetic work, the personal Muse, and a literary mistress.~
49   Ind|           Book EIII.VIII:1-24 The Muse of Scythia is a patron of
50   Ind|           The suggestion that the Muse is associated with Jupiter,
51   Ind|          s sister-in-law was his ‘Muse’.~ ~Myron~The sculptor of
52   Ind|           Orpheus by Calliope the Muse. ~ ~Oechalia~A city in Euboea.
53   Ind|          Oeagrus and Calliope the Muse. His lyre, given to him
54   Ind|       Sicily. Known as the ‘Tenth Muse.’ Her intense erotic relationships
55   Ind|            a Cretan.~ ~Thalia~The Muse of comedy and light verse,
56   Ind|         41-92 Book TV.IX:1-38 The Muse of Ovid’s early lighter
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