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Alphabetical [« »] shine 5 shines 1 shining 10 ship 55 ships 14 shipwreck 10 shipwrecked 9 | Frequency [« »] 55 465 55 540 55 horses 55 ship 54 54 54 left 54 maximus | Publius Ovidius Naso Poems from Exile Concordances ship |
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1 T-I| ribs of our storm-tossed ship,~don’t, I beg you, add to 2 T-I| that I didn’t allow her to ship with me,~or I, poor wretch, 3 T-I| let your powers favour the ship:~or if you hate me deeply, 4 T-I| little weight to your fleeing ship.~Caesar’s anger drives you 5 T-I| charioteer has given the ship her head,~where the wave’ 6 T-I| to mine. ~Still, if this ship were borne on a favourable 7 T-I| will be,~I pray, and the ship’s name’s from her painted 8 T-I| with gentle powers!~One ship’s ready to thread the narrow 9 T-I| and boarded the second ship of my exile’s path.~I marvel 10 T-I| Often the sea broke over the ship: still I spun~my verse, 11 T-II| the arena,~and the beached ship returns to the surging sea.~ 12 T-II| one storm blast drowns~the ship, so many times unharmed, 13 T-III| embraced me more closely~if my ship had been running, by chance, 14 T-III| left,~in the Argo, that ship built with the protection~ 15 T-III| on a high hill saw Aeetes ship far-off,~and said: ‘A guest 16 T-IV| my traces, either aboard ship or on foot.~I pray that 17 T-IV| harbour~and a refuge to the ship blasted by lightning:~through 18 T-IV| own blood.~A fresh built ship does well in a furious storm:~ 19 T-V| time for me.~Do you abandon ship, Palinurus, in mid-ocean?~ 20 T-V| inappropriate,~don’t desert our ship in the midst of the sea.~~ 21 T-V| my wounds,~and the Greek ship battered by the waves of 22 T-V| had come before.~Still my ship was wrecked, but not drowned 23 T-V| inaction:~I’m raising sail on a ship that’s already under oars.~ 24 ExII| snow.~It’s gnawed at as a ship’s weakened by hidden molluscs:~ 25 ExII| whose leadership the sacred ship sailed~Colchian waters, 26 ExII| Strong though it may be, the ship that’s never hauled~from 27 ExII| fragile boat:~it was a solid ship that carried Aeson’s son.~ 28 ExI| make me afraid.~A Trojan ship of Aeneas’s welcomed Greek~ 29 ExI| wise. I admit it.~But my ship doesn’t sail through calm 30 ExI| the master of the swaying ship.~You too, studiously, make 31 ExI| would be wrong to abandon a ship in distress,~wrong to side 32 ExI| started, don’t desert the ship~at sea, defend me and your 33 ExIII| young men arrived on board a ship~with sails, and set their 34 ExIII| because Neptune wrecked his ship.~The heavenly powers, believe 35 ExIV| my verse.~As long as my ship rested on a solid keel, 36 ExIV| loose the cables,~so my ship can leave the waters of 37 ExIV| into the waters where my ship was wrecked?~But I’ve done 38 IBIS| snatched from the Ithacan ship:~like those consumed in 39 IBIS| deceptive sail of Theseus’s ship,~as the child, Astyanax, 40 IBIS| in the same way.~If your ship touches the Minoan sands, ~ 41 Ind| scattered his limbs behind their ship. King Aeetes following gathered 42 Ind| Ovid and Macer.~ ~Argo~The ship of Jason and the Argonauts, 43 Ind| Minerva. The first Greek ship to enter the Black Sea. 44 Ind| clashing rocks to guide the ship.~ ~Ariadne~A daughter of 45 Ind| by freeing the stranded ship containing the image of 46 Ind| Ulysses.~Book TI.X:1-50 The ship Ovid embarked on took its 47 Ind| Minerva’s painted helmet: the ship’s tutela, or protective 48 Ind| sacrifice of a lamb if the ship reaches Tomis safely (after 49 Ind| disembarked at Samothrace). The ship’s name was fitting since 50 Ind| the Argo, the first Greek ship to sail into the Black Sea, 51 Ind| Saronic Gulf. There he took ship (the Minerva?) to Samothrace 52 Ind| the northern Aegean. The ship continued to Tomis, but 53 Ind| Tomis, but he took another ship to Tempyra on the Thracian 54 Ind| clashing rocks to guide the ship.~ ~Pandion~A king of Athens, 55 Ind| scattered his limbs behind their ship. King Aeetes following gathered