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Alphabetical [« »] ernle 3 erotic 12 eroticism 2 error 51 errors 2 errs 1 erupting 1 | Frequency [« »] 52 punishment 51 34 51 enemy 51 error 51 given 51 live 51 north | Publius Ovidius Naso Poems from Exile Concordances error |
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1 T-I| Ah, if you know it, if my error has misled me,~if my thought 2 T-I| explain to that man-god what error misled me,~so that he doesn’ 3 T-II| that day, when my unlucky error misled me,~my house, humble, 4 T-II| 252 His Plea: ‘Carmen et Error’~ ~Though two charges, carmen 5 T-II| Though two charges, carmen et error, a poem and an error,~ruined 6 T-II| et error, a poem and an error,~ruined me, I must be silent 7 T-III| I learnt its owner, ‘No error there,’ I said,~this is 8 T-III| nothing that he did, but in an error.~Ah me! I dread the place, 9 T-III| Book TIII.V:1-56 His Error and its Nature~ ~My friendship 10 T-III| one of my offences was an error.~So hope remains that he 11 T-III| Book TIII.VI:1-38 His Error: The Fatal Evil~ ~Dearest 12 T-III| wickedness in my heart,~an error was the cause of my offence.~ 13 T-III| you might think of as an error not a sin,~then, as a fugitive – 14 T-IV| shores.~She knows too the error that misled me, when I was 15 T-IV| known to you.~Either fear or error harmed me, above all error.~ 16 T-IV| error harmed me, above all error.~Ah! Let me not remember 17 T-IV| not been forfeit, for my error?~I must spend it far from 18 T-IV| the exile decreed was an error not a crime.~Let this suffice 19 ExII| happened should be called an error, not a crime.~or is every 20 ExII| not a crime.~or is every error involving the great gods 21 ExI| 1-38 To Messalinus: His Error~ ~He who honoured your House 22 ExI| actions~given the source of my error, or whether it’s better~ 23 ExI| speak your words as if no error ever misled me,~so that 24 ExI| you groaned aloud at my error.~Then your letters began 25 ExI| could be buried if my first error were forgiven, ~you think 26 ExI| wolf, avoiding true help in error.~The wounded limb shrinks 27 ExIII| crime under the guise of error,~your judge’s anger was 28 ExIV| your name in the wax!~The error of such mistakes itself 29 ExIV| beginning to forgive my mindless error:~he left the world, and 30 ExIV| my morals,~ignore my one error, alas, and they’re spotless.~ 31 ExIV| more ~a confirmation of my error, or a remedy for it.~I don’ 32 Ind| alone seems to have been his error. ~Ibis:465-540 Torn apart 33 Ind| and a mistake’ (carmen et error). The poem probably the 34 Ind| the distaste for Ovid’s error at court.)~Book TIV.V:1- 35 Ind| and so associated with his error. Again TV:1-48, and EIII: 36 Ind| His Crime, ‘Carmen et error’: references: ~Book TI.I: 37 Ind| implication is that Ovid’s error might have been considered 38 Ind| 70 Book EII.II:1-38 His error is a fault (culpa) rather 39 Ind| criminal intent (facinus). An error has misled him. He was stupid ( 40 Ind| Augustus and claims his error involved naivety, rather 41 Ind| 77-120 Ovid claims his ‘error’ was to have seen something, 42 Ind| TII:207-252 The ‘carmen et error’ passage. The specific charge 43 Ind| have been involved in the error. (This author favours the 44 Ind| one of his offences was an error.~Book TIII.VI:1-38 Ovid 45 Ind| that what led up to the error which ruined him was a ‘ 46 Ind| cause of his ruin was an error, that is is a long tale 47 Ind| Ovid seems to preclude his error having been any kind of 48 Ind| obvious successor? Was the error (for example if it concerned 49 Ind| based on the nature of his error, and Augustus’s reputation 50 Ind| influence, implies that the error was more serious a crime 51 Ind| the banned book, that the error should not be explained,