Work-Book

 1   T-I| regarding time.~Fine-spun verses come from a tranquil mind:~my
 2   T-I|      mighty city~dont think you come as a stranger to the crowd.~
 3   T-I|       bitter trouble,~would have come into my wealth, if you’d
 4   T-I| completely,~or were so afraid to come near my disaster, cruel
 5  T-II|        unimaginable ways:~you’ll come upon praise of your name
 6  T-II|          in Jove’s shrine, it’ll come to her,~shrined, how many
 7 T-III|        Book Arrives in Rome~ ~‘I come in fear, an exile’s book,
 8 T-III|     follow now, though, weary, I come~by land and sea from a distant
 9 T-III|         in sickness now thoughts come to me, of what’s not here.~
10 T-III|        let someone say my lady’s come, I’ll rise,~hope of you
11 T-III|      doing when she knows you’ve come~she’ll stop, and ask you
12 T-III|          Italy,~rare for them to come to this harbourless coast.~
13  T-IV|          whenever.~That day will come: I’ll lay aside my gloom,~
14  T-IV|          forget me,~does anguish come, and the night seem endless,~
15  T-IV|      myself, ~ah, how close I’ve come to revealing your name!~
16  T-IV|         Already, white hairs had come, driving away ~my best years,
17  T-IV|         you grant me solace,~you come as a rest from, and a cure
18   T-V|            A letter of Ovid’s, I come from the Euxine shore,~wearied
19   T-V|         the hour of my death had come before.~Still my ship was
20  ExII|      Perhaps you’ll ask why they come, while they’re a novelty.~
21  ExII|        Phrygian boxwood pipe, ~I come bearing the sacred names
22  ExII|        things,~nor does the Muse come to the harsh Getae when
23  ExII|        loyalty.~Yet no occasions come more frequently to mind~
24  ExII|        used to promise that he’d come to me even here~but only
25  ExII|       rare spirit,~that those to come may read your name, Celsus.~
26  ExII|     passion:~she doesnt usually come to a sorrowful bed.~The
27   ExI|       your worth.~I pray it will come about: a poet’s oracle’s
28   ExI|          both my prophecies have come true.~~ Book EII.II:1-38
29   ExI|         any chance that work has come to your notice,~I ask that
30   ExI|        to be admired by those to come,~for whom the whole theatre
31   ExI|         me in my exile.~I didnt come to Pontus, guilty of murder,~
32   ExI|    laughter.~When these thoughts come to you, though I’m absent,~
33   ExI|   present though absent,~and you come, at my command, from mid-city
34   ExI|         remember you.~I’d sooner come to forget my own name,~than
35 ExIII|    enemies and snow,~will a time come when Ovid is ordered away~
36 ExIII|         people. What city do you come from?~What journey do you
37 ExIII|          and a gentler hour will come, at your prayer.~Dont be
38 ExIII|      though searched for, hardly come to mind,~and delight in
39 ExIII|    prophecy I speak of things to come,~prove my words, I pray,
40  ExIV|       fickleness is revealed.~Or come, tell me about some resentment
41  ExIV|         my ears:~‘Lo, I, Rumour, come to you with glad tidings,~
42  ExIV|        the gods allow my name to come to you sometimes,~when you’
43  ExIV|        letter you’re reading has come to you~from that land where
44  ExIV|          venom.~May your enemies come to know how fierce you are~
45  ExIV|           The Rivers~ ~Those who come from Italy say you barely
46  IBIS|       torment it first.~Let this come to pass. Just now, himself,
47   Ind|         a more lenient Caesar to come! He acknowledges that his
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