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Alphabetical [« »] song-birds 1 songs 13 sonnets 2 sons 38 soon 14 sooner 13 soothes 1 | Frequency [« »] 38 prayers 38 savage 38 second 38 sons 38 speak 38 stars 38 troubles | Publius Ovidius Naso Poems from Exile Concordances sons |
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1 T-II| girls, wives, husbands, ~sons, indeed most of the Senate 2 T-V| dance at the death of his sons,~and Niobe, bereaved, to 3 ExII| as that which joined the sons of Atreus, or the Twins:~ 4 ExI| tongue lives in both you sons,~and that asset has found 5 ExI| granddaughters,~the granddaughter’s sons, and the rest of his House 6 ExI| Daphnian laurel.~His loyal sons worthy of their father and 7 ExI| your grandsons and their sons,~your good daughters-in 8 ExIII| unconquered courage of your sons,~has needed you to prepare 9 ExIV| husband is unclear:~and two sons, a powerful help to their 10 ExIV| for your art: and may~his sons, who you’ve been given to 11 IBIS| the event:~like the two sons of Phineus, from whom he 12 Ind| Egypt and Arabia. His fifty sons married the Danaides, the 13 Ind| Danaus. Learning of his sons’ fate at the hands of the 14 Ind| Agamemnon.~Book EI.VII:1-70 His sons Agamemnon and Menelaus.~ ~ 15 Ind| are Germanicus’s three sons by Agrippina (Caligula, 16 Ind| education of Germanicus’s sons (Nero and Drusus III). Possibly 17 Ind| tutelage of Germanicus’s sons mentioned.~Book EIV.XVI: 18 Ind| bimembres.~They were the sons of Ixion, and a cloud, in 19 Ind| oracle that he would have no sons but that his grandson would 20 Ind| their cousins, the fifty sons of Aegyptus, and, with one 21 Ind| Antiope was rescued by her sons Amphion and Zethus who tied 22 Ind| Gigantes, Giants~Monsters, sons of Tartarus and Earth, with 23 Ind| chased away by the winged sons of Boreas. An alternative 24 Ind| Medea then killed her own sons by Jason, and fled his wrath. 25 Ind| by human sacrifice. His sons offered Zeus, disguised 26 Ind| then sacrificed her own sons, before fleeing to Athens 27 Ind| fourteen children. Her seven sons were killed by Apollo and 28 Ind| Lucius (Julia the Elder’s sons by Tiberius) were already 29 Ind| tunica laticlavia for the sons of senators and equites 30 Ind| a triumph.~ ~Palicus~The sons of Jupiter and the nymph 31 Ind| Harpies. Calais and Zetes, the sons of Boreas, and his brothers-in-law, 32 Ind| Golden Fleece. The two winged sons chased the Harpies to the 33 Ind| Polyphemus~One of the Cyclopes, sons of Neptune, one-eyed giants 34 Ind| XII:1-68 The death of his sons.~ ~Priapus~The Pan of Mysia 35 Ind| Mother Earth persuaded her sons to attack Uranus, and depose 36 Ind| was deposed by his three sons Jupiter, Neptune and Pluto 37 Ind| after Medea sacrificed her sons on the altar of Jupiter, 38 Ind| EII.II:75-126 Tiberius’s sons Germanicus (adopted) and