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Alphabetical [« »] poeantian 2 poeas 3 poem 62 poems 23 poene 1 poet 150 poetess 5 | Frequency [« »] 23 modern 23 noted 23 painting 23 poems 23 remember 23 skill 23 star | Publius Ovidius Naso Poems from Exile Concordances poems |
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1 T-II| attack Troy again in my poems,~that fell before the power 2 T-II| he broadcast many love poems,~in which he confessed to 3 T-II| Hortensius’ and Servius’ poems are no less perverse.~Who’ 4 T-II| Misled by these I made poems, without gravity,~but a 5 T-II| licence to the mime?~Well my poems have often been danced to, 6 T-III| your names to be read in my poems.~Since it’s dangerous now, 7 T-III| teacher:~giving ear to the poems you had made,~causing you 8 T-III| to live in the city.~My poems were born of me, in the 9 T-V| prevented from composing poems.~I write, and burn the books 10 ExII| Pierian choir~so that the poems you read might gain acceptance.~ 11 ExI| As long as I undertake poems on humble themes~my talent’ 12 ExIV| give us all themes than poems:~even if you can’t abandon 13 ExIV| anxious lips.~Perhaps the poems I’ve made and sent off, 14 Ind| character in Virgil’s Bucolic poems.~Book TII:497-546 A character 15 Ind| Ovid addresses two of the poems.~Book EII.IV:1-34 Addressed 16 Ind| its consistency with other poems to Cotta (Ex Ponto I:V,IX 17 Ind| appropriate.~Dating of the Poems: references~Book TI.IV:1- 18 Ind| risen. This suggests the poems of Ex Ponto may not be in 19 Ind| his circle of friends, his poems to Corinna, his susceptible 20 Ind| character in Virgil’s Bucolic poems.~Book TII:497-546 A character 21 Ind| name before. Either the two poems are out of chronological 22 Ind| Plania) and Nemesis in his poems.~Book TII:421-470 Ovid paraphrases 23 Ind| well as epigrams and love poems in which he celebrated his