Work-Book

 1 T-III|      and carve these lines in fine letters on the marble~for
 2 T-III|       propitious prayers with fine words?~My situation and
 3 T-III| incense to unresponsive gods,~fine words dont rise to my lips
 4  T-IV|   ever:~and Livia, with their fine wives, Agrippina,~and Livilla,
 5  T-IV|     his name there,~who was a fine son worthy of his father. ~
 6   T-V|       be rendered for so many fine deeds:~he’ll not allow your
 7  ExII|  Though Pandion’s daughter is fine, shut in her cage,~she yearns
 8 ExIII|       Muse has sinned, that’s fine.~I see the defects in my
 9   Ind|     from 12BC to AD9. Ovid’s ‘fine son worthy of his father’,
10   Ind|    4500 feet and commanding a fine view of the Hellespont and
11   Ind|      willingness to tread the fine line. He follows it with
12   Ind|    something against the law, fine shades of difference?) but
13   Ind|    was himself condemned to a fine he refused to accept. The
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License