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Publius Ovidius Naso Poems from Exile Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
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1005 ExIV| Book EIV.XI:1-22 To Gallio: Commiseration~ ~Gallio, it would be a 1006 Ind| Leto), and her husband commited suicide. Still unrepentant, 1007 Ind| she had been accused of committing adultery while her husband 1008 T-IV| small part:~but I miss the communal joy, I’m driven far away,~ 1009 ExIV| assistance.~Even now your compassion, undeterred by my~swift 1010 ExII| he did nothing I didn’t compel him to do:~his anger even 1011 ExII| who grieves whenever he’s compelled to be harsh,~who conquers 1012 ExIII| late by delay.~Others have competed together in writing of the 1013 ExII| Circus~without a break in competition, will fall.~Strong though 1014 Ind| Octavia for Augustus. He compiled jokebooks in old age.~Book 1015 ExIV| won’t fit~my metres, as I complained to you recently in verse:~ 1016 T-IV| your union meet with no complaints:~and may that brother, who’ 1017 ExIV| Dyrapses, Melanthus~silently completing its gentle course. And the 1018 ExII| what’s become of my old complexion.~No strength penetrates 1019 Ind| him in 57 and is none too complimentary about the corruption of 1020 Ind| Explicitly addressed to Cotta. Compliments on his eloquence.~Book EIV. 1021 T-V| can’t be prevented from composing poems.~I write, and burn 1022 T-V| I’m the barbarian no one comprehends,~the Getae laugh foolishly 1023 ExII| 42 To Cotta Maximus: The Compulsion To Write~ ~Ovid, who once 1024 ExI| the gods the deep heavens~conceal, and worship Jupiter through 1025 T-V| silence,’~you say, ‘by mutely concealing your situation.’~Do you 1026 T-I| wish it could be veiled in concealment.~If I’d an untiring voice, 1027 ExII| they thought my ills a mere conceit.~As though my position, 1028 Ind| incurred Juno’s hatred, is conceivably Scribonia, the elder Julia 1029 ExI| iniquitous arrows,~I only conceive sad thoughts in my mind.~ 1030 Ind| to stay with her, while conceiving a frenzied desire for the 1031 Ind| Augustus’s time, due to his concern to revive traditional Roman 1032 ExIV| praising me and granting me concessions.~Though it’s not fitting 1033 Ind| as wiser than others: he concluded, ironically, that it was 1034 IBIS| Litany of Maledictions: Concluding Words~ ~Or like a Sicilian 1035 Ind| evidence, and epilogus or first conclusion asking for mitigation, a 1036 Ind| literary nature. There is no concrete evidence that she was herself 1037 Ind| near Mount Pelion. His concubine Phthia accused his son Phoenix 1038 Ind| renewed. Granted it, on condition he does not look back at 1039 T-II| the city,~and also far-off conducting savage war:~nay he return 1040 ExIV| if my verse happened to confer any honour.~Metric rules, 1041 T-III| whose punishment, which he confesses~he deserved, lay in nothing 1042 ExIV| from where I derive such confidence~in the future? Everyone 1043 Ind| Nile, modern Aswan, at the confines of the Empire.~Book EI.V: 1044 ExIV| whether you are more ~a confirmation of my error, or a remedy 1045 Ind| in that property was not confiscated and civic rights were retained. 1046 ExIII| bitter aspect of my fate confronts me,~and it seems to me a 1047 T-III| water through many mouths,~congeals, the winds hardening its 1048 Ind| Medea vanished in a mist conjured by her magic spells. Ovid 1049 Ind| Wadsworth Athanaeum, Hartford, Connecticut). She determined to help 1050 Ind| separating Europe and Asia Minor, connecting the Black Sea (Euxine) with 1051 T-III| beg, in so far as you can, connoisseur of new poets,~do so, and 1052 Ind| that Roman soldiers must conquer or die in the field. (Polybius 1053 Ind| the son of Philip II and conquereor of Greece, and the Persian 1054 ExIV| victorious Bacchus won fame by conquering~India, and Hercules by capturing 1055 T-II| appears,~and the skilful wife cons her stupid husband?~They’ 1056 ExII| hooves,~nor, if there’s any consciousness beyond the grave,~even a 1057 Ind| at Philippi in 42BC and consecrated forty years later.)~Ibis: 1058 Ind| and wife of Admetus, who consented to die in place of her husband 1059 T-IV| and what you did quiet, consign the act to Lethe’s waters,~ 1060 Ind| deed, act or crime, and any consilium, that is plan or stratagem, 1061 Ind| addressed to Cotta, given its consistency with other poems to Cotta ( 1062 ExIV| citizens, seated~on his high, conspicuously carved ivory chair:~or managing 1063 Ind| and that suggests a more conspiratorial involvement than he would 1064 Ind| Mistaken for one of the conspirators, the praetor Lucius Cornelius 1065 ExI| might be softened.~Then the constancy of long friendship moved 1066 Ind| and the autumns mild. (Constanta is now a holiday resort.)~ 1067 Ind| Constantinople (330AD by Constantine), and now named Istanbul ( 1068 T-III| when Boreas and the snow constrain life under the Bears,~those 1069 Ind| Book EIV.IX:1-54 Scene of consular inaugurations.~ ~Tartarus, 1070 Ind| and held a record seven consulships, the last being in 86.~ ~ 1071 ExIV| Augustus and his son,~and consulting about some task not well 1072 IBIS| may the ash as it subsides consume your visage.~Or like he 1073 ExIV| generations.~Age’s decay consumes iron and stone,~and nothing 1074 Ind| shape-changing skills he ended by consuming himself. See Metamorphoses 1075 ExIII| fearful man doesn’t avoid contagious illness,~afraid of contracting 1076 Ind| Book TIII. XII:1-54 He contemplates Tomis being his home now, 1077 T-IV| mind is worse,~absorbed in contemplating its ills, endlessly.~The 1078 T-V| retreat from~and banish the contemplation of my troubles.~I seek forgetfulness 1079 ExIV| not reject my words~with contempt, nor consider my attentions 1080 Ind| daughter Marpessa. Suitors contended with him for her in a chariot 1081 ExII| fourth winter wearies me, contending as I am~with cold, with 1082 T-IV| I avoided harsh military contests when I was young,~and only 1083 Ind| She gave her name to the continent of Europe.~ ~Eurus~The East 1084 ExIV| the Don~that separates two continents, Asia and Europe,~and innumerable 1085 Ind| Machaon. A physician who led a contingent to Troy. He and Machaon 1086 Ind| the Muses lived. It is a continuation of the Parnassus Range lying 1087 Ind| to the Bistonian shore to continue his journey.~Book EI.II: 1088 Ind| 92 Ovid’s autobiography continues. He mentions the poets in 1089 IBIS| with cries that match the contours of the beast:~like cruel 1090 ExII| than fresh wax.~I haven’t contracted these ills by excess drinking:~ 1091 ExIII| contagious illness,~afraid of contracting disease by its proximity?~ 1092 ExIV| you’re doling out lengthy contracts,~by the spear, settling 1093 T-II| but that doesn’t render it contrary to established law, ~or 1094 Ind| things are relative. The contrast in Ovid’s mind is between 1095 Ind| Amatoria etc) has hurt him, and contributed to his exile.~Book TI.I: 1096 Ind| Amatoria (The Art of Love) a contributory reason for his exile to 1097 Ind| following Seneca’s comment in Controversiae (2.2.12) of Ovid being asked 1098 Ind| Augustus with Jupiter in the convential way.~Book TIII.VI:1-38 ‘ 1099 Ind| had a disregard for social conventions. ~Book EI.III:49-94 Exiled 1100 Ind| Sicilian river, the Anapo, converging with the Cyane, now, to 1101 T-V| used to spend long hours in conversation,~until the daylight failed 1102 T-V| thyme,~than anyone could convict you of forgetting a friend.~ 1103 Ind| sister’s husband Tereus. She convinced her father to allow her 1104 IBIS| this sort of thing.~Its convolutions are uttered in imitation 1105 Ind| Corybantes, who were noted for convulsive dances to the music of flutes, 1106 T-I| leaving my ashes on the cooling pyre,~before the memory 1107 Ind| Range lying between Lake Copais and the Gulf. The sacred 1108 T-II| as is right, the crowd copied your views.~Yet, I recall, 1109 T-IV| read my writings?’~Often copious tears run down, too, as 1110 ExII| horn, who grudges him a few coppers as alms?~No such thing, 1111 Ind| Phaeacians (Phaeacia is probably Corcyra, =Corfu), on whose coast 1112 Ind| invention, by extracting the core from the outer sheath) ( 1113 Ind| joined to the mainland. (The Corinthians bored a channel through 1114 T-III| narrow.~See how the light cork bobs on the waves,~while 1115 Ind| toxic, and the seeds and corms were collected for the extraction 1116 Ind| XV:1-42 Sicily, the three cornered island.~ ~Trinacrius~An 1117 T-II| and the light things of Cornificus and Cato,~and others, in 1118 Ind| Argolis, which was ended by Corobeus confessing to his act at 1119 T-III| gives the reason for the coronal wreath:~it says that by 1120 Ind| grandson of Saturn, and named Coronides. He was saved by Apollo 1121 Ind| Aesculapius~The son of Coronis and Apollo, hence great 1122 ExIII| makes verse and bothers~to correct it, among the savage Getae, 1123 T-V| you to alter that! If you corrected that one thing~there’d be 1124 ExIII| hesitate to tell you the truth)~correcting, enduring the toil of hard 1125 ExIII| with one’s feelings.~But correction’s as much more arduous a 1126 Ind| to be mentioned, he could correspond, and publish, he was however 1127 Ind| Hydra tormented him, and corroded his flesh. Philoctetes received 1128 ExII| heaps of iron are eaten by corroding rust:~as a shelved book 1129 Ind| but attracts the already corrupted, and that everything prompts 1130 IBIS| Denial Of Benefits~ ~Your cortège is prepared: no delay to 1131 Ind| of Cybele, the Galli, or Corybantes, who were noted for convulsive 1132 Ind| Iasion~Son of Jupiter and Corythus’s wife Electra. Ceres fell 1133 T-II| written works on painting with cosmetics:~that one the etiquette 1134 T-II| small price. ~Check the cost of your own games, Augustus,~ 1135 Ind| The son of Marcus Julius Cottius a native prince. He took 1136 T-II| outside, why there’s so much coughing by the door.~He teaches 1137 ExII| part of my courage and my counsel.~But now, as you still can, 1138 ExII| great gift, and I’m well counselled by it.~~ Book EI.IV:1-58 1139 ExI| savour the general’s godlike countenance!~But instead of Caesar’s 1140 Ind| The Genius, the spiritual counterpart of every man that watches 1141 ExIV| voice,~and he, whom all the countries of the world obeyed,~ended 1142 Ind| Battus~Ibis:541-596 A countryman changed by Mercury into 1143 ExI| desires his return, and counts,~with anxious fingers, what 1144 T-V| that it’s usual to offer courtesy to both: we give way ~to 1145 Ind| TIV.X:41-92 The forum or courthouse of the dead.~Book EIII.V: 1146 Ind| small stature with a fierce courtoom manner. As a poet he wrote 1147 T-III| city.’~Speaking like this, covertly, with anxious speech,~I 1148 Ind| 1-46 Ibis:597-644 Dolon coveted his horses.~Book TIII.V: 1149 Ind| with Isis (or Hathor the cow-headed goddess with whom she was 1150 Ind| involved in something, and cowardice in not reporting it.~Book 1151 ExIV| to their peace treaty,~he cowed the Getic bowmen with the 1152 T-II| and when chance forms a crack, it all gapes open,~and 1153 Ind| She seized sailors and cracked their bones before slowly 1154 Ind| gave him strength, and, cracking his ribs, held him up until 1155 T-V| weakened by rot, and gape with cracks,~if it’s separated from 1156 T-I| whom the same careful study crafted.~The rest of the crowd will 1157 Ind| The Telchines, mythical craftsmen and wizards living on Ceos, 1158 ExII| suddenly fell in total ruin~and crashed down around it’s master’ 1159 Ind| captured by the Persians from Crassus at Carrhae (53BC) and from 1160 Ind| of Phorcys and the nymph Crataeis, remarkable for her beauty. 1161 Ind| ridge to jojn the River Crathis. Pausanias says (VIII xvii), 1162 IBIS| helped by fire.~May your crazed mind too be driven by frenzies,~ 1163 ExIII| slight noise, the window creaked open.~Startled I lifted 1164 ExII| just,~cause kindly earth to create nothing greater than Caesar,~ 1165 Ind| state of the Universe at its creation. See Ovid’s Metamorphoses 1166 Ind| that protected and was the creative force in all groups and 1167 T-III| the dying,~as will every creature of the lower orders.~Who 1168 Ind| them little or no factual credence. That also undermines his 1169 Ind| VII:1-40 Resignation is creeping over him by this stage of 1170 Ind| July 477BC near the River Cremera, against the Veientes, when 1171 Ind| near Mantua and educated at Cremona and Rome. He became Augustus’ 1172 Ind| its distinctive feathered crest and elongated beak. Its 1173 Ind| prince of Iolchos, son of Cretheus, father of Jason. His half-brother 1174 Ind| Acheus son of Dorus and Creusa, daughter of Erechtheus, 1175 T-V| Since I fell I’ve been the crier of sudden doom,~and the 1176 Ind| inadvisedly, that he witnessed a crimen (an ‘offence’ rather than 1177 ExIV| quite true: you too often criticise your own country.~Hesiod, 1178 Ind| 56 Inferior to those he criticised.~ ~Aristides (1)~The Athenian 1179 T-I| created, will amaze just critics:~they’ll read it, whatever 1180 IBIS| Sicilian Hybla,~or yellow crocuses, I would say, in Cilician 1181 Ind| goddess at Eryx. See Vincent Cronin’s book on Sicily – The Golden 1182 T-IV| shepherd, leaning on his crook, or sitting~on a stone, 1183 ExIV| no one produces a richer crop.~To send verses to such, 1184 Ind| three ways, ‘Diana of the crossroads’.~Book EIII.II:1-110 The 1185 Ind| He took up residence at Crotona in Italy (c531BC), where 1186 ExIII| experience Spring wreathed in crowns~of flowers, nor see the 1187 T-V| offend Achilles,~do you, crueller than an enemy, prevent my 1188 T-II| Ah! He was fiercest, cruellest, of all my enemies,~who 1189 ExIII| I think you’ll always be crying.~These are the riches my 1190 ExIV| your weary friend.~Let that culmination of evils be absent, as it 1191 ExI| It’s sweet to spend time cultivating the fields:~barbarian foes 1192 ExIV| delight in renewing earth by cultivation,~though I’d like to if the 1193 Ind| it became an important cultural centre in the 5th century 1194 T-II| throughout the world,~and the cultured crowd know Ovid well,~and 1195 ExII| Book I~ ~ ~‘quid tibi cum Ponto? ~what have you to 1196 ExI| your mother~those of the Cumean Sybil, and you be long a 1197 Ind| Paullus Aemilius and Fabius Cunctator. An orator, he was consul 1198 Ind| abducted him and made him his cup-bearer, against Juno’s will. Ganymede’ 1199 Ind| killed her son Linus.~ ~Cupido, Cupid, see Amor~Book TIV. 1200 IBIS| cruel sword.~Let no more cups be mixed for you that are 1201 Ind| reflects ancient ritual and the Curetes were the ‘young men with 1202 Ind| into the Black Sea, and curiously appropriate since Ovid was 1203 Ind| of Ovid, subject of his curse-poem Ibis based on a poem of 1204 T-V| Add that you’re the sole custodian of my estate,~a burden to 1205 Ind| Julia the Elder was still in custody but on the mainland). The ‘ 1206 Ind| daughter of Miletus, and Cyanee, twin sister of Caunus.The 1207 Ind| identified as ‘wild rue’, wild cyclamen, and a sort of garlic, allium 1208 Ind| Common hellebore (helleborus cyclophyllus) is a spring wildflower 1209 Ind| encounter with Ulysses.~ ~Cycnus~Ibis:413-464 The son of 1210 Ind| His birthplace was Mount Cyllene, and he is therefore called 1211 Ind| and he is therefore called Cyllenius. He has winged feet, and 1212 Ind| wrote a poem on hunting Cynegetica, and bucolics.~Book EIV. 1213 Ind| the philosophical sect of Cynics. Influenced by Antisthenes 1214 Ind| s power in the battle of Cynoscephalae, though he himself was killed. 1215 Ind| constellations.~Book TV.III:1-58 The Cynosurian or Little Bear. Ursa Minor.~ ~ 1216 T-III| altar covered with deathly cypress,~fits me, a flame prepared 1217 Ind| up with Antony’s mistress Cytheris, and as Lycoris wrote her 1218 Ind| coinage (staters) known as ‘Cyzicenes’. It was held for Rome against 1219 Ind| running into the Black Sea.~ ~Cyzicus~The Milesian colony founded 1220 Ind| his emblem. (see Leonardo Da Vinci’s drawing of Neptune 1221 Ind| They were also called the Daci (Dacians). Strabo ( 7.3. 1222 Ind| were also called the Daci (Dacians). Strabo ( 7.3.11-12, C. 1223 Ind| Dalmatian, chieftain of the Daesitiatae, who fought against Rome 1224 Ind| into the sea, and thrice, daily, drawing in and spewing 1225 Ind| of Apollo, the patron of dairy-farming, apiculture etc.~Book EIV. 1226 T-II| Ah me! If I’d not been damaged by recent events,~I’d be 1227 T-II| smoky month,~but nobody was damned for writing them.~Misled 1228 Ind| her sisters, daughters of Damon (or Demonax), the chief 1229 T-II| in her face,~but Venus, damp, too, wringing wet hair 1230 Ind| and punishment.~ ~Danaus, Danaan~A term originally applied 1231 Ind| Acrisioniades, Agenorides, Danaëius, Inachides, Lyncides. (See 1232 ExIII| your words,~no murderous Danaid, not Agamemnon’s cruel wife,~ 1233 Ind| Belides~The fifty daughters of Danaüs, granddaughters of Belus, 1234 Ind| of Crete, laid out the ‘dancing floor’ of Cnossos, and created 1235 ExI| forehead wreathed with Apollo’s Daphnian laurel.~His loyal sons worthy 1236 Ind| Black Sea as far as the Dardani north of Macedonia. They 1237 Ind| are often referred to as Dardanians. ~Book TI.X:1-50 Founded 1238 Ind| Book TI.X:1-50 Founded by Dardanus, Zeus’s son by the Pleiad 1239 Ind| of Troy is a Dardanian.~ ~Dareus, Darius~Darius III, King 1240 IBIS| They bound his limbs with dark-coloured bands,~snatched from an 1241 T-III| darker: she lightens them:~darkens them by her absence, lightens 1242 T-III| She makes my misfortunes darker: she lightens them:~darkens 1243 T-V| their command,~separate darkly into two distinct heaps.~ 1244 Ind| s sword as his own, and dashed the cup away in time. Medea 1245 Ind| period lateAD16-AD18. (Last dateable reference in Ex Ponto is 1246 Ind| penalty was appropriate.~Dating of the Poems: references~ 1247 ExI| and their sons,~your good daughters-in law, and their daughters.~ 1248 IBIS| that savage crowd, the daughters-in-law of exiled Aegyptos.~Tantalus, 1249 T-V| the day, and if it had not dawned~there would have been no 1250 T-V| conversation,~until the daylight failed us, while we talked,~ 1251 T-I| needs of an exile.~I was as dazed as a man struck by Jove’ 1252 T-V| cheeks be dry.~To ease a deadly pain with words, is something:~ 1253 T-II| tragedy,~yet this too always deals with matters of love.~What’ 1254 ExIII| delight.~Novelty’s the most dearly-loved of all things, too,~and 1255 T-III| funeral altar covered with deathly cypress,~fits me, a flame 1256 ExIV| Julian Temple,~he’ll be debating affairs fitting for so great 1257 Ind| Milesian Tales, a sort of Decameron, of which some fragments 1258 ExIV| later generations.~Age’s decay consumes iron and stone,~ 1259 ExII| s no wonder if my mind’s decaying,~melting like water dripping 1260 ExII| never allowed to lie fallow~decays, wearied by endless production.~ 1261 T-II| defeated the Chimaera,~whom a deceitful woman brought near to death?~ 1262 Ind| becomes the victim of the very deceits he had taught his mistress 1263 ExI| my standards.~Either I’m deceiving myself, mocked by excess ~ 1264 Ind| Oreithiya, making Eumolpus a decendant of Erictheus, king of Athens), 1265 T-II| fingers,~rising, scarce decent, from her natal waves.~Some 1266 T-I| hostile sea.~I endure the deceptions of waves and men,~and sword 1267 Ind| site of Augustus’s palace, decked with garlands for a triumph.~ ~ 1268 Ind| whom Julius adopted and declared as his heir, Octavius Caesar ( 1269 ExII| Time Passing~ ~Now the decline of life is on me, whitening 1270 ExIV| for this: there are sealed decrees ~extant, praising me and 1271 T-IV| soldier is no longer useful~he dedicates the weapons he carried to 1272 Ind| denying any facinus, that is deed, act or crime, and any consilium, 1273 T-IV| in nature, it’s grown and deepened with time.~My ills were 1274 ExIII| in his bronze bull.~Stop defaming that kind spirit with your 1275 Ind| Gaius Vibius Pansa, died in defeating Mark Antony at Mutina. Ovid 1276 ExIV| shouldn’t marvel if my art’s defective,~since I’ve almost turned 1277 ExIII| that’s fine.~I see the defects in my books myself, though 1278 IBIS| between the wolves and the defenceless flock.~First I’ll wage a 1279 ExII| I’ve adopted your mind’s defences,~then love of my country, 1280 ExI| speak bitter words to the defendant who’s confessed.~I needed 1281 ExI| accused who’s confessed is not defensible.~Yet see if you might apologise 1282 IBIS| song, die hated through a deficiency of food.~And as it’s said 1283 ExIV| consolation belongs to a definite time,~when grief’s in train, 1284 Ind| describes the shoreline as deformia, shapeless, featureless, 1285 Ind| temperatures (-20 to -30 deg. Fahrenheit). Tomis was 1286 Ind| s Perseus bronze, Loggia dei Lanzi, Florence, depicting 1287 Ind| killing her father, causing Deianeira to give him the shirt of 1288 Ind| wife of Hercules after his deification, and had the power to renew 1289 IBIS| blood:~whether any will deign to place me in the earth,~ 1290 T-IV| by sea and now by land, deigned to follow~my traces, either 1291 Ind| and ultimately executed by Deinocrates and the Messenians, drinking 1292 Ind| He murdered his own child Deiphilus rather than Polydorus, Iliona’ 1293 Ind| Helenus, Paris, Polydorus, Deïphobus, Cassandra and Polyxena. 1294 T-IV| Those you hear of, men delighting in human blood,~live almost 1295 T-III| things,~your name was on my delirious lips.~If I were failing 1296 Ind| of Bacchus meaning ‘the deliverer from care’.~Book EI.X:1- 1297 T-V| Boy, give me incense that delivers a rich flame,~and wine that 1298 Ind| Bartolomeo Ammannati, Piazza della Signoria, Florence.) Identified 1299 Ind| hemlock.~Ibis:541-596 The Delphic oracle acclaimed him as 1300 Ind| Apollo is therefore called Delphicus. The navel stone in the 1301 Ind| Naides~The water nymphs, demi-goddesses of the rivers, streams and 1302 Ind| Turnus.~ ~Satyrs, Satyri~Demi-gods. Woodland deities of male 1303 Ind| Ibis:541-596 An Athenian democrat, one of the accusers of 1304 Ind| Macedonia. Apollodorus was a democratic leader in the city in the 1305 Ind| daughters of Damon (or Demonax), the chief of the Telkhines, 1306 ExIV| here, where savage enemies~demonstrate that might’s more powerful 1307 Ind| or refurbished. He was on Demosthenes side in the orator’s opposition 1308 T-II| hard to believe his girl’s denials,~when she swears the same 1309 ExIV| grieved at my exile~shall denounce me as ungrateful, un-remembering.~~ 1310 IBIS| when that hated life has departed your limbs,~may avenging 1311 Ind| the safety of his kingdom, depended. His daughter was Scylla. 1312 Ind| constellation alternatively depicts Astraea.) The worship of 1313 ExIV| his own resources weren’t depleted.~He swears he’ll be your 1314 Ind| sons to attack Uranus, and depose him. Saturn the youngest 1315 Ind| building to found Rome, in derision, and Romulus killed him.~ 1316 ExIV| You might ask from where I derive such confidence~in the future? 1317 Ind| two in number, whose name derives from penus a larder, or 1318 Ind| W H Auden’s poem ‘Musée des Beaux Arts’ referring to 1319 Ind| Arcesilaus were linked by the descending figure of Cupid. The goddess 1320 T-V| of its siting.~The enemy descends, when least expected, like 1321 T-IV| do so, I address you~with descriptions not names, forgive my praise 1322 ExIV| What effort is it to not to desecrate true loyalty?~You mustn’ 1323 Ind| and claimed Atalanta.He desecrated Cybele’s sacred cave with 1324 T-I| pass, a lamb will fall, deservedly, to Minerva,~my resources 1325 Ind| the sculptor and inventor design a brazen bull for him where 1326 Ind| Lazio region. It originally designated the small area between the 1327 Ind| Rutilius exiled there. A desirable Greek colony.~ ~Socrates~ 1328 ExI| defeat when armed,~yet never desiring bloodshed once peace was 1329 T-I| seas,~both crowds of you, desist from your threats:~an unhappy 1330 T-III| shore,~and my fate will be desolate as the place itself:~my 1331 T-III| remove it from me,~that the desolating will of the god can be mollified.~ 1332 ExIII| happen:~the next stage is to despair of being saved, completely,~ 1333 T-III| the threshold of a house despaired of.~You, a new friend, not 1334 T-V| tongues.~Lest I seem too despairing of this ever being so,~and 1335 ExII| help you bring won’t aid my desperate sickness.~And I don’t say 1336 Ind| buried her brother Polynices despire King Creon’s forbidding 1337 T-II| count him one not to be despised.~~ Book TII:120-154 His 1338 ExIV| the waves,~the passer-by, despising boats, walks without wetting 1339 T-I| your doing that I’m not despoiled, stripped bare~by those 1340 ExIV| pressure.~So devouring time destroys all other things:~but death 1341 Ind| Swum by Leander, hence a destructive passage.~ ~Accius (Lucius)~ 1342 Ind| Thracian Minerva, though the detail sounds more like that of 1343 Ind| himself to silence over the details of the matter, wishing to 1344 ExIV| And perhaps my Muse can be detected ~in her true colours, by 1345 Ind| EIII.VI:1-60 The god who determines death in battle.~Ibis:209- 1346 Ind| him, such that he came to detest the Muses, poetry, temporarily.~ 1347 ExIII| you to redeem my death, a detestable idea,~Alcestis, Admetus’ 1348 T-I| devouring pyre:~because I detested the Muses, my accusers,~ 1349 Ind| III:1-48 The place he most detests.~Book EII.II:75-126 A place 1350 T-V| myself.~Though Fortune might detract from their author,~you’ll 1351 T-II| daring: but I thought I detracted from it,~and what was worse, 1352 T-III| punishment!~~ Book TIII.XI:1-38 A Detractor~ ~Cruel, whoever you are, 1353 ExII| forgive my lie:~my boast detracts in no way from your glory.~ 1354 Ind| 541-596 Wife and cousin to Deucalion, and the only woman to survive 1355 Ind| All this is retold and developed in Frazer’s monumental work, 1356 Ind| among the Equestrian order, developing an Augustan form of the 1357 T-IV| depths:~and do what is rare, devote yourself constantly~to every 1358 T-II| goddesses ruinous to their own devotee. ~But now – madness is such 1359 Ind| men with shaved hair’ the devotees of the moon-goddess Cer, 1360 IBIS| so may the baleful venom devour your body.~As his Athenian 1361 Ind| 540 The son of Lycurgus devoured by a serpent. The Nemean 1362 Ind| for him are the morning dew. See Metamorphoses Book 1363 ExI| the stones were red with dew-wet roses:~silver fascimiles 1364 Ind| Cretan Labyrinth. She fled to Dia with Theseus and he abandoned 1365 Ind| coast around Abdera and Dicaea, and as far west as the 1366 Ind| himself a poet. He married the dictator Sulla’s daughter, Fausta. 1367 Ind| lived in a cave in Cretan Dicte. They plagued Phineus of 1368 Ind| c95-c54BC) the greatest Roman didactic poet and author of the De 1369 ExI| for how does this state differ from death? –~by not turning 1370 Ind| the law, fine shades of difference?) but that one of his offences 1371 Ind| he probably behaved no differently than any member of the Caesars’ 1372 Ind| sensitive to the political difficulties of showing any favour to 1373 ExIV| you used to praise, that diffidence ~there used to be, is still 1374 ExIV| 36 To Sextus Pompey: His Dilatoriness~ ~Pompey, accept a poem 1375 ExIV| stagnant swamp,~it’s colour is diluted, and it’s barely blue.~The 1376 Ind| It continued as a shrine, diminishing in importance, until closed 1377 T-IV| chanting, the applause, and the din.~Then you’ll reach the citadel, 1378 ExII| you, whose presence the dinner ~table used to give witness 1379 T-II| that one the etiquette for dinner-parties:~another shows the clay 1380 Ind| Carthaginian conquest in 406/5BC. Diodorus Siculus (History XIII.90. 1381 Ind| possibly flourished there. Dioskorides (Materia Medica 4.148) says 1382 IBIS| the heights,~and uttered dire sounds in a funereal voice,.~ 1383 T-I| were driven in different directions.~Then truly the groans and 1384 Ind| Ovid who wrote his funeral dirge. Ovid stresses the relationship.~ 1385 ExIII| the only thing they ever disagreed on:~on all else they were 1386 ExI| a king of cannibals?~Who disapproves of generous Alcinous’s character?~ 1387 T-III| of water be lost:~I first discerned it, in your girlhood’s tender 1388 ExI| 100 To Cotta Maximus: The Disclosure~ ~If I know you well, if 1389 T-IV| sedge,~is the Rhine himself discoloured with his blood.~See even 1390 T-V| who killed each other,~the discordant ashes, as if at their command,~ 1391 T-I| those youthful times are discounted, now~endeavour to make me 1392 ExI| day was too short for our discourse,~and the long hours of summer 1393 ExIII| comrades,~in case some reader discovers the same feelings written 1394 T-I| feared its downfall,~and discreetly turned away, in shared flight.~ 1395 ExIII| many a poet, at his own discretion, plays ~variations on a 1396 T-V| live amongst us, without discrimination,~and also occupy more than 1397 IBIS| empty air with a hurled ~discus, may you fall to a blow 1398 Ind| survivors under oath to discuss ransom terms with the Senate. 1399 ExII| or the Twins:~he didn’t disdain me as a friend and companion:~ 1400 Ind| called him the salaputium disertum, the ‘eloquent manikin’~ 1401 Ind| crippling disgrace: the disgraced individual is an embarrassment, 1402 IBIS| who thought to be free ~by disgracing Rome, endured from the Carthaginian 1403 ExIII| land is merely the sea in disguise.~No birds sing, unless they’ 1404 T-IV| meadow, before he fails and dishonours his victories.~When the 1405 T-III| even say when I babbled disjointed things,~your name was on 1406 T-III| allowed, take up~my poetry, dismayed by the shame of its rejection.~~ 1407 Ind| Argo at Tomis, and Medea’s dismemberment of her brother Absyrtus.~ 1408 Ind| service of King Astyages, who disobeyed his orders and failed to 1409 IBIS| kingdom of Rhodope,~he who was disparately shod on his two feet,~or 1410 T-V| Reader, indulge me, or dispense with all ~my books, if what 1411 T-V| this that the sharp sword dispenses justice~unjustly, and wounds 1412 ExIV| will see you one moment dispensing justice to the people,~and 1413 Ind| generously.~Book TIII.V:1-56 Displays Alexander’s mercy.~ ~Poseidon~ 1414 T-III| itself, I don’t know why, displeases.~There’s no house here suitable 1415 Ind| the individual, and had a disregard for social conventions. ~ 1416 T-V| than the truth.~Whoever’s dissatisfied with them is one who’d add~ 1417 ExIV| help is really needed.~You dissemble too: don’t want to be thought 1418 Ind| Pandataria in 2BC for her dissolute lifestyle, and for political 1419 Ind| hoopoe, upupa epops, with its distinctive feathered crest and elongated 1420 ExIV| it in time.~If I dared to distort your name by such tricks,~ 1421 ExIV| fierce with monsters, from distorted loins,~but the Sarmatian 1422 ExI| offended by me.~The pain that distressed great Caesar’s feelings,~ 1423 Ind| living on the upper Hebrus. Distributed according to Strabo (7.5. 1424 T-IV| work, spinning the thread,~diverts herself, and whiles away 1425 IBIS| that an ancient ~quarrel divides, from the brothers’ blazing 1426 T-I| on reason:~that’s how I divined it, and gained my knowledge.~ 1427 Ind| Augustus’s presence. (Suetonius Divus Augustus:45)~Book EIII.III: 1428 Ind| Tyras~A Sarmatian river, the Dniester.~Book EIV.X:35-84 A river 1429 Ind| part of Romania called the Dobrudja. The townspeople were a 1430 ExII| the skill and care of the doctors fails someone,~but hope 1431 ExI| by my hand:~no fraudulent document convicted my ring~of printing 1432 ExII| Either I believe myself dodging Sarmatian arrows,~or offering 1433 Ind| for her changed her into a dog-like sea monster, ‘the Render’, 1434 Ind| with Cicero’s son-in-law Dolabella and Aesopus the actor’s 1435 ExIV| then it will think you’re doling out lengthy contracts,~by 1436 Ind| of Lycomedes, King of the Dolopians, on Scyros. She was the 1437 Ind| Sea frozen in winter. Its dolphin population.~Book TIII. XI: 1438 T-III| of your death.~Since the dolphins can’t hurl themselves into 1439 ExIV| spirit has passed to the domains of heaven:~and Tiberius 1440 Ind| Book EIV.X:1-34 The Getae: dominate the Greek admixture, are 1441 ExIV| be restored to Caesar’s dominions.’~That’s what he said: but 1442 Ind| and sexuality.~ ~Marsus~Domitius Marsus, an Augustan poet, 1443 Ind| of the attitude to John Donne after his less crippling 1444 Ind| also for lasting youth, dooming her to wither away until 1445 Ind| Roman two-headed god of doorways and beginnings, equivalent 1446 Ind| ruin in a wilderness, with Doric temples that surpassed those 1447 ExI| military task happens to be dormant,~in order that your leisure 1448 Ind| There was an Acheus son of Dorus and Creusa, daughter of 1449 Ind| Merseyside, England: See Dosso Dossi’s painting - Circe and her 1450 Ind| Merseyside, England: See Dosso Dossi’s painting - Circe 1451 Ind| green, Luna who so bright doth sheen, Persephone in hell’) 1452 Ind| The problem of Ovid’s past double-entendres in his works concerning 1453 T-IV| before.~My brother had just doubled his first ten years of life,~ 1454 T-I| who knows where, so I’m doubly punished.~Ah me! What mountains 1455 ExI| of my offence,~I wavered, doubtfully, between confession and 1456 Ind| sparing of his life. A subtle doubtle-entendre as to which Caesar might 1457 T-IV| horses,~and behold some with down-turned faces, as is fitting,~others, 1458 ExIV| till Vitellius, ~carried downriver, disembarked his troops,~ 1459 Ind| juniper?) to subdue the dragon, and took Medea back with 1460 T-IV| outside ~the fold, and drags it through the woods and 1461 T-V| a measure of suffering,~drain a little saltwater from 1462 T-III| the disease of an ill mind drains my limbs,~or this region 1463 Ind| years, and from 395BC a drama festival. The impressive 1464 Ind| c341-c290BC). The most celebrated dramatist of the New Comedy he wrote 1465 Ind| adaptations by the Roman dramatists Terence and Plautus. ~Book 1466 Ind| Teles, and Thelxepeia.) (See Draper’s painting – Ulysses and 1467 Ind| See the sculpture and drawings of Michael Ayrton, and Picasso’ 1468 ExIII| at fresh misfortune,~and dreading my fate, not my judge’s 1469 T-I| shattered by a mighty storm,~dreads to near the place where 1470 T-I| while I speak the waves drench my face.~The breakers will 1471 T-III| without nurture,~and is lost, dried up, by a long neglect.~I’ 1472 T-IV| Already, white hairs had come, driving away ~my best years, flecking 1473 T-V| up.~if you were going to drop it at a difficult time for 1474 ExII| relief for the horrors of dropsy.~Sorrow too at times isn’ 1475 Ind| prophecy that an eight-year drought and famine would end if 1476 Ind| House of Sleep, and induces drowsiness with its murmuring. (Hence 1477 Ind| extraction of the narcotic drug colchicine, tinctura colchici, 1478 Ind| to the music of flutes, drums and cymbals, and self-mutilation 1479 Ind| Orpheus.~ ~Livia Augusta~Livia Drusilla (58BC-29AD), the daughter 1480 T-III| I walked the frozen sea,~dry-shod, with the surface under 1481 ExIV| so the weapon can be a dual cause of death.~Would that 1482 Ind| Rape of Europa – Palazzo Ducale, Venice).~Book EIV.X:35- 1483 Ind| his comrades are called ‘Dulichian’. ~Book TI.V:45-84 Ibis: 1484 Ind| Ithaca.~Book TIV.I:1-48 The Dulichians, Odysseus’s men, were drugged 1485 IBIS| rival, suffered.~And like dull Myrrha’s author, Cinna, 1486 T-V| to that, my imagination’s dulled, harmed~by long disuse, 1487 ExIII| by gentle breezes.~She duly presided over the shrine 1488 ExI| me a tongue,~and I’d be dumb if I weren’t allowed to 1489 Ind| hence called biformes, duplex natura, semihomines, bimembres.~ 1490 ExIV| in any way, to me, for durability?~Drops of water carve out 1491 ExII| punishment’s worse for its long duration.~So Tityus’s liver, never 1492 T-V| whole world from dawn to dusk~contains no one more merciful 1493 T-V| and all the waters the dusky Indian drinks.~This was 1494 ExIV| your gifts to me, with a dutiful mind,~and my homeland will 1495 ExIII| Add that my lyre, always dwelling on it’s master’s moans,~ 1496 Ind| home, rather than merely a dwelling-place or temporary lodging.~Book 1497 Ind| surviving complete play is the Dyscolus, recovered from an Egyptian 1498 T-III| the Pontic shore.~I’ll go eagerly to meet the captain, and 1499 ExI| and I’ll follow you as my eagles, and my standards.~Either 1500 IBIS| delight in what you did not earn.~As Isindius, the host, 1501 T-II| a fault that’s not new earns new punishment:~I’d published 1502 Ind| ultimately destroyed by earthquakes. The uninhabited site is 1503 Ind| fashionable resort eighteen miles east-north-east of Rome in a bend of the 1504 Ind| protective wall was built eastwards from Axiopolis to Tomis,