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Publius Ovidius Naso Poems from Exile Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
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1505 ExII| only thing I drink.~nor by eating heavily: even if I’d loved 1506 T-V| humble food to the poor~now eats the bread of beggary himself.~ 1507 T-III| its little roof under the eaves:~and the shoots that lay 1508 IBIS| household:~as the thinning blood ebbed from Hercules’ body:~so 1509 IBIS| search for them:~and as the ebbing wave retreats in its turn,~ 1510 Ind| accompanied by personal eccentricity. He also published erotic 1511 Ind| makes her the mother of Echidna. Pausanias says the waters 1512 Ind| running into the Black Sea.~ ~Echionius~Theban, from Echion the 1513 Ind| drove off evil spirits at eclipses and during the rites. See 1514 Ind| who dedicated his tenth eclogue to him, and initially Augustus 1515 T-II| avenged the offence.~More, the edict, though harsh and threatening,~ 1516 Ind| 1)~King of the Edonians (Edoni) of Thrace who opposed Bacchus’ 1517 T-II| studied! Why did my parents~educate me, or letters entertain 1518 T-III| that my prayer might be effective.~The greater a man the more 1519 Ind| never released. Tiberius effectively had her starved to death ( 1520 ExII| more, it would be sheer effrontery.~~ Book EI.II:1-52 To Paullus 1521 Ind| arts of peace. His wife was Egeria, the nymph.~Book TIII.I: 1522 Ind| near the sea, on the Via Egnatia, the transcontinental road, 1523 Ind| fulfil a prophecy that an eight-year drought and famine would 1524 Ind| Tivoli, a fashionable resort eighteen miles east-north-east of 1525 Ind| capture formed Hercules’s eighth labour.~Book EI.II:101-150 1526 Ind| coast of the Black Sea about eighty miles south of Tomis. Now 1527 T-V| promised.~It’s worse to eject a guest than not receive 1528 Ind| expulsion.~Book EIV.III:1-58 Ejected from the fortress of Ortygia 1529 Ind| Jupiter at Ammon (Siwa Oasis, El Khargeh) but the army vanished 1530 ExIII| lifted myself on my left elbow, and sleep~was driven at 1531 Ind| help defend Tomis as an elderly man.~Book TIV.VII:1-26 Ovid 1532 Ind| 1-50 After the July AD13 elections to office when Pompey’s 1533 Ind| isthmus. It was famous for its electrum coinage (staters) known 1534 Ind| Alcmene~The daughter of Electryon king of Tiryns, wife of 1535 ExIII| the Aeneid.~Anyway, weak elegiacs couldn’t carry the weight~ 1536 Ind| childlessness.~ ~Anacreon~The Greek elegicac, iambic and lyric poet of 1537 Ind| 58. He also wrote erotic elegies addressed to Leucadia.~Book 1538 Ind| grammarian and poet, famed for elegy. His verses to Bittis his 1539 Ind| The son of Celeus, king of Eleusis in Attica. Ceres sent him 1540 Ind| Myron~The sculptor of Eleutherae, one of the greatest of 1541 Ind| major port, it is on an elevated and rocky part of the coast, 1542 Ind| twenty recorded instances in eleven centuries. A name also for 1543 T-I| the ninth and before the eleventh.~I don’t fear dying: but 1544 Ind| famous for its horses. The Elians presided over the Games 1545 ExI| impetus to his:~he has you to elicit his words, from your own.~ 1546 ExIII| clustering vines clothe the elms,~no apples bend the branches 1547 Ind| distinctive feathered crest and elongated beak. Its rapid, far-carrying, ‘ 1548 ExIV| next moment you’re speaking eloquently to the Senate,~pursuing 1549 Ind| apparently distinct from Hades.~ ~Emathius~A poetic term for Macedonian, 1550 Ind| EII.II:39-74 Augustus was embarrassed by the fragility of the 1551 Ind| disgraced individual is an embarrassment, an object of suspicion, 1552 Ind| is his sacred tree. His emblems of power are the sceptre 1553 ExI| be seeing Rome:~since he embodies the features of the fatherland 1554 Ind| bird. But she is also an embodiment of the Cretan Great Goddess, 1555 ExI| mighty voice, how, ~wearing embroidered robes, glorious insignia,~ 1556 T-II| described the abortion of an embryo,~nor Hemitheon who’s just 1557 T-I| beware, while that angry emotion’s quiet don’t rouse it, ~ 1558 T-IV| my mind still feels the emotions of recent troubles.~Indeed 1559 Ind| close supporter of the Emperors, is meant.~Book TV.IV:1- 1560 T-II| eyes, that the whole world employs,~you’ve calmly watched these 1561 IBIS| spoke: but ordered Clotho to empower the future, ~and she spun 1562 T-V| So, as you may make songs empowered by Apollo,~keep my name 1563 Ind| 58 The god of poetry, who empowers poetic achievement.~Book 1564 Ind| Drusus Claudianus, who became Empress. Her first husband was Tiberius 1565 ExIV| shadowy trees,~and the seas be emptied of their sailing ships,~ 1566 Ind| the world from winter was enacted. Ceres was there a representation 1567 Ind| Oechalia, whom Hercules was enamoured of. He carried her off after 1568 Ind| Aeolus, God of the Winds and Enarete. Her ill-fated love for 1569 Ind| traditionally where Orpheus enchanted the trees and animals with 1570 Ind| triplets: Thelxinoë, the Enchantress; Aglaope, She of the Beautiful 1571 ExIII| sacrificial ribbons might encircle their yellow hair.~As she 1572 Ind| fires.~Book EIV.X:1-34 The encounter with Ulysses.~ ~Cycnus~Ibis: 1573 IBIS| of Thrace:~like those who encountered the lions of Therodamas,~ 1574 Ind| Mars located there. It was encroached on by public buildings later 1575 T-I| times are discounted, now~endeavour to make me forget this failing, 1576 Ind| when Pompey suppressed the endemic piracy of the coastal area. 1577 Ind| were basically moral with endings involving marriage.~ ~Mercury~ 1578 ExI| little stream.~Indeed, your endorsement’s gratifying to my spirit,~ 1579 Ind| Annales 6.27). He was an energetic soldier, close to Tiberius. ~ 1580 Ind| January 38BC) after her enforced divorce from Tiberius Claudius 1581 T-I| and slight.~He was always engaged in savage warfare,~I was 1582 T-V| no festive day for me.~It engendered a character equal to those 1583 Ind| the galaxy. The stars were engraved on Achilles’s shield. As 1584 T-III| Our wretched author’s fate engulfs his children,~and from birth 1585 Ind| which partner gained more enjoyment in love-making. He was blinded 1586 T-II| fame in excess: still he enjoys his deeds~being retold, 1587 ExIII| That wasn’t enough. I also ensured by a foolish poem~that you 1588 ExIV| afar in shining armour,~ensuring that your brave deeds can’ 1589 T-II| 471-496 His Plea: Dubious Entertainments~ ~Others have written about 1590 Ind| The blind Greek bard who entertains the guests in Alcinous’ 1591 Ind| in the form of a cow, to entice it. From the union she produced 1592 T-I| letter you’ve read in this entire volume,~was composed in 1593 T-III| possessing sight.~True I can’t entirely defend myself from blame,~ 1594 ExIII| feeble arm. ~A god’s to be entreated, not that he befriend me,~ 1595 ExI| too were resistant to my ~entreaties, after I’d deserved Caesar’ 1596 T-II| and wage war,~to whom you entrust the high auspices and the 1597 T-III| I was not aware of,~and entrusted many hidden things, to my 1598 Ind| Scorpius, depicting a man entwined in the coils of a serpent, 1599 T-IV| the kingdom of Thoas, ~not envied by the evil, nor desired 1600 IBIS| cause of his death:~as the envious girl who threw herself from 1601 Ind| Getae and the cheerless environment. All things are relative. 1602 Ind| goddess of the dawn (Greek Eos) the daughter of Hyperion, 1603 Ind| talented but primitive.~ ~Eous~Book TIV.IX:1-32 Book EII. 1604 Ind| they defeated Sparta under Epaminondes, and until he was killed 1605 Ind| treatise in six books on Epicurean theory. ~Book TII:253-312 1606 Ind| atomic theory, following Epicurus.~ ~Luna~The moon goddess. 1607 Ind| III:1-48 Aesculapius the Epidaurian was famed for his healing 1608 Ind| were Victory and Strength. Epimenedes makes her the mother of 1609 Ind| Celer. Catullus also wrote epithalamia, epigrams and at least one 1610 Ind| his patronage. He wrote an epithalamium in Catullus’s style as well 1611 Ind| 311-364 The daughter of Epopeus king of Lesbos who unknowingly 1612 Ind| bird, the hoopoe, upupa epops, with its distinctive feathered 1613 ExIV| accepted the lying invective equably,~and the author’s wild speech 1614 Ind| cases and probate. As an eques of good standing he was 1615 T-II| s perverse, then she’ll equip~her character for sin, whatever 1616 T-V| consider if this place equips me for song.~There are no 1617 Ind| at an annual parade (the equitum transvectio of the equites 1618 T-III| s streaked with blotted erasures,~the poet marred his own 1619 Ind| Calliope (Epic Poetry), Erato (Love Poetry), Urania (Astronomy), 1620 Ind| opera with Lully’s dances – Ercole Amante). He was then tormented 1621 T-V| colour to my fate:~let them erect a green altar of grassy 1622 IBIS| stricken Eumolpus, scion of Erectheus,~three times defeated by 1623 Ind| Eumolpus a decendant of Erictheus, king of Athens), and a 1624 Ind| Whale, between Pisces and Eridanus that contains the variable 1625 Ind| the Furies~The Furies, Erinyes, or Eumenides (ironically ‘ 1626 T-II| some’? Whoever thinks so, errs,~and claims too much for 1627 Ind| Cyclopes.~Book EII.X:1-52 Seen erupting by Ovid on his travels.~ 1628 ExI| flames illuminate the sky,~eruptions of the giant under the mountain,~ 1629 Ind| herself on finding him dead.~ ~Erymanthis~Arcadian from Mount Erymanthus 1630 Ind| Erymanthis~Arcadian from Mount Erymanthus in Arcadia.~Book TI.IV:1- 1631 Ind| cattle from the island of Erythia after shooting three arrows 1632 Ind| honeycomb for the goddess at Eryx. See Vincent Cronin’s book 1633 Ind| EI.I:1-36 A moralist and essayist on various subjects.~ ~Brutus ( 1634 Ind| Philoctetes and his weapons were essential for the defeat of the Trojans 1635 Ind| his tragedies were highly esteemed. May be intended here.~ ~ 1636 Ind| who was made to sleep for eternity in a cave on Carian Mount 1637 T-I| crash resounds from the ether!~The blow on her planks 1638 Ind| c469-399BC), Plato’s teacher. An ethical philosopher with an emphasis 1639 Ind| stone including many of the Ethiopians, or Cephenes after her death 1640 T-II| cosmetics:~that one the etiquette for dinner-parties:~another 1641 Ind| of Rome, extending from Etruria to the Adriatic and north 1642 Ind| the island lying off the Etrurian coast in the Tyrrhenian 1643 Ind| The priestly clan of the Eumolpidae claimed descent from him, 1644 Ind| statesman who served Mithridates Eupator c. 100 BC. He was called 1645 Ind| εϋξειυος:euxinus, as a euphemism. Hence Euxene as an epithet. 1646 Ind| Freya Stark ‘Rome on the Euphrates’ p9. Pausanias also lived 1647 Ind| of Laconia on the River Eurotas, better known as Sparta. ~ ~ 1648 IBIS| on Achillean soil.~And as Eurydamas was drawn three times round ~ 1649 Ind| mankind, son of the Titan Eurymedon, or of Iapetus by the nymph 1650 Ind| Saint Jerome’s Chronicle of Eusebius, at the latest AD18 based 1651 Ind| Tragedy), Thalia (Comedy), Euterpe (Lyric Poetry), Terpsichore ( 1652 Ind| coast, later hospitable, εϋξειυος:euxinus, as a euphemism. 1653 Ind| euxinus, as a euphemism. Hence Euxene as an epithet. Ovid also 1654 Ind| with limited success. His eventual triumph was for the Pannonian 1655 T-V| to deal wounds with the ever-present knife~that every barbarian 1656 T-III| the world?~Does it possess everlasting glory, as the laurel~is 1657 IBIS| destined to offer his entrails evermore to carrion birds.~and the 1658 Ind| Terentius Afer (c195-159BC) an ex-slave from North Africa, born 1659 ExI| something sad,~and for whom to exact punishment is to punish 1660 T-V| hates.~Vengeful Nemesis exacts punishment on those~who 1661 Ind| That also undermines his exaltation of the Caesars as gods towards 1662 T-II| to my care, nor the cases examined by the centumvirs.~I also 1663 T-II| power to foolish games,~examining my idle things with your 1664 ExIV| delivered many.~But your courage exceeded all others, as Pegasus,~ 1665 T-II| obscene laughter,~with many exceedingly shameful words:~it didn’ 1666 T-I| of her husband in death, exceeds you in probity.~If you’d 1667 T-II| distinguished, inferior in excellence to none,~and noted neither 1668 Ind| Seneca considered him an excellent poet.~Book EIV.XVI:1-52 1669 Ind| Aegyptus, and, with one exception, Hypermnestra, who saved 1670 ExII| anything other~than, by exchange of ills, to be free to leave 1671 ExII| still their savour won’t excite my jaded palate~and the 1672 Ind| his book was written to exclude virtuous women and he ‘quotes’ 1673 Ind| death as a scapegoat. He was excommunicated six days before in order 1674 IBIS| And let the prayers of execration harm his false ~name no 1675 ExI| urge it on.~Besides you execute the wishes of an absent 1676 IBIS| are dragged away, at the executioners’ hands,~and their hooks 1677 Ind| capitales, the prisons and executions) but held back from public 1678 ExI| companion, not to find an exemplar but to be one.~You, who 1679 ExII| for you.~He conducted your exequies and rituals of great honour,~ 1680 Ind| written in a light vein, as exercises in wit.~Book TI.II:1-74 1681 ExIV| be achieved by praying,~exhort the gods you worship, with 1682 Ind| Relegatio was milder than exilium, in that property was not 1683 Ind| were corrupting, with an exordium to placate the judge, a 1684 T-III| where statues alternate with exotic pillars,~Danaids, and their 1685 Ind| Empire was maintained and expanded.~Book TI.V:1-44 Ovid denies 1686 ExII| our neighbours.~One side expects to feel the Bistonian spears,~ 1687 ExI| Their first care’s for expediency, not honour,~and their loyalty 1688 Ind| Pelopidas failed (368) in one expedition against him and was briefly 1689 T-I| want this. Why hold one he expels?~Let the land of Pontus 1690 T-I| the burden of hate,~and explain to that man-god what error 1691 T-II| attracts the eye~so your exploits should have drawn my spirit.~ 1692 Ind| letter addressed to him, exploring the possibilities of appealing 1693 Ind| iambic poet and leading exponent of the neoteric movement 1694 Ind| a tractatio or treatment expounding the case, consisting in 1695 Ind| school at Corinth after his expulsion.~Book EIV.III:1-58 Ejected 1696 T-V| wherever Earth’s paths extend.~Do you see how Penelope’ 1697 Ind| frater). Athamas too suffered extensively, his wife Ino being turned 1698 T-V| once more.~My talent’s extinguished by long sufferance of ills,~ 1699 Ind| EI.III:49-94 He opposed extortion by the equites in his province 1700 Ind| 55-88 The consuls receive extra authority from the deified 1701 Ind| Minerva’s invention, by extracting the core from the outer 1702 IBIS| stone.~Then to make his eyelids retract they brought brands~ 1703 Ind| Tomis ‘Cimmerian’. Also a fabled people who were said to 1704 Ind| temple according to Hyginus Fabula 247.~ ~Europa~The daughter 1705 Ind| gave him magic herbs to facilitate his tasks (probably including 1706 Ind| suicide, and links him to the factions around Julia. The evidence 1707 Ind| all of them little or no factual credence. That also undermines 1708 T-II| the Trojan boy.~Time will fade if I repeat all the passions 1709 T-I| leaves my mind.~and loyalty fades away through the long years.~ 1710 Ind| temperatures (-20 to -30 deg. Fahrenheit). Tomis was a border garrison 1711 ExIV| colours, by tokens of her failings.~Thersites’ ugliness prevented 1712 Ind| Aellopus and Ocypete, the fair-haired, loathsome, winged daughters 1713 ExIV| these lines, except that I’m fairly well,~you won’t hear of 1714 Ind| Kirke or Circe means a small falcon) She was famed for her beauty 1715 Ind| second wife was from Falerii. Falisca herba is the ‘grass of Falerii’. ~ 1716 ExIV| as well as oxen fed on Faliscan grass.~There’s still nothing 1717 ExII| that’s never allowed to lie fallow~decays, wearied by endless 1718 ExII| if you do I’ll own to a falsehood in that regard as well:~ 1719 ExI| you allow your strength to falter you will fall.~The hope 1720 Ind| reaches the upper world, he faltered, and she was lost. He mourned 1721 Ind| an eight-year drought and famine would end if he did so.~ 1722 ExIV| justice to the people,~and fancy itself secretly present 1723 Ind| elongated beak. Its rapid, far-carrying, ‘hoo-hoo-hoo’ call is interpreted 1724 T-III| them to you cannot do: ‘Fare well.’~~ Book TIII.IV:1- 1725 Ind| while Ovid was saying his farewells.~Book TIII.V:1-56 Herald 1726 T-III| looking back in vain at their farms and homes.~some die wretchedly 1727 Ind| of Bacchus and Ariadne – Farnese Palace, Rome)). The Northern 1728 Ind| The lectors carried the fasces, axes encased in a bundle 1729 ExI| with dew-wet roses:~silver fascimiles of conquered walls were 1730 IBIS| famous horses,~who first fastened a sharp point into hollowed 1731 ExII| remains taut, held by its fastenings, forever.~The rooftops bristle, 1732 ExIV| boulders, ~sliding on, Tyras, fastest of streams, and you, ~Thermodon, 1733 ExIV| striking the white necks of fat oxen.~If only, when you’ 1734 ExIII| outcome of my efforts is faulted in the end,~by everyone, 1735 Ind| dictator Sulla’s daughter, Fausta. Convicted of bribery he 1736 IBIS| neither Moon nor Sun were favourably placed,~nor did Mercury, 1737 ExI| many friends,~while the favouring breeze swelled my sails:~ 1738 Ind| sacrifice. They dressed in fawn skins, wreathed themselves 1739 ExI| be dragged, a slave~with fear-struck face, before your triumphant 1740 Ind| epops, with its distinctive feathered crest and elongated beak. 1741 Ind| gardens. He presided over the fecundity of fields, flocks, beehives, 1742 Ind| Aphrodite punished him for feeding his mares on human flesh 1743 T-I| to offer a few words of feigned distress,~and, at least, 1744 ExIV| But you, who drink more felicitously of the Aonian spring,~go 1745 T-I| Tristia Book I~ ~ ~‘laeta fere laetus cecini, cano tristia 1746 Ind| Ulysses and the Sirens – Ferens Art Gallery, Hull, England, 1747 ExI| useless plant, feel the fertilising power,~and am often benefited 1748 Ind| to the string of spring festivals which included the Megalesia, 1749 ExII| don’t burn and gasp with fever,~and my pulse keeps to its 1750 T-I| most part of his toil is fiction,~there’s no mythology in 1751 T-II| of my work, deceptive and fictitious,~is more permissive than 1752 Ind| caught in a fig tree (the Ficus Ruminalis) and they were 1753 Ind| treachery in the war with Fidenae, on the orders of Tullus 1754 T-IV| venom,~circles the walls fiercely on his snorting steed:~and 1755 T-II| His ‘Fault’~ ~Ah! He was fiercest, cruellest, of all my enemies,~ 1756 Ind| Olympia, celebrated every fifth year inclusive from 776BC, 1757 IBIS| now that I’ve reached my fifties,~all my Muse’s poetry has 1758 Ind| twins cradle caught in a fig tree (the Ficus Ruminalis) 1759 T-I| she rose, hair fouled with filthy dust,~and lifted her body 1760 Ind| after readministrating its finances, and had several buildings 1761 Ind| Lycurgus became a successful financier, statesman and orator in 1762 T-I| re safe regarding time.~Fine-spun verses come from a tranquil 1763 ExIII| silver~that you’ve seen, that finery, I complain of:~but the 1764 Ind| him carrying ivy-twined fir branches as thyrsi. (See 1765 T-IV| But though I was such, fired by the smallest spark,~no 1766 Ind| fields, flocks, beehives, fishing and vineyards. He became 1767 T-III| covered with deathly cypress,~fits me, a flame prepared for 1768 T-III| of grievous pain.~I’m no fitter in mind than body, rather 1769 T-IV| command. ~That one now who fixes his wretched gaze on the 1770 T-II| their bodies snared in a flagrant act?~On whose evidence but 1771 ExII| sees no land at all,~still flail his arms about in the midst 1772 IBIS| any water’s struck by your flailing arms,~may it all be worse 1773 Ind| and arrows, and carrying a flaming torch.~Book TII:361-420 1774 Ind| shores.~ ~Flaminia Via~The Flaminian Way, the Roman road, ran 1775 Ind| the Adriatic Coast. Gaius Flaminius completed it in 220BC. Augustus 1776 Ind| begun by Caesar in 45BC flanking the Forum Romanum and dedicated 1777 IBIS| of the Furies rake your flanks with her whip,~till the 1778 T-III| stage is alive, faction flares among separate parties,~ 1779 ExI| often thunders without the flash of lightning,~who’s indeed 1780 T-I| Ah! What a swift flame flashes from the cloud!~What a mighty 1781 ExII| leads you ~to the country on flashing wheels heading for your 1782 Ind| The country round Tomis is flat and marshy. The winters 1783 Ind| Book EII.IX:39-80 Though flattering its king, Ovid implies the 1784 Ind| orator known for his extreme flattery of Augustus, Cotta was his 1785 T-IV| tasted,~gave pleasure by a flavour that did harm.~Often a lover’ 1786 T-V| one thing~there’d be no flaw in your illustrious person.~ 1787 Ind| in musical skill, and was flayed alive by the God when he 1788 T-IV| driving away ~my best years, flecking my ageing locks,~and ten 1789 ExI| all its food.~Often a lamb flees the sight of a distant dog,~ 1790 T-IV| sings:~and he who draws flexed oars to his chest, together,~ 1791 ExI| to hurl javelins with a flick of the wrist,~and guide 1792 Ind| The evidence however is flimsy.~Book EI.II:1-52 Addressed 1793 IBIS| sleep.~Whatever you do, I’ll flit before your lips and eyes,~ 1794 ExIV| wagon over the Danube’s floes.~And you observe poison 1795 Ind| was noted for its seasonal flooding in ancient times. (See the 1796 Ind| Crete, laid out the ‘dancing floor’ of Cnossos, and created 1797 Ind| included the Megalesia, the Floralia, and the Quinquatrus Maiores ( 1798 ExIII| the Muse, Maximus, that flourishes in this place!~Though I’ 1799 Ind| Iliad, II, 853), was a flourishing town in the time of Trajan ( 1800 ExI| tears a great service that flowed~over your face when mine 1801 ExI| Cinyphus,~or thyme plants flowering on the heights of Hybla,~ 1802 ExIV| with glad tidings,~having flown down the vast pathways of 1803 ExIV| hail. ~A storm of missiles flung from above don’t stop you,~ 1804 T-I| alone.~See how the doves fly to a whitened dovecote,~ 1805 ExI| is absent.~Driven by the foaming sea, stretching out our 1806 Ind| third poem addressed to him, focusing on Messalinus’s close relationship 1807 IBIS| who having poor grass ~for fodder, fed his horses on human 1808 Ind| Moreau’s watercolour in the Fogg Art Museum, Harvard) Aeneas 1809 ExIV| it really a hardship to fondle lovely Calypso~for six years, 1810 T-II| waves~because it dares to fool about in a tiny pond.~Perhaps – 1811 T-III| Can you see each other footstep tremble?~I pray, that, some 1812 T-V| changeable, with uncertain footsteps,~never remaining sure, nor 1813 ExII| own inward eye.~Now the fora, now the temples, now the 1814 Ind| Polynices despire King Creon’s forbidding him to be buried. ~Book 1815 IBIS| s road:~like those that forceful Nisus son of Hyrtacus ,and 1816 Ind| they then sent him back forcibly to Hannibal, to be dealt 1817 T-I| book!~And because you’re a foreigner in a mighty city~don’t think 1818 T-IV| Probably Cotta)~ ~O you the foremost of my dear friends,~who 1819 T-II| never hurt me,~scarcely foreseeing it, hurts me now I’m old.~ 1820 ExIV| you there, too.~And so I foretell your divine power will yield 1821 Ind| King of Thebes. Tiresias foretold his fate at the hands of 1822 T-IV| yet my life has not been forfeit, for my error?~I must spend 1823 ExIII| Yet there’s nothing more forgivable in my writing~than that 1824 ExI| buried if my first error were forgiven, ~you think of your old 1825 IBIS| you or your tears: you’ll forgo your life, unlamented: and 1826 Ind| the form of a suasoria or formal argument concerning the 1827 Ind| Ovid’s friends were not formally tainted by association, 1828 Ind| consul in 69 but after the formation of the First Triumvirate ( 1829 Ind| TIV.X:93-132 He uses the formula here of the closing lines 1830 IBIS| let all the bright stars forsake your eyes.~Nor let fire 1831 ExII| rosy lips~might soon call forth the day when the Prince 1832 ExI| flight.~Look at me, once fortified with many friends,~while 1833 ExII| firm minds.~Admire the deep fortitude of great-hearted Rutilius,~ 1834 T-IV| lakes, mountains, all the forts and rivers,~filled with 1835 Ind| lesser contemporaries.~ ~Fortuna~The Roman goddess of Fortune, 1836 IBIS| Polymestor, killed his foster-child Polydorus, for ~his great 1837 Ind| sister of Semele and Agave fostered the infant Bacchus. She 1838 Ind| Book TI.V:1-44 Ovid denies fostering any armed opposition to 1839 IBIS| boy’s mouth:~from it the fosterling drank it’s nurse’s fury,~ 1840 Ind| Virgil, Celaeno. They are foul-bellied birds with girls’ faces, 1841 ExIV| so long as it aids me~my foundering barque will rise again from 1842 ExIII| water we drink from the fount itself’s more pleasing.~ 1843 T-IV| by fire,~that there are four-hooved Centaurs, with human breasts,~ 1844 Ind| boasted rashly about her fourteen children. Her seven sons 1845 Ind| Augustus was embarrassed by the fragility of the succession, and his 1846 Ind| some variant on what is a fragmentary myth whereby he was eaten 1847 ExII| which is food itself to a frail body,~fails to provide my 1848 T-IV| dark hair.~The years of frailty, and the inertia of age, 1849 Ind| Daedalus built for her a wooden frame in the form of a cow, to 1850 Ind| with Latin as a lingua franca.~Book EIV.IX:55-88 Flaccus 1851 Ind| EIII.III:1-108 The bluff, frank and open hero type. The 1852 IBIS| commit an act to make the frantic horses ~of the Sun hurtle 1853 Ind| e.g. Julius Caesar. See Fraser’s ‘The Golden Bough’ Ch1 1854 ExI| was mixed by my hand:~no fraudulent document convicted my ring~ 1855 Ind| and Medea’, Louvre, Paris: Frederick Sandys painting ‘Medea’, 1856 Ind| herself a pure woman by freeing the stranded ship containing 1857 T-IV| brother and I assumed the freer adult toga:~our shoulders 1858 T-III| savage power of wild Boreas~freezes the sea-water or the flowing 1859 Ind| her, while conceiving a frenzied desire for the sister. He 1860 IBIS| crazed mind too be driven by frenzies,~like a man who’s whole 1861 Ind| Thermodon~A river in Pontus, frequented by Amazons. The modern Terme 1862 Ind| and Annibale Carracci’s fresco – The triumph of Bacchus 1863 Ind| normally in a riverbank, by freshwater and not by seawater.)~See 1864 Ind| winter cap of snow – See Freya Stark ‘Rome on the Euphrates’ 1865 T-III| sweet years, unknown,~form friendships equal to your own,~and love 1866 ExIII| only one the lightning ~frightens, and the crowd round the 1867 ExIV| ill-starred idleness, and fritter away the days?~Since neither 1868 T-II| books too have plenty of frivolous matter.~Though Ennius sang 1869 ExII| whether Night urges on her frosty horses,~my heart melts with 1870 T-III| hidden in leafy shade,~no frothing must fills the deep wine-vats.~ 1871 ExIV| your merits:~while, if you frown, I’ll confess I’ve sinned 1872 Ind| presided over planting and fructification. He became associated (as 1873 ExII| mine.~O how often, as the frustrating saviour of my bitter life,~ 1874 Ind| mountain in Boeotia (5968 ft) near the Gulf of Corinth, 1875 Ind| On Sicily.~Ibis:597-644 Fuelled by the anger of the giants 1876 Ind| Orpheus and Eurydice – Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe, Hamburg: 1877 Ind| Armenia.~ ~Mettus~Or Mettius Fufetius, an Alban commander who 1878 IBIS| by endless hunger though full-fed:~and may you not be averse 1879 ExIV| have offered incense, heart fuller than my salver,~rejoicing 1880 Ind| younger son of Mark Antony and Fulvia, educated at Rome by Augustus’ 1881 T-V| So there’s meaning in the fumes the fire emits:~Pontus, 1882 Ind| but still retained its function as a park and exercise ground.~ 1883 Ind| or blindfolded.~ ~Fundi~Fundanum solum, a town on the Appian 1884 IBIS| uttered dire sounds in a funereal voice,.~At once the Furies 1885 Ind| fatal’ evil. The word used funestus might link to its use (as 1886 Ind| Native town of Rufus.~ ~Furiae, the Furies~The Furies, 1887 T-IV| built ship does well in a furious storm:~even a little squall 1888 T-IV| carried me,~often my hand, furiously, angered by its efforts,~ 1889 T-II| undeservedly blamed. Narrow the furrow I plough:~while that was 1890 ExII| the wrinkles of age are furrowing my face:~now strength and 1891 T-III| hid, buried in the wheat furrows,~show through, unfurl their 1892 T-III| cold with sewn trousers~and furs: the face alone appears 1893 Ind| in the gulfs of Sidra and Gabes. Pirates infested the neighbouring 1894 ExIV| recaptured at your coming,~gaining no advantage from the nature 1895 Ind| Varro Atacinus born 82BC in Gallia Narbonensis near the modern 1896 ExIV| guided the aged Antenor to Gallic fields:~Camerinus, singing 1897 Ind| Dardanelles) opposire Callipolis (Gallipoli), colonised in the 7th cent 1898 Ind| to the Hindu elephant god Ganesh. The Janus mask is often 1899 T-V| be weakened by rot, and gape with cracks,~if it’s separated 1900 T-II| chance forms a crack, it all gapes open,~and dragged down by 1901 Ind| Mysia, the highest peak Gargaros rising to over 4500 feet 1902 T-V| warm hearth with a woven garland,~Boy, give me incense that 1903 IBIS| all your bodies with black garments!~You too, why hesitate to 1904 Ind| Fahrenheit). Tomis was a border garrison and subject to constant 1905 Ind| killed by a wild boar that gashed his thigh. His blood formed 1906 ExII| no pain, I don’t burn and gasp with fever,~and my pulse 1907 T-I| jaws of Pontus,~the giant gateway between the twin seas.~I 1908 ExIII| peace,~where the wild Danube gathers its icy waters?~What’s the 1909 Ind| at the Issus in 333BC and Gaugamela in 331BC, and subsequently 1910 Ind| with the help of a band of Gaullish mercenaries and ruled from 1911 Ind| Romans were crushed by the Gauls under Brennius in a battle 1912 ExII| His Need~ ~Whether day gazes on this wretched life,~or 1913 Ind| Tityus~A giant, son of Ge (Earth) whose home was traditionally 1914 Ind| being the blue-white star Gemma.~Book TV.III:1-58 Her crown 1915 ExIII| shield shine with gold and gems,~and the trophied tree-trunk 1916 ExIV| of Thebes and the seven generals, without ~poetry, or everything 1917 Ind| manes, the good deities, a generic term for the gods of the 1918 Ind| XIII.~Book EII.IX:39-80 His generosity in helping a stranger.~Book 1919 Ind| Alexander conquered but treated generously.~Book TIII.V:1-56 Displays 1920 IBIS| May someone sever your genitals, as Saturn, ~when he was 1921 Ind| author of the Eclogues, Georgics, and the Aeneid, the story 1922 Ind| garlic, allium moly. John Gerard’s Herbal of 1633 Ch.100 1923 Ind| in Asia and a legate of Germania Superior. The elder Pliny 1924 Ind| Mentioned.~ ~Basternae~A Germanic or Celtic people living 1925 ExIII| of a vast sea.~While news gets here, and hasty verse is 1926 ExIV| asks how Ovid the exile is getting on:~let him know I owe my 1927 Ind| Eurydice – Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe, Hamburg: and the bas-relief – 1928 Ind| not the warlike tribes.~ ~Gigantes, Giants~Monsters, sons of 1929 Ind| have intended to write a Gigantomachia, the story of the war between 1930 ExI| buildings of the Roman forum gilded~by the gold of trophies, 1931 Ind| flesh.~The taking of the girdle of Hippolyte, Queen of the 1932 T-III| first discerned it, in your girlhood’s tender years,~when I was 1933 Ind| The implication is that gladiators were not allowed to fight 1934 T-III| icicles,~and their beards gleam white with a coat of frost.~ 1935 T-III| prominent doorposts hung ~with gleaming weapons, and a house fit 1936 ExIII| deserved.~Yet my wings have glided over endless ways~to see 1937 IBIS| be named in vain, ~that glides with dread murmurs through 1938 ExI| greater part of the quickly gliding year.~Ah, how different 1939 IBIS| and you Moon, that never glittered brighter in your orbit,~ 1940 ExI| by the gold of trophies, glittering in the sun,~and so many 1941 T-IV| come: I’ll lay aside my gloom,~and the public fate will 1942 ExIV| might celebrate your latest glories,~and tell of your great 1943 T-IV| allowing himself to be glorified by every tongue.~So your 1944 ExIII| effort,~and the growing work glows with one’s feelings.~But 1945 Ind| Sonnets to Orpheus’, and Gluck’s Opera ‘Orphée’).~ ~Eurytion~ 1946 T-V| shepherd plays his reed-pipe glued with pitch,~under a helmet, 1947 Ind| Antioch, and prosecutor of Gnaeus Piso), at the capture of 1948 ExIII| since envy~hurts the living, gnaws with the tooth of injustice. ~ 1949 T-I| As a wolf raging with the goad of hunger,~eager for blood, 1950 T-I| malice,~may you reach life’s goal without hindrance.~And may 1951 ExI| farmers?~The sacrificial goat won’t offer its throat to 1952 ExII| lands, was left alone on the god-forsaken earth.~She lets the man 1953 IBIS| wretched witness to the gold-bearing waters.~Or like Achilles’ 1954 Ind| linen, hemp, pitch and gold-dust.~Book TIII. IX:1-34 Home 1955 T-I| Ovid’s Journey to Tomis~ ~Golden-haired Minerva’s protection’s mine, 1956 ExIV| the day’s brought words of good-omen,~and you’ve given the thanks 1957 ExI| duty for their own sake.~Goodness, in your judgement, is free 1958 T-I| the open sea to trade my goods~greedy to acquire wealth 1959 ExIV| me from that spring~that Gorgonian Pegasus’s hollow hoof created,~ 1960 Ind| the child Perseus: See Jan Gossaert called Mabuse’s panel – 1961 ExI| sooner will I let my eyes be gouged from their sockets,~than 1962 Ind| Louvre, Paris, and Jean Goujon’s sculpture (attributed) – 1963 Ind| describes him as an extravagant gourmet. Juvenal (5.109, 7.94) makes 1964 Ind| AD17 he was appointed to govern Rome’s eastern provinces 1965 T-V| wedded love.~That virtue not governed by Fortune is truly rare,~ 1966 Ind| descendant of the great Gracci. ~Book EIV.XVI:1-52 A poet 1967 ExIV| against your will. ~Your grace was never slow in my affairs,~ 1968 T-V| celebration.~Let that tongue be graced, forgetful of my troubles,~ 1969 ExI| s face and bearing,~his graceful appearance creates the expectation 1970 T-IV| hostile anger,~the most gracious man in all the world?~Has 1971 Ind| aspect he became known as Gradivus.~Book TII:253-312 His great 1972 Ind| goddesses and spread through the Graeco-Roman world as far as the Rhine. 1973 Ind| his sisters.~ ~Mesembria~A Graeco-Thracian town on the west coast of 1974 T-V| down little trails to their granaries underground,~so dense is 1975 T-I| never head for an empty granary:~no friends gather round 1976 Ind| Augustus was Julius Caesar’s grand-nephew, whom Julius adopted and 1977 Ind| younger Julia, Augustus’s grandaughter, was banished as was the 1978 ExI| to you,~and to whom your grandeur is no burden,~and your son, 1979 ExIV| and he’s shown by you~as grandly as a hero should be sung 1980 ExIV| Germanicus,~are there, one by his grandmother’s side, one by his father’ 1981 T-IV| and my life of leisure~I grasped the unaccustomed weapons 1982 T-V| yellow sand,~as the tender grasses in the Field of Mars,~so 1983 Ind| the aromatic herb found in grasslands in the Northern hemisphere 1984 ExI| Indeed, your endorsement’s gratifying to my spirit,~even if it’ 1985 T-II| shouldn’t be doing.~Often grave-browed women consider~naked girls 1986 T-IV| reached,~my chariot has been gravely wrecked.~In my madness, 1987 T-IV| that has won many races, grazes idly~in the meadow, before 1988 ExII| staff, I’d like to guard the grazing sheep myself.~I myself would 1989 Ind| thirst in Hades. He was the great-grandfather of Menelaus, called Tantalides.~ 1990 Ind| and the Younger Julia.The great-grandsons ~are Germanicus’s three 1991 ExII| Admire the deep fortitude of great-hearted Rutilius,~who refused the 1992 ExIII| that familiar brow:~and let greaves and shield shine with gold 1993 ExIV| place from which you’re greeted.~Not that my style’s wonderful, 1994 T-IV| and place a helmet on my grey head.~When the lookout gives 1995 T-IV| mind broods on her just grievance,~does soft sleep leave her 1996 ExIII| Instead of spinning they grind Ceres’s gift,~and carry 1997 T-III| with ice,~a slippery shell gripping the unmoving deep.~Seeing 1998 Ind| 49-80 Allowed Perillus to groan and bellow.~Ibis:413-464 1999 ExIII| unruly locks~not neatly groomed now, as they were before.~ 2000 Ind| and small yellow flowers grouped into long loose spikes. 2001 Ind| the creative force in all groups and families, and, as the 2002 T-I| He has a power, not to be grudged, over my life:~he’ll take 2003 ExII| sounds the curved horn, who grudges him a few coppers as alms?~ 2004 T-II| your ancestors’.~Nature, grudgingly, shut me in a narrow space,~