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Publius Ovidius Naso Poems from Exile Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
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2005 Ind| Book TV.XIV:1-46 Ovid’s guarantee of immortality to her.~Book 2006 T-II| existed.~The city and the guardianship of your laws, also,~wearies 2007 T-III| here’s Vesta’s temple, guarding the Palladium ~and the fire, 2008 ExI| Together~ ~Macer, do you guess at all from the image printed ~ 2009 Ind| with sowing and harvest guidance. (See Hesiod Works and Days: 2010 T-IV| Major and Minor, one that guides the Greek~the second Phoenician 2011 T-III| distant world.’~He obeyed, and guiding me, said: ‘This is Caesar’ 2012 Ind| won the race and her. (See Guido Reni’s painting – Atalanta 2013 T-V| work,~saved by chance or guile, ever reach you.~If only 2014 T-I| falling endlessly over her guiltless cheeks.~My daughter was 2015 ExIII| hide the crime under the guise of error,~your judge’s anger 2016 Ind| hunting, music, medicine and gymnastics. He is represented in the 2017 Ind| island of Icaria. ( See W H Auden’s poem ‘Musée des 2018 Ind| this friends disloyalty.~ ~Hadria~Book TI.XI:1-44 The Adriatic.~ ~ 2019 Ind| had a superb temple of Hadrian, and was ultimately destroyed 2020 Ind| XI:1-44 The Adriatic.~ ~Haedi, the Kids~The constellation 2021 T-I| shore,~nobly founded by the Haemonian people,~and Byzantium’s 2022 Ind| name was Haemonia, hence Haemonius, Thessalian.~Book EI.III: 2023 Ind| the world by a blow from Haephaestus’s axe.~Book TIV.V:1-34 The 2024 ExII| do with me,~surely you’re hailed by one less voice than before.~ 2025 T-IV| Immortality~ ~Already, white hairs had come, driving away ~ 2026 Ind| townspeople were a mix of half-breed Greeks and barbarians chiefly 2027 Ind| of them was the half-man, half-bull line from Ars Amatoria II. 2028 IBIS| fires,~may you bear your half-burned bones to a Stygian death.~ 2029 T-I| more so, sobs choking her half-heard cries.~She threw herself 2030 T-II| and the gods,~and so are half-present, watching over the city,~ 2031 Ind| daughters of Atlas and Aethra, half-sisters of the Pleiades. They lived 2032 Ind| changed into the sea eagle, haliaeetus albicilla. Her name Ciris, 2033 Ind| Karia, and Kar built a great hall to Demeter (Ceres) there, 2034 ExIV| titles.~Now I seem to see halls near bursting with the crowd,~ 2035 T-I| at the same time,~let him halt the music of his songs, 2036 Ind| be turned into birds, the halycons. Ceyx was son of Lucifer ( 2037 Ind| Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe, Hamburg: and the bas-relief – Hermes, 2038 Ind| Carthaginian commander, son of Hamilcar Barca. Ovid may refer to 2039 T-I| and place.~If you can be handed in when he’s at leisure, 2040 T-III| marshes lie beyond it,~a handful of names in a region scarcely 2041 Ind| Originally an Italic goddess of handicrafts and arts, she was early 2042 Ind| plays with the difficulty of handling the name Tūtĭcānus 2043 IBIS| ashes:~as Penelope’s twelve handmaids died, and the suitors,~and 2044 T-III| might seem sad enough to a hangman:~but it’s still not profound 2045 IBIS| let your bones lie more happily than Pyrrhus’,~that were 2046 Ind| became a winged, musical, harbinger of justice. ~Book TIV.VII: 2047 T-IV| and there are no quiet harbours for foreign ships.~There 2048 T-III| Bears,~those tribes must be hard-pressed by the shivering sky.~Snow 2049 T-III| mouths,~congeals, the winds hardening its dark flow,~and winds 2050 ExI| protecting your friend in the hardest times.~You deserve it, and 2051 ExIV| delays, conquered by my hardiness.~Ulysses, the example of 2052 ExIV| interludes.~Was it really a hardship to fondle lovely Calypso~ 2053 Ind| her being exposed to the hardships of life in exile.~Book TI. 2054 ExII| where to put them, without harming~anyone? Where my Ars Amatoria 2055 Ind| which Cadmus and his wife Harmonia were turned into serpents. ( 2056 Ind| in Herodotus I.107-119.~ ~Harpyia, Harpies~The ‘snatchers’, 2057 ExI| endured mid-ocean.~There’s no harsher race in the world than the 2058 T-IV| stain,~I’m crushed, in the harshest years of life:~not far from 2059 Ind| spell’, Wadsworth Athanaeum, Hartford, Connecticut). She determined 2060 Ind| in the Fogg Art Museum, Harvard) Aeneas passed their island, 2061 T-III| Mind~ ~Go, greet Perilla, hastily written letter, ~and be 2062 ExIII| not to ruin my chances by hastiness.~Again I don’t suggest you 2063 Ind| He was called the ‘Rome Hater’. He later transferred his 2064 Ind| synonymous with Isis (or Hathor the cow-headed goddess with 2065 ExII| be, the ship that’s never hauled~from fresh water to dry-dock 2066 IBIS| face.~Living, you’ll be haunted by the furies, dead as well,~ 2067 ExI| quivering wings, in fear of the hawk~dares to seek human protection 2068 T-I| gods who bring us harm.~Hawks, the smallest sound of wings 2069 ExII| merely hide the truth.~He headed for Pontus, sent there by 2070 Ind| Acroceraunia~The dangerous headland on the Adriatic Coast of 2071 Ind| was sent to Caesar. The headless corpse was left on the sand.~ ~ 2072 IBIS| unarmed help:~or he who fell headlong from his horse in the Aleian 2073 ExII| and sleep, care’s common healer,~are here, that night might 2074 ExIV| sword~had made, the Getae heaped wherever your feet stood.~ 2075 T-IV| of great Caesar’s party,~heaping as many as evils on me, 2076 Ind| Book EIII.III:1-108 Ovid hears of Tiberius’s Pannonian 2077 ExIII| learned, with difficulty,~from hearsay, and rumour has acted as 2078 T-III| fiercer than Perillus~who heated the brazen bull in the slow 2079 ExII| the sunless waters ever heaving with the winds’ madness.~ 2080 ExII| arrows~fixed there, and the heavy-barred gate hardly prevents attack.~ 2081 T-III| terror of belligerent races, hedged in~on all sides, the enemy 2082 T-I| orders.~Seeking too great a height on fragile wings~Icarus 2083 Ind| stretches from Euboea past Helene to the Aegean. ~ ~Mysians~ 2084 Ind| Metamorphoses Ovid mentions Hector, Helenus, Paris, Polydorus, Deïphobus, 2085 Ind| adulteress, to be blushed for.~ ~Heliades~The seven daughters of the 2086 Ind| accusers.~ ~Sol~The sun-god, Helios, son of Hyperion. Identified 2087 Ind| doth sheen, Persephone in hell’) Callisto is one of her 2088 IBIS| your scored body to her hellish snakes:~the third one scorch 2089 IBIS| you a way.~Exiled, wander helpless, across the alien thresholds,~ 2090 Ind| Vindelicia on the north, Helvetia on the west and Noricum 2091 Ind| Somnus, Sleep.~ ~Cinna~Gaius Helvius Cinna, the neoteric poet 2092 Ind| grasslands in the Northern hemisphere and the source of absinthe, 2093 Ind| noted for timber, linen, hemp, pitch and gold-dust.~Book 2094 Ind| it was believed that the hen-kingfisher layed her eggs in a floating 2095 Ind| containing obscene material.~ ~Heniochi~Book EIV.X:1-34 A Sarmatian 2096 Ind| who indulged in piracy.~ ~Henna, Enna~The town in central 2097 Ind| Samos was famous for its Heraion, the great sanctuary of 2098 Ind| Bithynian river south of Herakleia.~Book EIV.X:35-84 A river 2099 Ind| TIII.V:1-56 The Sun at dawn heralded by Lucifer.~Book TIV.III: 2100 Ind| was from Falerii. Falisca herba is the ‘grass of Falerii’. ~ 2101 Ind| allium moly. John Gerard’s Herbal of 1633 Ch.100 gives seven 2102 Ind| constellation of the Waggoner, or Herdsman, or Bear Herd. The nearby 2103 T-III| ice no longer, Sarmatian herdsmen~don’t drive creaking carts 2104 Ind| Apollo, and invented by Hermes-Mercury, is the constellation Lyra 2105 Ind| above the valley of the Hermus, on Mount Sipylus, which 2106 Ind| area.~ ~Corinna~The unknown heroine of Ovid’s Amores.~Book TIV. 2107 T-I| its bite,~if, while you’re hesitating, scared to go near,~someone 2108 Ind| and Shield of Hercules.~ ~Hesperia~Book TIV.IX:1-32 The West, 2109 Ind| 32 The West, and Italy. Hesperius, ‘of the evening’.~ ~Hippocrene~ 2110 Ind| daughter of Saturn, the Greek Hestia. The goddess of fire. The ‘ 2111 Ind| thinking he was a vine, and hewed at his own foot thinking 2112 ExIII| set elegiac pentameter to hexameter.~You wouldn’t let me reach 2113 ExIV| human beings don’t become a hideous offering:~if I lie or Pontus 2114 T-IV| battles.~That traitor, who hides his face in his shaggy hair,~ 2115 Ind| Ovid lightly and ironically highlights the relationships, Tiberius 2116 T-I| curving breaker rises like a hillside.~The helmsman himself raises 2117 T-I| reach life’s goal without hindrance.~And may my prayers that 2118 Ind| beginnings, equivalent to the Hindu elephant god Ganesh. The 2119 Ind| the elder Julia. Ovid is hinting again I think that the younger 2120 T-III| none.~My verse gives no hints that drag my friends from 2121 Ind| of Samos and the Athenian Hipparchos. He was in Thessaly in 514 2122 Ind| Phaedra, and Euripides’ Hipploytos.).~Book TII:361-420 Her 2123 Ind| See also Euripides’s play ‘Hippolytos’, and Racine’s ‘Phaedra’.)~ 2124 Ind| the Consuls, namely Aulus Hirtius and Gaius Vibius Pansa, 2125 IBIS| and twining snakes, will hiss, and funeral ~torches, forever 2126 Ind| identified by Schliemann with Hissarlik four miles inland from the 2127 T-V| rich flame,~and wine that hisses, poured on the sacred fire.~ 2128 Ind| when he went to law. Pliny (Historia Naturalis:10.52) describes 2129 Ind| also wrote critical and historical works.~Book TII:313-360 2130 Ind| the second, who was not historically significant) Codomannus, 2131 Ind| horses and archery, using hit and run fighting tactics. 2132 T-V| Attic bee stores in the hive.~Often he remembers, as 2133 ExII| clear the weeds with a long hoe,~and supply the water that 2134 Ind| actually lays its eggs in a hole, normally in a riverbank, 2135 Ind| mild. (Constanta is now a holiday resort.)~Book TIII.IV:1- 2136 ExIV| that Gorgonian Pegasus’s hollow hoof created,~let it be 2137 T-V| you’re not harmed by the homage of a friend ~who remembers, 2138 Ind| poet who wrote about the homecoming of Helen and Menelaus.~Book 2139 Ind| of which the third, Moly Homericum, is he suggests the Moly 2140 T-III| vain at their farms and homes.~some die wretchedly pierced 2141 ExII| than cold Scythia?~Yet the homesick barbarian will still flee 2142 Ind| Book TIII.II:1-30 Ovid’s homesickness for the city.~Book TIII. 2143 ExIII| my eyes,~as the back of a homing dove often is,~with the 2144 Ind| Achilles as effeminate, and homosexual.~Book TIII.IV:1-46 Ibis: 2145 Ind| Caesar (Octavian). (The honorary title Augustus was bestowed 2146 Ind| Its rapid, far-carrying, ‘hoo-hoo-hoo’ call is interpreted as ‘ 2147 ExI| thinks there’s a bronze hook in all its food.~Often a 2148 IBIS| executioners’ hands,~and their hooks are buried deep in your 2149 Ind| turned into a bird, the hoopoe, upupa epops, with its distinctive 2150 Ind| like an omen, that Ovid was hopeful of Augustus relenting, but 2151 Ind| TV.VIII:1-38 Ovid goes on hoping for remission of his sentence, 2152 Ind| flowers.~ ~Cimbri~The Teutonic horde defeated by Marius.~Book 2153 ExII| gods, ~sounds the curved horn, who grudges him a few coppers 2154 IBIS| for him who was born of horned Jupiter.~Or die suspended 2155 Ind| corpse, and the Edonians, horrified, instructed by Bacchus, 2156 ExII| bring any relief for the horrors of dropsy.~Sorrow too at 2157 Ind| language. They were noted horse-breeders and horsemen. Their warrior 2158 Ind| bullfight.~Book EI.IV:1-58 A horse-racing venue.~ ~Ciziges~A tribe 2159 Ind| produces.~Book TV.VII:1-68 Horse-riding bowmen, warlike and semi-nomadic.~ 2160 T-V| fro, along the trails, on horseback.~There’s not one among them 2161 Ind| Hortensius~Quintus Hortensius Hortalus (114-50BC) was a prominent 2162 Ind| those of Agrippa and the Horti Pompeiani.~ ~Canace~The 2163 Ind| confused), and Epaphus with Horus. Ovid suggests Juno drove 2164 Ind| advances of Stheneboea his hostess who falsely denounced him 2165 Ind| on the orders of Tullus Hostilius.~Book TI.III:47-102 An analogy 2166 T-V| against your wishes.~Like a hound that’s scented the trail 2167 Ind| Latona (Leto). Having been hounded by jealous Juno (Hera), 2168 Ind| taken to Rome by Aeneas, and housed in the Temple of Vesta.~ 2169 T-II| familiar standards,~wings hovering as ever over the Italian 2170 IBIS| drank it’s nurse’s fury,~and howled with a dog’s cry over all 2171 T-IV| no wound,~while the wild howling of the Idaean rites numbs 2172 T-I| by Thesean loyalty!~I’ll hug you while I can: perhaps 2173 Ind| Sirens – Ferens Art Gallery, Hull, England, and Gustave Moreau’ 2174 T-V| Nothing’s certain for humankind. Who’d have thought~that 2175 ExI| Advantage, then, makes god and humans great,~by their support 2176 T-I| the changing sea defeated, humbled?~No accident, but you, called 2177 T-I| but not wicked,~if as the humblest may I’ve favoured that House,~ 2178 T-IV| not without respect and humility.~I pray for a milder place, 2179 T-I| cloud,~between, the roar and humming of the winds.~The ocean 2180 Ind| She was then guarded by hundred-eyed Argus. After Mercury killed 2181 ExIV| meadow,~while Grattius gave hunters suitable weapons:~Fontanus 2182 T-IV| Apollo’s laurel,~will chant: ‘Hurrah, for the triumph’ in loud 2183 T-III| letters on the marble~for the hurried eyes of passers-by to read:~ ~ 2184 IBIS| frantic horses ~of the Sun hurtle back from west to east:~ 2185 ExIV| under their slow-growing husks, in some fertile farm’s 2186 T-I| not be cloaked, dyed with hyacinthine purple –~that’s no fitting 2187 Ind| Thrace who fell in love with Hyacinthus the Spartan prince. Apollo 2188 Ind| son of Autonoë, called Hyantius from an ancient name for 2189 Ind| southerly wind.~ ~Hybla~Megara Hyblaea, a small town in eastern 2190 Ind| Phaethon.~ ~Sphinx~The mythical hybrid moinster with human head ( 2191 Ind| 1-50 The honey of Mount Hymettos in Attica, near Athens, 2192 Ind| Augusta, in 17BC, with a hymn by Horace sung by a mixed 2193 ExIV| Lycus, Sagaris, Penius, Hypanes, and Cales,~all enter, the 2194 Ind| present at a marriage.~ ~Hypanis~A Sarmatian river, now the 2195 Ind| and, with one exception, Hypermnestra, who saved the life of Lynceus 2196 Ind| 464 The son of Apollo and Hyrie, a great hunter of Tempe. 2197 T-I| among the Rutulian host,~Hyrtacian Nisus would have found no 2198 Ind| to death by a serpent. ~ ~Hyrtacides~Nisus son of Hyrtacus.~ ~ 2199 Ind| named for him, January (Ianuarius). ~ ~Jason~The son of Aeson, 2200 Ind| the Titan Eurymedon, or of Iapetus by the nymph Clymene. He 2201 Ind| the brother of Agenor and Iasus.~Book TII:361-420 The Greeks 2202 ExIV| yourself see the fierce Iazygian ox-herd~lead his loaded 2203 Ind| poets, such as Anacreon and Ibycus. Pythagoras migrated to 2204 Ind| cover for his true enemy.~ ~Icariotis~Book EIII.1:105-166 Penelope 2205 ExIII| cold.~You hold the waves ice-bound, and the fish, ~in the sea, 2206 T-III| hair tinkles with hanging icicles,~and their beards gleam 2207 Ind| Phineus and his second wife Idaea persecuted his two children 2208 Ind| the loser being killed. Idas stole her, and Evenus drowned 2209 ExIII| redeem my death, a detestable idea,~Alcestis, Admetus’s wife 2210 Ind| and supported Augustus’s ideas of national regeneration 2211 Ind| specifically liked. They proved identical. (One of them was the half-man, 2212 Ind| of plenty.~Book TII.I:1 Identifed with Cybele by the Romans, 2213 Ind| Dodona, and Ovid continually identifies Augustus with Jupiter in 2214 Ind| Troesmis~A Moesian town (modern Iglita) near the Danube just above 2215 T-V| less happy times,~no age ignores it, though you add centuries,~ 2216 Ind| in Tomis) is completed. (Ignoring the winter of AD9 when he 2217 Ind| the entry for Romulus.~ ~Iliacus~Ilian, and so Trojan.~Book 2218 Ind| Deiphilus rather than Polydorus, Iliona’s nephew, sent to him by 2219 Ind| King of Thrace, husband of Ilione daughter of Priam. He murdered 2220 Ind| Book TI.V:45-84 Called Ilium from the citadel of Troy.~ 2221 ExII| Scythian earth,~nor my ashes, ill-interred, as no doubt an exile deserves,~ 2222 Ind| Pontus-on-the-left, the ill-omened (to him) western shore of 2223 Ind| 361-420 Ibis:311-364 Her illicit love.~ ~Capaneus~The son 2224 ExI| eyes.~We saw Etna’s flames illuminate the sky,~eruptions of the 2225 ExIV| Since neither wine nor illusory dice attract me,~those usual 2226 Ind| III:1-48 Remus.~ ~Illyria~Illyris, the district along the 2227 Ind| son of Tros, brother of Ilus and Assaracus, loved by 2228 T-II| stirring my feelings with imaginary desires.~I wish I hadn’t. 2229 T-I| city~came to your port, Imbrian land, from where~we reached 2230 ExIV| form of my verse can act as immediate~witness to the place from 2231 T-III| imagine yours the equal of immense wealth,~still fortune gives 2232 T-III| lest my prayer might be immodest.~Perhaps, sometime, when 2233 ExIV| added to the stars, was immortalised in part by poetry.~So, Caesar, 2234 ExIV| I’m the only one so far immune from taxes on your ~shores, 2235 Ind| Rome AD 6-9. He obtained immunity and was allowed to live 2236 Ind| number of years. Odysseus was impatient to leave her. See Homer’ 2237 IBIS| Anytus, once drank with imperturbable lips.~Nor may you be happier 2238 ExI| prior speech gave forward impetus to his:~he has you to elicit 2239 Ind| by the Bacchantes for his impiety.~Book TV.III:1-58 His offence 2240 Ind| Poseidon made him immortal by implanting a golden hair in his head, 2241 Ind| attempted suicide after being implicated in Sejanus’s conspiracy.~ 2242 T-V| mistaken:~now I believe it implicitly, since you wise vapours~ 2243 ExII| each of you as suppliants implore your gods not to end, ~but 2244 Ind| anything for the theatre, implying that someone has adapted 2245 ExIII| of your party.~The role imposed on you in my books is a 2246 ExIV| and poetry flows in an impoverished vein.~If anyone had set 2247 IBIS| Medusa’s cousin,~may ominous imprecations descend on your head:~like 2248 Ind| Book TII:253-312 She was impregnated by Mars. See the entry for 2249 Ind| 395BC a drama festival. The impressive ancient theatre has been 2250 T-II| erase the bruise~that the imprint of a love-bite often makes:~ 2251 T-III| of the Erymanthian Bear~imprisons me, earth gripped with freezing 2252 T-II| than that love joined in an improper union.~Before, in youthful 2253 T-III| noble mind has generous impulses.~It’s enough for the great 2254 IBIS| your birth was dark and impure,~overcast with cloud, so 2255 Ind| Acrisioniades, Agenorides, Danaëius, Inachides, Lyncides. (See Burne-Jones’ 2256 Ind| Identified with Io, Daughter of Inachus a river-god of Argolis, 2257 T-V| I’m admonishing you, for inaction:~I’m raising sail on a ship 2258 Ind| that he had not spoken inadvisedly, that he witnessed a crimen ( 2259 T-V| the swell of anger, it’s inappropriate,~don’t desert our ship in 2260 ExIV| renews it, who disturbs it, inappropriately.~And then (and I hope this 2261 Ind| Saeculares. They were held to inaugurate the pax Augusta, in 17BC, 2262 Ind| procession to the Capitol at the inauguration of a consul.~ ~Carus~A friend 2263 Ind| IX:1-54 Scene of consular inaugurations.~ ~Tartarus, Tartara~The 2264 T-I| your worth! –~if I had any inborn vigour long ago,~it’s extinct, 2265 T-III| ease,~I was tender, and incapable of labour,~now I endure 2266 Ind| Sarmatians and Getae are Mars incarnate.~Book EIII.VI:1-60 The god 2267 Ind| epyllion Zmyrna described the incest between Myrrha and her father 2268 ExI| talk,~and more words than inches if you numbered them.~Often 2269 ExIII| or Phalaris who used to incinerate men in his bronze bull.~ 2270 Ind| of the Laestrygonians. He incited his people, who were cannibals, 2271 Ind| celebrated every fifth year inclusive from 776BC, and therefore 2272 ExIV| Troien to swift ~death, the incomplete effort of many days:~Largus, 2273 Ind| interrogation to reveal inconsistency. He was charged with atheism 2274 T-V| face,~and only true in her inconstancy.~I too flowered, but the 2275 Ind| coastal region of Asia Minor, incorporated into the Empire from 67BC 2276 ExIII| and has the weight of an incorruptible informant.~Not to produce 2277 T-V| the pain of great ones increases with time.~For ten years 2278 ExI| as is proper, you’re not incriminated by ‘Art’.~You sing whatever 2279 Ind| brains of his opponent, incurring Athene’s anger. She allowed 2280 ExIV| poem composed by one~who’s indebted to you, Sextus, for his 2281 Ind| in the winter months, and indicative of stormy weather.~Book 2282 Ind| Ursa Major and Ursa Minor, individually or together. They never 2283 Ind| 76 Laurel was chewed to induce prophetic trance in the 2284 Ind| the House of Sleep, and induces drowsiness with its murmuring. ( 2285 Ind| 34 A Sarmatian people who indulged in piracy.~ ~Henna, Enna~ 2286 ExIII| Great poets don’t require indulgent readers: they grip us,~however 2287 T-I| pray they live, and with industrious leisure ~delight the reader, 2288 ExII| and the weight will lie inert on my stomach for hours.~ 2289 T-IV| years of frailty, and the inertia of age, already~steal over 2290 Ind| Augustus is that one is inevitably tempted to read them into 2291 IBIS| myself away in exile:~and he, inexorably, disturbs the wound of a 2292 ExIII| poem~that you wouldn’t be inexperienced in my Arts.~The reward of 2293 IBIS| flames.~May you pay for infamies in your offspring, as for 2294 IBIS| or she who made a place infamous with her crime’s name,~trampling 2295 T-III| offspring have caught my infection:~let the rest of the flock 2296 Ind| Sidra and Gabes. Pirates infested the neighbouring coasts.~ ~ 2297 ExII| touched.~However they were inflicted on me, cease asking~about 2298 T-II| also calm it:~song often influences the great gods. Caesar himself~ 2299 ExIII| weight of an incorruptible informant.~Not to produce a book, 2300 ExIII| that, and using dubious informants,~it’s right I seek the help 2301 Ind| flint (touchstone, the ‘informer’) See Metamorphoses II:676~ ~ 2302 Ind| of its water snakes as an ingredient for her magic potion. Ovid 2303 ExI| reached your ears,~that I inhabit part of a country near to 2304 Ind| IX:39-80 Cursed for his inhumanity and abuse of strangers.~ ~ 2305 T-II| games also sow~seeds of iniquity: order the theatres closed!~ 2306 ExIII| their yellow hair.~As she initiated the rites, bound the threads 2307 Ind| forced him to relinquish, initiating the famous quarrel described 2308 Ind| lost her when he broke the injunction not to look back at her. 2309 T-I| she carried in flight so insecurely,~that separate Sestos from 2310 ExIII| be the bride misleading insistent suitors.~If you followed 2311 IBIS| their creator,~may your insolent tongue be your destruction.~ 2312 T-III| learned minds, is open to inspection by the reader.~I searched 2313 T-V| inside, mixed with Greeks, inspire fear,~for the barbarians 2314 T-I| That Phocean Pylades was an instance of true love~was due to 2315 Ind| taken, by Paris, to Troy, instigating the Trojan War. ~Diomede 2316 T-IV| eyes still burning,~was the instigator and planned the battles.~ 2317 ExI| touch,~and a vain shadow instils fear in the nervous.~So, 2318 Ind| crime. Cotta initially and instinctively sided with Augustus, but 2319 T-III| moments to my life:~no parting instructions, no last lament~as a friendly 2320 Ind| Ovid and Macer.~ ~Cyaneae Insulae, Symphlegades~The Greek 2321 Ind| love etc.~Ibis:541-596 Insulted, she made Hippolytus fall 2322 Ind| Book TII:207-252 The Alpine insurgents occupied the area and were 2323 ExI| and keeps the sacred bed intact:~his son, Tiberius, extends 2324 Ind| considered of superior intelligence by Herodotus (4.92). Alexander 2325 T-III| to ensure I receive an intelligent hearing:~there’s no secluded 2326 Ind| victory.~Ibis:311-364 Ovid may intend Darius III (not the second, 2327 Ind| Minerva on the sternpost. Ovid intends to offer her the sacrifice 2328 T-III| narrow the sails of your intentions.~Since you ought to run 2329 ExI| fault’s pardoned by the intercession ~of friends: all kindness 2330 Ind| when the blow fell. This is interesting coupled with his last meeting 2331 Ind| Pythoness’s orders, for interfering with the sacrifice there. 2332 Ind| Sea, and mountains in the interior, and the Sorrento peninsula. 2333 ExIV| there were often peaceful interludes.~Was it really a hardship 2334 IBIS| your tortured~body, and interminable delay torment it first.~ 2335 T-II| air,~but they subside to intermittent silence,~and you’d think 2336 ExIV| him no harm.~But a wrong interpretation rouses people’s anger ~against 2337 Ind| the ‘Socratic method’ of interrogation to reveal inconsistency. 2338 T-II| Calvus~who revealed his intrigues in various metres.~Why speak 2339 Ind| 132 A very suggestive and intriguing comment that the cause of 2340 Ind| crossing point for Xerxes’ invading army in 480BC as it moved 2341 ExIV| you,~so you could own your investment in a better location!~Given 2342 IBIS| Preliminaries at the Altar: The Invocation~ ~We’ll enjoy that peace, 2343 ExIV| surely words of deceit involve less danger.~Even when you’ 2344 Ind| suggests a more conspiratorial involvement than he would have us believe 2345 ExII| surveys it all with its own inward eye.~Now the fora, now the 2346 T-IV| s safe): delight in this inwardly,~that I’ve remembered you 2347 Ind| elder son of Oedipus and Iocasta, brother of Polynices who 2348 Ind| was ‘my Muse’ ‘playful’, iocosa, in Ars Amatoria and why 2349 IBIS| Aethalos,~whom even now Ion, mindful, drives from his 2350 Ind| 420 Loved by Hercules.~ ~Ionium~The Ionian Sea, between 2351 ExIII| sentence, I suffer, one iota.~He doesn’t forbid anyone 2352 Ind| drove Io over the sea.~ ~Iphias~Evadne the daughter of Iphis.~ 2353 Ind| Hercules killed his eldest son Iphitus, and fell in love with Iole. 2354 Ind| the Babylonians, in modern Iraq.~Book EII.IV:1-34 Its heat.~ ~ 2355 T-III| reach is left to which your ire might stretch?~What do you 2356 Ind| nickname Irus was a version of Iris since he was also a messenger, 2357 Ind| visit.~Book EI.V:43- 86 An ironic judgement on their lack 2358 ExII| limbs will be freed from the irons.~She lets the shipwrecked 2359 Ind| of Julius Caesar. Ovid’s irony is subdued. Germanicus translated 2360 ExIV| warlike Getae.~The Tomitae are irritated with me for such words,~ 2361 Ind| suspicion, and a source of irritating pleas for remembrance and 2362 IBIS| what you did not earn.~As Isindius, the host, took the life 2363 Ind| Cyclades~The ‘Encircling Isles’ The chain of islands centred 2364 Ind| likely one of the five Galli islets, the Sirenusae, at the entrance 2365 Ind| from his son Keryx. His son Ismarus married a daughter of Tegyrius 2366 Ind| 325BC).Pupil of Plato and Isocrates, Lycurgus became a successful 2367 ExII| knows all, ~what state this isolated place is in.~The great burden 2368 T-II| I also settled private issues, without criticism, as arbiter,~ 2369 T-II| you’ll scan many pricey items like these.~You’ve seen 2370 Ind| hill of Acrocorinth, it and Ithome were ‘the horns of the Greek 2371 Ind| were the forum Romanum, Iulium, and Augusti.~Book TV.I: 2372 Ind| Vestalis~The grandson of Gaius Iulius Donnus a Celtic chieftain 2373 T-II| her brother.~Again, didn’t ivory-shouldered Pelops, with Phrygian steeds ~ 2374 Ind| winepress’.~Book TI.VII:1-40 The ivy-crowned god.~Book TI.X:1-50 Dionysopolis 2375 Ind| Satyrs following him carrying ivy-twined fir branches as thyrsi. ( 2376 Ind| the Naiad Periboa. ~(See J R Spencer Stanhope’s painting- 2377 ExII| their savour won’t excite my jaded palate~and the weight will 2378 Ind| Pincian Hill and east of the Janiculum, used for army musters and 2379 Ind| Huntress – Louvre, Paris, and Jean Goujon’s sculpture (attributed) – 2380 T-II| believe there’s one who jeers at my fall,~if there’s any 2381 Ind| or 17 according to Saint Jerome’s Chronicle of Eusebius, 2382 T-II| s stained with poisonous jest.~Among so many thousands 2383 Ind| seven stars, its central jewel being the blue-white star 2384 Ind| making one of his traditional jibes at Augustus’s supposed homosexuality 2385 T-V| Purposefully, when the joint offering’s made~on the altar, 2386 ExII| strength penetrates my fragile joints,~and my limbs are more pallid 2387 Ind| of the Chelmos ridge to jojn the River Crathis. Pausanias 2388 Ind| for Augustus. He compiled jokebooks in old age.~Book EIV.XVI: 2389 T-II| harmed~for weaving vile jokes into the tale.~It was no 2390 ExIV| would be~pleasant to be jostled by people at a time like 2391 Ind| trusted friend of Augustus. He journeyed with Augustus to the island 2392 Ind| passed its streams while journeying through the deep caverns 2393 T-IV| embrace, not his death.~Joyfully, she carried off the statue 2394 ExI| so as to be worshipped in joyous piety,~order sadness laid 2395 Ind| potion. Ovid also gives it as Juba’s place of origin.~Book 2396 Ind| Romulus killed his brother for jumping over the wall. He reigned 2397 Ind| her first cousin Drusus Junior the son of Tiberius by Vipsania, 2398 Ind| including magic juice (juniper?) to subdue the dragon, 2399 ExI| milder~than his, who was justifiably offended by me.~The pain 2400 T-II| could not be judged more justly.~Who could be my friend 2401 Ind| Asia Minor, on a peninsula jutting into the Black Sea. It was 2402 Ind| an extravagant gourmet. Juvenal (5.109, 7.94) makes him 2403 Ind| more ancient worship of the Kabeiroi, an archaic Greek equivalent.~ ~ 2404 Ind| The acropolis was named Karia, and Kar built a great hall 2405 Ind| albicilla. Her name Ciris, from κείρω, ‘I cut’, reflects her shearing 2406 Ind| Cretan Great Goddess, Car, Ker or Q’re, to whom doves were 2407 Ind| descent from him, as the Kerkidae did from his son Keryx. 2408 Ind| Kerkidae did from his son Keryx. His son Ismarus married 2409 Ind| libraries.~Book TIII.V:1-56 A key statement again regarding 2410 Ind| at Ammon (Siwa Oasis, El Khargeh) but the army vanished in 2411 Ind| the Isthmus who used to kick travellers into the sea. 2412 Ind| springs’. Now Balchik (40 kilometres north of Varna).~Book TI. 2413 ExII| Augustus is, I believe~a kindlier shore might be granted to 2414 IBIS| your burning limbs to the kindling pyre,~as they say Broteas 2415 ExIII| thanks are due for all my kindnesses.~Indeed, you return them 2416 ExI| there’s harmony between kindred spirits,~and everyone maintains 2417 T-II| this man tells of various kinds of ball-game,~that one teaches 2418 Ind| both were transformed into kingfishers. In antiquity it was believed 2419 ExIV| my troubles.~Our bonds of kinship make some claims on us,~ 2420 Ind| granddaughter of Oceanus. (Kirke or Circe means a small falcon) 2421 Ind| Hera. He was visited and kissed by the Moon (Selene/Luna/ 2422 Ind| into the Pontus. The modern Kizil-Irmak flowing into the Black Sea 2423 T-IV| of the world, on bended knee, to the Caesars,~and perhaps 2424 ExII| divinity~of linen-robed Isis kneeling before Isis’s altar.~Another, 2425 IBIS| relinquish your throat to my knives.~Let earth deny its fruits 2426 T-III| lost.~Ah, how often I’ve knocked at the door of my own tomb~ 2427 ExIII| forms,~no Medusa binding her knotted hair with snakes,~but the 2428 Ind| Possibly Damasicthon son of Kodros, the Ionian. ~Danae~The 2429 Ind| Tomis. Earlier known as Krounoi, ‘the springs’. Now Balchik ( 2430 Ind| and Eurydice – Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe, Hamburg: and 2431 Ind| remains (burial mounds or kurgans). They may have formed the 2432 Ind| Book EIV.VIII:49-90 Ovid labels them fierce, stern, of a 2433 ExI| allegiance to their calling:~the labourer loves the farmer, the soldier 2434 ExI| unfulfilled the prayers of labouring farmers?~The sacrificial 2435 Ind| Book EI.X:1-44 Hebe.~ ~Lacedaemon, Sparta~Book EI.III:49-94 2436 T-III| husband’s empty name?~Don’t lacerate your cheeks or tear your 2437 Ind| for having read a poem to ladies lamenting the death of Drusus 2438 IBIS| like those who fell into Laestrygonian hands:~like those the Punic 2439 T-I| Tristia Book I~ ~ ~‘laeta fere laetus cecini, cano 2440 T-I| Tristia Book I~ ~ ~‘laeta fere laetus cecini, cano tristia tristis: ~ 2441 T-V| moves so slowly,~and with lagging steps the year completes 2442 Ind| king of Troezen. Aegeus had lain with her in the temple. 2443 ExII| wild natures – seek their lairs.~Yet you hope, by your palliatives, 2444 Ind| having read a poem to ladies lamenting the death of Drusus while 2445 Ind| Two of them are named. Lampetia and the eldest Phaethüsa. 2446 Ind| poet he wrote epigrams, lampoons etc. His oratory was compared 2447 T-IV| over earth and sea, and landed me in Sarmatia.~Shattered 2448 Ind| at Troy, fated to die on landing. She was granted three hours 2449 Ind| poetry.~ ~Propontis~The landlocked Sea of Marmara lying between 2450 Ind| III:1-58 Its snow-covered landscape.~ ~Styx~A river of the underworld, 2451 Ind| Circe and her Lovers in a Landscape- National gallery of Art, 2452 ExII| fields I lost,~the noble landscapes of the Paelignian country,~ 2453 Ind| Perseus bronze, Loggia dei Lanzi, Florence, depicting Danaë 2454 Ind| On the Minerva’s route.~ ~Laodameia~The daughter of the Argonaut 2455 Ind| slain in the Trojan War. See Laodemia, his wife. She was granted 2456 Ind| Mother of Orestes, Electra (Laodice), and Iphigenia. She conspired 2457 Ind| the Trojan War, the son of Laomedon, husband of Hecuba, by whom 2458 ExIV| rational thought, by the lapse of time. ~While your letter 2459 Ind| areas etc. Each house had a Lararium where the image of the Lar 2460 Ind| Larissa~Ibis:311-364 Larisa was the daughter of Pelasgos, 2461 IBIS| of Thrasyllus by hostile Larissean wheels, ~as Hector who often 2462 Ind| X:1-53 The siege and war lasted ten years.~Book EII.II:1- 2463 Ind| death sometime in the period lateAD16-AD18. (Last dateable reference 2464 Ind| He had adopted the tunica laticlavia for the sons of senators 2465 Ind| of Samos and across the Latmian Gulf from the River Maeander. 2466 Ind| in a cave on Carian Mount Latmos by Zeus for attempting to 2467 Ind| Latona (hence her epithet Latonia) and twin sister of Apollo. 2468 T-V| one comprehends,~the Getae laugh foolishly at my Latin words.~ 2469 T-III| night and day equal now.~Now laughing boys and girls gather the 2470 T-II| work’s remiss,~I’ve often launched my boat under full sail.~ 2471 Ind| s Aeneid, where he loses Lavinia his betrothed to Aeneas 2472 Ind| brought before Senate or law-court, and was a relegatus, with 2473 Ind| Maiores (19th March) when the law-courts closed. (Fasti I:297-8). 2474 Ind| 114-50BC) was a prominent lawyer, but notorious for bribery. 2475 Ind| that the hen-kingfisher layed her eggs in a floating nest 2476 ExII| of my exile.~You see how laziness spoils an idle body,~how 2477 Ind| containing Rome. (The modern Lazio region. It originally designated 2478 ExII| soil.~Jason, under whose leadership the sacred ship sailed~Colchian 2479 ExIV| shore alone.~Here there’s leafless land, arrows steeped in 2480 Ind| cistern with water carried in leaking sieves.~Book TIII.I:47-82 2481 T-II| falls on the parts that lean,~and when chance forms a 2482 Ind| encouragement of her poetic leanings.~Book EI.VIII:1-70 His thoughts 2483 T-I| weathers the tides and the leaping billows,~not drenched, or 2484 T-I| from the deep!~The breaker leaps mountain-high on prow~and 2485 Ind| and the death of her son Learchus, at the hand of his father, 2486 Ind| exile.~Book TI.III:1-46 His leave-taking from her.~Book TV.XI:1-30 2487 Ind| Ionia. Between Samos and Lebinthos Icarus flew too high, the 2488 Ind| the city gates, towards Lechaeum, into whose waters the Corinthian 2489 Ind| broad purple stripe. The lectors carried the fasces, axes 2490 ExIII| learnt ~nothing save what’s legal from your teaching,~and 2491 Ind| been repulsed by Athene). Legendary king of Athens (as Erechtheus) 2492 Ind| the loss of Varus and his legions in the Teutoberger Forest 2493 Ind| clandestine marriage which legitimised the child she was carrying, 2494 ExII| the place I’m in itself lends them substance.~You’d hardly 2495 T-V| think, if the prince shows lenience, it may be~you’ll be saddened 2496 Ind| waiting for leniency, ‘lenito Caesare’, from a Caesar 2497 Ind| Medea’s and Triptolemus’s (lent him by Ceres) chariots. 2498 Ind| Possibly the wife of Publius Lentulus Spinther who divorced her 2499 Ind| trident is his emblem. (see Leonardo Da Vinci’s drawing of Neptune 2500 IBIS| star befriended a scion of Leoprepeus.~Or may you give your name 2501 Ind| The destruction of the Lernean Hydra. He uses the poison 2502 ExI| Pontus, guilty of murder,~no lethal poison was mixed by my hand:~ 2503 ExII| numbness checks them:~and a lethargy like death grips my thoughts.~ 2504 T-IV| were drinking soporific Lethean draughts,~so the feeling