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2505 ExI| better cause~than in not letting such prayers be made in 2506 T-V| ocean deep, offered to the Leucadian god.~What I ask is punishment: 2507 Ind| forgetfulness.~ ~Leucadia, Leucas~A large island near Acharnarnia 2508 Ind| Ligeia, the Bright Voice; and Leucosia, the White One – seeUlysses 2509 Ind| changed to the sea-goddess Leucothoë by Neptune, at Venus’s request.~ 2510 T-III| calm water,~He who falls on level ground – it scarcely happens –~ 2511 ExII| you look are uncultivated levels,~and the vast plains that 2512 T-II| entertain my eyes?~This lewdness made you hate me, for the 2513 ExII| So it’s fitting I make libation of tears for dead Celsus,~ 2514 Ind| Identified with Bacchus.~ ~Libertas~Liberty. The Atrium Libertatis, 2515 Ind| Libertas~Liberty. The Atrium Libertatis, north of the Forum, was 2516 Ind| Maecenas, grammarian, poet and librarian. He wrote Trabeatae, comedies 2517 Ind| of Lycaon.~ ~Calvus~Gaius Licinius Macer Calvus (82-46?BC) 2518 Ind| and were preceded by a lictor when in public. Breaking 2519 T-V| the purple stripe,~and the lictorsrods and cries, demand 2520 IBIS| to his eyes, close to the lids.~The child wept when he 2521 Ind| 6.7) for his extravagant life-style, his shameful behaviour, 2522 Ind| destroyed. Both were more than lifesize. ~ ~Athens~The chief city 2523 ExI| perhaps in verse~if only my lifespan equals my misfortunes,~and 2524 Ind| in 2BC for her dissolute lifestyle, and for political intrigue 2525 T-IV| loyalty you bear me can lift its head.~Use this time, 2526 Ind| Parthenope, the Virgin Face; Ligeia, the Bright Voice; and Leucosia, 2527 ExIII| see things, struck by the lightening bolt, live~and recover, 2528 T-I| she runs well before the lightest wind,~if oars are used, 2529 Ind| Alexandria in Egypt, site of the lighthouse. Protected by Isis as goddess 2530 Ind| 58 hint at the adulterous lightness (why was ‘my Muse’ ‘playful’, 2531 Ind| foreheads. They forged Jupiter’s lightning-bolts, using Etna’s fires.~Book 2532 T-V| things~in the brightest of lights in eloquent books:~even 2533 Ind| chieftain reigning over Ligurian tribes. The son of Marcus 2534 Ind| retain three he specifically liked. They proved identical. ( 2535 Ind| Ulysses.~Book TV.V:1-26 Likewise separated from his wife, 2536 ExI| help in error.~The wounded limb shrinks from a gentle touch,~ 2537 ExII| friend, live at the furthest limits of the world?~May the gods 2538 IBIS| winner to sacrifice.~And lest Limon should suffer his punishment 2539 T-III| If the crippled couplets limp in alternate lines,~it’s 2540 ExII| outraging the divinity~of linen-robed Isis kneeling before Isis’ 2541 T-I| on swiftly, winds – why linger here? –~Why do my sails 2542 T-III| melted,~and in many parts it lingers there two years.~The power 2543 Ind| s time, with Latin as a lingua franca.~Book EIV.IX:55-88 2544 Ind| the Thracian Bosphorus, linking the Aegean to Pontus, the 2545 Ind| cave was on the islands of Lipari (the Aeolian Islands) that 2546 ExI| than my words.~Often you listened to a freshly made poem,~ 2547 Ind| A soldier interested in literature, possibly the Graecinus 2548 Ind| Tiberius and Livia. The Livia-Augustus relationship is mocked in 2549 ExIII| straightforwardness of Hercules.~Livid malice, vice of fear, won2550 Ind| the daughter of Marcus Livius Drusus Claudianus, who became 2551 Ind| Germany.~Book TIV.X:93-132 Livor, Envy, here may possibly 2552 Ind| and only one survived. (Livy II:48)~Book EI.II:53-100 2553 ExIV| words came to my ears:~‘Lo, I, Rumour, come to you 2554 ExIV| Iazygian ox-herd~lead his loaded wagon over the Danube’s 2555 T-IV| statue of the goddess~who loathed those cruel rites, to a 2556 IBIS| s natal ills,~may a just loathing visit your existence.~Like 2557 Ind| while Vulcan’s was in the lobby. The statues of Venus Genetrix 2558 Ind| sacrifice. Strabo (7.4.2) locates her temple at Heracleia 2559 ExIV| loved by Satyrs,~Capella locking words in elegiac couplets:~ 2560 IBIS| daughter-in-law:~or the Locrian who, disguised as her murdered ~ 2561 Ind| capital of the Opuntian Locrians.~Book EI.III:49-94 The birthplace 2562 ExI| divine Julius views from his lofty shrine.~Messalinus does 2563 Ind| philosopher with an emphasis on logic, and the ‘Socratic method’ 2564 ExIV| monsters, from distorted loins,~but the Sarmatian pirates 2565 Ind| supported by Augustus, Marcus Lollius providing military help, 2566 T-I| becoming like her, through long-acquired habit.~~ Alas, my poetry 2567 T-IV| his victories.~When the long-serving soldier is no longer useful~ 2568 ExIV| it, joined to you,~in a long-standing friendship, almost boy with 2569 Ind| Ulysses, the Ithacan, also longed for home.~Book EII.VII:47- 2570 T-III| thoughts, and home, and longed-for places,~whatever of mine 2571 T-V| imprisoned by your command,~longs to pursue the glory of your 2572 T-III| oars in these shallows.~A look-out on a high hill saw Aeetes 2573 T-IV| on my grey head.~When the lookout gives the signal for a raid~ 2574 T-IV| Germany is carried along with loosened hair,~seated sorrowing at 2575 Ind| her in a chariot race, the loser being killed. Idas stole 2576 Ind| Virgil’s Aeneid, where he loses Lavinia his betrothed to 2577 ExII| their fruit.~Despite those losses I wish it were possible 2578 ExIV| sweet singing:~and the lotus wasnt bitter to him who 2579 T-III| itself, no narrower than lotus-bearing Nile,~mingling with deep 2580 Ind| drugged by the food of the Lotus-Eaters, see Homer’s Odyssey IX: 2581 T-IV| wounded me. ~So the strange lotus-flowers, Odysseus’s men tasted,~ 2582 Ind| Book TII:361-420 His many love-affairs.~Book TV.IV:1-50 A paragon 2583 T-II| bruise~that the imprint of a love-bite often makes:~finally he 2584 Ind| wrote her four books of love-elegies, of which a single line 2585 Ind| Amor~Book TIV.X:41-92 The love-god and his arrows.~Book EI. 2586 Ind| gained more enjoyment in love-making. He was blinded by Juno 2587 T-II| alone in having sung tender love-songs:~but I’m the one punished 2588 T-V| here, and ease my fate, loveliest of the gods,~remembering 2589 Ind| one of her followers. (See Luca Penni’s – Diana Huntress2590 Ind| estuary.~ ~Paestum~A city of Lucania in Italy. The site is near 2591 Ind| passed into the hands of the Lucanians in the 4th century. It was 2592 Ind| See Cavalli’s opera with Lully’s dances – Ercole Amante). 2593 T-III| draughts of mead, but frozen lumps.~Shall I speak of solid 2594 ExII| blood expelled by a weak lung~points the sure way to the 2595 T-I| If I’d an untiring voice, lungs stronger than brass,~and 2596 ExII| drink, till dawn,~and the lure of the dice doesnt grip 2597 Ind| 75~Book EIV.X:1-34 They lured Ulyssesmen with their 2598 Ind| with the legs of birds, and luring the sailors of passing ships 2599 Ind| budding horns. Sexually lustful. They were followers of 2600 T-III| I’m taken from you, mea lux.~Think that I perished when 2601 Ind| Frazer: The Golden Bough LVIII: The Human Scapegoat in 2602 Ind| lesser contemporaries.~ ~Lyaeus~An epithet of Bacchus meaning ‘ 2603 Ind| Ibis:365-412 The King of Lybia, son of Neptune and Earth, 2604 Ind| and Rhea, born on Mount Lycaeum in Arcadia and nurtured 2605 IBIS| missiles at you, stained with Lycambean blood.~Now, as Battiades 2606 Ind| tail. Its native country is Lycia (or Caria) in Asia Minor.~ 2607 Ind| Deidamia~The daughter of Lycomedes, King of the Dolopians, 2608 Ind| drowned himself in the river Lycormas which became the river Evenus.~ ~ 2609 Ind| patron of Ovid and Tibullus, Lygdaus, Valgius Rufus and Aemilius 2610 Ind| Hypermnestra, who saved the life of Lynceus because he preserved her 2611 Ind| Agenorides, Danaëius, Inachides, Lyncides. (See Burne-Jones’s oil 2612 Ind| the gift of her crops to Lyncus king of the Scythian barbarians. 2613 Ind| a freedman, and Augustan lyrical poet and satirist. He enjoyed 2614 ExIV| and you too Rufus, sole lyricist of Pindar’s lyre:~and Turranius’ 2615 Ind| his private secretary. His lyrics imitate Greek poets (e.g. 2616 Ind| King of Argos, who married Lysianassa (or alternatively Lysimache). 2617 Ind| Lysianassa (or alternatively Lysimache). The reference is obscure.~ ~ 2618 Ind| The home of the sculptor Lysippos. It is near modern Vasilikó.) ~ 2619 Ind| contains the Andromeda galaxy M31 a spiral like our own, the 2620 Ind| Pleiades are the star cluster M45 in the constellation Taurus. 2621 Ind| See Jan Gossaert called Mabuse’s panel – Danaë – in the 2622 Ind| and was in turn killed by Machaereus a Phocian and the priest 2623 Ind| 53-100 The Roman military machine.~Book EIV.VIII:49-90 Rome, 2624 IBIS| whom Cybele, the Mother, maddens:~and like Attis, once a 2625 ExIV| chase after the weapons madly, that have hurt me?~Am I 2626 Ind| painting, Museo del Prado, Madrid: See the pedestal of Benvenuto 2627 Ind| Latmian Gulf from the River Maeander. A commercial port from 2628 Ind| Maenalian Bear from Mount Maenalus in Arcadia.~Book TIV.III: 2629 Ind| Maeonides~Homer, so called from Maeonia a name for Lydia in Asia 2630 Ind| Euripides’ The Bacchae.~ ~Maeonides~Homer, so called from Maeonia 2631 Ind| kingdom of Thrace, from the Maeotes who lived near the Sea of 2632 Ind| Black Sea (Euxine) and the Maeotic Lake (Sea of Azov).~Book 2633 Ind| V:1-56 Alexander showed magnanimity in victory.~Ibis:311-364 2634 Ind| of Italy, now part of the magnificent Parco Nazionale del Circeo 2635 ExIV| supreme consul,~it’s still magnified by the authority of the 2636 Ind| Pompeius (1)~Gnaius Pompeius Magnus, the triumvir.~Book EIV. 2637 Ind| Persephone, as the Mother and the Maiden, was central to the Eleusinian 2638 Ind| Heroides.~Ibis:365-412 Her maids and the suitors killed at 2639 IBIS| gut.~May the cruel sword maim your trunk, and mutilate ~ 2640 T-V| Loyalty~ ~Do you too, once the mainstay of my fortunes,~who were 2641 ExIV| swells, and stops the sea maintaining its power.~Indeed, like 2642 Ind| or because his father was Maion.~Book TI.I:1-68 Homer too 2643 Ind| Floralia, and the Quinquatrus Maiores (19th March) when the law-courts 2644 Ind| a year, and its violets. Malaria eventually drove away its 2645 Ind| Aesculapius. The pre-Greek god Maleas was later equated with Apollo, 2646 Ind| and stretching from the Maliac Gulf and the Gulf of Pagasae 2647 T-V| words.~and they often talk maliciously to my face, ~quite safely, 2648 T-IV| attacked any work of mine with malignant teeth.~Though this age of 2649 Ind| name for him is Mavors or Mamers. In his military aspect 2650 IBIS| the parts, as they say Mamertas’s limbs were maimed.~Or 2651 T-I| hate,~and explain to that man-god what error misled me,~so 2652 Ind| white bull from the sea. A man-headed bull, imprisoned in the 2653 ExII| I live, it’s enough if I~manage to be a poet among the uncivilised 2654 ExIV| conspicuously carved ivory chair:~or managing public revenues, next to 2655 Ind| also founded Callatis, now Mangalia, on the Minerva’s course.~ ~ 2656 T-IV| Autobiography: Youth and Manhood~ ~I cherished and cultivated 2657 Ind| disertum, the ‘eloquent manikin’~Book TII:421-470 His love 2658 Ind| Ibis:541-596 The creator of mankind, son of the Titan Eurymedon, 2659 Ind| killed at the battle of Mantinea dominated the mainland. 2660 Ind| Rome. Virgil was born near Mantua and educated at Cremona 2661 T-IV| mutual circle dear to me.~And many-metered Horace captivated us,~when 2662 Ind| Rome in 204BC. She wore a many-turretted crown, and is often represented 2663 T-I| been assigned to Homer, the Maonian bard,~Penelope’s fame would 2664 ExIII| resting his left hand on the maple bedpost,~no neck-let, no 2665 T-III| looks,~and time’s wrinkles mar your furrowed brow,~Ruinous 2666 Ind| Athens by the allies after Marathon, which supposedly stood 2667 T-IV| chains round their necks,~marching in front of the garlanded 2668 ExI| Pontus have no ice,~the marigold out-scent the rose of Paestum,~ 2669 Ind| the sea where he became a marine god. See Metamorphoses VII: 2670 Ind| running into the Hebrus (Maritza) which flows thrugh Thrace.~ ~ 2671 T-IV| that your love shows the marks of sorrow’s pain,~that you’ 2672 Ind| Virgil~Publius Vergilius Maro (70-19BC), bucolic and epic 2673 Ind| Alcippe and had a daughter Marpessa. Suitors contended with 2674 T-III| blotted erasures,~the poet marred his own work with his tears.~ 2675 T-II| were sure, troubled sacred marriage-beds.~But no bride learned deception 2676 T-IV| so may your daughter’s marriage-torch make you~a father-in-law, 2677 Ind| blameless life, his three marriages, his daughter by his second 2678 T-I| always be fixed in my very marrow,~and I’ll be an eternal 2679 Ind| round Tomis is flat and marshy. The winters are severe 2680 ExIV| the honour’s great, and martial Rome perceives~nothing higher 2681 Ind| Temple of Isis in the Campus Martius, Rome)~Book TI.II:75-110 2682 T-III| But Phalaris replied: ‘You marvellous~creator of torments, try 2683 T-III| land and sea,~the effort masked my cares, and my sick heart:~ 2684 ExI| defended against you,~despite massive walls, armaments, and clever 2685 ExIV| cattle, true to life, are a masterpiece by Myron:~so I’m not the 2686 Ind| Phrygian great goddess, Magna Mater, the Great Mother, personifying 2687 Ind| flourished there. Dioskorides (Materia Medica 4.148) says the best 2688 ExI| father will see his son’s mature honours,~feeling the joy 2689 Ind| sea on the west coast of Mauretania.~Book EI.V:1-42 Ovid suggests 2690 Ind| An old name for him is Mavors or Mamers. In his military 2691 Ind| Nonacris. It forms the falls of Mavroneri, plunging six hundred feet 2692 T-IV| it, seeking plunder and mayhem,~and the land’s no less 2693 T-III| time, I’m taken from you, mea lux.~Think that I perished 2694 T-III| dont drink draughts of mead, but frozen lumps.~Shall 2695 | meantime 2696 Ind| Harpagus~Ibis:541-596 A Mede in the service of King Astyages, 2697 Ind| who when besieged by the Medes set fire to his palace killing 2698 Ind| there. Dioskorides (Materia Medica 4.148) says the best black 2699 Ind| archer.~Book EIII.IV:1-56 His medical skill.~ ~Maenads, Maenades, 2700 ExII| boast of?~But I, with my mediocre writings, dont register 2701 Ind| Sicily~Sicania, Trinacri. The Mediterranean island, west of Italy.~Book 2702 Ind| were Alecto, Tisiphone and Megaera, the daughters of Night 2703 Ind| festivals which included the Megalesia, the Floralia, and the Quinquatrus 2704 Ind| Arcadian Greek general of Megalopolis (c253-182BC: see the life 2705 Ind| Ibis:311-364 The son of Megareus. Great-grandson of Neptune. 2706 Ind| often depicted with one melancholy and one smiling face. The 2707 IBIS| himself, from duty, brought Melanthea to light,~when she was hidden 2708 Ind| Gods’, Bk III 47)~(See John Melhuish Strudwick’s paintingCirce 2709 Ind| sweet-scented honey. Modern Mellili.~Book TV.VI:1-46 The bees 2710 T-II| again, ~if only time will mellow Caesar’s anger, ~whose mercy 2711 Ind| the arts. Clio (History), Melpomene (Tragedy), Thalia (Comedy), 2712 T-I| mine,~and my spirit will melt away in the empty air,~leaving 2713 Ind| contemporaries.~ ~Mulciber~The ‘Melter’. A name for Vulcan, the 2714 Ind| warring flock of birds, the Memnonides, from his ashes. Aurora’ 2715 ExII| EI.VIII:1-70 To Severus: Memories of Home~ ~Accept this greeting, 2716 Ind| paragon of friendship. Called Menoetiades from his father.~Book EI. 2717 Ind| Patroclus~The son of Menoetius, and grandson of Actor. 2718 T-V| request.~And one of you, mentioning Ovid’s name,~pledge him 2719 Ind| help of a band of Gaullish mercenaries and ruled from c279-276BC.~ 2720 ExIV| feeble.~Also the rivers here merge with land-locked Pontus,~ 2721 ExII| and that lifeless winter merges into winter.~Here a fourth 2722 Ind| C.304) considers them a merging of two tribes and aggressive 2723 ExIII| lightning at many,~who’ve not merited punishment for any crime.~ 2724 ExIV| you’ll find nothing here meriting shame,~except fate: she 2725 Ind| Walker Art Gallery, Sudley, Merseyside, England: See Dosso Dossi’ 2726 Ind| Corvinus the elder son of Mesalla Corvinus, born 36BC, consul 2727 Ind| exile.~ ~Babylon~The ancient Mesopotamian capital of the Babylonians, 2728 ExIV| on your mother’s side, Messallas on your father’s)~and with 2729 Ind| Hercules in his youth, and held Messenia in the south-west of Greece. 2730 Ind| Italy and Sicily in the Messenian straits. Charybdis was the 2731 Ind| Vulcan, the smith, as a metal-worker.~(See Milton’s Paradise 2732 Ind| The Cyclops were linked to metal-working and the volcano of Mount 2733 Ind| artist c.460BC famous for metalwork.~Book EIV.I:1-36 Famous 2734 Ind| Aeneid.~Book TV.VI:1-46 A metaphor for abandoning any project.~ 2735 Ind| Probably one of the Caecillii Metellii family. Possibly the wife 2736 Ind| Pulcher, and wife of Quintus Metellus Celer. Catullus also wrote 2737 Ind| the radiant of the Perseid meteor shower. His epithets are 2738 Ind| cities were Mytilene and Methymna. Famous as the home of Sappho 2739 ExIV| happened to confer any honour.~Metric rules, and the nature of 2740 Ind| of Armenia.~ ~Mettus~Or Mettius Fufetius, an Alban commander 2741 Ind| side of the Bosporus in the mid 7th century BC. Renamed 2742 ExI| come, at my command, from mid-city to the Getae. ~Repay me 2743 Ind| Winter stars. Rising in mid-October.~Book EI.V:43- 86 Remote 2744 Ind| with Eurydice. He taught Midas and Eumolpus the Bacchic 2745 T-I| Moon on high steered her midnight horses.~Gazing at her, and, 2746 Ind| sign, Capricorn, i.e. at midwinter, making him a solar god. 2747 ExI| menacing?~Spare me, hero mightier in virtues than ~the vast 2748 ExIV| when Marsus lived, and mighty-voiced Rabirius,~and the Ilian, 2749 Ind| Anacreon and Ibycus. Pythagoras migrated to Magna Graecia, perhaps 2750 T-III| merely human anger turned to mildness,~Juno’s former enemy Hercules 2751 T-III| colonists came, sent by the Miletians,~to found Greek holdings 2752 ExIII| were black as Memnon.~But milky liquid can’t be altered 2753 Ind| as a metal-worker.~(See Milton’s Paradise Lost Book I, 2754 T-II| theatre grants licence to the mime?~Well my poems have often 2755 IBIS| Aethalos,~whom even now Ion, mindful, drives from his rites:~ 2756 ExIV| beginning to forgive my mindless error:~he left the world, 2757 T-III| than lotus-bearing Nile,~mingling with deep water through 2758 Ind| torches.~Ibis:209-250 Their ministrations to the newborn Ibis.~ ~Gallio~ 2759 IBIS| If your ship touches the Minoan sands, ~may the Cretan crowd 2760 Ind| monetales, overseeing the public mint, or capitales, the prisons 2761 Ind| Marius hid in the marshes of Minturnae and later escaped to Africa.~ 2762 Ind| they sailed from Iolchos in Minyan territory.~Book TIII. IX: 2763 Ind| people named from their king Minyas who ruled Orchomenus in 2764 Ind| contains the variable star, Mira. She was chained to a rock 2765 ExII| read, and suppose, by a miracle,~it found favour: surely 2766 Ind| to be punished for that mischance, like Actaeon. He does not 2767 T-I| days are clouded by sudden miseries.~Verse asks for a writer 2768 ExIII| you wished~to be the bride misleading insistent suitors.~If you 2769 T-V| shore of the Euxine, that misnomer,~and the truly sinister 2770 T-V| Theseus, and his Euryalus.~He misses his country and the many 2771 Ind| to Thrace on an Imperial mission, and was possibly prefect 2772 Ind| time. Medea vanished in a mist conjured by her magic spells. 2773 Ind| Lycus, King of Thebes, who mistreated her niece Antiope. Antiope 2774 T-V| that what the Sisters, the Mistresses of Fate,~ordain is no longer 2775 Ind| Augustus’s, the god, who has mitigated his punishment. The implication 2776 T-III| despite the king.~and, mixing leaves and nard with my 2777 T-II| s lyric Muse teach~but a mixture of love and plenty of wine?~ 2778 Ind| daughters of Jupiter and Mnemosyne (Memory). They are the patronesses 2779 ExIII| dwelling on it’s master’s moans,~can barely turn itself 2780 Ind| killed by Achilles for mocking the latter’s grief over 2781 Ind| Cynthia, in her Moon goddess mode. She gave birth to a son 2782 ExI| is, my judge’s anger was moderate,~who took nothing from me, 2783 T-V| enough.~Indeed your anger is moderated, you grant me life,~I’m 2784 ExIII| than our prince:~Justice moderates his powers.~Caesar recently 2785 T-II| reins of power with greater moderation.~You’ve often granted mercy 2786 Ind| LichasGalleria d’Arte Moderna, Rome). He had asked his 2787 ExII| nothing else, your favour can modestly attempt~for me, and still 2788 T-II| from here, you badges of modesty,~the thin headband, the 2789 Ind| Is there a hint here in modo sit sospes: if only he ( 2790 Ind| the Thracian tribe, the Moesi on the lower Danube. It 2791 Ind| Book TIII.I:1-46 The Porta Mogunia was the way to the Palatine 2792 Ind| Sphinx~The mythical hybrid moinster with human head (usually 2793 Ind| Fates~The three Fates, the Moirai, or Parcae, were goddesses 2794 ExII| death~was immediately made moist by my tears:~and though 2795 IBIS| hands together thrice.~They moistened the child’s throat with 2796 IBIS| ll be your dearest enemy.~Moisture will sooner cease to conflict 2797 T-III| desolating will of the god can be mollified.~Whether my hope is rash, 2798 ExII| ship’s weakened by hidden molluscs:~as waves of salt water 2799 Ind| Mythsadds Aglaophonos, Molpe, Raidne, Teles, and Thelxepeia.) ( 2800 Ind| the boards of tresviri (monetales, overseeing the public mint, 2801 Ind| Ovid, his first volume the Monobiblos gained him entry to Maecenas’ 2802 ExIII| You’ve become weary of my monotonous verses,~and I ask what you’ 2803 IBIS| hidden cave changed to new monstrous shapes, ~never to return 2804 Ind| and developed in Frazer’s monumental work, on magic and religion, ‘ 2805 ExIII| dream.~It was night, and the moonlight entered my double ~shuttered 2806 Ind| scenes but were basically moral with endings involving marriage.~ ~ 2807 Ind| rhetoric.~Book EI.I:1-36 A moralist and essayist on various 2808 T-II| also,~wearies you, and morality you desire to be as yours.~ 2809 ExIV| want to enquire into my morals,~ignore my one error, alas, 2810 Ind| painting- Penelope – The De Morgan Foundation). See Homer’s 2811 Ind| towers of Heaven. ‘From Morn to Noon he fell...’). Identified 2812 Ind| the Seven against Thebes. Mortally wounded he gnawed on the 2813 T-V| god,~if it’s allowed for mortals to address Jupiter.~Imperial 2814 IBIS| you be ground in a deep mortar,~and your bones resound 2815 | mostly 2816 Ind| having the greatest proper motion of any star and being the 2817 ExII| comes easily,~I lack the motive for too intense a labour.~ 2818 T-II| clay from which pots are moulded,~or teaches what storage 2819 Ind| archaeological remains (burial mounds or kurgans). They may have 2820 T-I| deep!~The breaker leaps mountain-high on prow~and curving stern, 2821 Ind| worshipped in caves and on mountaintops. Merged with Rhea, the mother 2822 Ind| who stormed heaven, piling Mounts Pelion, Ossa and Olympus 2823 Ind| exponent of the neoteric movement with its emphasis on technique 2824 ExIV| so my mind’s been hurt by muddy misfortune,~and poetry flows 2825 T-II| move given the throw:~how a multi-coloured piece attacks in a straight 2826 T-IV| how my troubles have been multiplied by passing time!~Believe 2827 IBIS| grant more than I ask, and multiply the power of my prayers.~ 2828 T-V| us, and seethes inside,~multiplying its own strength under pressure.~ 2829 ExIII| the sea has overwhelmed a multitude~in the cruel waves, how 2830 Ind| destroyed by the Roman general Mummius in 146BC and rebuilt by 2831 Ind| in the Alte Pinakothek, Munich) ~Book TII:361-420 Raped 2832 Ind| which certain criminals (murderers and traitors) were thrown. 2833 Ind| library.~Book EIII.1:105-166 Murderesses.~Ibis:163-208 Ibis:311-364 2834 Ind| EIII.1:105-166 Impious in murdering Itys.~ ~Procrustes~Ibis: 2835 ExIV| quivers,~and there was a long murmur from Getic mouths.~And one 2836 Ind| induces drowsiness with its murmuring. (Hence the stream of forgetfulness).~ 2837 IBIS| that glides with dread murmurs through infernal valleys,~ 2838 Ind| opposed the Trojans.~ ~Muses, Musae~The nine Muses were the 2839 Ind| The subject of a poem by Musaeus (5th century AD) and treated 2840 Ind| See W H Auden’s poemMusée des Beaux Artsreferring 2841 Ind| See Titian’s painting, Museo del Prado, Madrid: See the 2842 Ind| Janiculum, used for army musters and political assemblies. 2843 ExIV| desecrate true loyalty?~You mustnt think these words spoken 2844 T-V| in silence,’~you say, ‘by mutely concealing your situation.’~ 2845 IBIS| sword maim your trunk, and mutilate ~the parts, as they say 2846 Ind| with her. Tereus raped and mutilated her sister, and told Procne 2847 Ind| Themistocles. After the battle of Mycale (479) the citizens joined 2848 Ind| Clytaemnestra. She is called Mycenis. She was sacrificed by her 2849 Ind| 361-420 Aeschylus in the Myrmidons and Sophocles in Achilles2850 Ind| her transformation into a myrrh-tree. (As such he is a vegetation 2851 Ind| by a serpent in various mythological variants. He is said to 2852 Ind| Proserpine. The modern Lago di Naftia between Catania and Caltagirone~ 2853 Ind| After 1200BC the goddess Naia, worshipped there, who continued 2854 Ind| Telephus was their leader.~ ~Naides~The water nymphs, demi-goddesses 2855 Ind| Dione, was joined by Zeus Naios. The sanctuary was destroyed 2856 ExIV| Should I declare the crime nameless, ~or should I wish who you 2857 | namely 2858 Ind| Atacinus born 82BC in Gallia Narbonensis near the modern Carcassone. 2859 Ind| for the extraction of the narcotic drug colchicine, tinctura 2860 T-III| and, mixing leaves and nard with my bones,~bury them 2861 T-IV| The Senate awaited me: I narrowed my purple stripe:~it would 2862 T-III| pools?~The Danube itself, no narrower than lotus-bearing Nile,~ 2863 Ind| Distant from his friends.~ ~Natalis~Book TIII.XIII:1-28 The 2864 Ind| fierce, stern, of a barbaric nation.~Book TV.VII:1-68 Book TV. 2865 Ind| to law. Pliny (Historia Naturalis:10.52) describes him as 2866 Ind| Ibis:597-644 The son of Nauplius whom Ulysses’ wrongfully 2867 Ind| washed ashore. The father of Nausicaa. One of his ships was turned 2868 Ind| therefore called Delphicus. The navel stone in the precinct at 2869 Ind| for the Phoenicians who navigated by the stars, including 2870 Ind| 50 A favourable wind for navigating the Bosporus from south-west 2871 Ind| Delos in the Aegean Sea, Naxos, Paros and Andros being 2872 T-II| far-off conducting savage war:~nay he return to you victor 2873 T-I| winds, she doesnt see death nearing.~It’s good that I didnt 2874 ExI| bereft of that now, let your nearness offer me~the power to live 2875 T-V| share my studies,~drink the neat wine, and make the same 2876 ExIII| hair, his unruly locks~not neatly groomed now, as they were 2877 Ind| refers to a Circus, not necessarily this one, and describes 2878 ExIII| on the maple bedpost,~no neck-let, no pin in his hair, his 2879 ExII| hunger.~Let ambrosia and nectar, the godsfood and drink~ 2880 ExIV| the world obeyed,~ended by needing the aid of a single man.~ 2881 ExIII| ve made errors in it, or neglected anything.~Add that my lyre, 2882 Ind| Nestor~King of Pylos, son of Neleus. The oldest and wisest of 2883 Ind| Pentheus.~ ~Themistocles~Son of Neocle. He was the great Athenian 2884 Ind| of the Great Goddess of Neolithic times, and her daughter 2885 Ind| the tutor of Ptolemy VII Neos Philopator and Director 2886 Ind| daughter of Athamas and Nephele, sister of Phrixus, and 2887 Ind| Book TI.II:1-74 Pursued by Neptune-Poseidon.~Book TI.V:45-84 Book TIII. 2888 T-I| ve suffered more than the Neritian.~He wandered a narrow space 2889 Ind| had a son Marcus Suiliius Nerullinus.~Book TIII.VII:1-54 Ovid 2890 T-I| Avoid them, or if you’ve the nerve, call them~parricides, like 2891 ExIII| warning of its imminent fall,~nervousness and fear empty the place.~ 2892 Ind| of Roman Moesia. Modern Nesebur.~Book TI.X:1-50 On the Minerva’ 2893 Ind| The rock dove no doubt nested on the rocks of the citadel 2894 Ind| and as far west as the Nestos. Used by Ovid and others 2895 Ind| boundary was on the River Nestus, and the northern along 2896 T-III| own weight sinks the heavy net.~If I who warn you had once 2897 ExIV| a great man’s dish.~The new-born lamb, struck down in sacrifice, 2898 Ind| returning to his palace. His nickname Irus was a version of Iris 2899 Ind| black hellebore helleborus niger also possibly flourished 2900 IBIS| lay on Cinyphian soil,~a night-owl sat over against him on 2901 Ind| father of Antilochus.~ ~Nilus~The river Nile and its god. 2902 Ind| mythical, King of Assyrian Nineveh, who lived in great luxury, 2903 T-I| overtops them all:~after the ninth and before the eleventh.~ 2904 T-III| at my death there’ll be no-one there to weep:~nor will 2905 ExIII| to the marriage torches, noblest~of the daughters of Scythia 2906 T-I| clinging to Propontis’s shore,~nobly founded by the Haemonian 2907 | nobody 2908 T-V| something wrong~about my only nodding no or yes to what to they 2909 T-II| how he often signalled by nods, or fingers,~and traced 2910 T-III| Ruinous age that comes with noiseless step~will take possession 2911 Ind| as unwise and cowardly (non sapiens, timidus) and this 2912 Ind| of Heaven. ‘From Morn to Noon he fell...’). Identified 2913 Ind| Helvetia on the west and Noricum on the east, i.e. roughly 2914 Ind| lays its eggs in a hole, normally in a riverbank, by freshwater 2915 Ind| Asopus, the river-god of the north-eastern Peloponnese. He named his 2916 Ind| Hellespont, and the corner of the north-weast Aegean at its entrance. 2917 IBIS| shudder as much from swift Northerlies,~those that make Mount Athos 2918 ExII| from your glory.~Who that’s noticed by the Caesars doesnt think 2919 ExIII| gaze,~and given me more notoriety than before.~Capaneus was 2920 Ind| defending his province of Africa Nova in 42BC.~Book TII:421-470 2921 ExIII| delight in anything seems novel to me.~Just as eyes shun 2922 IBIS| his name) ~he forces my novice hand to take up weapons.~ 2923 Ind| forming the so-called Latium novum or adiectum.)~ ~Latona, 2924 Ind| wind from distant Italy.~ ~Nox~Book EI.II:53-100 The goddess 2925 T-II| husband?~They’re seen by nubile girls, wives, husbands, ~ 2926 ExI| words than inches if you numbered them.~Often the day was 2927 T-IV| howling of the Idaean rites numbs her,~so, when my mind’s 2928 Ind| IX:1-32 Jupiter’s sacred oak-tree and lightning bolt are connected 2929 Ind| of Jupiter at Ammon (Siwa Oasis, El Khargeh) but the army 2930 Ind| Ibis:41-104 The gods swore oaths on the waters of Styx.~Book 2931 T-IV| the ploughman’s ox is made obedient to the plough,~submitting 2932 T-IV| spirit:~the Indian elephant, obeying its master’s command,~submits 2933 ExIV| house should be your first objective:~no other’s nearer to the 2934 ExI| it is the willingness to oblige:~the rest of the material 2935 ExII| you can’t prevent it:~my obliging Muse comes against your 2936 Ind| Book EIV.X:35-84 Mentioned obliquely.~ ~Ambracia~Ibis:251-310 2937 Ind| Possibly Ovid is referring obscurely to the Delian league and 2938 T-I| children too, cried at my obsequies,~and every corner of home 2939 T-I| the flight of some bird I observed, taught it me:~it was augury, 2940 T-IV| honouring of your name might obstruct you.~This you can do (and 2941 Ind| Anapis and wedded him. She obstructed Dis in his abduction of 2942 Ind| which is something like the occasionalchooc, chooc’ among its 2943 ExII| with a calm loyalty.~Yet no occasions come more frequently to 2944 Ind| 252 The Alpine insurgents occupied the area and were defeated 2945 Ind| The death of Augustus has occurred or is imminent.~Book EIV. 2946 Ind| bolt are connected by the occurrence of the natural phenomenon. 2947 Ind| Colchis, son of Sol and the Oceanid Perse, brother of Circe, 2948 Ind| Nero (who fought against Octavian-Augustus in the Perusine War) to 2949 Ind| and declared as his heir, Octavius Caesar (Octavian). (The 2950 Ind| snatchers’, Aellopus and Ocypete, the fair-haired, loathsome, 2951 Ind| Centauri. The father of Ocyroë, by Chariclo the water-nymph. 2952 ExIII| they quench or parch.~The odd barren tree sticks up in 2953 ExII| character,~and is no less at odds with your pursuits.~The 2954 Ind| after 442BC) famous for his odes, many celebrating winning 2955 T-V| free of shame, is free of odium,~or because the whole world 2956 Ind| Minerva’s course.~ ~Odrysii, Odrysae~A Thracian tribe, friendly 2957 Ind| re-captured it with the aid of the Odrysian Thracians of King Rhoemetalces, 2958 Ind| Calydonian Boar Hunt. The son of Oecleus, father of Alcmaeon, and 2959 Ind| one of the heroes, the Oeclides, at the Calydonian Boar 2960 Ind| his funeral pyre on Mount Oeta, between Aetolia and Thessaly. ( 2961 IBIS| shod on his two feet,~or as Oetean Hercules was once, Athamas 2962 T-V| Madman! What am I saying? In offending Caesar’s~divine will, I 2963 T-I| lest this faithfulness offends the god!~Often Caesar praises 2964 Ind| Rome. He became Augustus’s ‘officalpoet, and supported Augustus’ 2965 Ind| s power.~Book TV.VI:1-46 Officials (the curule magistrates, 2966 Ind| Associated with virginity, olive-cultivation, domestic arts (spinning, 2967 IBIS| he who once set out from olive-rich Sicyon,~may hunger and cold 2968 Ind| 132 Ovid had lived for ten Olympiads, the space between Olympic 2969 Ind| was the cupbearer of the Olympians.~Book TIII.V:1-56 Married 2970 IBIS| to Medusa’s cousin,~may ominous imprecations descend on 2971 Ind| Cyclopes, sons of Neptune, one-eyed giants living in Sicily ( 2972 ExII| mind can’t bear anything onerous.~Should I start to use the 2973 Ind| sight of her face turned the onlooker to stone. She was killed 2974 T-IV| Book TIV.VIII:1-52 The Onset of Age~ ~My temples already 2975 T-I| used, the rowers speed her onward.~She’s not content to beat 2976 T-III| you or I were:~and your openness of heart to your dear friends –~ 2977 Ind| sky by the constellation Ophiucus near Scorpius, depicting 2978 Ind| 1-50Hector’s city’ was Ophrynion, the site of his purported 2979 Ind| Hellespont (Dardanelles) opposire Callipolis (Gallipoli), 2980 ExIII| dont always, endlessly oppress the wounded.~No god is more 2981 T-I| than Jove,~Jupiter’s anger oppressed me, Neptune’s him.~And, 2982 Ind| of the Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus on the Capitoline.~ 2983 Ind| Opus~The capital of the Opuntian Locrians.~Book EI.III:49- 2984 Ind| Praeneste where she had an oracular shrine. Represented on a 2985 ExIV| shows by her own wavering orb that she’s fickle,~she who 2986 ExIV| in some fertile farm’s orchard,~as African grain, as the 2987 Ind| which Phrixus had fled from Orchemonos, to avoid being sacrificed. 2988 Ind| their king Minyas who ruled Orchomenus in Boeotia. A name for the 2989 T-V| the Mistresses of Fate,~ordain is no longer wholly in the 2990 T-V| the fatal thread, twice ordained for you, at your double 2991 T-III| private place.~You too, ordinary hands, if it’s allowed, 2992 Ind| Sea, famous for its iron ore mines.~Book EII.III:49-100 2993 Ind| the daughter of Boreas and Oreithiya, making Eumolpus a decendant 2994 Ind| The worship of the goddess originated in Asia Minor.~Book EIII. 2995 Ind| naiad. They were chased by Orion rousing the anger of Artemis 2996 Ind| Amyntor~Ibis:251-310 King of Ormenium, near Mount Pelion. His 2997 T-I| allowed to go!~Go, but without ornament, as is fitting for an exile’ 2998 Ind| reflected light from the gold ornaments of Tiberius’s triumph.~Book 2999 Ind| Orpheus’, and Gluck’s OperaOrphée’).~ ~Eurytion~Ibis:365-412 3000 Ind| the goddess of travellers. Osiris was her husband, whom she 3001 Ind| adultery was given as the ostensible reason for her banishment, 3002 T-I| known, though it wasnt ostentatious.~But when the blow came, 3003 Ind| the mud when arriving at Ostia in 204BC.~Book EI.II:101- 3004 Ind| centre, where he was born ot the goddess Aphrodite-Venus.


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