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Publius Ovidius Naso Poems from Exile Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
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3005 Ind| Brassides, the Jupiter of Otricoli, Vatican)~Book TI.V:45-84 3006 Ind| Istanbul (1457AD by the Ottoman Empire). The city now lies 3007 | ours 3008 ExI| have no ice,~the marigold out-scent the rose of Paestum,~than 3009 T-III| somehow,~don’t refuse an outcast a loyal hand.~So may good 3010 ExIV| course.~Cyclops couldn’t outdo cruel Piacches in savagery,~ 3011 Ind| extracting the core from the outer sheath) (See Perugino’s 3012 Ind| the judge, a propositio outlining the brief, and a tractatio 3013 IBIS| to his own law.~May you outrage a phantom, like that of 3014 Ind| shirt of Nessus from the outraged Deianira. (See Cavalli’s 3015 ExII| seen one who confessed to outraging the divinity~of linen-robed 3016 T-IV| in ancestral titles,~who outshine your tribe in nobility of 3017 T-III| Sappho of Lesbos’s work outshines you.~But I fear lest my 3018 ExIV| and always suffer for my outspoken art?~Shall I hesitate to 3019 ExI| itself, unaccompanied by outward benefit.~You think it’s 3020 T-IV| and the public fate will outweigh the private.~~ Book TIV. 3021 IBIS| birth was dark and impure,~overcast with cloud, so you would 3022 Ind| enough for the poet probably overestimate his power, and underestimate 3023 T-I| peers in winged course,~she overhauls boats that set out long 3024 Ind| continued his journey to Tomis overland. He would have disembarked 3025 ExIV| barely blue.~The fresh water overlays the flood, lighter than 3026 Ind| lower slopes of Parnassus overlooking the Pleistos valley. Phoebus 3027 T-II| if the content’s not to overpower the work.~Still I was daring: 3028 Ind| of tresviri (monetales, overseeing the public mint, or capitales, 3029 Ind| prefect in 25, Rome’s first overseer of aqueducts in 11, and 3030 T-I| Here comes a wave that overtops them all:~after the ninth 3031 T-V| yields to force,~and right is overturned by the sword’s aggression.~ 3032 Ind| Ovid~The author, Publius Ovidius Naso, born March 20th 43BC, 3033 ExIV| savage roads safe:~it was owing to your heartfelt care he 3034 Ind| her sacred bird the Little Owl, often depicted on ancient 3035 T-IV| the sheltered gardens I owned,~and enjoyed the sight of 3036 T-III| mind.~When I learnt its owner, ‘No error there,’ I said,~ 3037 T-II| reason for punishing their owners. ~~ Book TII:313-360 His 3038 ExIV| see the fierce Iazygian ox-herd~lead his loaded wagon over 3039 Ind| might link to its use (as an oxymoron) in Heroides XII:140 where 3040 Ind| Rome on the Euphrates’ p9. Pausanias also lived nearby 3041 IBIS| Trojan, who by a coward’s pact, wished to drive the horses, 3042 ExII| noble landscapes of the Paelignian country,~or those gardens 3043 Ind| XIV:1-62 His homeland.~ ~Paeones, Pannonia~The Pannonians, 3044 ExI| there’s the triumph over Paeonia, there are~raised arms in 3045 Ind| 75-126 Ovid uses the term Paeonian (Macedonian) loosely to 3046 Ind| Maliac Gulf and the Gulf of Pagasae in the north to the island 3047 Ind| Aventine Hills used for pageants races etc.~Book TIV.IX:1- 3048 T-V| days I’ve been tortured by pains in my side:~so winter’s 3049 Ind| See J R Spencer Stanhope’s painting- Penelope – The De Morgan 3050 T-I| many years,~between the palaces of Ithaca and Troy:~after 3051 Ind| Ulysses against Rhesus and Palamades, and with him brought Philoctetes 3052 Ind| enemy gold. ~ ~Palatine, Palatium~The most important of Rome’ 3053 Ind| painting – The Rape of Europa – Palazzo Ducale, Venice).~Book EIV. 3054 Ind| in 753BC on the feast of Pales, the Palilia, April 21st.~ 3055 Ind| worshipped in Sicily at Palica, between Syracuse and Enna, 3056 Ind| the feast of Pales, the Palilia, April 21st.~Book TI.III: 3057 Ind| months.)~Book TII:253-312 Pallas-Athene raised him.~Book EII.IX: 3058 ExII| lairs.~Yet you hope, by your palliatives, to remove~the pangs of 3059 Ind| xlvii, mentions the sacred palm-tree, noted there in Homer’s 3060 Ind| had built a city near Lake Pambrotis and the oracle of Dodona 3061 Ind| 36 A writer of political pamphlets against his opponents.~ ~ 3062 Ind| his sons.~ ~Priapus~The Pan of Mysia in Asia Minor, 3063 Ind| banished her to the island of Panadataria in 29AD where she starved 3064 Ind| banished her to the island of Pandataria in 2BC for her dissolute 3065 Ind| Gossaert called Mabuse’s panel – Danaë – in the Alte Pinakothek, 3066 Ind| with wild horses on Mount Pangaeum. There are many variants 3067 ExIII| without using your name.~But panic robbed me, stunned, of the 3068 Ind| Hirtius and Gaius Vibius Pansa, died in defeating Mark 3069 Ind| disguised as a white bull. (See Paolo Veronese’s painting – The 3070 IBIS| bellow like an ox in that Paphian metal.~When you wish to 3071 Ind| recovered from an Egyptian papyrus in 1958, but many of his 3072 Ind| including Ovid, at an annual parade (the equitum transvectio 3073 T-II| me, and my ways,~when I paraded before you, on the horse 3074 Ind| poems.~Book TII:421-470 Ovid paraphrases parts of Tibullus I:2, I: 3075 ExIII| dubious whether they quench or parch.~The odd barren tree sticks 3076 T-IV| foreign air,~or quenched my parched thirst at Getic fountains,~ 3077 Ind| part of the magnificent Parco Nazionale del Circeo extending 3078 IBIS| juice given you by your parent.~Or be said to have been 3079 ExIV| ll not build a temple of Parian marble for you,~Germanicus: 3080 Ind| retained its function as a park and exercise ground.~Book 3081 Ind| Jupiter and Juno are a gentle parody of Augustus and Livia throughout 3082 Ind| in the Aegean Sea, Naxos, Paros and Andros being the largest.~ 3083 Ind| fated to die in exile.~ ~Parrhasius~See Lycaon.~Book TII:155- 3084 T-I| ve the nerve, call them~parricides, like Oedipus, and Telegonus.~ 3085 T-V| husband, though forced~to be parted from him, and, at length, 3086 Ind| chryselephantine statue on the Parthenon, and the bronze Athena Promachos (‘ 3087 Ind| and his preferred triplet Parthenope, the Virgin Face; Ligeia, 3088 Ind| Zeus of Olympia, the Athena Parthenos and Athena Promachos, and 3089 Ind| a nervous Phraates IV of Parthia after Armenia had become 3090 Ind| running into the Black Sea.~ ~Parthus, Parthian~Roughly, Persian. 3091 T-II| from every poem.~If she’s partial to what’s perverse, then 3092 Ind| dedicated to Augustus, and partially revised in AD14, at Augustus’ 3093 Ind| been any kind of active participation in a plot against Augustus 3094 T-III| faction flares among separate parties,~and the three theatres 3095 T-V| if only you are well, I’m partly well:~since my ruin was 3096 ExIV| made the Isthmus scarcely passable:~but you must show love, 3097 ExIV| way through the waves,~the passer-by, despising boats, walks 3098 T-III| knows,~and be the sharer and passer-on of rumour.~I hope he can 3099 T-III| for the hurried eyes of passers-by to read:~ ~I LIE HERE, WHO 3100 ExIV| from whom~nothing that passes in the whole world is hidden.~ 3101 Ind| Originally it was open pasture outside the city boundary ( 3102 ExIV| here winter makes the sea a pathway for walkers,~so where oars, 3103 ExIV| having flown down the vast pathways of the air.~Because of Pompey’ 3104 T-IV| of time hasn’t granted me patience,~and my mind still feels 3105 Ind| died, and was buried at Patrae in the sanctuary of Serapis ( 3106 Ind| Maximus was of the famous patrician clan of the Fabii, which 3107 ExI| learned speech.~Then when the pause is over, and the celestial 3108 T-IV| bull scatters sand,~and paws the earth, already, with 3109 T-IV| prayed to be able to live peacefully when old,~The Fates were 3110 Ind| western Mysia, the highest peak Gargaros rising to over 3111 Ind| sacred to Mars. Brought up by peasants the twins built the first 3112 Ind| plan or stratagem, in his peccatum, sin, Ovid seems to preclude 3113 Ind| del Prado, Madrid: See the pedestal of Benvenuto Cellini’s Perseus 3114 Ind| says (II:iii, Corinth) that Peirene was a human being who became 3115 Ind| the Beautiful Face, and Peisinoë, the Seductress: and his 3116 Ind| Larisa was the daughter of Pelasgos, and two of the cities of 3117 ExII| had limited his power~the Pelian spear he hurled dealt a 3118 IBIS| exiled Aegyptos.~Tantalus, Pelop’s father, always reaches 3119 IBIS| daughter, may she be what Pelopea was ~to Thyestes, Myrrha 3120 Ind| in horror.~Ibis:311-364 Pelopia his daughter was a priestess 3121 Ind| of Scilla, opposite Cape Peloro on Sicily. See Ernle Bradford ‘ 3122 T-V| off the evils of cold with pelts~and loose trousers, shaggy 3123 ExII| taken, when they see true penitence for sin.~Oh, I repent! If 3124 Ind| her followers. (See Luca Penni’s – Diana Huntress – Louvre, 3125 ExIII| guided me to set elegiac pentameter to hexameter.~You wouldn’ 3126 Ind| the dead warrior princess Penthesilea.~Book EIII.IX:1-56 Book 3127 Ind| whose name derives from penus a larder, or storage room 3128 Ind| for Persephone, did not perceive the wickedness and ate a 3129 Ind| shipwreck again and the perceived high rank of the recipient, 3130 Ind| Daedalus. She prophesied perched on or over a tripod. She 3131 ExIV| letter has arrived here, one perfected Suillius ~by your studies: 3132 ExIII| daughters of Scythia by birth, performs the rites.~The nature of 3133 Ind| Its lake is the Lago di Pergusa. Also scene of the First 3134 Ind| of Icarius and the Naiad Periboa. ~(See J R Spencer Stanhope’ 3135 Ind| Acropolis building project under Pericles.~Book EIV.I:1-36 His statues 3136 Ind| 70-128 Book TV.VII:1-68 A peril to the Greek fleet.~ ~Capitolium~ 3137 IBIS| robbed of sight, ~find your perilous way with the help of a stick.~ 3138 T-V| journey’s danger, the bitter perils ~of the sea, or the hands 3139 Ind| of robbers along the way (Periphetes, Sinis, Sciron and Procrustes). 3140 T-III| wind, freezing, makes it permanent.~So another fall comes before 3141 T-II| I sing what is lawful, permissible intrigue,~and there’ll be 3142 T-II| and fictitious,~is more permissive than its author.~A book’ 3143 ExIV| enjoy these things!~What’s permitted is for me to see you, though 3144 T-V| my writings were never~pernicious: hurt no one except their 3145 T-III| ll be amazed I managed to persevere ~at verse at all, with sorrow’ 3146 Ind| was upbraded by Augustus personally, his life was spared, he 3147 Ind| Mater, the Great Mother, personifying the earth in its savage 3148 Ind| by Augustus who failed to persuade him to become his private 3149 Ind| from the outer sheath) (See Perugino’s painting – Apollo and 3150 Ind| Octavian-Augustus in the Perusine War) to whom she bore Tiberius, 3151 T-II| Anything can corrupt a perverted mind:~everything’s harmless 3152 Ind| Moreau Museum, Paris: See Peter Vischer the Younger’s Bronze 3153 IBIS| Unhappy, may you see Medusa’s petrifying face,~that dealt death to 3154 Ind| Alcinous~The king of the Phaeacians (Phaeacia is probably Corcyra, = 3155 Ind| part of the Odyssey in his Phaeacid.~Book EIV.XII:1-50 This 3156 Ind| drinking hemlock. See Plato’s Phaedo, Symposium etc.~Book TV. 3157 Ind| Germanicus translated the Phaenomena of Aratus, a guide to the 3158 Ind| Lampetia and the eldest Phaethüsa. Turned into poplars beside 3159 IBIS| the cause of a death like Phalaecus’.~May the wild boar that 3160 ExI| who see the reality, not phantoms,~and see the gods’ true 3161 Ind| EIV.III:1-58 Defeated at Pharsalus (48BC) he sought refuge 3162 Ind| Electra, a native of Arcadian Pheneus. He married Chryse the daughter 3163 Ind| occurrence of the natural phenomenon. Oak trees are particularly 3164 Ind| river, hence Colchian.~ ~Pheraean~Book EII.IX:39-80 Descended 3165 Ind| of Pelopidas)~ ~Phidias, Phideas~The Athenian sculptor and 3166 Ind| Alexandria under Ptolemy II Philadelphos, where he produced a catalogue ( 3167 Ind| flourished under Ptolemy II Philadelphus. His only extant poem Cassandra 3168 Ind| tutor of Ptolemy VII Neos Philopator and Director of the great 3169 Ind| 322 BC) who founded the philosophical sect of Cynics. Influenced 3170 Ind| Caesar, and a writer on philosophy and rhetoric.~Book EI.I: 3171 Ind| half-horse. He was the son of Philyra and Saturn. Phoebus Apollo 3172 Ind| 7th cent BC by Greeks from Phocaea. Artaxerxes I assigned the 3173 Ind| turn killed by Machaereus a Phocian and the priest of Apollo 3174 Ind| Arcadia, a favourite of Phoebe-Diana. The daughter of Lycaon, 3175 Ind| daughter of Agenor, king of Phoenicia, and sister of Cadmus, abducted 3176 Ind| poetry.~ ~Tiphys~The son of Phorbas, a Boeotian and the mythical 3177 Ind| their king Pelasgus, son of Phoroneus the brother of Io. He was 3178 Ind| Ceyx was son of Lucifer (Phosphorus, the Morning Star), Alcyone 3179 Ind| offer was made by a nervous Phraates IV of Parthia after Armenia 3180 T-III| work with his tears.~If any phrase might not seem good Latin,~ 3181 Ind| Minor bordering the Aegean. Phrygius often means Trojan.~Book 3182 Ind| Mount Pelion. His concubine Phthia accused his son Phoenix 3183 T-V| Laodamia’s name lives, wife to Phylacos’ grandson~Protesilaus, whose 3184 Ind| attempts suicide to spite Phylius by diving into a lake, thereafter 3185 IBIS| Adimantus, ~who ruled the Phyllesian kingdom, find you too.~Or 3186 Ind| oblivion, and (spiritual or physical) death.~Book TIV.X:41-92 3187 Ind| and Machaon were the chief physicians to the Greek camp. He is 3188 Ind| 84 He suggests that his physique was relatively slight and 3189 Ind| by Bartolomeo Ammannati, Piazza della Signoria, Florence.) 3190 Ind| drawings of Michael Ayrton, and Picasso’s variations on the theme 3191 Ind| bound to him by oath after picking up an apple on which he 3192 ExII| though he’s dead, love pictures him still living.~Often 3193 Ind| of a tribe near Tomis.~ ~Pierides~An epithet for the Muses 3194 Ind| traditionally was of a black pigmentation. He killed Antilochus in 3195 IBIS| wounded and buried under a pile of earth. ~Or like the infant 3196 T-V| disgrace to exist without pillage.~Nowhere’s safe outside: 3197 Ind| being chained naked to a pillar in the Caucasus, where a 3198 T-III| statues alternate with exotic pillars,~Danaids, and their savage 3199 ExIII| bedpost,~no neck-let, no pin in his hair, his unruly 3200 Ind| produced a catalogue (the Pinakes) of the library’s holdings. 3201 Ind| panel – Danaë – in the Alte Pinakothek, Munich) ~Book TII:361-420 3202 Ind| of the Tiber south of the Pincian Hill and east of the Janiculum, 3203 ExII| those gardens sited on the pine-clad hills~that view the junction 3204 IBIS| bull:~Sinis, who sent bent pine-trees from earth to air,~to gaze 3205 IBIS| waters.~And like Prometheus, pinned there, without mercy,~and 3206 T-II| that wished the same:~and piously offered incense for you, 3207 Ind| to the sound of flutes, pipes and horns.~Ibis:413-464 3208 T-V| be: but sad?~Such is the piping that befits my funeral rites.~~ 3209 Ind| contemporaries.~ ~Pirene~The Pirenian Spring. A famous fountain 3210 IBIS| night.~May you be always pitiable, and yet let no one pity:~ 3211 T-III| the more his anger can be placated,~and a noble mind has generous 3212 T-III| believe it? –~among the place-names of the savage barbarians:~ 3213 Ind| 20BC and whom he accuses of plagiarism (Epistle I.13).~Book EI. 3214 Ind| Augustus to the island of Planasia at the end of Augustus’s 3215 Ind| her real name was possibly Plania) and Nemesis in his poems.~ 3216 Ind| Italy who presided over planting and fructification. He became 3217 Ind| were placed between the plates and offered the first food. 3218 Ind| Roman dramatists Terence and Plautus. ~Book TII:361-420 His plays 3219 T-V| Scythian Danube’s lands,~the player with Love’s quiver is exiled.~ 3220 ExII| Often my mind recalls his playfulness, free of gravity,~how he 3221 Ind| 50 Ovid is concerned that pleading his case may have been a 3222 Ind| and a source of irritating pleas for remembrance and assistance. ~ ~ 3223 T-II| scarcely knows.~I made sweet pleasurable songs in such a way~that 3224 Ind| Titan. Their mother was Pleione the naiad. They were chased 3225 Ind| Agamemnon and Menelaus to Pleisthenes son of Atreus. ~Book TII: 3226 Ind| Parnassus overlooking the Pleistos valley. Phoebus Apollo is 3227 ExIV| attentions.~They’ve been as plentiful as the pomegranate seeds 3228 Ind| sister of the Thestiadae, Plexippus and Toxeus. She sought revenge 3229 T-IV| fiery horse endures the pliant bridle, ~and takes the harsh 3230 Ind| after Virgil’s death with Plotius Tucca.~Book EIV.XVI:1-52 3231 T-IV| Time Passing~ ~In time the ploughman’s ox is made obedient to 3232 T-III| edge of war,~and no man ploughs the soil with curving blade.~ 3233 Ind| golden bough that he must pluck from the tree. She was offered 3234 T-III| their undefended wealth is plundered,~the scant wealth of the 3235 Ind| the falls of Mavroneri, plunging six hundred feet down the 3236 Ind| and the Tristia itself, plus his considering writing 3237 Ind| lightning.~Book EII.I:68 Jupiter Pluvius, the rain-bringer.~Book 3238 Ind| He destroyed the Harpy, Poene, visited on Argos by Apollo 3239 T-V| must need to have the sun pointed out to him,~is unable to 3240 Ind| referring to the incident pointedly here. ~Book EIV.X:1-34 Book 3241 Ind| Medea.~Book EIII.1:105-166 A poisoner and witch.~Ibis:413-464 3242 T-I| frozen Boreas raves from dry polar stars,~now Notus wars with 3243 Ind| in other copies though. Polite references to Augustus will 3244 Ind| Triumvirate (60) he retreated from politics and returned to the law. 3245 Ind| poison of the Hydra. (See Pollaiuolo’s painting – The Rape of 3246 Ind| Forum, was where Asinius Pollio established a public library.~ 3247 Ind| Polymestor who murdered him. ~ ~Polyduces, Pollux~The son of King 3248 Ind| cellars of Cnossos, whom Polyeidus restored to life.~ ~Gorgo, 3249 Ind| Urania (Astronomy), and Polyhymnia (Sacred Song). Mount Helicon 3250 Ind| Deïphobus, Cassandra and Polyxena. Aesacus was his son by 3251 ExIV| been as plentiful as the pomegranate seeds reddening~under their 3252 Ind| Apollonia further north. Modern Pomerie.~Book TI.X:1-50 On the Minerva’ 3253 Ind| outside the city boundary (pomerium) in the bend of the Tiber 3254 Ind| of Agrippa and the Horti Pompeiani.~ ~Canace~The daughter of 3255 Ind| of Night.~ ~Numa (1)~Numa Pompilius, the second king of Rome ( 3256 T-II| to fool about in a tiny pond.~Perhaps – and I should 3257 ExII| the lovely gardens,~the ponds and the canals, and the 3258 T-III| be friendly prows on the Pontic shore.~I’ll go eagerly to 3259 Ind| her temple at Heracleia Pontica near modern Sevastapol, 3260 Ind| became the residence of the Pontifex Maximus.~Book EIII.II:1- 3261 Ind| reminder of the ancient Pontine Marshes before they were 3262 Ind| VIII:1-24 Ovid speaks of Pontus-on-the-left, the ill-omened (to him) 3263 Ind| eldest Phaethüsa. Turned into poplars beside the River Po as they 3264 T-V| host of seeds the soporific poppy owns, ~as creatures the 3265 Ind| defence of eroticism and pornography that it does not corrupt, 3266 Ind| Antony.~Book TIII.I:1-46 The Porta Mogunia was the way to the 3267 ExI| streets, the squares, all the porticoes, saw us~together: and the 3268 Ind| Circeo extending to Capo Portiere in the north, and providing 3269 ExIII| Nothing is to hand.~What portion of such things could rumour 3270 Ind| the more famous Marcius Portius Cato), the Roman grammarian 3271 Ind| as Zeus, and his style of portraiture was a major influence for 3272 Ind| Aphrodite). He is often portrayed as a blind winged child 3273 Ind| Athens. Originally called Poseidonia, the city of Neptune, it 3274 T-II| women consider~naked girls positioned for every kind of lust.~ 3275 ExII| I would boast~the Danube possesses no greater wit than mine.~ 3276 Ind| addressed to him, exploring the possibilities of appealing to Germanicus.~ ~ 3277 ExII| overcome by your prayers, the possibility of return.~But I fell heavily. 3278 ExIV| Vestalis, since you’ve been posted to the Euxine Sea,~to deliver 3279 Ind| the island where Agrippa Postumus, his grandson, the son of 3280 Ind| and therefore allowing for potential delays may have been written 3281 Ind| adultery’, to an affair that potentially threatened the future succession 3282 Ind| known in Thucydides’ time as Potidaea. He seized power with the 3283 Ind| in The Metamorphoses by potraying them as Juno and Jupiter. 3284 Ind| spinning, weaving, and pottery etc) wisdom, learning, technology 3285 Ind| call is interpreted as ‘pou-pou-pou’ meaning ‘where? where? 3286 T-I| with what power the waves pound at her sides!~Mercy, you 3287 IBIS| resound like grain does being pounded.~And may Apollo bury you 3288 Ind| Nemorensis, and the rites practised there are the starting point 3289 Ind| barbarous cannibalistic practises. He was transformed into 3290 ExI| same fountain:~we are both practitioners of the liberal arts.~The 3291 Ind| Titian’s painting, Museo del Prado, Madrid: See the pedestal 3292 Ind| Servius Tullius perhaps from Praeneste where she had an oracular 3293 Ind| lover Sejanus, the ambitious praetorian prefect.~Book TIV.II:1-74 3294 Ind| magistrates, consuls and praetors) wore the toga bordered 3295 ExI| what I’d started.~What’s praiseworthy in it is the willingness 3296 Ind| Jason demanding tasks as a pre-condition for its return. Medea assisted 3297 Ind| sacred to Aesculapius. The pre-Greek god Maleas was later equated 3298 Ind| A representation of the pre-Hellenic Great Goddess. (See the 3299 T-V| fear the power of Fortune’s precarious wheel,~nor the proud words 3300 T-I| troubles. ~Often I was tossed, precariously, by the stormy Kids:~often 3301 Ind| enormous prestige, and were preceded by a lictor when in public. 3302 IBIS| tortured without ancient precedent,~nor your troubles be less 3303 Ind| that has since moved by precession into Pisces. He reached 3304 Ind| The navel stone in the precinct at Delphi was taken as the 3305 ExIV| point is of speaking so precisely,~I’d say: ‘I’ve whiled away 3306 Ind| peccatum, sin, Ovid seems to preclude his error having been any 3307 Ind| in the Argolis. Jupiter predicted at his birth that a scion 3308 T-I| it was augury, a future prediction, based on reason:~that’s 3309 T-II| cause of impetuous fire,~and predicts the triple death of earth, 3310 ExI| measure, Ovid~to Salanus, prefaced by my wish for his good 3311 Ind| of Tomis. Ovid generally prefers the name Hister rather than 3312 Ind| for this poem. He was born prematurely, and then a second time 3313 Ind| this one, and describes the preparations for a bullfight.~Book EI. 3314 Ind| Promachos (‘The Champion’) presented to Athens by the allies 3315 ExI| I pray my timid heart’s presentiments prove true,~that the god’ 3316 Ind| assimilated to the Fates who preside over birth marriage and 3317 T-I| anger!~Often when one god presses, another brings help.~Mulciber 3318 Ind| years. They enjoyed enormous prestige, and were preceded by a 3319 Ind| the Golden Fleece. Medea pretended to rejuvenate him but instead 3320 Ind| was at least his literary pretext.~ ~Corinth~The city north 3321 T-II| he became his own hounds’ prey.~Even fate must be atoned 3322 T-II| Augustus,~you’ll scan many pricey items like these.~You’ve 3323 ExIV| virtuous son, Tiberius, and priestess-widow, Livia,~stand beside him, 3324 Ind| Metamorphoses Book XI:85). The priestly clan of the Eumolpidae claimed 3325 Ind| Sulla’s time a college of priests had been founded in Rome 3326 Ind| all the Muses, being the primal Muse.~Ibis:465-540 The mother 3327 Ind| See Botticelli’s painting Primavera.)~Ibis:209-250 In astrology 3328 ExIV| once harmed me,~and was the prime cause of this wretched exile.~ 3329 Ind| the Danube delta. Marcus Primus governor of Macedonia (25- 3330 IBIS| by the blood of wretched princes, ~as that cruel tyrant’s 3331 Ind| grief over the dead warrior princess Penthesilea.~Book EIII.IX: 3332 ExI| guess at all from the image printed ~in the wax, that Ovid writes 3333 ExI| document convicted my ring~of printing a false seal on its linen 3334 ExI| well as character.~Your prior speech gave forward impetus 3335 Ind| mint, or capitales, the prisons and executions) but held 3336 T-I| writer with leisure and privacy:~I’m tossed by winter gales, 3337 Ind| with property cases and probate. As an eques of good standing 3338 Ind| consisting in turn of a probatio or proof by evidence, and 3339 Ind| divine characteristics. The problem of Ovid’s past double-entendres 3340 ExII| let me live in a region producing neither fruit nor grape,~ 3341 ExII| decays, wearied by endless production.~The horse that enters every 3342 ExIV| Let anyone examine the products of my labour:~there’s no 3343 ExII| you can list them all,~has profited me – I wish none had harmed 3344 T-III| hangman:~but it’s still not profound enough for a judge.~~ Book 3345 ExIII| striving to return from here is prohibited by fate,~then take from 3346 Ind| turned into a rock. (The rock projects from the Calabrian coast 3347 ExII| something he lacks himself.~Prolonged apathy, with its bitter 3348 IBIS| aspect.~Cruel Mars that promises no peace, lowered down, ~ 3349 ExIV| public asks of the gods),~promote my cause, my health, as 3350 Ind| under the new regime. It was promoted as a revival of ancient 3351 Ind| The specific charge of promoting adultery through the poem ( 3352 T-III| I said, a wreath of oak~prompting that thought in my mind.~ 3353 Ind| corrupted, and that everything prompts lewd thoughts in a lewd 3354 Ind| triumph in October AD12. Ovid prophesies a later triumph for him, 3355 Ind| blinded by the gods for prophesying the future too accurately, 3356 Ind| allowed the priestesses and prophets~of the goddess.~Book EII. 3357 Ind| 11, and nine years later proposed the title pater patriae: 3358 Ind| embraced the new regime, proposing a gold statue of the new 3359 Ind| to placate the judge, a propositio outlining the brief, and 3360 IBIS| on the naked earth,~they propped his tender head on a hard 3361 Ind| of Catullus and Cicero, proscribed by the second Triumvirate, 3362 Ind| successfully defended by him when prosecuted in 32AD, for accusing Gaius 3363 Ind| committed suicide to avoid prosecution for treason. He had taken 3364 Ind| s death in Antioch, and prosecutor of Gnaeus Piso), at the 3365 Ind| Acheloïdes, companions of Proserpina, turned to woman-headed 3366 T-V| symbol of the country that prospers~through you, O hero equal 3367 ExI| intent on gain, like a prostitute.~So I marvel the more that 3368 T-II| lust.~And Vestals’ eyes see prostitutes’ bodies: ~that’s no reason 3369 Ind| reference to the ritual prostitution of the followers of Diana 3370 ExI| name amongst such heroes,~protecting your friend in the hardest 3371 Ind| the old Togatae. He was a protégé of Maecenas and organised 3372 Ind| Magna Graecia, perhaps in protest at Polycrates’ rule.~Book 3373 T-I| they deserve.~So you’re proven, by one who’s as true as 3374 Ind| to govern Rome’s eastern provinces and died in Antioch in mysterious 3375 Ind| husband, Cornelius Fidus, the provincial senator.~Ibis:163-208 Extensive 3376 T-I| breaker leaps mountain-high on prow~and curving stern, and strikes 3377 T-II| barked at, when someone prowls ~outside, why there’s so 3378 T-III| and there’ll be friendly prows on the Pontic shore.~I’ll 3379 ExIII| contracting disease by its proximity?~Some of my friends too 3380 ExI| Master Ovid, without much prudence, passing on ~the art of 3381 Ind| foot thinking it one. He pruned the corpse, and the Edonians, 3382 Ind| kind is not to the same pseudonymous Carus. Possibly here the 3383 Ind| sister of Publius Clodius Pulcher, and wife of Quintus Metellus 3384 Ind| and caused his death by pulling out the golden hair from 3385 ExI| incense on the sacred fires~purely to placate his father’s 3386 ExII| approved.~Even that Claudia, purer than her own reputation, ~ 3387 Ind| black hellebore used as purgatives. Common hellebore (helleborus 3388 Ind| people went to Anticyra to be purged. See Pausanias (10.36.3).~ ~ 3389 Ind| Thrace. It was publicly purified once a year and one of the 3390 IBIS| birds without warning,~who purifies his body in a shower of 3391 ExIII| sprinkled the captives with purifying water,~that the long sacrificial 3392 Ind| Ophrynion, the site of his purported grave.~Book TIII. XI:1-38 3393 T-V| your skies with a purpose.~Purposefully, when the joint offering’ 3394 Ind| the ‘Hospitable Sea’ for purposes of good omen. ~Book TII: 3395 T-V| feel cheated, stops you putting it aside?~I don’t alter 3396 Ind| birthplace of Pythagoras (at Pythagórion = Tigáni). Samos was famous 3397 Ind| Apollo at Delphi on the Pythoness’s orders, for interfering 3398 Ind| Great Goddess, Car, Ker or Q’re, to whom doves were sacred. 3399 Ind| XI:4f: XIII:4f. He was quaestor to Germanicus.~Book EIV. 3400 T-III| great lion to bring down his quarry:~when his enemy’s fallen 3401 Ind| It contains the brightest quasar, 3C 273. (The constellation 3402 ExIII| its goddess, is there to quell your doubts:~and the altar, 3403 T-IV| because the king of the world quelled fire with fire.~Semele was 3404 Ind| monster, including that which questioned Oedipus, the Sphinx eventually 3405 Ind| servants perhaps under harsh questioning?).~Book TV.VIII:1-38 Ovid 3406 IBIS| defeated by the tortuous questions she uttered:~like those 3407 T-I| heavy burden to the bearer.~Quick, it’s a long way! I’ll be 3408 ExII| Ex Ponto Book I~ ~ ~‘quid tibi cum Ponto? ~what have 3409 T-I| be saved.~Though the seas quieten, and kind winds blow,~though 3410 IBIS| Achilles drove.~May you have no quieter a sleep than Rhesus,~and 3411 Ind| The Roman woman, Claudia Quinta, a Vestal Virgin, who was 3412 Ind| mentioned by Seneca and Quintilian.~Book EI.VIII:1-70 If the 3413 Ind| Capitol at the foot of the Quirinal Hill. Augustus dedicated 3414 ExII| deprived of peace,~while the quiver-carrying Getae make cruel war.~Of 3415 ExII| from Sarmatian hands.~So quote the example of ancient heroes 3416 Ind| the Naiad Periboa. ~(See J R Spencer Stanhope’s painting- 3417 Ind| love with Hippomenes. He raced with her, and by use of 3418 T-V| strong leash,~like an eager racehorse thudding on the unopened~ 3419 T-V| though I’m far away, be radiantly here,~and if any sad hurt 3420 IBIS| shattered timbers of his raft.~Or, lest your flesh shall 3421 ExI| lessened,~the more Fortune rages, the more you resist her,~ 3422 T-I| two edges,~so you’re seen ragged, with straggling hair.~No 3423 Ind| adds Aglaophonos, Molpe, Raidne, Teles, and Thelxepeia.) ( 3424 Ind| north-east.~Book TI.XI:1-44 A rain-bearing wind in winter.~Book EII. 3425 Ind| 68 Jupiter Pluvius, the rain-bringer.~Book EII.II:39-74 Augustus 3426 T-II| with noise,~he scatters the rain-clouds and clears the air.~So it’ 3427 IBIS| last, brought down vast rains:~like Antaeus’s brother, 3428 ExI| and, like the snow the rainy south wind melts,~welling 3429 IBIS| There let one of the Furies rake your flanks with her whip,~ 3430 Ind| in Libya where he was the ram-horned god.~Ibis:311-364 Cambyses 3431 T-I| see your brothers there ranged in order,~all, whom the 3432 Ind| survivors under oath to discuss ransom terms with the Senate. One 3433 Ind| his son by Alexiroë. He ransomed the dead body of his son 3434 Ind| and elongated beak. Its rapid, far-carrying, ‘hoo-hoo-hoo’ 3435 T-I| to port, used to savage rapine,~always full of bloodshed, 3436 ExI| need,~you perform an act rarer than any in this age.~It’ 3437 Ind| rejected Latona and boasted rashly about her fourteen children. 3438 T-I| the writing lacks the last rasp of the file. ~I ask forgiveness 3439 ExIV| already over, if not~through rational thought, by the lapse of 3440 ExII| threshold~one who shakes Isis’s rattling sistrum of Pharos in his 3441 ExIII| drinking sea-water here, making raucous cries.~The empty plains 3442 Ind| the time when Amphitryon ravaged the islands of the Taphians 3443 IBIS| Euboean Bay:~and as the fierce ravager died by lightning and the 3444 Ind| and was allowed to live in Ravenna.~Book EII.I:68 A captive 3445 IBIS| let your body be food for ravenous serpents.~Or, as in Ariadne’ 3446 T-I| evening,~Now frozen Boreas raves from dry polar stars,~now 3447 IBIS| and that form clothed with rays of sunlight,~and you Moon, 3448 T-III| northern gales is such~it razes high towers, and blows away 3449 Ind| was destroyed by fire and re-built in 3AD.~ ~Opus~The capital 3450 Ind| Getic incursion. The Romans re-captured it with the aid of the Odrysian 3451 Ind| at Augustus’s death, to re-dedicate the work to Germanicus. 3452 Ind| father of Caligula. Ovid re-dedicated the Fasti to him after Augustus’ 3453 ExIII| made them more by frequent re-reading, and never ~a time when 3454 ExIV| bowmen with the sword.~He re-took Troesmis when captured, 3455 ExIII| example,~which you might more readily set me, since I,~who have 3456 Ind| the wealth of Athens after readministrating its finances, and had several 3457 Ind| Fabian House, and Ovid’s realisation that the Julian hopes are 3458 T-III| lest her father did not realise, high on a rock,~she set 3459 ExIII| received~in the heavenly realm, to exist among the happy 3460 ExIV| whether it’s the fact I’ve reaped no profit from it, ~that 3461 ExIII| the naked bodies of the reapers.~Autumn never offers you 3462 Ind| to Chiron the Centaur to rear. He is represented in the 3463 T-V| how great a monument I’ve reared~to you in my books, wife 3464 T-IV| you’ll see the four horses rearing at the noise~of all the 3465 ExI| I’d believe,~or think it reasonable, that you’ve forgotten me 3466 Ind| frontier area. A Thracian rebellion was put down by Lucius Piso 3467 T-III| Roman Jupiter, and that you~rebellious Germany, at last, have bowed ~ 3468 Ind| where the ritual of the rebirth of the world from winter 3469 Ind| mitigation, a refutatio rebutting the charge, and a second 3470 ExIV| Aegisos won’t deny it, recaptured at your coming,~gaining 3471 ExII| Jason, the son of Aeson, receives~from later ages because 3472 Ind| 145BC. He also made critical recensions of Hesiod and Pindar.~Book 3473 ExIV| Tomitae, my situation’s gentle reception among you~shows how kind 3474 ExIV| and the gods begin to be receptive to your prayers:~the snowy 3475 Ind| perceived high rank of the recipient, who wishes to be strictly 3476 T-IV| grief, but never shame.~When reckless Capaneus died, at that sudden 3477 T-I| of my own fortunes~can be reckoned among those Metamorphoses.~ 3478 ExI| shaped by my hand?~Or is recognition denied you by passing time,~ 3479 Ind| death. There were twenty recorded instances in eleven centuries. 3480 T-III| straits,~whoever he is he can recount the news he knows,~and be 3481 IBIS| Pasiphae.~And I’ll have recounted these punishments, and he’ 3482 Ind| addressed to him explicitly, recounting Ovid’s vision of Love.~Book 3483 ExIII| lightening bolt, live~and recover, unhindered by Jupiter.~ 3484 Ind| complete play is the Dyscolus, recovered from an Egyptian papyrus 3485 ExII| your words,~as the pulse recovers when wine’s administered. ~ 3486 Ind| Campus (Martis)~The great recreation ground of ancient Rome, 3487 ExIII| such a clamour,~like a raw recruit hearing the trumpet-call 3488 Ind| Corinthian bronzes were dipped red-hot on completion.~Book EI.III: 3489 T-IV| t let the blush of shame redden your cheeks,~because I’ve 3490 ExIII| the stone,~is darkened, reddened by the stains of spilt blood.~ 3491 ExIV| as the pomegranate seeds reddening~under their slow-growing 3492 ExIV| struck down in sacrifice, reddens ~the Tarpeian altars, as 3493 ExIII| Approach To Livia~ ~Had you to redeem my death, a detestable idea,~ 3494 T-IV| soothes his flock with the reed pipe’s tune.~The slave girl, 3495 T-V| The shepherd plays his reed-pipe glued with pitch,~under 3496 ExIV| being driven towards the old reef again,~into the waters where 3497 ExIV| which you polish with such refined care all would deny~that 3498 Ind| of the Forum bright with reflected light from the gold ornaments 3499 Ind| regeneration and agricultural reform. He was a close friend of 3500 T-V| was.~A field that’s not refreshed by constant ploughing~will 3501 Ind| several buildings built or refurbished. He was on Demosthenes side 3502 ExI| down her weapons,~and not refusing to set her head beneath 3503 Ind| asking for mitigation, a refutatio rebutting the charge, and 3504 T-V| what you’re not, so you~can refute these false accusations