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3505 ExIV| can,~something I’ll not regain without a change of place.~~ 3506 ExI| land.~Believe me, it’s a regal action to aid the fallen,~ 3507 Ind| Julia was moved to Rhegium (Reggio) on the mainland in 4AD 3508 ExII| mediocre writings, dont register where~you are: fame fled 3509 Ind| love.~Book EI.IV:1-58 Ovid regrets his role as the teacher 3510 ExI| and doing good for free is regretted.~Only what’s profitable 3511 ExII| and my pulse keeps to its regular rhythm.~But my appetite’ 3512 Ind| Donnus a Celtic chieftain reigning over Ligurian tribes. The 3513 ExIII| chill,~and tightens the rein on horses eager for the 3514 Ind| importance. This letter certainly reiterates the close tie with Paullus, 3515 Ind| enemies.~Book EI.II:53-100 A reiteration of the nature of his offence, 3516 T-III| dismayed by the shame of its rejection.~~ Book TIII.II:1-30 The 3517 T-V| sacred altar: the altar rejects no one’s hands.~~ Book TV. 3518 ExIV| heart fuller than my salver,~rejoicing more than once at your supreme 3519 Ind| Fleece. Medea pretended to rejuvenate him but instead employed 3520 Ind| Colchis.~Ibis:413-464 Failed rejuvenation.~ ~Pelion~A mountain in 3521 Ind| mischievous sub-text. The relations between Livia and Augustus 3522 ExII| the day when the Prince relents!~~ Book EI.V:1-42 To Cotta 3523 Ind| war. ~Book TV.VI:1-46 A reliable physician.~ ~Polydorus~Ibis: 3524 T-V| peace at times, there’s no reliance on peace:~so the place now 3525 T-IV| grief is worked through, and relieved by tears.~And I wish what 3526 Ind| monumental work, on magic and religion, ‘The Golden Bough’ (see 3527 Ind| the 6th century BC as a religious leader, and mathematician 3528 Ind| that Circe was worshipped religiously by the colonists at Circei. (‘ 3529 Ind| Thessaly. King Aeetes was reluctant and set Jason demanding 3530 T-IV| and proved invincible, relying on its own powers.~Forgetting 3531 T-V| uncertain footsteps,~never remaining sure, nor fixed in the same 3532 Ind| and the nymph Crataeis, remarkable for her beauty. Circe or 3533 Ind| concerned Julia the Younger’s remarrying and bearing a rival successor) 3534 T-V| these few lines serve to remind you of it,~accept that word 3535 Ind| any favour to Ovid. I am reminded of the attitude to John 3536 Ind| shed over his disgrace is reminiscent of TIII.IV, see above, and 3537 Ind| Ovid goes on hoping for remission of his sentence, based on 3538 T-V| gods he’ll join,~when he remits my sentence he’ll grant 3539 T-II| cause,~no one’s assigned a remoter place than mine.~There’s 3540 T-IV| region, nearly the earth’s remotest,~that men and gods shun, 3541 ExIII| I pray.~Your well-being removes much of my torment,~and 3542 ExII| and accept my poetry after removing the name.~The peaceful olive 3543 Ind| the mid 7th century BC. Renamed Constantinople (330AD by 3544 T-II| origin,~at least my genius renders it not unknown:~though my 3545 Ind| deification, and had the power to renew life. She was the cupbearer 3546 Ind| wished she could obtain a renewal of his youth. She gave birth 3547 ExIV| and I can’t delight in renewing earth by cultivation,~though 3548 Ind| race and her. (See Guido Reni’s paintingAtalanta and 3549 T-III| exile.~I could easily have renounced the light, just now,~when 3550 Ind| Augustus himself paid for its repair in 27BC, and statues of 3551 ExII| refused the offered terms of repatriation.~Smyrna held that hero, 3552 IBIS| Mestra who changed her form~repeatedly, may you be wasted by endless 3553 ExIV| dare to console the wise~repeating the trite words of the learned 3554 Ind| us believe elsewhere. He repeats that the cause of his ruin 3555 T-IV| if only you clearly have repented: if only ~you condemn yourself, 3556 Ind| penalty. ~Book EI.VI:1-54 A repetition again that the history of 3557 Ind| her associates planned to replace Tiberius with Antonius as 3558 Ind| and elegiac poet. He wrote replies to some of Ovid’s Heroides, 3559 ExI| the glorious triumph.~Your report told me how countless peoples~ 3560 Ind| grandson, and that Fabius reported as such to his wife Marcia, 3561 Ind| something, and cowardice in not reporting it.~Book TI.II:75-110 He 3562 Ind| preventing any chances of reprieve from his exile.~Book TI. 3563 ExIII| to life again,~but Caesar reprieves many or lightens their sentence,~ 3564 ExI| Graecinus: An Answer To His Reproof~ ~Ovid, who used to be present 3565 ExII| noose round their neck!~She reproved me too, and checked me with 3566 Ind| erotic poet, probably of the Republicam period. Pliny the Younger 3567 ExII| before.~Your father didnt repudiate my friendship,~he, the spur, 3568 Ind| of a deception had been repulsed by Athene). Legendary king 3569 Ind| Antenor~A Trojan noble, the reputed founder of Padua.~Book EIV. 3570 Ind| Heroides.~Ibis:541-596 He was reputedly killed, by Telegonus, with 3571 Ind| Argonauts reached his court, and requested the return of the Golden 3572 ExI| almost extinct in this age,~requires me to make such prayers, 3573 T-III| s.~So, whoever you are, rescind the charge against me,~take 3574 T-V| bless you:~your honour, in rescuing a poet, would remain.~Caesar’ 3575 Ind| Cassandreus~Book EII.IX:39-80 Resembling Apollodorus the cruel lord 3576 ExIV| come, tell me about some resentment that changed you:~since 3577 Ind| the plague, and becomes a resident god. (His cult centre was 3578 Ind| became a highly fashionable residential area, and Augustus lived 3579 Ind| Quintus Hortensius. Other residents included Cicero and Mark 3580 Ind| Accused by Anytus, he showed resilience under stress.~Ibis:465-540 3581 Ind| War, and most cunning and resilient of the Greek leaders, the 3582 ExI| it’s right you too were resistant to my ~entreaties, after 3583 Ind| Atropos (She Who Cannot Be Resisted) wields the shears. The 3584 T-I| cloud!~What a mighty crash resounds from the ether!~The blow 3585 ExIV| concerning the new god.~May this respectful act aid me, and let there 3586 Ind| Ocean and the Underworld respectively. He was banished to Tarturus. 3587 ExIV| Moreover my skill doesnt respond as before,~I turn the arid 3588 Ind| Oracle of Jupiter-Zeus, whose responses were delivered by the rustling 3589 T-II| nations,~since you wage many restless wars.~So, should I wonder 3590 Ind| and its reference to the restoration of the temple of Janus, 3591 Ind| supposed to have killed him for restoring the dead to life. His cult 3592 ExII| saviour of my bitter life,~he restrained my hands ready to cause 3593 Ind| given him by Aeolus and the resultant storms blew them off course.~ ~ 3594 Ind| public. Breaking of their vow resulted in whipping and death. There 3595 Ind| place of exile specified but retaining his rights and possessions, 3596 T-V| health, ~one part of my fate retains its brightness.~Dearest 3597 T-V| using forgotten phrases,~and retrace the ill-fated symbols of 3598 Ind| Book EIV.V:1-46 Ovid is retracing the journey to Rome.~ ~Halcyone, 3599 IBIS| Then to make his eyelids retract they brought brands~made 3600 Ind| First Triumvirate (60) he retreated from politics and returned 3601 IBIS| and as the ebbing wave retreats in its turn,~and the soft 3602 Ind| Rhamnusia~The Goddess of retribution. She punishes mortal pride 3603 IBIS| Sisyphus is there: he rolls and retrieves his stone:~and Ixion, beaten, 3604 Ind| the Blessed where he was reunited with Eurydice. He taught 3605 ExIV| with the tribes the Danube reveals in its winding course.~Cyclops 3606 T-II| would be cruel, Terence a reveller,~and those who sing of war 3607 Ind| by her during the Bacchic revels. She then helped Procne 3608 ExIV| chair:~or managing public revenues, next to the planted spear,~ 3609 ExIV| left by all ~of this: he reverences him next to the great gods.~ 3610 T-I| source: the hurrying Sun reverse his wheeling team,~earth 3611 Ind| destined for public office, but reverted to the angusticlavia of 3612 IBIS| bloodless ghost will still revile all your ways,~then, too, 3613 ExIV| those others.~So, Envy, stop reviling one exiled from his country,~ 3614 T-IV| flames myself, for them to revise it.~Even then, when I was 3615 Ind| regime. It was promoted as a revival of ancient customs. ~Book 3616 Ind| Book TIV.II:1-74 He was rewarded by the Senate with the title 3617 Ind| underworld for spirits in bliss, rewarding virtue in life.~ ~Electra~ 3618 Ind| epic poet. He apparently reworked part of the Odyssey in his 3619 Ind| and the King of the Wood (Rex Nemorensis). All this is 3620 Ind| gods. Her shrine was at Rhamnous in Attica. ~Book TV.VIII: 3621 Ind| Nemesis from her temple at Rhamnus in Attica.~Book TV.VIII: 3622 Ind| faction. Julia was moved to Rhegium (Reggio) on the mainland 3623 Ind| 38 She punishes hubris.~ ~Rhenus~The river Rhine in northern 3624 Ind| shared Thrace with his uncle Rhescuporis, when Augustus divided the 3625 Ind| writer on philosophy and rhetoric.~Book EI.I:1-36 A moralist 3626 Ind| translated or adapted Apollonius Rhodius’s Argonautica. He wrote 3627 Ind| Eurydice a second time, hence Rhodopeius an epithet of Orpheus.~ ~ 3628 Ind| languages of the region. The rhythms of Getic are different to 3629 Ind| and his brothers-in-law, rid him of their loathsome attentions, 3630 Ind| who failed to answer her riddles.~ ~Sterope, Asterope~One 3631 Ind| Caligula of homosexuality, ridiculing a banquet to the late Julia 3632 Ind| the name or scanning it in ridiculous ways.~Book EIV.XIV:1-62 3633 Ind| across the frozen Danube, riding their swift horses.~Book 3634 T-II| sinful in my song.’~Havent I rigidly excluded from this ‘Art’~ 3635 T-III| spring~lest that precious rill of water be lost:~I first 3636 ExI| hollowed by the wheel’s rim,~than my heart’s trampled 3637 Ind| ran from Rome to Ariminum (Rimini) on the Adriatic Coast. 3638 T-V| enough that it once ran riot with my wit.~If only a part 3639 IBIS| claw, ~and the greedy dogs rip out your treacherous heart,~ 3640 T-IV| hold the juice inside:~time ripens the seed into white ears 3641 T-III| broad sails bring more risk than the narrow.~See how 3642 T-IV| nothing of ambush, or the risks to my life,~real, but too 3643 Ind| EII.IX:1-38 Pregnant sows ritually sacrificed to her.~Book 3644 T-II| temple in adoration,~how many rivals caused the goddess pain. ~ 3645 Ind| in a hole, normally in a riverbank, by freshwater and not by 3646 ExIV| with the fierce Achaei, who roam the eastern shore~with more 3647 T-I| threatening cloud,~between, the roar and humming of the winds.~ 3648 T-I| verses I wrote to the wild roaring of the sea,~astonished the 3649 T-III| they try:~and though Boreas roars and thrashes his wings,~ 3650 T-III| Shut him in at once, and roast him over slow coals:~he’ 3651 Ind| him where victims could be roasted alive and made Perillus 3652 T-III| work in person,’~At once, roasting in the fires he’d prepared,~ 3653 Ind| cleansing the Isthmus of robbers along the way (Periphetes, 3654 ExIV| raging Parthenius, Cynapses rolling boulders, ~sliding on, Tyras, 3655 Ind| Rhoemetalces~The father of Cotys.~ ~Roma, Rome~The city on the Tiber, 3656 Ind| transvectio of the equites Romani wearing their special dress, 3657 Ind| 12AD. He was cultivated and Romanised. He was deposed and killed 3658 Ind| the New Comedy he wrote on romantic and domestic themes. His 3659 ExIII| in the sea, often swim roofed-in by solid water.~There are 3660 ExII| fastenings, forever.~The rooftops bristle, covered by the 3661 T-V| in whom Rome’s power is rooted,~was often merciful to his 3662 ExII| Dawn, Memnon’s mother, with rosy lips~might soon call forth 3663 T-V| boat will be weakened by rot, and gape with cracks,~if 3664 ExI| warning when I could have rounded Ceraunia,~all sails standing, 3665 T-I| angry emotion’s quiet dont rouse it, ~dont you be a second 3666 T-II| her children’s blood,~was roused to do it by the pain of 3667 ExIV| But a wrong interpretation rouses people’s anger ~against 3668 Ind| They were chased by Orion rousing the anger of Artemis to 3669 ExI| Though you do, I’ll still row despite the following wind,~ 3670 T-I| wind,~if oars are used, the rowers speed her onward.~She’s 3671 Ind| feet. Each head had three rows of close-set teeth.Her cry 3672 Ind| day a Sarmatian tribe, the Roxolani, had reached as far west 3673 Ind| Ennius (239-169BC) from Rudiae in Calabria, the important 3674 Ind| variously identified as ‘wild rue’, wild cyclamen, and a sort 3675 T-I| the support on which my ruins rest,~if I’m still anyone, 3676 Ind| in a fig tree (the Ficus Ruminalis) and they were rescued by 3677 Ind| circumstances, perhaps, as rumoured, through the effects of 3678 IBIS| fate, may raging liquid rush~over your head, covered 3679 T-I| purple east,~now Zephyrus rushes in from late evening,~Now 3680 IBIS| Tiberinus, drowned in the rushing river.~May you be worthy 3681 Ind| Thrace, across southern Russia to the Caspian Sea, and 3682 ExII| iron are eaten by corroding rust:~as a shelved book feeds 3683 Ind| responses were delivered by the rustling of the oak trees in the 3684 Ind| and his Latin is growing rusty. He stresses the savagery 3685 Ind| underwent in Smyrna.~ ~Rutuli, Rutulians~An Italic people living 3686 IBIS| prize, sewn inside a bulls-hide.~May your throat be cut 3687 Ind| Minotaur). He made wings of bees-wax and feathers to escape from 3688 Ind| betrayed the citadel to the Sabines or from Lucius Tarpeius 3689 Ind| Tauric Chersonese where human sacrifices were offered.~ ~Irus~The 3690 Ind| carried off Iole.~Ibis:251-310 Sacrificing at the altars to Jupiter 3691 Ind| the gold sent by Priam for safekeeping, with the boy, and the boy’ 3692 ExI| most wretched fate’s ~the safest, since fear of a worse one 3693 Ind| Argo.~ ~Tiresias~The Theban sage who spent seven years as 3694 Ind| AD16 or 17 according to Saint Jerome’s Chronicle of Eusebius, 3695 Ind| Catullus called him the salaputium disertum, the ‘eloquent 3696 Ind| would have disembarked at Salé or Zoné having sailed from 3697 Ind| about thirty miles north of Salmydessos, and somewhat less than 3698 T-I| the Ocean and stirs the salt-waters with his stars.~I still 3699 T-V| suffering,~drain a little saltwater from this brimming sea.~ 3700 T-I| I relinquish, receive my salutation, for all time.~And though 3701 ExIV| incense, heart fuller than my salver,~rejoicing more than once 3702 ExI| shame on your House.~May the sanctuaries of your race flourish,~may 3703 T-I| re admitted to my inner sanctum,~and reach your own house, 3704 Ind| 62 A dangerous series of sandbanks on the north coast of Africa 3705 Ind| but the army vanished in a sandstorm. (Herodotus III.26)~Ibis: 3706 Ind| linked to the mainland by a sandy isthmus. It was famous for 3707 Ind| Louvre, Paris: Frederick Sandys paintingMedea’, Birmingham 3708 Ind| unwise and cowardly (non sapiens, timidus) and this suggests 3709 Ind| with women led to the term Sapphic, or Lesbian. ~Book TII:361- 3710 T-IV| the slowness of old age is sapping my strength~its time now 3711 Ind| Persia at the taking of Sardis.~Book TIII.VII:1-54 An example 3712 Ind| Ovid’s destination is a Sarmation territory.~Book TI.V:45- 3713 T-III| whoever you are.~If you can sate your thirst for blood on 3714 Ind| Augustan lyrical poet and satirist. He enjoyed the patronage 3715 T-V| ease what he’s made.~and satisfied at last by a measure of 3716 Ind| subsequently murdered by the satrap Bessus. The incident referred 3717 Ind| supported Turnus.~ ~Satyrs, Satyri~Demi-gods. Woodland deities 3718 Ind| Sarmatia, Sarmatians, Sauromatae~A nomadic Indo-European 3719 ExIV| less than if the bronze and scales weighed me.~~ Book EIV.XVI: 3720 T-II| games, Augustus,~you’ll scan many pricey items like these.~ 3721 Ind| by splitting the name or scanning it in ridiculous ways.~Book 3722 T-I| the harbour itself will scare me:~the land has more terrors 3723 Ind| stupid (stultus) not wicked (sceleratus). He stresses his loyalty 3724 Ind| culpa) rather than a crime (scelus) and not ultimately judged 3725 Ind| His plays contained love scenes but were basically moral 3726 ExIV| harshness of the place.~Scepsian Metrodorus attacked Italian 3727 Ind| Greeks, and identified by Schliemann with Hissarlik four miles 3728 Ind| Atalanta ~The daughter of King Schoeneus of Boeotia, famous for her 3729 T-V| empty bed.~Truly virtue schooled in adversity offers~a theme 3730 Ind| Timoleon, and ended as a schoolteacher in Corinth.~ ~Dionysopolis~ 3731 Ind| Book TII:421-470 He dealt scientifically with the elements, and atomic 3732 Ind| poet and Archimedes the scientist and mathematician were born 3733 Ind| and attracted sculptors, scientists and poets, such as Anacreon 3734 Ind| coast near the village of Scilla, opposite Cape Peloro on 3735 Ind| a winged cap, carries a scimitar, and has a magic wand, the 3736 IBIS| hellish snakes:~the third one scorch your smoking cheeks with 3737 IBIS| confessed:~another give your scored body to her hellish snakes:~ 3738 T-II| tally the bones, what throw scores the most,~and how to avoid 3739 ExIII| company more,~and unless you scorn to do so, follow the example,~ 3740 Ind| constellation Ophiucus near Scorpius, depicting a man entwined 3741 T-II| adulteries.~If it’s right to scribble mimes that copy vice,~a 3742 T-I| Either the Adriatic saw me scribbling these words~in the midst 3743 ExIV| spear, settling it all with scrupulous honesty:~next moment you’ 3744 Ind| Polycrates, and attracted sculptors, scientists and poets, such 3745 Ind| King of the Dolopians, on Scyros. She was the mother of Neoptolemus ( 3746 IBIS| of aged Saturn, with his scythe.~And the day of your birth 3747 Ind| through love of Minos.~ ~Scythi, Scythia~Originally a nomadic 3748 ExIV| d think~composed by the sea-green gods themselves:~he who 3749 Ind| drawing of Neptune with four sea-horses, Royal Library, Windsor: 3750 T-V| Euxine shore,~wearied by the sea-lanes, wearied by the roads,~to 3751 Ind| a rock and exposed to a sea-monster Cetus because of her mother’ 3752 Ind| Cursed soil.~ ~Circe~The sea-nymph, daughter of Sol and Perse, 3753 Ind| Doom, Perseus slaying the Sea-Serpent, and The Baleful Head.)( 3754 Ind| largest city of Sicily. A seaport in the south-east of the 3755 T-III| land and sea,~and Pontus, seared by perpetual frost, holds 3756 T-IV| feels no exile, no Scythian seashores,~it’s not aware of the angry 3757 Ind| river was noted for its seasonal flooding in ancient times. ( 3758 Ind| importance to him, as the seat of Empire and the gods. 3759 ExI| amphitheatre, in adjoining seats.~In short our love, was 3760 Ind| by freshwater and not by seawater.)~See Metamorphoses Book 3761 T-III| intelligent hearing:~there’s no secluded place. The guards on the 3762 T-IV| me on to seek~that safe seclusion my tastes always loved.~~ 3763 T-III| my heart:~I told whatever secrets I had to you~except that 3764 ExIII| which none travel on foot, securely, or by boat,.~No wonder 3765 Ind| capture of his oxen.~The securing of the apples from the Garden 3766 T-V| judge, through whom the security~of all the gods of the Roman 3767 T-IV| badly covered with green sedge,~is the Rhine himself discoloured 3768 T-II| forbidden love,~in which a smart seducer constantly appears,~and 3769 ExIII| woman the law protects from seducers~been strictly excluded from 3770 Ind| Face, and Peisinoë, the Seductress: and his preferred triplet 3771 T-I| veins of flint,~and iron seeded in your rigid breast,~and 3772 | seeming 3773 T-V| suppressed chokes us, and seethes inside,~multiplying its 3774 T-IV| Chimaera, lioness and serpent segmented by fire,~that there are 3775 T-V| indignation against me.~Select the very least of all my 3776 ExIII| think perhaps this work was selected by me.~Be kind to my writings, 3777 Ind| and kissed by the Moon (Selene/Luna/Diana/Artemis).~Book 3778 T-IV| writing’s safe in its own self-criticism.~Still I often say: ‘Who’ 3779 Ind| calimed total freedom and self-sufficiency for the individual, and 3780 ExI| friendship, who was once revered,~sells herself, intent on gain, 3781 IBIS| rivers, and the nymphs and semi-divine races:~appear, at the last, 3782 Ind| from Ars Amatoria II.24: semibovemque virum, semivirumque bovem, 3783 Ind| biformes, duplex natura, semihomines, bimembres.~They were the 3784 Ind| 24: semibovemque virum, semivirumque bovem, and all three were 3785 Ind| Graccus~Probably Titus Sempronius Graccus, a writer of tragedy 3786 Ind| EIV.IV:1-50 The Curia or Senate-house.~Book EIV.IX:55-88 The consulship 3787 Ind| went to Africa with him, a senatorial province. Ovid’s house was 3788 ExII| never lose the bitterness of sensation,~and my punishment’s worse 3789 Ind| II:1-52 Happy in becoming senseless stone.~Ibis:541-596 Turned 3790 Ind| grieves for him, but was sensibly left behind in Rome, probably 3791 Ind| leniency, but equally both were sensitive to the political difficulties 3792 ExIII| verse,~because the same sentiment’s in all these books:~nothing 3793 Ind| Sea.~ ~Bosporus~The strait separating Europe and Asia Minor, connecting 3794 Ind| analogy for Ovid’s feelings at separation.~ ~Miletus, Milesian~The 3795 Ind| Caesar’s campaign against the Sequani in 58. He also wrote erotic 3796 Ind| Patrae in the sanctuary of Serapis (Pausanias VII.21.6)~Book 3797 Ind| area of modern Bulgaria and Serbia, taking its name from the 3798 T-II| writing are surpassed in seriousness by tragedy,~yet this too 3799 ExIII| These are the riches my fate serves up for you.~~ Book EIII. 3800 Ind| shameful behaviour, and his servility, he was a supporter of Tiberius, 3801 Ind| brother Thyestes (killing and serving his children cooked at a 3802 T-IV| master’s command,~submits to servitude, conquered by time.~Time 3803 T-II| shattered house begins to settle,~the whole weight falls 3804 Ind| twins built the first walled settlement on the Palatine. Romulus 3805 Ind| the site of the earliest settlements adjacent to the Tiber, south-east 3806 ExIV| contracts,~by the spear, settling it all with scrupulous honesty:~ 3807 Ind| Heracleia Pontica near modern Sevastapol, and Herodotus (4.103) describes 3808 Ind| founded by Cadmus. The seven-gated city suffered as a result 3809 T-II| I’m the only one sent to seven-mouthed Hister’s delta,~I’m crushed 3810 Ind| 490?-432?BC) creator of severeal famous works including the 3811 Ind| castrated himself and became a sexless follower of hers. See Catullus: 3812 Ind| ruling war, passion, and sexuality.~ ~Marsus~Domitius Marsus, 3813 Ind| legs and budding horns. Sexually lustful. They were followers 3814 ExII| man digging ditches live, shackled with chains,~believing that 3815 T-IV| misfortune.~That’s why the man in shackles, digging ditches,~still 3816 ExIV| steeped in snake’s venom.~Shafts with painted feathers cling 3817 ExII| from his threshold~one who shakes Isis’s rattling sistrum 3818 Ind| was killed by the mob. See Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar.~Book TII: 3819 T-I| verse, such as it is, with shaking hand.~Now the rigging shrieks, 3820 T-III| rested its oars in these shallows.~A look-out on a high hill 3821 T-IV| I lived.~Now my life is shamed by this punishment.~~ Book 3822 T-V| whom nothing can be below.~Shameless one, what stirs your animosity 3823 ExIV| long-haired Getae:~and it shames me, if you’ll only allow 3824 Ind| After living off Mestra’s shape-changing skills he ended by consuming 3825 Ind| the shoreline as deformia, shapeless, featureless, unlovely.~ 3826 T-III| news he knows,~and be the sharer and passer-on of rumour.~ 3827 T-III| too constant in cruelty,~sharers of the anger one god feels,~ 3828 T-IV| was not destined to remain sharing my bed.~Lastly she who remained 3829 IBIS| sand,~so I’ll not hurl my sharpened steel at you as yet,~my 3830 T-I| left but prayer? –~dont shatter the ribs of our storm-tossed 3831 Ind| and they were rescued by a she-wolf and fed by a woodpecker, 3832 Ind| κείρω, ‘I cut’, reflects her shearing of Nisus’s hair, as does 3833 Ind| the core from the outer sheath) (See Perugino’s painting – 3834 ExIII| sent you Scythian arrows sheathed in a quiver:~I pray they 3835 Ind| Luna who so bright doth sheen, Persephone in hell’) Callisto 3836 ExII| asked for more, it would be sheer effrontery.~~ Book EI.II: 3837 ExIV| managed three words on a sheet of paper?~I scarcely believe 3838 Ind| obtained from the murex shell-fish. Once an island harbour, 3839 Ind| tumulus was decorated with shell-stone sacred to the goddess at 3840 T-V| as bad as the whole.~As shells the sand, as flowers a rich 3841 T-V| protected by the fortress’s shelter: and even~the barbarous 3842 T-IV| but retired now to the sheltered gardens I owned,~and enjoyed 3843 T-V| as creatures the forest shelters, or fishes that swim the 3844 ExII| Brutus, the learned, has shelves waiting.~I’m not so foolish 3845 Ind| Erigone, killed by drunken shepherds.~ ~Icarus~The son of Daedalus 3846 ExI| forests,~mingled piles of shields and spears,~the buildings 3847 T-IV| they know little.~‘He, who shines on high in Sidonian purple,~ 3848 T-V| saw a man who laughed at shipwrecks, drowned~in the sea, and 3849 ExII| destroyed~the Odrysii in a shock war, taking arms against 3850 ExI| You told me how the sun shone brightly,~by heaven’s power, 3851 ExIII| suddenly the trembling air shook with wings,~and, with a 3852 Ind| island of Erythia after shooting three arrows through the 3853 T-III| under the eaves:~and the shoots that lay hid, buried in 3854 Ind| its right. It was a smart shopping street in Ovid’s day and 3855 T-II| touched tragedy~if she hadnt shorn her father’s hair, through 3856 ExIII| and the anxiety should shorten your hours asleep.~I think 3857 ExIV| be equally ashamed if I shortened a syllable ~that’s long, 3858 ExIII| Believe, and truth will shortly arrive. Your son will have~ 3859 ExII| sight for a similar reason,~shouted, through the streets, that 3860 ExII| bullocks understand~and go shouting the customary warnings to 3861 IBIS| vigilant dogs tear you to shreds.~~ Ibis:597-644 The Litany 3862 Ind| on Mount Ida, ululating, shrieking wildly, in ecstatic dances. ~ 3863 T-I| shaking hand.~Now the rigging shrieks, taut in a north wind,~and 3864 T-II| shrine, it’ll come to her,~shrined, how many mothers that god 3865 T-IV| reach the citadel, and the shrines that favour~your prayers, 3866 ExII| You may try to hide it and shrink from confessing,~Graecinus, 3867 T-V| as many as the reeds that shroud the sodden ditches,~as many 3868 ExII| is covered with neither shrubs~nor trees, and that lifeless 3869 T-V| friend you protected,~and shrug off duty’s honest charge 3870 T-III| whatever it was, it has shrunk without nurture,~and is 3871 IBIS| Cilician country,~nor winter shudder as much from swift Northerlies,~ 3872 T-IV| for that vocation, and I shunned ambition’s cares,~and the 3873 ExIII| you could feel.~The bull shuns the plough when he’s taken 3874 ExIII| moonlight entered my double ~shuttered window, as bright as ever 3875 Ind| lesser contemporaries.~ ~Sibyl~The priestess of Apollo 3876 Ind| XV) at the urging of the Sibylline books, after a plague there.~ ~ 3877 Ind| Her long life.~ ~Sicily~Sicania, Trinacri. The Mediterranean 3878 T-III| Scythians and Getae why speak of Sicilians?~My complaint returns to 3879 Ind| Leucon son of Athamas who sickened and died of disease. The 3880 Ind| the youngest was given a sickle and castrated Uranus. The 3881 Ind| conquest in 406/5BC. Diodorus Siculus (History XIII.90.4) reports 3882 Ind| Cyrene, in the gulfs of Sidra and Gabes. Pirates infested 3883 T-I| waves is no less~than a siege-gun’s heavy thud against the 3884 Ind| water carried in leaking sieves.~Book TIII.I:47-82 The figures 3885 T-I| advocacy.~Find someone who sighs about my exile,~and reads 3886 T-V| understand what my words signify.~Everywhere’s filled with 3887 Ind| Ammannati, Piazza della Signoria, Florence.) Identified with 3888 T-IV| poetry.~Meanwhile, as the silent-footed years slipped by,~my brother 3889 Ind| of the sea. Subsequently silted up and linked to the mainland.~ 3890 Ind| and was crippled by the silting up of its harbour.~Book 3891 Ind| Callimachus’s. TIV.IX has close similarities with Ibis:1-61.~Ibis:41- 3892 IBIS| the new-made ~walls, may a simple spear take your life. ~Last, 3893 Ind| Ixion in the act with this simulacrum, and bound him to a fiery 3894 IBIS| eyes, that had viewed gold sinfully,~the father giving them 3895 Ind| Eumolpus~A mythical Thracian singer, the son of Poseidon and 3896 T-IV| barge against the current, sings:~and he who draws flexed 3897 T-III| waves,~while its own weight sinks the heavy net.~If I who 3898 T-II| guilt away, is herself the sinner.~Yet it’s no crime to unroll 3899 IBIS| parents being acknowledged sinners:~be blind as Tiresias, the 3900 Ind| the Cynic’s native city.~ ~Sinti~A Thracian tribe living 3901 T-IV| ambush, or the blades~of Sintian soldiers, storms, seas, 3902 Ind| of the Hermus, on Mount Sipylus, which weeps when the sun 3903 Ind| rhetorician known as ‘the Latin Siren’. He flourished at Rome 3904 Ind| the five Galli islets, the Sirenusae, at the entrance to the 3905 ExII| country,~or those gardens sited on the pine-clad hills~that 3906 Ind| A Thracian people, the Sithonians.~Book EIV.VII:1-54 Ruled 3907 Ind| rolled to the bottom again,~ ~Sithonius~Of the central peninsula 3908 T-V| and the ingenuity of its siting.~The enemy descends, when 3909 Ind| temple of Jupiter at Ammon (Siwa Oasis, El Khargeh) but the 3910 Ind| part of the coast, about sixty-five miles southwest of the nearest 3911 Ind| cut travellers down to the size of his bed or stretch them 3912 Ind| the huntress on earth. (Skelton’s ‘Diana in the leaves green, 3913 Ind| EIV.XIV:1-62 Metrodorus of Skepsis in Mysia: a philosopher 3914 T-II| constantly appears,~and the skilful wife cons her stupid husband?~ 3915 ExI| study of the Muses,~and, skilfully, you approve my skill.~Our 3916 Ind| wounded he gnawed on the skull and ate the brains of his 3917 Ind| compliment.~ ~Jupiter, Zeus~The sky-god, the Greek Zeus, son of 3918 Ind| says that Cape Skyllaion (Skyli) was named after Scylla. 3919 Ind| II xxxiv says that Cape Skyllaion (Skyli) was named after 3920 IBIS| beneath.~And, inspired, slash your private parts to Phrygian 3921 ExIV| when the holy sacrifice was slaughtered at your command,~the great 3922 Ind| The Rock of Doom, Perseus slaying the Sea-Serpent, and The 3923 T-II| reward for my care, and my sleepless toil,~a punishment’s been 3924 T-I| always~afraid of a sword slicing at my throat.~Even what 3925 T-III| young men, when they’re slick with slippery oil,~soak 3926 ExIII| He spoke, and either he slid away into thin air,~or my 3927 ExIV| that Fortune’s frowned, you slide away,~now that you know 3928 ExIII| itself in noble~natures, but slides like a hidden snake along 3929 T-III| Neptune’s anger was much slighter than Jove’s.~So, whoever 3930 ExI| behalf,~for though I was only slightly acquainted with you,~they 3931 ExIV| Melissus with her little slippers:~Varius and Graccus, granting 3932 IBIS| always vanish, who knows how,~slipping away, endlessly, flowing 3933 IBIS| Phalaris, your tongue first slit with a sword,~may you bellow 3934 ExIV| seeds reddening~under their slow-growing husks, in some fertile farm’ 3935 T-IV| ancient Lares.~Since the slowness of old age is sapping my 3936 ExIV| fortune is unchanging, and slyly~obstructs my wishes with 3937 T-II| mimes that copy vice,~a smaller punishment is due my matter.~ 3938 IBIS| the Stygian stream,~and smeared venom from a snake of Erebus 3939 ExII| from a cruel wound, ~by smearing every arrow-head with viper3940 T-I| While Fortune helps us, a smile on her calm face,~all things 3941 Ind| with one melancholy and one smiling face. The first month of 3942 Ind| A name for Vulcan, the smith, as a metal-worker.~(See 3943 T-II| toyed with, in December’s smoky month,~but nobody was damned 3944 T-V| Gallus would be better, or smooth-tongued Propertius,~Tibullus, with 3945 T-IV| Sphinx, and Harpies, and snake-footed Giants,~Gyas of the hundred 3946 T-II| Mars and Venus~their bodies snared in a flagrant act?~On whose 3947 Ind| Harpyia, Harpies~The ‘snatchers’, Aellopus and Ocypete, 3948 IBIS| wheel:~and here the one who snatches vainly at branch and wave,~ 3949 ExIV| wish that, injured by the snatching away of your ~friend, you’ 3950 Ind| Amatoria I:31-34, but with the sneaky amendment of ‘what is lawful’ 3951 T-IV| the walls fiercely on his snorting steed:~and as a ravening 3952 Ind| Macedonia.~Book TV.III:1-58 Its snow-covered landscape.~ ~Styx~A river 3953 ExI| Tiberius soon drive behind snow-white steeds,~the avenger of his 3954 ExII| earth carries perpetual snowfall.~No fields bear fruit, or 3955 T-IV| autumn fruit, or the wintry snowflakes,~than the ills I endured, 3956 Ind| of Abruzzo, forming the so-called Latium novum or adiectum.)~ ~ 3957 Ind| contemporaries.~ ~Cotys~Several so-named Kings of Thrace. Cotys IV, 3958 T-III| slick with slippery oil,~soak their weary limbs in the 3959 ExIII| by enemies,~their arrows soaking wet with fatal venom,~add 3960 T-III| mingled with the sound of sobbing.~I’ve also felt your strong 3961 Ind| and had a disregard for social conventions. ~Book EI.III: 3962 ExII| managed to end among human society.~~ Book EI.III:49-94 To 3963 ExI| eyes be gouged from their sockets,~than I lack you, by your 3964 Ind| emphasis on logic, and the ‘Socratic method’ of interrogation 3965 T-V| the reeds that shroud the sodden ditches,~as many as the 3966 T-IV| and solid steel:~it even softens fierce anger, little by 3967 T-IV| me help,~till there’s a softer breeze and the god’s appeased:~ 3968 ExIII| were before.~The hair fell softly over his unkempt cheeks,~ 3969 Ind| midwinter, making him a solar god. His mother’s seven 3970 Ind| blindfolded.~ ~Fundi~Fundanum solum, a town on the Appian Way 3971 Ind| north of Salmydessos, and somewhat less than two hundred miles 3972 Ind| their country is the home of Somnus, Sleep.~ ~Cinna~Gaius Helvius 3973 T-III| with many flowers,~and the song-birds welcome spring, untaught:~ 3974 T-IV| or sitting~on a stone, soothes his flock with the reed 3975 Ind| Telemus~Ibis:251-310 A soothsayer, son of Eurymus, who prophesied 3976 Ind| from different plays, in a sophisticated and realistic manner. Six 3977 Ind| Antigone’s betrothed in the Sophoclean version, he committed suicide 3978 Ind| north-west of Rome, beyond Mount Soracte, captured by Rome in 241BC. 3979 Ind| called Aeetias. A famous sorceress. She conceived a passion 3980 ExII| spared.~Oxen draw back their sore necks from the load.~But 3981 Ind| in the interior, and the Sorrento peninsula. It’s modern capital 3982 T-II| sin and my~open fault: I’m sorry for my wit and taste.~Why 3983 T-I| in Rome,~but in so many sorts of foreign places?~Was it 3984 Ind| a hint here in modo sit sospes: if only he (Augustus) is 3985 T-III| a long time.~If only our souls might vanish with the body,~ 3986 T-I| chanced, grief and mourning sounded,~and inside was the semblance 3987 T-IV| the fruits do not taste sour.~It thins the ploughshare 3988 Ind| Hister~The great river of south-eastern Europe, running from Germany 3989 Ind| Cilicia~Ibis:163-208 The southeast coastal region of Asia Minor, 3990 Ind| about sixty-five miles southwest of the nearest mouth of 3991 Ind| of Thebes. The Sparti or sown men were born from the soil, 3992 Ind| Book EII.IX:1-38 Pregnant sows ritually sacrificed to her.~ 3993 Ind| and King of Tartessus in Spain.~Book TIV.VII:1-26 Ovid 3994 T-II| of death,~O Prince, how sparingly you used your powers!~Then, 3995 T-IV| such, fired by the smallest spark,~no scandal was associated 3996 Ind| the soil of Thebes. The Sparti or sown men were born from 3997 T-IV| in the sea, or the very spawn of those same fish.~You’ 3998 Ind| her hair. He seems to have specialised in portraits and allegories, 3999 Ind| wildfowl and varied tree species.) Cicero mentions that Circe 4000 T-I| the sky,~or as many tiny specks as the dry dust holds:~suffered 4001 T-IV| people will own the true spectacle,~the joyful crowd will be 4002 Ind| Fates.~Book TV.III:1-58 Ovid speculates that a dark Fate was present 4003 Ind| Muse, I would suggest the speculation, without any evidence, that 4004 Ind| Livia, but that is highly speculative.~Book EI.IV:1-58 A reference


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