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Publius Ovidius Naso Poems from Exile Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
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4005 T-III| my character in eloquent speeches.~Anyone can be eloquent 4006 T-I| oars are used, the rowers speed her onward.~She’s not content 4007 ExIV| flow of the current’s often speeded by using oars.~I’m ashamed 4008 T-V| duty’s honest charge so speedily? ~I’m a burden, I confess, 4009 IBIS| those who sought in vain the speeding girl, ~Atalanta, she who 4010 Ind| painting, ‘Medea casting a spell’, Wadsworth Athanaeum, Hartford, 4011 Ind| mist conjured by her magic spells. Ovid tells part of her 4012 Ind| Naiad Periboa. ~(See J R Spencer Stanhope’s painting- Penelope – 4013 ExII| pursuits,~and delight in spending time on their favourite 4014 ExIV| times, ~and three times spew it out, you can’t compare 4015 Ind| thrice, daily, drawing in and spewing out a huge volume of water.~ 4016 ExI| friend of the goddess on her sphere.~You’re loyal, and seeing 4017 Ind| an ear of wheat, the star Spica. It contains the brightest 4018 ExII| great honour,~and poured the spices over your cold breast.~Grieving, 4019 Ind| grouped into long loose spikes. The undersides of the leaves 4020 ExIII| reddened by the stains of spilt blood.~A woman, unknown 4021 Ind| human life. Clotho (the Spinner) spins the thread. Lachesis ( 4022 Ind| EI.VIII:1-70 Ibis:41-104 Spinners of the thread of life.~ ~ 4023 Ind| wife of Publius Lentulus Spinther who divorced her in 45BC 4024 ExI| you as sponsor also.~The spirited horse which races for the 4025 Ind| when he attempts suicide to spite Phylius by diving into a 4026 ExI| my situation.~We gazed at splendid cities of Asia, with you 4027 ExI| substance.~The gravity and splendour of the thing sank my attempt,~ 4028 Ind| It can only be done by splitting the name or scanning it 4029 ExI| My wife’s to be praised spontaneously, for herself, ~yet she’s 4030 ExIV| error, alas, and they’re spotless.~If you hope anything at 4031 ExIII| and my weary limbs were sprawled over the bed,~when suddenly 4032 ExIV| hair wet with the sea’s spray:~as warlike Athene stands 4033 T-III| from the melting snow in springtime.~Rome’s in my thoughts, 4034 ExIII| backs.~The Greek priestess sprinkled the captives with purifying 4035 Ind| s union with Medusa and sprung from her head when Perseus 4036 Ind| Augustus was said to be (spuriously) descended from Aeneas. ~ 4037 Ind| Tarpeian Rock, named from Spurius Tarpeius who commanded the 4038 ExI| there’s no harm in setting spurs to the galloping horse.~~ 4039 T-IV| light,~while dark blood spurts over the earth, from the 4040 Ind| of Eumedes. He acted as a spy in the Greek camp and asked 4041 T-IV| furious storm:~even a little squall shatters an old one.~I too 4042 Ind| supposedly stood in the great square at Constantinople until 4043 ExI| friendly file.~The streets, the squares, all the porticoes, saw 4044 ExIV| sorrow.~Where’s the joy in stabbing your steel into my dead 4045 T-V| brambles.~A horse that’s stabled too long will race badly,~ 4046 T-I| daughter and me, on the stacked pyre,~and wanted to die, 4047 ExII| cliff-hanging goats: ~leaning on my staff, I’d like to guard the grazing 4048 T-II| ve calmly watched these staged adulteries.~If it’s right 4049 ExIV| like a still pool or a stagnant swamp,~it’s colour is diluted, 4050 T-IV| crackling on the flames, staining the light,~while dark blood 4051 ExIII| darkened, reddened by the stains of spilt blood.~A woman, 4052 T-III| Then I was led up the high stairway’s even steps,~to the sublime, 4053 Ind| He died when his horses stampeded at the vision of a bull 4054 Ind| Periboa. ~(See J R Spencer Stanhope’s painting- Penelope – The 4055 Ind| Bacchus. The Hyades are the star-cluster forming the ‘face’ of the 4056 T-IV| wet my breast,~my eyes, staring at the familiar sky, on 4057 Ind| cap of snow – See Freya Stark ‘Rome on the Euphrates’ 4058 ExII| anything onerous.~Should I start to use the file more bitingly,~ 4059 ExIII| the window creaked open.~Startled I lifted myself on my left 4060 IBIS| noose.~And may you suffer starvation behind your own locked door~ 4061 Ind| for its electrum coinage (staters) known as ‘Cyzicenes’. It 4062 Ind| work was broken off, as he states. The tragedy is the lost 4063 Ind| Catullus. He was a man of small stature with a fierce courtoom manner. 4064 T-I| that House,~if Augustus’s statutory law was enough for me,~if 4065 T-V| how you and a few others stayed loyal,~if one might call 4066 Ind| Temple of Jupiter Stator (the Stayer).~Book TIII. XI:39-74 His 4067 Ind| married her and freed his men, staying for a year on her island. ( 4068 T-I| approves of a friend who stays loyal ~in hard times, however 4069 ExIV| whose rule esteem for you steadily grows,~see that the winds 4070 T-IV| inertia of age, already~steal over me, and it’s hard for 4071 T-IV| fiercely on his snorting steed:~and as a ravening wolf 4072 T-I| what to shun or where~to steer for: his art is baffled 4073 T-I| silent:~the Moon on high steered her midnight horses.~Gazing 4074 Ind| rough seas.~Book EI.IV:1-58 Steersman of the Argo.~ ~Tiresias~ 4075 T-III| grows, buds break from the stem:~but vines grow far away 4076 Ind| admired by Phaedra, his step-mother, and was killed at Troezen, 4077 Ind| of armed Minerva on the sternpost. Ovid intends to offer her 4078 Ind| to answer her riddles.~ ~Sterope, Asterope~One of the seven 4079 IBIS| perilous way with the help of a stick.~Nor see more than Oedipus 4080 ExIII| parch.~The odd barren tree sticks up in the open field, ~and 4081 ExI| rest of the material was stillborn.~If by any chance that work 4082 Ind| armed with the spine of a sting-ray.~ ~Umbria~The district of 4083 IBIS| be on you, be so fit to stink,~that when you might have 4084 T-II| labours, the songs of youth,~stirring my feelings with imaginary 4085 Ind| of Getic, Indo-European stock. They dressed in skins, 4086 ExII| weight will lie inert on my stomach for hours.~Though it’s all 4087 IBIS| throw yourself from the stony cliff.~Or like Cychreus, 4088 T-V| the honey the Attic bee stores in the hive.~Often he remembers, 4089 Ind| Boreas is the North Wind. A storm-wind.~Book TI.X:1-50 A favourable 4090 Ind| Enceladus~One of the giants who stormed heaven, piling Mounts Pelion, 4091 T-I| good by your eloquence.~Straightaway, feeling this, I said to 4092 ExIII| have a noble~heart, and the straightforwardness of Hercules.~Livid malice, 4093 ExIII| work for me day and night, strain~with a full heart and with 4094 Ind| Black Sea.~ ~Bosporus~The strait separating Europe and Asia 4095 Ind| pure woman by freeing the stranded ship containing the image 4096 T-IV| hands in play:~now I’m old I strap a sword to my side, a shield~ 4097 T-V| every barbarian carries, strapped to his side.~Alas, dear 4098 Ind| Germanicus’s war, and Augustus’s strategy.~Book EII.I:68 The delayed 4099 T-V| transient,~my fire was a fire of straw, and was brief.~Still, so 4100 T-I| Nor does the lamb dare stray far from the fold~once torn 4101 T-III| author:~if the writing’s streaked with blotted erasures,~the 4102 Ind| showed resilience under stress.~Ibis:465-540 He died by 4103 IBIS| swift circling,~and Tityus, stretched across nine acres, head 4104 Ind| VIII:49-90 The god of both strings, those of the bow and the 4105 ExIV| not owning it wrong to strip you of your pure wife.~Only 4106 IBIS| entrails be revealed by stripping~your skin, like Marsyas 4107 ExIII| far from the Styx.~If my striving to return from here is prohibited 4108 IBIS| effeminate hand,~and at a stroke become one of the Great 4109 T-II| open, since certain girls~stroll there, to meet a lover in 4110 Ind| Aeolian Islands) that include Stromboli, off Sicily.~Book TI.IV: 4111 Ind| III 47)~(See John Melhuish Strudwick’s painting – Circe and Scylla – 4112 ExII| Getae when called.~Yet I’m struggling to weave verses, as you 4113 ExII| and once that light bow’s strung with horse’s sinew~it remains 4114 T-II| punished me.~Ah, that I ever studied! Why did my parents~educate 4115 T-IV| shades: I turn again, to you,~studious spirits, who wish to know 4116 ExI| the swaying ship.~You too, studiously, make a study of the Muses,~ 4117 Ind| misled him. He was stupid (stultus) not wicked (sceleratus). 4118 IBIS| run with every ill, and on stumbling feet,~and cloak all your 4119 ExII| my crime might be termed stupidity:~he spared me as far as 4120 ExIV| with tears.~But I wouldn’t, stupidly, dare to console the wise~ 4121 ExII| Nestor.~You know how the sturdy oxen are broken in body~ 4122 Ind| killing of the birds of the Stymphalian Lake in Arcadia.~The capture 4123 Ind| Tristia II is in the form of a suasoria or formal argument concerning 4124 Ind| magic juice (juniper?) to subdue the dragon, and took Medea 4125 T-V| displease you,~I who am now subjected to the stars of the Little 4126 Ind| and essayist on various subjects.~ ~Brutus (2)~A friend addressed 4127 T-III| stairway’s even steps,~to the sublime, shining temple of unshorn 4128 ExIV| from a client, and in a submissive voice,~and he, whom all 4129 T-IV| obeying its master’s command,~submits to servitude, conquered 4130 T-IV| obedient to the plough,~submitting its neck to the weight of 4131 Ind| battle of Actium, and the subsequent death of Cleopatra, Octavian ( 4132 Ind| Perseus, making Hercules subservient to him. Hercules was set 4133 T-II| agitate the air,~but they subside to intermittent silence,~ 4134 T-IV| Iphigenia, for whom a deer was substituted,~cared for the offerings, 4135 Ind| reference is possibly to the substitution of a phantom for Iphigenia 4136 T-II| added, ~since you didn’t subtract it, my family wealth.~You 4137 Ind| city.~Book TIII.VI:1-38 ‘Suburban’ means ‘near the city’, 4138 Ind| Isocrates, Lycurgus became a successful financier, statesman and 4139 Ind| supporter of Tiberius, and was successfully defended by him when prosecuted 4140 Ind| period of five years covering successive Games at Olympia, celebrated 4141 IBIS| works so there might be no succour for an aged fugitive:~ah, 4142 T-IV| Yet my mind refused to succumb to misfortune,~and proved 4143 ExIV| more.~Though Charybdis may suck the sea down three times, ~ 4144 IBIS| be drowned, as you ride, sucked down ~by the mud, so long 4145 Ind| Scylla – Walker Art Gallery, Sudley, Merseyside, England: See 4146 Ind| in Augustus’s presence. (Suetonius Divus Augustus:45)~Book 4147 Ind| Syria. Publius was consul suffectus in May 16 AD. A soldier 4148 T-V| talent’s extinguished by long sufferance of ills,~and nothing of 4149 T-IV| error not a crime.~Let this suffice the shades: I turn again, 4150 T-III| daughters~trees, if he’d sufficed Phaethon as a father.~You 4151 T-III| BONES OF OVID LIE’~~ ~That suffices for an epitaph. In fact 4152 Ind| did not use her real name, suggesting that she was in fact a real 4153 ExIV| made changes based on your suggestions,~while the Muses, those 4154 Ind| Book TIV.X:93-132 A very suggestive and intriguing comment that 4155 Ind| AD16, and had a son Marcus Suiliius Nerullinus.~Book TIII.VII: 4156 Ind| the theme in the Vollard Suite)~Book TIV.VII:1-26 Ovid 4157 Ind| island of Syme, and a former suitor of Helen.~ ~Nisus(1)~The 4158 ExIII| purple terebinth.~Your birth suits your spirit, since you have 4159 Ind| son or grandson of Servius Sulpicius Rufus, and so the father 4160 ExIV| that too will add to the sum of your merits:~while, if 4161 ExII| file more bitingly,~and summon every single word to judgement?~ 4162 ExII| rather than the land,~the sunless waters ever heaving with 4163 T-V| requests.~If you count the sunny or cloudy days in a year,~ 4164 T-IV| relate will travel from sunrise to sunset,~and the East 4165 Ind| raised by Lucullus, had a superb temple of Hadrian, and was 4166 ExIV| had decided to speak,~in supplication, to divine Augustus on my 4167 ExI| swimmer,~and don’t regret supporting his chin with your hand.~ 4168 ExII| when my judge’s decision supports me, ~there’s no reason for 4169 ExII| this letter,~wishing to be surer of who speaks to you.~Ah, 4170 ExIII| once and for all, with the surety of faith.~We see some wounds 4171 T-II| beached ship returns to the surging sea.~Perhaps, like Telephus 4172 Ind| of Vestalis.~ ~Drusus (1)~Surnamed Germanicus, the younger 4173 T-I| away, in shared flight.~No surprise, since they fear the savage 4174 ExI| wrong to side with chance, surrender a friend to fate,~and deny 4175 ExI| to an exile.~Fortune has surrendered me to you – I don’t complain ~ 4176 T-III| Sarmatians, a wild tribe, surround me, the Bessi~and the Getae, 4177 ExII| from my home,~and my mind surveys it all with its own inward 4178 Ind| Hannibal sent ten Roman survivors under oath to discuss ransom 4179 IBIS| of horned Jupiter.~Or die suspended like the captive Acheus 4180 Ind| embarrassment, an object of suspicion, and a source of irritating 4181 Ind| prosecute Gnaius Piso over that suspicious event. He later attempted 4182 T-I| dear, I remember~to dare to sustain me with words when the bolt 4183 Ind| their bones before slowly swallowing them. She threatened Ulysses 4184 ExIV| still pool or a stagnant swamp,~it’s colour is diluted, 4185 Ind| passed through the sulphurous swamps there while abducting Proserpine. 4186 ExI| sailor the master of the swaying ship.~You too, studiously, 4187 T-V| is covered by the earth,~swearing it on his own life, and 4188 T-IV| Grieve truly for your loss, sweetest of wives,~endure the sad 4189 ExI| while the favouring breeze swelled my sails:~now the wild seas 4190 IBIS| Nor let Neptune in the swelling waves be kinder to you~than 4191 ExIV| adulterates the waves~it swells, and stops the sea maintaining 4192 ExI| the more that you’re not swept away~as well, by the force 4193 Ind| Book TII:361-420 His horses swerved in horror at Atreus’s revenge 4194 T-II| we’d not read about the swerving horses of the Sun.~Impious 4195 ExI| boat,~or drove along in a swift-wheeled carriage,~the road often 4196 ExI| winter,~and summer nights be swifter than December’s,~Babylon 4197 ExIV| once flew faster than the swiftest horse.~Aegisos was taken, 4198 Ind| Sulpicia was his niece. He switched sides adroitly during the 4199 Ind| east, i.e. roughly eastern Switzerland, Bavaria and the Tyrol. 4200 ExIV| didn’t warm~some Bistonian sword-blade with his blood.~and you 4201 Ind| Minerva’s route.~Ibis:541-596 Swum by Leander, hence a destructive 4202 ExI| mother~those of the Cumean Sybil, and you be long a son.~ 4203 Ind| XIV:1-62 His birthplace.~ ~Syene~A town on the upper reaches 4204 Ind| moon disc, and ears of corn symbolising her moon, fertility and 4205 Ind| King of the island of Syme, and a former suitor of 4206 T-V| mother, Semele,~and had sympathy, and gazing at the bards 4207 Ind| Macer.~ ~Cyaneae Insulae, Symphlegades~The Greek Symplegades, the ‘ 4208 Ind| hemlock. See Plato’s Phaedo, Symposium etc.~Book TV.XII:1-68 Accused 4209 IBIS| passage of your breath~as the Syracusan poet’s throat was stopped.~ 4210 T-V| Yet if I take up a writing tablet, as I have now,~and wish 4211 ExIV| part, when I’ve taken up my tablets,~she barely lays a hand 4212 T-I| the narrows,~we changed tack to larboard, and from Hector’ 4213 Ind| using hit and run fighting tactics. Ovid uses Scythian as a 4214 Ind| she-goat’s body and serpent’s tail. Its native country is Lycia ( 4215 Ind| form but with goats’ ears, tails, legs and budding horns. 4216 Ind| friends were not formally tainted by association, his name 4217 T-I| great stage awaits your talents.’~No sheep’s liver, thunder 4218 T-V| daylight failed us, while we talked,~so letters now should bear 4219 T-III| a flame prepared for a tall pyre.~I don’t wish to offer 4220 T-II| was no light sin –~how to tally the bones, what throw scores 4221 T-I| terror~to the doves your talons wounded.~Nor does the lamb 4222 Ind| under his hoof. Pegasus was tamed by Bellerephon.~Book TIII. 4223 IBIS| same way he did.~And die as tamely, as whoever delighted in 4224 ExII| body,~how water acquires a tang unless its flowing.~Whatever 4225 Ind| great-grandfather of Menelaus, called Tantalides.~Book TII:361-420 Ibis:413- 4226 Ind| ravaged the islands of the Taphians or Teleboans. Poseidon made 4227 Ind| Pterelaus~Ibis:311-364 Son of Taphius (son of Poseidon) and king 4228 Ind| of Poseidon) and king of Taphos (an island off the coast 4229 Ind| Menelaus was his descendant.~ ~Taprobanes~Ceylon.~Book EI.V:43- 86 4230 Ind| banishment, and Ovid was perhaps tarnished by association, so that 4231 Ind| Sabine War or his daughter Tarpeia who betrayed the citadel 4232 Ind| inaugurations.~ ~Tartarus, Tartara~The underworld. The infernal 4233 Ind| and Callirhoë, and King of Tartessus in Spain.~Book TIV.VII:1- 4234 Ind| respectively. He was banished to Tarturus. He was the father also 4235 ExIV| Latium a royal poem,~and tasteful Numa, along with the two 4236 T-IV| seek~that safe seclusion my tastes always loved.~~ Book TIV. 4237 Ind| Volesus~The companion of Titus Tatius and founder of the Valerian 4238 T-V| my face, ~quite safely, taunting me perhaps for my exile.~ 4239 Ind| 596 The infernal deep.~ ~Tauri~A people of the Crimea, 4240 ExIV| only one so far immune from taxes on your ~shores, excepting 4241 Ind| mother of Mercury by Jupiter, Taÿgeta, Electra, Merope, Asterope, 4242 Ind| sweeter than the honey of Taygetos near Sparta.~Book EI.III: 4243 Ind| Amazons. The modern Terme Tchai east of the Halys. ~Book 4244 Ind| His lyric eroticism. The Tean bard.~ ~Anapus~A Sicilian 4245 IBIS| who drank from ~the doe’s teat, and armed received a wound, 4246 Ind| ingenuity, invention and technical skill. See Ovid’s Metamorphoses 4247 Ind| movement with its emphasis on technique and allusiveness, following 4248 Ind| pottery etc) wisdom, learning, technology and the mind. ~Book EIV. 4249 T-V| and makes all things as tedious as my cares.~Or is time 4250 Ind| Ismarus married a daughter of Tegyrius the King of Thrace, and 4251 Ind| Dexithea~Ibis:465-540 The Telchines, mythical craftsmen and 4252 Ind| islands of the Taphians or Teleboans. Poseidon made him immortal 4253 Ind| Aglaophonos, Molpe, Raidne, Teles, and Thelxepeia.) (See Draper’ 4254 Ind| Demonax), the chief of the Telkhines, because Macelo, Dexithea’ 4255 Ind| Achilles.~ ~Delos, Delia tellus~The Greek island in the 4256 Ind| Hyrie, a great hunter of Tempe. He is turned into a swan 4257 ExII| you wish that Caesar might temper ~his anger, and your villa 4258 ExIV| I deserve to be,~and my temperament’s not altered with my fortunes.~ 4259 ExI| and mind are helped by a temperate climate:~perpetual cold 4260 Ind| are severe with below zero temperatures (-20 to -30 deg. Fahrenheit). 4261 ExI| are tumultuous with the tempest,~I’m abandoned on a shattered 4262 Ind| detest the Muses, poetry, temporarily.~Book TII:120-154 His art 4263 Ind| is that one is inevitably tempted to read them into the later 4264 Ind| ancient city destroyed in the ten-war year with the Greeks, and 4265 T-II| not describe them all~that tend to waste that precious thing, 4266 ExIV| injustice,~no woman’s more tender-hearted than you.~I felt this most 4267 ExII| call it love or unmanly tenderness,~I confess my strength of 4268 ExIV| things mortal hang by a tenuous thread,~and what was strong 4269 Ind| iambic and lyric poet of Teos, Ionia, born c. 570BC. His 4270 ExIII| fresh, my water will be tepid.~~ Book EIII.IV:57-115 To 4271 ExIII| shining ivory become purple terebinth.~Your birth suits your spirit, 4272 Ind| frequented by Amazons. The modern Terme Tchai east of the Halys. ~ 4273 ExII| that my crime might be termed stupidity:~he spared me 4274 Ind| Euterpe (Lyric Poetry), Terpsichore (Dance), Calliope (Epic 4275 T-IV| is fitting,~others, still terrible, indifferent to their fate.~ 4276 ExII| near to left and right,~terrifying us on all sides with fear 4277 ExIII| wife,~no yelping Scylla terrorising Sicilian waters,~no Circe 4278 T-V| weariness?~Not a single anchor tethers my vessel now.~Do it! Though 4279 Ind| daughter of Oceanus and Tethys whose husband was the Ethiopian 4280 Ind| Cyprus, sacred to Venus.~~ Teucri~Book TI.II:1-74 The Trojans 4281 Ind| IX:506~ ~Telephus~King of Teuthrantia in Mysia, son of Hercules 4282 T-II| like Telephus who ruled the Teuthrantian land,~the same weapon will 4283 Ind| Varus and his legions in the Teutoberger Forest defeat of AD9, Tiberius 4284 Ind| crocus flowers.~ ~Cimbri~The Teutonic horde defeated by Marius.~ 4285 Ind| here by Ovid, perhaps a textual corruption.~ ~Sirens~The 4286 Ind| leading philosophers including Thales, and Anximander.It declined 4287 Ind| loathsome, winged daughters of Thaumas and the ocean nymph Electra, 4288 T-V| wild beasts weep,~don’t thaw you, or reconcile you to 4289 Ind| voice and memory. ~ ~Thebes, Thebae~The oldest and most famous 4290 Ind| appears to have written a Thebaid. Book TIV.X:41-92 Mentioned.~ ~ 4291 Ind| family, led by his wife Thebe (see Plutarch’s: Life of 4292 IBIS| calling~savage Dryops to his Theiodamantine weapons:~or as cruel Cacus 4293 ExII| conceits’ as these may be theirs as well.~That sleep, too, 4294 Ind| Molpe, Raidne, Teles, and Thelxepeia.) (See Draper’s painting – 4295 Ind| Bradford suggests two triplets: Thelxinoë, the Enchantress; Aglaope, 4296 Ind| centre in the 5th century BC. Theocritus the poet and Archimedes 4297 Ind| importance, until closed by Theodosius in 390AD.~Book TIV.VIII: 4298 Ind| he suggests the Moly of Theophrastus, Pliny and Homer – Odyssey 4299 | thereby 4300 T-I| O hearts joined to me by Thesean loyalty!~I’ll hug you while 4301 Ind| epithets are Aonides, and Thespiades.~Book TI.VII:1-40 Book TII. 4302 Ind| Thessaly, from Haemon father of Thessalos.~Book TI.X:1-50 Cyzicos 4303 Ind| Calydon. The sister of the Thestiadae, Plexippus and Toxeus. She 4304 IBIS| Apollo at the holy altars,~as Theudotus suffered death from a savage 4305 Ind| the time of the Odyssey thickly wooded. ~Book TI.V:45-84 4306 ExIV| carve out stone, a ring’s thinned by use,~the curved plough’ 4307 ExI| The ploughshare’s not worn thinner by steady use,~nor the Appian 4308 ExII| how, when there’s only the thinnest of walls~and a barred gate 4309 IBIS| father the household:~as the thinning blood ebbed from Hercules’ 4310 T-IV| fruits do not taste sour.~It thins the ploughshare as it turns 4311 Ind| King of Thessaly.~ ~Thoas, Thoans~The king of Lemnos, son 4312 IBIS| suffered the Tauric rites of Thoantean Diana:~like the terrified 4313 ExI| out our arms~we snatch at thorns and harsh rocks with our 4314 T-V| so no one thinks it said thoughtlessly,~support me and your faithful 4315 T-III| though Boreas roars and thrashes his wings,~there’s no wave 4316 IBIS| times round ~the tomb of Thrasyllus by hostile Larissean wheels, ~ 4317 Ind| defended him from Minos. (He threaded the spiral shell for King 4318 T-V| here,~and if any sad hurt threatens my lady,~may it be annulled 4319 T-IV| Centaurs, with human breasts,~three-bodied Geryon, and triple-headed 4320 IBIS| accursed.~Or may you suffer the three-pronged bolts of angry Jove,~like 4321 Ind| Samos (2), Samothrace~Threicia, i.e. Samothrace, the northern 4322 T-IV| lost my native land, the threshing-floor’s twice been ~smoothed for 4323 IBIS| helpless, across the alien thresholds,~seek out scant nourishment 4324 ExIV| its meadows, offer their throats to the sure axe:~and next, 4325 ExIV| procession,~and how the dense throng filled the lengthy way.~ 4326 ExIII| delay.~Traitorous Germany throws away the hated spears,~soon 4327 Ind| Hebrus (Maritza) which flows thrugh Thrace.~ ~Lucifer~The morning 4328 T-I| because you’re mine, and thrusts you away,~say: ‘Look at 4329 Ind| Chalcidice peninsula, known in Thucydides’ time as Potidaea. He seized 4330 T-I| than a siege-gun’s heavy thud against the walls.~Here 4331 T-V| like an eager racehorse thudding on the unopened~starting-gate, 4332 IBIS| passage be closed off with a thumb.~Or like Anaxarchus may 4333 IBIS| your fatal work with triple thumbs,~and you the stream of waters, 4334 Ind| Struck down by Jupiter’s thunderbolt to avoid the earth being 4335 T-II| was weapon-less.~When he’s thundered, and scared the world with 4336 Ind| Thrace, hence Thracian.~ ~Thybris~A poetic name for the River 4337 ExIV| Eastern sea,~as if the age of Thyestean banquets were returned,~ 4338 T-I| the clashing rocks,~the Thynian bay and from there hold 4339 Ind| Ibis:541-596 The banquet.~ ~Thynias~A promontory and small town 4340 Ind| ivy-twined fir branches as thyrsi. (See Caravaggio’s painting – 4341 ExII| Ponto Book I~ ~ ~‘quid tibi cum Ponto? ~what have you 4342 ExIII| sets sail on an adverse tide.~The oracles don’t always 4343 T-I| before.~She weathers the tides and the leaping billows,~ 4344 ExIV| Rumour, come to you with glad tidings,~having flown down the vast 4345 Ind| certainly reiterates the close tie with Paullus, and the Fabian 4346 Ind| Pythagoras (at Pythagórion = Tigáni). Samos was famous for its 4347 ExIII| not to bring me help in a tight corner.~So my gratitude 4348 ExIII| with worry’s icy chill,~and tightens the rein on horses eager 4349 T-I| breast,~and your nurse a tigress, once, offering~full udders 4350 IBIS| name, ~struck down by a tile hurled from an enemy hand.~ 4351 Ind| Colchis was noted for timber, linen, hemp, pitch and 4352 IBIS| he clung to the shattered timbers of his raft.~Or, lest your 4353 Ind| and cowardly (non sapiens, timidus) and this suggests foolishness 4354 Ind| the fortress of Ortygia by Timoleon, and ended as a schoolteacher 4355 ExI| kindest gods, assent to my timorous prayers.~Let it benefit 4356 Ind| narcotic drug colchicine, tinctura colchici, used as a specific 4357 T-III| whole body.~Often their hair tinkles with hanging icicles,~and 4358 T-III| through, unfurl their tender tips from the earth.~Wherever 4359 IBIS| serpent’s son-in-law, ~Orestes Tisamenus’s father, and Alcmaeon Callirhoe’ 4360 T-IV| to erase~that moment of Tisiphonean madness from your life.~ 4361 Ind| Epimetheus, hence called Titania. Epimetheus was a brother 4362 ExIII| die in battle, even Mars’~tithe seems unjust, in his own 4363 Ind| poetry.~ ~Tibur~The modern Tivoli, a fashionable resort eighteen 4364 Ind| Ephesus and its sources in the Tmolus mountains.~Book TV.I:1-48 4365 T-IV| yours, earth, though I die today.~Whether I’ve won fame through 4366 IBIS| across nine acres, head to toe,~destined to offer his entrails 4367 Ind| Augustan form of the old Togatae. He was a protégé of Maecenas 4368 T-I| this,~and shed tears in token of their feelings.~What, 4369 T-IV| who is milder~than him – tolerates being mentioned often in 4370 T-I| return to me, in the same tone,~the never to be repeated, 4371 ExIII| the living, gnaws with the tooth of injustice. ~If to live 4372 ExII| to judgement?~Is fate not tormenting me enough unless I make 4373 ExI| force of common vice, that torrent of water.~There’s only love 4374 IBIS| killed,~those defeated by the tortuous questions she uttered:~like 4375 T-I| unfinished.~The verses were not totally destroyed: they survive –~ 4376 Ind| by Mercury into a flint (touchstone, the ‘informer’) See Metamorphoses 4377 Ind| 75-110 The region was a tourist attraction for the Romans. ~ ~ 4378 ExIII| towns in ivory be circled by towered walls,~and the semblance 4379 ExI| informed me,~that floats of townships rolled on in your name.~ 4380 Ind| called the Dobrudja. The townspeople were a mix of half-breed 4381 Ind| Thestiadae, Plexippus and Toxeus. She sought revenge for 4382 Ind| Prometheus. The plant is highly toxic, and the seeds and corms 4383 ExIV| great a man.~Divine power toys with human affairs, and 4384 Ind| their special dress, the trabea). An unworthy member could 4385 Ind| and librarian. He wrote Trabeatae, comedies of Roman manners 4386 T-II| by nods, or fingers,~and traced silent letters on the table’ 4387 T-IV| land, deigned to follow~my traces, either aboard ship or on 4388 Ind| Hercules. (See Sophocles Trachiniae)~Book TII:361-420 Wife of 4389 Ind| outlining the brief, and a tractatio or treatment expounding 4390 Ind| the second king of Rome (trad. 715-673BC). He searched 4391 Ind| XII:1-54 A destination for trading vessels.~Book TIII.XIII: 4392 T-V| one of your own.~The gods traffic between themselves. Bacchus,~ 4393 ExIV| and Turranius’s Muse, the tragically shod:~and yours Melissus 4394 ExIII| Let uncouth Rhine, hair trailing under broken ~reeds, bear 4395 Ind| charioteer of King Oenomaus, who traitorously caused the King’s chariot 4396 Ind| criminals (murderers and traitors) were thrown. Ovid calls 4397 Ind| flourishing town in the time of Trajan (98-117), and was of some 4398 Ind| chewed to induce prophetic trance in the rites of Diana, and 4399 Ind| 40 The pax Augusta, the tranquillity of the Empire within established 4400 Ind| when no public business was transacted. ~Ibis:209-250 A black day.~ ~ 4401 Ind| on the Via Egnatia, the transcontinental road, from where Ovid continued 4402 IBIS| on whom the mouth, he had transfixed, closed.~Or may you be like 4403 Ind| Cinyras, born after her transformation into a myrrh-tree. (As such 4404 T-III| your tears.~Though the fire transforms my body to ash,~the sorrowing 4405 T-V| flowered, but the flower was transient,~my fire was a fire of straw, 4406 Ind| and Cicero, and also the translator of the Milesian tales of 4407 T-III| are also fifteen books of transmuted forms,~verses snatched from 4408 Ind| the god that Lucullus had transported to Rome.~Book TII.I:1 Patron 4409 Ind| annual parade (the equitum transvectio of the equites Romani wearing 4410 Ind| of AD9 when he was still travelling, and given the preceding 4411 Ind| dangerous willingness to tread the fine line. He follows 4412 Ind| to avoid prosecution for treason. He had taken up with Antony’ 4413 ExIV| and, victorious, held its treasure captive, till Vitellius, ~ 4414 T-V| is,~accustomed, too, to treat himself as an example:~since 4415 Ind| before her abduction. Ovid treates her as an adulteress, to 4416 Ind| De Rerum Natura a verse treatise in six books on Epicurean 4417 Ind| an authority on herbs and treatments.~Book EI.III:1-48 This letter 4418 Ind| of Tomis, whom Ovid here treats with respect.~ ~Tonans~Book 4419 ExIV| Moesian tribes to their peace treaty,~he cowed the Getic bowmen 4420 Ind| describes their lands as tree-less and vine-less. ~Book TIII. 4421 ExIII| and gems,~and the trophied tree-trunk stand above chained men:~ 4422 ExII| harmed me, at whom earth trembles~from the sun’s rising to 4423 T-III| writing wavers with the tremor of fear.~Can you see the 4424 Ind| by Alexander.~ ~Allia~A tributary of the Tiber. The Romans 4425 T-III| must be delayed by some trick.’~While she thought what 4426 T-II| and when the lover’s newly tricked the husband,~he’s applauded, 4427 T-IV| and the rain of sorrow trickles down my chest.~When I think 4428 Ind| of Pluto and Jupiter. The trident is his emblem. (see Leonardo 4429 Ind| great god. The scene of the triennial festival of Bacchus, the 4430 ExI| you are to my wife.~She tries to be not unlike you in 4431 Ind| festival of Bacchus, the trietericus. Orpheus fled there after 4432 Ind| too well known, and was triggered by the wickedness of friends’ 4433 Ind| mother. See Sophocles great trilogy The Theban Plays.~Book TI. 4434 ExII| something~less demanding, and trim the sails of prayer I beg 4435 Ind| banished to the island of Trimerum off the coast of Apulia ( 4436 T-V| Mars,~neither beard or hair trimmed, hands not slow~to deal 4437 Ind| life.~ ~Sicily~Sicania, Trinacri. The Mediterranean island, 4438 Ind| son of the Thessalian king Triopas. His daughter was Mestra. 4439 T-IV| three-bodied Geryon, and triple-headed Cerberus,~Sphinx, and Harpies, 4440 Ind| Seductress: and his preferred triplet Parthenope, the Virgin Face; 4441 Ind| Ernle Bradford suggests two triplets: Thelxinoë, the Enchantress; 4442 T-I| laetus cecini, cano tristia tristis: ~ happy, I once sang happy 4443 ExIV| console the wise~repeating the trite words of the learned to 4444 ExI| fear-struck face, before your triumphant horses:~so may your father 4445 ExIV| and how they fell.~You trod in victory over the piles 4446 ExIII| with gold and gems,~and the trophied tree-trunk stand above chained 4447 ExI| forum gilded~by the gold of trophies, glittering in the sun,~ 4448 Ind| waters.~ ~Ganymede~The son of Tros, brother of Ilus and Assaracus, 4449 T-IV| Scythians are present, crowds of trousered Getae:~So what I can see, 4450 ExIII| raw recruit hearing the trumpet-call to arms.~Though my heart 4451 ExIII| often been inspired by the trumpets,~and the general’s words 4452 IBIS| river.~May you be worthy of truncation, like that son of Astacus,~ 4453 IBIS| the cruel sword maim your trunk, and mutilate ~the parts, 4454 Ind| was consul in 11BC and a trusted friend of Augustus. He journeyed 4455 ExI| if I’m known to you as a truth-sayer,~(in my position how could 4456 Ind| Virgil’s death with Plotius Tucca.~Book EIV.XVI:1-52 A poet 4457 Ind| brought to Rome by Servius Tullius perhaps from Praeneste where 4458 Ind| Fidenae, on the orders of Tullus Hostilius.~Book TI.III:47- 4459 T-III| touched,~but poor Elpenor who tumbled from the high roof~met his 4460 Ind| describes his death when he tumbles from the roof of Circe’s 4461 ExI| sails:~now the wild seas are tumultuous with the tempest,~I’m abandoned 4462 Ind| there, Pausanias I xxxx. His tumulus was decorated with shell-stone 4463 T-IV| flock with the reed pipe’s tune.~The slave girl, singing 4464 Ind| Senate. He had adopted the tunica laticlavia for the sons 4465 Ind| coast of Africa between Tunis and Cyrene, in the gulfs 4466 T-I| waves,~my heart is more turbulent than the sea.~So grant them 4467 T-V| a green altar of grassy turf,~and veil the warm hearth 4468 Ind| north-east Greece, European Turkey as far as the Bosphorus, 4469 Ind| the private garden of the Turkish Bey.). The spring was said 4470 T-I| didn’t fail me~in such a turmoil of seas and feelings,~Whether 4471 T-I| dovecote,~but a weathered turret never attracts the birds.~ 4472 IBIS| plains soft grass,~while the Tuscan Tiber flows with its clear 4473 Ind| difficulty of handling the name Tūtĭcānus in elegiac verse. 4474 Ind| painted helmet: the ship’s tutela, or protective emblem, being 4475 Ind| again addressed and his tutelage of Germanicus’s sons mentioned.~ 4476 Ind| works.~Book EII.V:41-76 Tutored Germanicus in oratory.~ ~ 4477 ExIV| enter a poem disguised as Tutti-car-nus,~where a short syllable’ 4478 Ind| Dionysus~The god Dionysus, the ‘twice-born’, the god of the vine. The 4479 Ind| caduceus, with twin snakes twined around it, that brings sleep 4480 IBIS| house.~Cruel whips, and twining snakes, will hiss, and funeral ~ 4481 T-IV| threads of a black fleece, twisted for me.~To say nothing of 4482 ExIV| place was banished.~So, two-faced Janus, when you’ve opened 4483 Ind| Book EIV.IV:1-50 The Roman two-headed god of doorways and beginnings, 4484 ExIV| that’s over quickly,~long, Two-tea-car-nus, by extending it in time.~ 4485 ExIV| long, and addressed you as Two-tick-a-nus.~Nor can you enter a poem 4486 Ind| identified with the Greek Tyche, and associated from early 4487 Ind| lesser contemporaries.~ ~Typhon~One of the Giants who attacked 4488 IBIS| Like Milo, under whose tyranny Pisa suffered,~may you be 4489 Ind| Amphitryoniades. Called also Tyrinthius from Tiryns his city in 4490 Ind| Switzerland, Bavaria and the Tyrol. Raetia became an Imperial 4491 T-I| tigress, once, offering~full udders to be drained by your tender 4492 Ind| Caravaggio’s painting – Bacchus – Uffizi, Florence) He was equated 4493 Ind| father of Thersites the ugliest man among the Greeks at 4494 Ind| cruelty.~ ~Thersites~An ugly abusive Greek at the Trojan 4495 Ind| was from Tyre.~ ~Ulysses~Ulixes, the Greek Odysseus, the 4496 Ind| part of his punishment. The ultra-civilised poet to be sent to the edge 4497 Ind| the rites on Mount Ida, ululating, shrieking wildly, in ecstatic 4498 T-V| sounds.~I myself have already un-learned Latin, I think,~now I’ve 4499 T-I| one already lost may be un-lost.~~ Book TI.V:1-44 Loyalty 4500 T-III| tomb,~my head will bow, un-mourned, in a barbarous land!~~ 4501 ExIII| waters that the as yet un-pacified Getae drink:~this is the 4502 ExII| often pray for death, yet un-pray that same death,~lest Sarmatian 4503 ExIV| denounce me as ungrateful, un-remembering.~~ Book EIV.VII:1-54 To 4504 T-III| has reached peoples’ lips un-revised,~if anything of mine is