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  1      I,    35    |                               E'er caused such havoc: to no
  2      I,    99    |                              Ne'er without peril separate before --~ ~
  3      I,   226    |        of my race who watched o'er Troy of old;~ ~
  4      I,   232    |       soldier here and wheresoe'er thou wilt:~ ~
  5      I,   276    |           And Caesar towering o'er the throng was seen,~ ~
  6      I,   362    |         Rome's chief honours ne'er to be resigned?~ ~
  7      I,   381    |         Nay, this one lesson, e'er it be too late,~ ~
  8      I,   383    |            Of old his victory o'er Cilician thieves~ ~
  9      I,   435    |             To plant our arms o'er Tiber's yellow stream,~ ~
 10      I,   440    |        vowed to follow wheresoe'er he led.~ ~
 11      I,   466    |     land alternate claim, whene'er the tide~ ~
 12      I,   473    |                           Whate'er the cause that may control
 13      I,   613    |                               O'er Calpe's rock and Atlas'
 14      I,   697    |                           Whate'er may be the purpose of the
 15      I,   712    |                         Hangs o'er this city and o'er all mankind.~ ~
 16      I,   712    |      Hangs o'er this city and o'er all mankind.~ ~
 17      I,   718    |                           Whate'er the truth, the days in which
 18      I,   764    |               Thou bear'st me o'er the cloud-compelling Alps~ ~
 19     II,    17    |                           Whate'er be truth, keep thou the
 20     II,    76    |    Meantime, the aged fathers o'er their fates~ ~
 21     II,   208    |       Such agonies could bear e'er death should come.~ ~
 22     II,   221    |                          But ne'er one man's revenge. Between
 23     II,   306    |      Olympus rears his summit o'er the clouds:~ ~
 24     II,   383    |                              Ne'er to be parted I return to
 25     II,   421    |                          Hung o'er his reverend visage; for
 26     II,   470    |      were no larger, but that o'er the sand~ ~
 27     II,   520    |         And Caesar's fortune, o'er their wavering faith.~ ~
 28     II,   601    |             And Gallia's fury o'er the snowy Alps 25~ ~
 29     II,   685    |                  Leads wheresoe'er he will his lowing bands:~ ~
 30     II,   714    |         and Euphrates, wheresoe'er the fame~ ~
 31    III,   139    |    Clear ringing spake: "Save o'er Metellus dead~ ~
 32    III,   167    |                 Thou dost whate'er is bidden thee. For us~ ~
 33    III,   209    |           Her ancient victory o'er the Persian King.~ ~
 34    III,   332    |                           Nor e'er met nations varied thus
 35    III,   604    |                         Swept o'er the sea and gained the space
 36    III,   670    |                      670 But ne'er distinguished till death'
 37    III,   708    |                        Gushed o'er his limbs till lost amid
 38    III,   804    |                 Oft stumbling o'er the benches the old man
 39    III,   807    |       One blow he struck, but o'er his eyes there fell~ ~
 40     IV,   254    |         Drags us to slavery. Ne'er from depths of earth,~ ~
 41     IV,   256    |          Draw store of iron; ne'er entrench a town;~ ~
 42     IV,   257    |                              Ne'er should the war-horse dash
 43     IV,   347    |                           Where'er on foulest mud some stagnant
 44     IV,   404    |                              Ne'er were it meet that thy victorious
 45     IV,   442    |        Pour out his blood where'er great Caesar leads!~ ~
 46     IV,   666(17)|        against the gods, did ne'er acknowledge So proud and
 47     IV,   690    | strength might fail; and cast o'er all his bulk~ ~
 48     IV,   926    |                         Swept o'er his wavering mind: and Curio
 49      V,    86    |                        Poured o'er the earth her billows, rose
 50      V,   401    |                       Wanders o'er land and sea. Nor were your
 51      V,   545    |                           Nor e'er, Pompeius, since that distant
 52      V,   587    |       Alone he passes on, and o'er the guard~ ~
 53      V,   668    |                 Thy comrade, ne'er deserted by the gods,~ ~
 54      V,   833    |          Thus art thou tyrant o'er the mightiest mind!~ ~
 55     VI,    20    |                      20 Watch o'er the fortress of Corinthian
 56     VI,    87    |                               O'er hill and valley, and enclose
 57     VI,   166    |                        Stride o'er the rampart, in their front
 58     VI,   219    |                           Where'er he struck, the victor. Now
 59     VI,   344    |       beneath his load spouts o'er the plains~ ~
 60     VI,   370    |       To follow Caesar wheresoe'er he fled)~ ~
 61     VI,   373    |        Now freed from foes. "Ne'er will I pass," he said,~ ~
 62     VI,   418    |                               O'er which men pass the ploughshare:
 63     VI,   494    |                   Now hanging o'er them, deemed disaster near:~ ~
 64     VI,   520    |                520 Of fiction e'er transcended; all their art~ ~
 65     VI,   659    |       flaming altars: and whene'er she needs~ ~
 66     VI,   756    |                               O'er rocks she drags him to the
 67     VI,   839    |                         Hath ne'er been absent from my proffered
 68    VII,     1    |                              Ne'er to the summons of the Eternal
 69    VII,    16    |                               O'er conquered tribes where swift
 70    VII,   229    |       else the sky discordant o'er the space~ ~
 71    VII,   332    |                               O'er our Italia? Rome, 'tis Rome
 72    VII,   349    |         finding utterance. I ne'er have seen~ ~
 73    VII,   354    |                               O'er all that peoples, all that
 74    VII,   412    |        nations' destinies. Whoe'er of you~ ~
 75    VII,   420    |                 420 An empire o'er the world, had they not
 76    VII,   461    |                         Shall e'er make good. Nations that
 77    VII,   518    |        Thessalia fought, she ne'er had known~ ~
 78    VII,   694    |        brave Domitius. 24 Whene'er the day~ ~
 79    VII,   782    |                           And o'er his prostrate corpse a world
 80    VII,   820    |       favourite ever; and whate'er, alone~ ~
 81    VII,   822    |                           Whate'er thy sufferings 'neath the
 82    VII,   877    |       that asked for all. Whate'er~ ~
 83    VII,   977    |     delayed their voyage. As ne'er before~ ~
 84    VII,  1007    |                          Pass o'er more frequent bones. Wert,
 85   VIII,    92    |      yet I breathe, unseemly. O'er my tomb~ ~
 86   VIII,   431    |     down the rampart; and whate'er avails~ ~
 87   VIII,   571    |                               O'er Nile and Pharos: we shall
 88   VIII,   743    |        do such work? But whosoe'er thou art~ ~
 89   VIII,   869    |        Some glowing logs, "Whoe'er thou art," he said~ ~
 90     IX,    21    |                          Next o'er Emathian plains he winged
 91     IX,    49    |                        Sweeps o'er the yielding wave, by northern
 92     IX,    84    |                     Cornelia ne'er enclose within the tomb,~ ~
 93     IX,   181    |         on: for civil strife ne'er gave~ ~
 94     IX,   237    |                            He e'er demanded: willing took he
 95     IX,   529    |             Raged at his will o'er the defenceless earth.~ ~
 96     IX,   574    |                        Flamed o'er them wandering: yet some
 97     IX,   784    |                        Poised o'er Medusa's realm; a burnished
 98     IX,   810    |                           810 O'er Libya's regions, from the
 99     IX,   814    |                            If o'er forgetful of her course
100     IX,   821(23)|        such numbers swarming ne'er she showed." -- Carey. (
101     IX,   975    |      been thy fate!~ ~ ~ ~ Whoe'er had thought~ ~
102     IX,   976    |         scorpion had strength o'er death or fate?~ ~
103     IX,  1172    |                     Who watch o'er Phrygian ruins: ye who now~ ~
104     IX,  1255    |         thy haughty hand? Whate'er the cause~ ~
105     IX,  1258    |                               O'er lands and oceans, that without
106      X,     4    |           In crimson conquest o'er the guilty land,~ ~
107      X,    26    |     Which should be scattered o'er the earth, repose,~ ~
108      X,   252    |         god 11 Cyllenian: whene'er he holds~ ~
109      X,   340    |                       340 Has e'er made mention; wheresoe'er
110      X,   340    |       er made mention; wheresoe'er thou art~ ~
111      X,   355    |         it owes thee. Nature ne'er revealed~ ~
112      X,   426    |                               O'er Egypt's land and o'er himself
113      X,   426    |         O'er Egypt's land and o'er himself her king:~ ~
114      X,   445    |                    Those who ne'er sought her favours? By the
115      X,   454    |       The glory of his empire o'er the world.~ ~
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