bold = Main text
    Book,  Verse      grey = Comment text

  1      I,    38(3) |       that these famous lines may have been written in mockery.
  2      I,    69    |                          Then may all men lay down their arms,
  3      I,    95    |     any nations, so that they may strike~ ~
  4      I,   150(8) | compositions he alludes to, I may be tempted to an act of
  5      I,   473    |       Whate'er the cause that may control the main~ ~
  6      I,   506(19)|   suspicion that the doctrine may in some shape be true, however
  7      I,   646    |   lore of omens; knowing what may mean~ ~
  8      I,   697    |                      Whate'er may be the purpose of the gods,~ ~
  9      I,   701    |       future worse than fact. May all the gods~ ~
 10     II,    19    |                               May men still hope.~ ~ ~ ~ Thus
 11     II,    48    |                     You still may grieve: when either wins
 12     II,    56    |        Rouse fiercest cities! may the world find arms~ ~
 13     II,    62    |           Of all the peoples. May the Getan press~ ~
 14     II,   250    |       250 Yet worse disasters may our fears suggest,~ ~
 15     II,   352    | through my frame their darts! May I alone~ ~
 16     II,   354    |                          Thus may the people be redeemed,
 17    III,    30    |               30 So long as I may break thy nightly rest:~ ~
 18    III,    85(4) |                            It may be remarked that, in B.C.
 19    III,   168    |                   Some pardon may be found: a host of ills~ ~
 20    III,   254(16)|  group known by that name. He may have been a Phoenician.~ ~
 21    III,   361    |       aloof: no stranger hand may touch~ ~
 22    III,   409    |      my march: speed though I may~ ~
 23    III,   417    |                When those who may be conquered will not fight~ ~
 24    III,   821    |       upon thee -- still thou may'st 31~ ~
 25     IV,   216(11)|               Saecula nostra" may refer either to Lucan's
 26     IV,   216(11)| arrived at in the poem; or it may, as Francken suggests, have
 27     IV,   489    |                               May tempt them, and their goal
 28     IV,   562    |       here the only pledge we may.~ ~
 29     IV,   569    |       The greater glory, they may bid us hope~ ~
 30     IV,   571    |       our hearts'-blood, they may say~ ~
 31     IV,   581    |       the high gods, that men may bear to live,~ ~
 32      V,   164    |                       Whom he may answer." But the maiden'
 33      V,   344    |      For aught but evil, thus may civil war~ ~
 34      V,   361    |            Nor learn that men may lay their arms aside~ ~
 35      V,   487    |                           And may he bend the spars, and bear
 36      V,   490    |                           490 May catch our flagging sails.
 37      V,   521    |          New vows they find. "May mighty winds arise~ ~
 38      V,   585(29)|     Merivale thinks the story may have been invented to introduce
 39      V,   651    |   from east or west the storm may come~ ~
 40      V,   795    |      bear what chance or fate may bring,~ ~
 41      V,   889    |      tardy rumour of thy fall may come?~ ~
 42     VI,    16(1) |    modern name is Durazzo. It may be observed that, according
 43     VI,   139    |      starving, all that teeth may bite~ ~
 44     VI,   176    |  valourous deeds in civil war may be~ ~
 45     VI,   243    |                          Thus may an elephant in Afric wastes,~ ~
 46     VI,   437(23)|        in order that the gods may still fear to break an oath
 47     VI,   447    |        So that the gods above may fear him still.~ ~ ~ ~
 48     VI,   511    |                               May know the fates to come;
 49     VI,   694    |                      Her hand may snatch, on which of Caesar'
 50     VI,   695    |                      She soon may pounce, she makes her foul
 51     VI,   828    |                            We may not enter: and thou, Proserpine,~ ~
 52     VI,   848    |                 Grant (for ye may) that listening to the spell~ ~
 53     VI,   914    |                       Obscure may be the answers of the gods~ ~
 54    VII,   147    |                            So may a sailor give the winds
 55    VII,   168    |       toils divine with human may compare,~ ~
 56    VII,   370    |                           370 May he be conqueror who shall
 57    VII,   448    |           So far as Imperator may, I bend~ ~
 58    VII,   540    |                           540 May give to mortals; for these
 59    VII,   547    |    For one short moment where may fall the spear,~ ~
 60    VII,   548    |                     What hand may deal their death, what monstrous
 61    VII,   556    |      Poised yet unthrown. Now may th' avenging gods~ ~
 62    VII,   559    |                               May'st thou have feeling and
 63    VII,   566    |    re-echoes where nor clouds may reach~ ~
 64    VII,   617    |                    Barbarians may grapple. Then arose~ ~
 65    VII,   714    |                               May'st pay atonement." So he
 66    VII,   769    |            The world and Rome may stand. And if ye need~ ~
 67    VII,   880    |                           880 May gather, had they seized;
 68    VII,  1001    |       A crimson torrent. Thus may be o'erthrown~ ~
 69   VIII,   113    |                               May bear thee gently onwards,
 70   VIII,   114    |                               May keep their faith to thee,
 71   VIII,   135    |                               May court the victor's favour;
 72   VIII,   159    |       other kings and peoples may be pleased~ ~
 73   VIII,   162    |                         Right may be found or wrong. My latest
 74   VIII,   164    |            Thou bidest, thus. May it be mine again,~ ~
 75   VIII,   319    |         Ye chiefs, which best may help the needs of Rome,~ ~
 76   VIII,   437    |              But as the winds may suffer, from afar~ ~
 77   VIII,   467    |       her former husbands, he may grant~ ~
 78   VIII,   469    |                               May seem to smile on Parthia;
 79   VIII,   514(14)|   Thus rendered by Sir Thomas May, of the Long Parliament:~ ~ "
 80   VIII,   576    |     Some foreign nation which may share his fate.~ ~
 81   VIII,   633    |     Finds place, or Egypt? O, may civil war~ ~
 82   VIII,   696    |  brutal, thirsting as a beast may thirst~ ~
 83   VIII,   729    |     The blow is Caesar's. Men may tear this frame~ ~
 84   VIII,   732    |   Call back my triumphs. Life may bring defeat,~ ~
 85   VIII,   743    |                               May do such work? But whosoe'
 86   VIII,   858    |           His mutilated corse may reach the flame.~ ~
 87   VIII,   901    |         These letters reading may some kindly friend~ ~
 88   VIII,   902    |   thine head, dissevered, and may grant~ ~
 89   VIII,   969    |  Shall I call down upon thee? May the Nile~ ~
 90   VIII,   986    |                            O, may my country place the crime
 91   VIII,   990(25)|                            It may be noted that the Emperor
 92   VIII,   990(25)|     in a mausoleum. Lucan, it may be supposed, knew nothing
 93   VIII,   998    |                       Who now may seek beneath the raging
 94   VIII,  1001    |      s broad stream; or whose may exchange~ ~
 95     IX,    99    |       than this whatever land may yield~ ~
 96     IX,   121    |       he contend for freedom) may ye serve;~ ~
 97     IX,   259    |           An alien conqueror, may Juba be~ ~
 98     IX,   552    |                     Where men may fear the weapons from the
 99     IX,   672    |                          What may be known the author of our
100     IX,   710    |                      710 Thou may'st in distant days decree
101     IX,   812(22)|      of an oblique one, which may happen from her forgetfulness (
102     IX,   895    |                               May find in thirst a pardon
103     IX,  1014    |                               May still await us; in the waves
104     IX,  1019    |                         There may we long, where yet some
105     IX,  1032    | Pursuing Caesar with his host may come."~ ~ ~ ~
106     IX,  1161    |        For if the Latian Muse may promise aught,~ ~
107     IX,  1297    |     Not merely that the earth may hide your guilt,~ ~
108     IX,  1301    |                          Thus may he know my coming, and may
109     IX,  1301    |    may he know my coming, and may hear~ ~
110      X,   233    |       it right to utter. Some may deem~ ~
111      X,   504    |               Nor son of Rome may cease from civil war;~ ~
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA2) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2010. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License