bold = Main text
   Book,  Verse     grey = Comment text

 1      I,   167   |                   Reaped to the full; the favour of the gods~ ~
 2      I,   594   |                        Shone in full daylight; and the orbed
 3     II,   179   |      the wild beasts' dens were full.~ ~
 4     II,   345   |         the cruel gods exact in full~ ~
 5    III,    48   |                         Not yet full circled, or when past the
 6    III,    48   |       circled, or when past the full;~ ~
 7    III,   700   |                             700 Full many wondrous deaths, with
 8    III,   774   |                                 Full on a keel he struck and
 9     IV,   416   |        though their frames were full~ ~
10      V,    39   |                  While Rome was full. Of that high order all~ ~
11      V,    40(3)| Senators in Epirus, who were in full possession of theirs.~ ~
12      V,    96   |                             Was full of voices murmured from
13      V,   575   |                      To reap in full the favour of the gods,~ ~
14      V,   766   |               Dictator, Consul, full of honours, died~ ~
15      V,   870   |                    870 In their full misery; then her mind amazed~ ~
16     VI,   107   |                    Brought from full barns in place of living
17     VI,   524   |        secret: and the land was full~ ~
18    VII,     2(1)|         is, methinks, a morning full of fate!~ ~ It riseth slowly,
19    VII,   266   |                                 Full space to wing their arrows;
20    VII,   351   |    dividing us; their hands are full~ ~
21    VII,   382   |                             But full in face of brother or of
22    VII,   536   |                         Receive full daylight, wielding kindred
23    VII,   583   |                                 Full on the central column Caesar'
24    VII,   667   |                                 Full at the visage; and with
25    VII,   728   |                                 Full in his father's teeth the
26    VII,   847   |                                 Full of the fruits and knowledge
27    VII,   859   |                                 Full and triumphant: there doth
28    VII,   973   |       deserted: all the air was full~ ~
29   VIII,    93   |                    Weep out thy full, the final pledge of faith.~ ~
30   VIII,   249   |          Then fill your quivers full,~ ~
31   VIII,   312   |                                 Full of his honours? shall a
32   VIII,   903   |                                 Full funeral honours to thine
33     IX,   339   |                               A full reward. Thus, cowards, shall
34     IX,   656   |     counsellor."~ ~ ~ But Cato, full~ ~
35     IX,   823   |                                 Full was the blood and thick
36     IX,   954   |                         Brimmed full his veins; his very sweat
37      X,   161   |                          Men of full age whose cheeks with growth
38      X,   479   |              Nor do thou tarry: full of wine and feast~ ~
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