bold = Main text
   Book,  Verse      grey = Comment text

 1     II,   471    |                        Of level Egypt he spreads out his waves;~ ~
 2     II,   718    |                           Rouse Egypt's kings; Tigranes, wholly
 3     II,   833    |          Decreed the strands of Egypt for thy tomb:~ ~
 4    III,   338    |                   The bounds of Egypt to the shore that meets~ ~
 5      V,    72(5) |    appointed joint sovereign of Egypt with her young brother.
 6     VI,   972(45)| Pompeius himself, of course, in Egypt.~ ~ ~ ~
 7    VII,   679(23)|   Caesar determined to hurry to Egypt as the most probable refuge
 8   VIII,   321    |                                 Egypt or Libya. For myself, ye
 9   VIII,   374(12)|          9.) He was murdered in Egypt by Ptolemy's ministers.~ ~
10   VIII,   505    |            Then seek we Pharos. Egypt on the west~ ~
11   VIII,   526    |            But to the bounds of Egypt hardly won~ ~
12   VIII,   572    |                    Preserve our Egypt from the Latian arms.~ ~
13   VIII,   586    |                   But none than Egypt with this chief from Rome~ ~
14   VIII,   633    |                 Finds place, or Egypt? O, may civil war~ ~
15   VIII,   937    |            Not all the lands of Egypt should suffice~ ~
16   VIII,   965(23)|   interfering in the affairs of Egypt, in B.C. 57.~ ~
17   VIII,   975(24)|         of History": Chapter on Egypt.~ ~
18   VIII,   976    |        Proclaims for man. Thou, Egypt, in thy sand~ ~
19   VIII,  1023    |                             And Egypt's fable, that she holds
20     IX,   163    |      fell a deed would dare, to Egypt's strand~ ~
21      X           |               BOOK X~ Caesar in Egypt~ ~ ~ ~ ~
22      X,     2    |        the shore accursed, with Egypt's fates~ ~
23      X,    15    |                              Of Egypt's gods he strode, and round
24      X,    68    |      Caesar unknowing, entered: Egypt's shame;~ ~
25      X,   189    |                                 Egypt's high gods, they placed
26      X,   280    |    Tempering the torrid heat of Egypt's clime.~ ~
27      X,   426    |                            O'er Egypt's land and o'er himself
28      X,   435    |                            Hath Egypt won, and plays the bawd
29      X,   525    |            Flooding the land of Egypt with a day~ ~
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