bold = Main text
   Book,  Verse      grey = Comment text

 1      I,   560    |      parent now could stay his son;~ ~
 2     II,   523    |                  Great Sulla's son, unworthy of his sire,~ ~
 3     II,   711    |          Forbad Iberia, to his son he spake,~ ~
 4    III,   373    |  Romans fight -- shall not the son~ ~
 5    III,   825    |              To anticipate his son: for this he feared~ ~
 6     IV,   133    |                    Her darling son; then smiling to his part~ ~
 7     IV,   202    |    Found not a comrade, was no son of Rome.~ ~
 8     IV,   625    |      fatal chance or sire with son,~ ~
 9     IV,   659    |       handed down from sire to son:~ ~
10     IV,   727    |         could breathe into her son~ ~
11     IV,   922    |                        Another son, who, had he right pursued,~ ~
12     VI,   497    |               Sextus, unworthy son of worthy sire~ ~
13     VI,   519(30)|                                Son of Pelasgus. From him was
14     VI,   696    |             To whom the coward son~ ~
15     VI,   704    |       Magnus' most illustrious son,~ ~
16     VI,   852    |       destiny of Magnus to his son."~ ~ ~ ~
17     VI,   931    |    visages of sorrow. Sire and son~ ~
18    VII,   109    |      blood was forced upon thy son.~ ~
19    VII,   907    |         When she had known her son. Before his gaze~ ~
20   VIII,   232    |                            His son; 4 next, captains who preserved
21   VIII,   246    |                     And to the son of haughty Arsaces,~ ~
22   VIII,   672    |                            And son, I pray you; from the shore
23   VIII,   733    |       misery. If my spouse and son~ ~
24     IX,   409(10)|         878). He was Neptune's son and trumpeter. That Pallas
25     IX,   759(20)| Theogony", 276.) Phorcus was a son of Pontus and Gaia (sea
26     IX,  1240    |       1240 Rather to mourn his son's dissevered head,~ ~
27     IX,  1248    |        of thy daughter and her son~ ~
28      X,   504    |                            Nor son of Rome may cease from civil
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