Book,  Verse

 1      I,   151|                           His gift to Rome: his triumphs in
 2     II,   576|                     And by my gift, unwilling, see the day:~ ~
 3     II,   590|      life's ties: be Caesar's gift in vain."~ ~ ~ ~
 4    III,   108|       conjoined; by Fortune's gift~ ~
 5    III,   237|     which mourned of yore the gift~ ~
 6     IV,   434|                What priceless gift in peace had they secured!~ ~
 7      V,    71|                     The fatal gift gave, too, Pompeius' life;~ ~
 8      V,   129|                            No gift from heaven's high gods
 9      V,   336| thankless chief: as fortune's gift he takes~ ~
10      V,   606|   That poverty affords! great gift of heaven~ ~
11     VI,   272|     Magnus, living: this your gift to him;~ ~
12     VI,   858|    was his death; and yet the gift supreme~ ~
13    VII,   494|          Lops at one blow the gift of centuries,~ ~
14    VII,   829|                           Thy gift, Pompeius; and a fitting
15     IX,   256|    his kinsman's throne. Best gift of all~ ~
16     IX,   326|                          This gift of Ptolemaeus. 8 Who would
17     IX,   336|    sons; outstrip the Pharian gift,~ ~
18     IX,   786|                           Her gift, he bore: in which she bade
19     IX,  1200|     1200 Bearing his dreadful gift, Pompeius' head,~ ~
20     IX,  1206|                          This gift receive from the Pellaean
21     IX,  1230|       sight did Caesar on the gift~ ~
22     IX,  1266|       sight with thy detested gift,~ ~
23     IX,  1273|     Cleopatra had I paid this gift.~ ~
24      X,   430|              430 But Caesar's gift, is Pharos. Dost delay~ ~
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