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   Book,  Verse      grey = Comment text

 1     II,   402    |          with robes of broidered gold adorned;~ ~
 2    III,   133    |       unopened. 'Tis the love of gold~ ~
 3    III,   141    |       flow, thou robber, ere the gold be thine.~ ~
 4    III,   181    |                      And all the gold which Pyrrhus panic-struck~ ~
 5    III,   182    |          Left when he fled: that gold 9, the price of Rome,~ ~
 6    III,   182(9) |                     That is, the gold offered by Pyrrhus, and
 7     IV,   107    |         peasant, who, in gain of gold,~ ~
 8     IV,   336    |          bowels of the earth for gold.~ ~
 9     IV,   426    |                             With gold and jewels wrought restores
10     IV,   932(27)|          Caesar. How far Gaulish gold was the cause of this conversion
11     VI,   478    |             Ran silver forth and gold, soon to receive~ ~
12    VII,   862    |          Hesperian nations ruddy gold,~ ~
13    VII,   869    |        blind with frenzy for the gold,~ ~
14   VIII,   141    | treasures of our temples and the gold,~ ~
15   VIII,   508    |                              And gold and merchandise; and proud
16   VIII,  1009    |                              And gold, thy memory were viler deemed:~ ~
17     IX,    13    |          the monument encased in gold,~ ~
18     IX,   213    |      spoils, embroidered deep in gold,~ ~
19     IX,   499    |      Falls there in showers. Not gold nor wealth of brass~ ~
20      X,    18    |                      Yet did nor gold nor ornament restrain~ ~
21      X,   150    |           part feathered as with gold;~ ~
22      X,   168    |   beneath the weight of gems and gold.~ ~
23      X,   184    |         such spoil. On plates of gold~ ~
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