bold = Main text
   Book,  Verse      grey = Comment text

 1      I,   501(18)| legend, was propitiated by human sacrifices. Orestes on his
 2     II,   188(11)| said to feed his horses on human flesh. (For Antaeus see
 3     IV,    22    |                         Of human vision; Cinga girds them
 4     IV,   782    |    When Curio22 all things human and the gods~ ~
 5     IV,   927    |    his change the scale of human things.~ ~
 6      V,   111    |             Strikes on the human spirit: then a voice~ ~
 7      V,   117    |                         No human passion lurks within the
 8      V,   332    |                        Nor human ordinance shall hold thine
 9      V,   624    |    its strength, permitted human eyes~ ~
10     VI,   457    |           Half beast, half human: Monychus who broke~ ~
11     VI,   584    |      And dies the snake by human venom slain.~ ~ ~ ~
12     VI,   833    |                Who castest human offal to the dog:~ ~
13    VII,   168    |       If toils divine with human may compare,~ ~
14    VII,   468    |       Home of our gods, no human foot shall tread,~ ~
15   VIII,    18    |   wondered at the whirl of human things:~ ~
16   VIII,    25    |                         Of human greatness, envied of mankind,~ ~
17   VIII,   974    |          Half hounds, half human, and the drum that bids~ ~
18     IX,   933    |             Till more than human: and his definite frame~ ~
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