bold = Main text
   Book,  Verse      grey = Comment text

 1      I,   459    |      Var, since then Italia's bound;~ ~
 2     II,    13    |                 Himself, too, bound by law), so that for aye~ ~
 3     II,   407(16)| dressed in a long white robe, bound round the waist with a girdle.
 4     II,   408    |             Nor modest circle bound her neck; no scarf~ ~
 5     II,   454    |                          Here bound his mountains: there Ancona'
 6    III,   590    |                      590 That bound the Roman fleet, the larger
 7    III,   824    |       the deep, with headlong bound,~ ~
 8      V,   503    |                               Bound fast in frosty fetters;
 9      V,   533    |    which the streams of Apsus bound~ ~
10     VI,   766    | caverned Taenarus, the gloomy bound~ ~
11     VI,   895    |       strain, but rising at a bound~ ~
12    VII,     2(1) |          And her sick head is bound about with clouds~ ~ As
13     IX,    32    |                               Bound to Pompeius. Rome in him
14     IX,   669    |                               Bound are we to the gods; no voice
15     IX,   907    |                  Parted, that bound his vitals, which abroad~ ~
16     IX,   947    |                           And bound to Cato with admiring soul,~ ~
17     IX,  1312    |         Content, thine equal, bound in faithful peace,~ ~
18      X,   135    |       tracery, the beams were bound~ ~
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