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3001 II, 72 | To settle which of them shall rule 3002 VII, 922 | Slow settling down; there numbered he 3003 VIII, 507 | By sevenfold stream the ocean; rich in 3004 II, 154(9) | were Consuls. Marius died seventeen days afterwards, in the 3005 II, 154(9) | days afterwards, in the seventieth year of his age.~ ~ 3006 IX, 972 | And severs arm and shoulder at a blow:~ ~ 3007 IV, 358 | The reeking filth of shambles in the stream,~ ~ 3008 IV, 289 | To prove his shamelessness of guilt.~ ~ ~ But thou,~ ~ 3009 VIII, 46 | For there wert thou, sharer of all his griefs,~ ~ 3010 V, 570 | shipwreck. Not in equal shares~ ~ 3011 VII, 749 | our doom; yet, Fortune, sharing not~ ~ 3012 V, 69 | Boy! thy sword was only sharp~ ~ 3013 VII, 173 | Sharpened his darts afresh: on Pallas' 3014 VII, 163 | Glows on the sharpening stone; no lance will serve~ ~ 3015 I, 49 | Shatter the routed navies; servile 3016 VI, 868 | She-dogs of hell, I'll call you to 3017 I, 195 | To sheathe the sword, with tranquil 3018 V, 285 | Or that the falchion sheathed had lost its charm;~ ~ 3019 I, 110 | 110 To cause the shedding of a brother's blood.~ ~ ~ ~ 3020 II, 539 | The sheen of armour glistening in 3021 VI, 122 | Drooped for sheer weariness. So the disease~ ~ 3022 X, 145 | Shells of the tortoise gleamed, 3023 X, 384 | Where shelves the earth) thy billows shall 3024 I, 150(8) | America; in allusion to Mr. Sheridan. The latter replied, `If 3025 VIII, 220 | 220 Shifted the sails; and hauling to 3026 VI, 788 | Of timid shivering shades?"~ ~ ~ Then to her 3027 V, 412(21)| expression is said to have shocked and abashed the army. (Tacitus, " 3028 VIII, 993 | And earthquake shocks, and Rome shall pray an 3029 VI, 595 | Shoot headlong from the zenith; 3030 IV, 353 | Dripping with dew, from tender shoots they pressed,~ ~ 3031 IV, 590 | 590 Were shortened by the Archer.~ ~ ~ ~ When 3032 IV, 589(14)| That is, night was at its shortest.~ ~ 3033 VII, 52 | And shouts of welcome bid great Caesar 3034 IV, 79 | Were showerless, for on Calpe's rock alone~ ~ 3035 I, 619 | brought to birth and mothers shrieked~ ~ 3036 II, 38 | holy threshold, and with shrieks~ ~ 3037 VI, 738 | mummied flame in accents shrill~ ~ 3038 VIII, 1008 | mount to Jove! In temples shrined~ ~ 3039 II, 652 | The pirate, shrinking from the open sea,~ ~ 3040 VIII, 802 | By art nefarious: the shrivelled skin~ ~ 3041 IV, 72 | Drave all that shroud Arabia and the land~ ~ 3042 I, 597 | Shrouded his burning car in blackest 3043 VII, 921 | Rose shrouding all the plain, now in decay~ ~ 3044 IX, 366 | Not wholly shrunk, so that it should receive~ ~ 3045 II, 91 | In act to murder, shuddered in the stroke~ ~ 3046 II, 135 | To kiss with shuddering lips the red right hand 5.~ ~ 3047 III, 420 | 420 With shutting Caesar out they shut him 3048 X, 170 | 170 Which woven close by shuttles of the east~ ~ 3049 VIII, 965(23)| have been discovered in the Sibylline books at the time when it 3050 II, 616 | Carbo 27, now buried in Sicanian tomb;~ ~ 3051 VI, 124 | Twixt life and death, for sickness, and the pest~ ~ 3052 VIII, 237(5) | Rome, and in the civil war sided with Pompeius. He was at 3053 IV, 876 | And sidelong sword-thrusts slain: nor 3054 IV, 827 | Turned sideways, watches till the victim 3055 III, 252 | From Sidon's courts enriched with purple 3056 X, 169 | snowy breast shone through Sidonian lawn~ ~ 3057 IX, 1132 | Sigeum's sandy beach and Simois' 3058 IV, 906(26)| not "arte". The word "signifer" seems to favour the reading 3059 I, 313 | thy command prolonged. But silenced now~ ~ 3060 VIII, 734 | Behold me murdered, silently the more~ ~ 3061 VI, 613(35)| Coatus audire silentum." To be present at the meetings 3062 II, 480 | 480 And Siler flowing through Salernian 3063 VI, 428 | To silt the shore beside the neighbouring 3064 VI, 427(19)| the sea has been largely silted up.~ ~ 3065 V, 318 | Behold these silvered locks, these nerveless hands~ ~ 3066 II, 822 | The planets faded, and the silvery star~ ~ 3067 IX, 1132 | Sigeum's sandy beach and Simois' stream,~ ~ 3068 IV, 428 | And simplest fruits of earth. The flood, 3069 IV, 845 | Who still deceiving, simulated flight,~ ~ 3070 I, 308(11)| should lay their arms down simultaneously; but this was resisted by 3071 VII, 904 | To purge his sin within the Scythian bounds;~ ~ 3072 VI, 603 | These sinful rites and these her sister' 3073 VI, 637 | Singed with the redolent fire that 3074 VII, 694(24)| that Lucan would have thus singled him out. But he appears 3075 V, 104 | Perchance he sings the fates, perchance his 3076 IX, 692 | in his sleep, the last to sip the spring~ ~ 3077 IX, 724 | cup is harmless." Then he sipped the fount,~ ~ 3078 V, 435 | Where sheltered Sipus nestles at the feet~ ~ 3079 X, 254 | neighbouring Cancer joined, and Sirius star~ ~ 3080 V, 576 | Not sit supine; and knowing danger 3081 I, 772(28)| The confusion between the site of the battle of Philippi 3082 VI, 93(4) | Aricia was situated on the Via Appia, about 3083 VI, 93(4) | on the Via Appia, about sixteen miles from Rome. There was 3084 VI, 613(35)| their voices. So, in the sixth Aeneid, the dead Greek warriors 3085 IX, 898 | curving tooth, of little size,~ ~ 3086 V, 752 | Here in this puny skiff in such a sea?~ ~ 3087 IV, 149(8) | island. Portable leathern skiffs seem to have been in common 3088 I, 483 | No skilful warrior of Seine directs~ ~ 3089 IV, 674 | There slept he; not on skins of beasts, or leaves,~ ~ 3090 VIII, 278 | Pompeius' vessel skirts the foamy crags~ ~ 3091 VI, 209 | rocks crush the foeman's skull~ ~ 3092 VIII, 221 | One sheet, he slacked the other, to the left~ ~ 3093 V, 497 | With slackened sheet the canvas wooed the 3094 IX, 881 | seek for water that might slake~ ~ 3095 X, 286 | Till the slant sun and Meroe's lengthening 3096 I, 674 | leads to the altar, and with slanting knife~ ~ 3097 III, 626 | And turned his vessel slantwise to the foe.~ ~ 3098 VII, 744 | That shall be slavish; by our sires was shaped~ ~ 3099 IX, 822 | In guise of Asp, sleep-bringing, swollen of neck:~ ~ 3100 VI, 145 | sudden dash he makes on sleeping foe~ ~ 3101 VIII, 346 | The slightest wound deals death.~ ~ "Would 3102 VI, 810 | 810 Her cursed mouth had slimed. Last came her voice~ ~ 3103 VI, 649 | The slimy gore which drips upon the 3104 VI, 233 | twisted thongs of mighty slings.~ ~ 3105 II, 223 | Death thus let slip, to deal the fatal blow.~ ~ 3106 VI, 433(22)| to have lost one of his slippers.~ ~ 3107 II, 124 | Befouled with slippery gore the holy walls.~ ~ 3108 II, 330 | 330 Slips from her base, who sits 3109 VIII, 40 | 40 Borne in a sloop, to lightest wind and wave~ ~ 3110 IV, 824 | Thus doth the sly ichneumon 25 with his tail~ ~ 3111 IV, 787 | Still smarting at the insult, came the 3112 VII, 186 | Smoked with a sulphur that had 3113 III, 564 | living torches, 'neath a smoky pall~ ~ 3114 III, 586 | Smoothed for the battle, swift on 3115 VII, 953 | airy realms is thine, nor smoother couch~ ~ 3116 IX, 1163 | Shall live upon the page of Smyrna's bard,~ ~ 3117 IX, 981 | Have given thee power to snap the fatal threads.~ ~ ~ ~ 3118 III, 750 | 750 Whose oily timbers soaked in pitch and wax~ ~ 3119 V, 635 | And soaring on his wings -- all these 3120 VIII, 716 | Or sob escaped, might mar the deathless 3121 VI, 121 | Started from out their sockets, and the head~ ~ 3122 III, 439 | Heaved up with earthy sod; with lofty towers~ ~ 3123 VIII, 606 | The fields, though softened by the refluent Nile:~ ~ 3124 X, 224(8) | founded on the Egyptian or solar year. (See Herodotus, ii., 3125 II, 528 | Fled with his standards, soldierless; and thou,~ ~ 3126 V, 457 | In vain solemnity of empty urns.~ ~ 3127 V, 268 | Far on the solitary shore a grave~ ~ 3128 V, 925 | Its cold, its solitude. When slumber found~ ~ 3129 IX, 617 | Solstitial divides in middle sky 15~ ~ 3130 | sometime 3131 VI, 603 | rites and these her sister's songs~ ~ 3132 I, 1(1) | Emathian conqueror' (Milton's sonnet). Emathia was part of Macedonia, 3133 V, 643 | No sooner done than stars were seen 3134 V, 841 | To soothe the anxious bosom of her 3135 II, 29 | marks the glazing eye, and soothes~ ~ 3136 II, 669 | Before an unknown God; Sophene soft --~ ~ 3137 I, 212 | In face most sorrowful and ghostly guise,~ ~ 3138 IV, 197(10)| victoresque in lacrumas effusi, sortem civilium armorum misera 3139 V, 141 | These soundless caverned rocks, in quest 3140 Note | Lucan's friendship evidently soured, and in A.D. 65 Lucan joined 3141 V, 655 | A wild south-eastern gale shall sweep the sea.~ ~ 3142 IX, 1079 | Larch, southern-wood and antlers of a deer~ ~ 3143 III, 291 | Whose clime lies southward, yet men thence descry~ ~ 3144 IX, 394 | Hurried them southwards, victor of the gale.~ ~ 3145 X, 223 | The stars and heavenly spaces have I conned;~ ~ 3146 IV, 155 | imperious Sicoris shall be spanned.~ ~ 3147 II, 541 | ye can, the bridge that spans the stream;~ ~ 3148 IX, 1188 | he left while foamed the sparkling main~ ~ 3149 V, 487 | And may he bend the spars, and bear us swift~ ~ 3150 II, 624 | That smote vile Spartacus the robber foe.~ ~ 3151 VII, 557(20)| 312. He was placed in a special tomb after the battle.~ ~ 3152 II, 753 | into the deep, yet not a speck~ ~ 3153 V, 47(4) | Coblentz presented a pitiful spectacle of the high pretensions 3154 I, 773 | frenzy left her and she speechless fell.~ ~ ~ ~ 3155 VII, 398 | With speedier tread dashed down upon the 3156 V, 855 | With speediest ruin. 'Tis enough for thee~ ~ 3157 I, 748 | Speeds some Bacchante, thus in 3158 III, 790 | old; and thou, Tyrrhenus, spend~ ~ 3159 VI, 431 | Thy rapids fall, Spercheius: pure the wave~ ~ 3160 IX, 1100 | 1100 Then spew it forth; and from the taste 3161 IX, 839 | With spines contorted: like to torrid 3162 II, 526 | The gates of Auximon; and Spinther driven~ ~ 3163 II, 798 | waters, and with ceaseless splash~ ~ 3164 I, 12 | vengeance? Could ye not have spoiled,~ ~ 3165 IX, 518 | For spoilers are they of the luckless 3166 IX, 837 | With various spots unnumbered, more than those~ ~ 3167 I, 685 | Spotted they were and pale, with 3168 VI, 344 | Writhing beneath his load spouts o'er the plains~ ~ 3169 IX, 411 | Pallas, who springing from her father's head~ ~ 3170 I, 654 | With holy sprinkling purge the open space~ ~ 3171 IV, 118 | Sprouts from the frozen earth; but 3172 IX, 605 | Spurns all the wealth of Rome. 3173 X, 33 | conquest of his sire, and spurred by fate~ ~ 3174 VII, 615 | And through their comrades spurring from the field~ ~ 3175 III, 576 | Meantime had Caesar's squadron kept the isles~ ~ 3176 II, 87 | And lengthened squalor: thus he paid for crime~ ~ 3177 VIII, 649 | Dost stab our breasts? Thou know'st 3178 I, 333 | In stable pent gnaws at his prison 3179 IV, 490 | second voyage. Round the stag~ ~ 3180 VII, 452 | save! Nor in the latest stage of life,~ ~ 3181 VII, 738 | To stagnate on the plain. Nor life was 3182 V, 523 | Cast off stagnation and be sea once more."~ ~ 3183 VI, 796 | the fell hyaena; flesh of stags~ ~ 3184 V, 835 | his fortunes, though he staked the world~ ~ 3185 VI, 207 | enemies; with poles and stakes he thrusts~ ~ 3186 VI, 479 | The minting stamp. 'Twas thus that money came~ ~ 3187 V, 451 | Clothing his power; and stamped upon the time~ ~ 3188 VII, 254 | the right, Domitius, ever stanch,~ ~ 3189 VII, 348(14)| Thus paraphrased by Dean Stanley: "I tremble not with terror, 3190 III, 511 | Meanwhile a giant mound, on star-shaped wheels~ ~ 3191 IX, 752 | Grew stiff and stark ere yet it fled the frame.~ ~ 3192 VII, 321 | Barbaric, that will start to hear our trump,~ ~ 3193 VI, 121 | Started from out their sockets, 3194 III, 66 | before him: but a people starved~ ~ 3195 Bib | Caesar, Politician and Statesman" (Harvard University Press, 3196 X, 258 | Their several stations, under which doth lie~ ~ 3197 I, 609(22)| Mr. Haskins' note, citing Statius, "Thebiad")~ ~ 3198 IX, 949 | As from a statue saffron spray is showered~ ~ 3199 V, 666 | Me in its stead receive. Alone in thee~ ~ 3200 VI, 170 | 170 Steadfast till death refused them; 3201 III, 619 | on the Roman side their steadier keels~ ~ 3202 III, 575 | Gave steady foot-hold for an ocean fight.~ ~ ~ ~ 3203 IV, 818 | By stealth came Juba: silent was his 3204 IX, 173 | Consumed it, which with stealthy flame arose~ ~ 3205 IX, 938 | to mountainous height the steaming wave;~ ~ 3206 VI, 452 | the glebe was furrowed. Steed-renowned~ ~ 3207 III, 221 | There first men steeled their hearts to dare the 3208 IX, 892 | poison in his frame, he steels himself~ ~ 3209 VI, 234 | Let steelshod ram or catapult remove~ ~ 3210 IV, 301 | Reluctant. There by steepest trench shut in,~ ~ 3211 III, 254(16)| the pilot declares that he steers by the pole star itself, 3212 IV, 719 | Nor did the hatred of his step-dame 18 find~ ~ 3213 IV, 778 | angry lion, monarch of the steppe.~ ~ ~ ~ 3214 IX, 65 | Cornelia prayed her stepson and the crew~ ~ 3215 V, 440 | From sweet Apulia, or the sterner blast~ ~ 3216 IX, 878 | Nor Cato's sternness, nor of his sacred charge~ ~ 3217 IX, 759(20)| parents of the Gorgons -- Stheno, Euryale. and Medusa, of 3218 VIII, 922 | stone he places, and with stick half burned~ ~ 3219 II, 30 | 30 The stiffening limbs and gazes on the face,~ ~ 3220 V, 154 | Stifled the god; perhaps the breath 3221 VIII, 223 | The stillness of the waters; while the 3222 III, 577 | Named Stoechades 28, and Brutus 29 turret 3223 V, 605 | Stoops not to cottages. Oh! happy 3224 II, 515 | Then, by the Storm-king smitten, should the earth~ ~ 3225 IX, 403 | The storm-tossed mariners, their keel aground,~ ~ 3226 VII, 164 | Till straightened for the fray; each bow is 3227 IV, 879 | The straightening circle, for the first pressed 3228 IX, 619 | Nor Scorpion rises straighter than the Bull,~ ~ 3229 VI, 895 | With toil and strain, but rising at a bound~ ~ 3230 III, 691 | Strains to the utmost and with failing 3231 III, 372 | But grant that strangers shun thy destinies~ ~ 3232 IX, 865 | In strangest forms of death unnumbered 3233 II, 180 | 180 One strangled died; another from the height~ ~ 3234 IV, 832 | On Juba's stratagem; for Curio~ ~ 3235 VI, 681 | Lest Mars might stray into another world,~ ~ 3236 II, 243 | In crimson streak across the Tuscan Sea.~ ~ ~ ~ 3237 VI, 985 | Now streaked the heavens, by the hag' 3238 I, 685 | were and pale, with sable streaks~ ~ 3239 IV, 338 | Nor streamlet whispered from its hidden 3240 II, 507 | About to yield, strengthened their walls with mounds~ ~ 3241 VI, 105 | killed the succulence. They strengthless lay~ ~ 3242 X, 564(23)| she killed her brother and strewed the parts of his body into 3243 VI, 166 | Stride o'er the rampart, in their 3244 X, 354 | Strik'st thou the Ethiop fields. 3245 VIII, 775 | Of striking, fierce Septimius' murderous 3246 VI, 825 | Who striv'st to mix innumerable worlds,~ ~ 3247 IV, 702 | totter. Breast to breast they strive~ ~ 3248 VI, 748 | slain unnumbered; had she striven~ ~ 3249 I, 695 | keeps the pulse in rapid strokes astir.~ ~ ~ ~ 3250 II, 739 | So many strongholds captured, might suffice;~ ~ 3251 I, 676 | The victim's struggles prove the gods averse;~ ~ 3252 VII, 164 | for the fray; each bow is strung~ ~ 3253 II, 809 | Chalcis. Here two ships stuck fast~ ~ 3254 X, 146 | With frequent emeralds studded. Gems of price~ ~ 3255 IV, 201 | Of olden studies: he who in the camp~ ~ 3256 VII, 348(14)| Andrews. 1873, on the "Study of Greatness".~ ~ 3257 II, 404(15)| of her new home, for to stumble on it would be of evil omen. 3258 III, 804 | Oft stumbling o'er the benches the old 3259 I, 159 | To speedy fall, amid the sturdier trees~ ~ 3260 II, 244 | these, shall Sulla now be styled~ ~ 3261 I, 330 | 330 Thou should'st subdue thy kinsman: share the world~ ~ 3262 II, 10 | 10 Matter unformed to his subduing hand,~ ~ 3263 I, 116(4) | island of Aegina would be submerged. Merivale's "Roman Empire", 3264 VI, 267 | No longer bent on fight, submissive cried,~ ~ 3265 II, 158(10)| a town which afterwards submitted to Sulla, who put all the 3266 V, 426 | Might be denied, till they submitting pledged~ ~ 3267 III, 327(22)| circle had been, and the subsequent ten thousands were driven 3268 I, 400 | 400 This would-be ruler of subservient Rome~ ~ 3269 III, 515 | Beheld, and thought some subterranean gust~ ~ 3270 VI, 16(1) | to Caesar's account, he succeeded in getting between Pompey 3271 X, 456 | shore that bids us hope success:~ ~ 3272 VIII, 615 | And all his proud successes? Fair is help~ ~ 3273 VII, 704 | Thee his successor, thee? Why leavest thou 3274 VIII, 339(10)| kingdoms established by the successors of Alexander the Great. 3275 VIII, 475 | Then ask the foe for succour. For what blame~ ~ 3276 III, 195 | Nearest of all, her succours to the host.~ ~ 3277 VI, 105 | And killed the succulence. They strengthless lay~ ~ 3278 III, 711 | Succumbed to death, but with the lungs 3279 VI, 797 | Fed upon serpents; and the sucking fish~ ~ 3280 X, 313 | Sucks from its waters more than 3281 IX, 698 | Not by sucoessful issue, should be judged,~ ~ 3282 II, 561 | And suddenly, as storm in summer, flew~ ~ 3283 VI, 432(21)| Pherae in Thessaly, and sued for Alcestis, the daughter 3284 IV, 380 | Before the victor's feet, and sues for peace.~ ~ 3285 II, 61 | Elbe, pour thy Suevians forth! Let us be foes~ ~ 3286 VIII, 262 | If by my sufferance, Parthians, you alone~ ~ 3287 IX, 831 | Who suffers not his hapless victims' 3288 VII, 577 | By civil war suffices spear nor lance,~ ~ 3289 II, 552 | Were not the walls sufficient to protect~ ~ 3290 II, 250 | disasters may our fears suggest,~ ~ 3291 I, 38(3) | itself does not aid such a suggestion; and the view generally 3292 I, 150(8) | Plausuque sui gaudere theatri.' Quoted 3293 II, 191 | seen and wept for when the suitors died.~ ~ 3294 VII, 2(1) | It riseth slowly, as her sullen car~ ~ Had all the weight 3295 VII, 186 | Smoked with a sulphur that had come from heaven.~ ~ 3296 VIII, 967 | all the banks which in the summer-tide~ ~ 3297 III, 602 | And note of trumpet summoning: and all~ ~ 3298 V, 105 | Once sung, is fate. Haply some part 3299 VI, 569 | And sunless Scythia's sempiternal snows~ ~ 3300 VI, 888 | Ye dwell supernal; who by waves of Styx~ ~ 3301 V, 576 | Not sit supine; and knowing danger yields~ ~ 3302 II, 145(7) | and brought to Marius at supper. He was the grandfather 3303 VII, 666 | Caesar supplies the weapon and bids strike~ ~ 3304 II, 531(21)| each of the two leaders to supply a legion for it, Pompeius 3305 IV, 474 | Supported; nor upon the deck were 3306 IV, 932(27)| tribuneship (B.C. 50-49), become a supporter of Caesar. How far Gaulish 3307 VIII, 554 | When it supports the fallen. To the fates~ ~ 3308 IX, 682 | Make sure my heart, but surely-coming Death.~ ~ 3309 V, 428 | strike and suffer 22 holds in surest thrall~ ~ 3310 V, 631 | The forest sounds; the surf upon the shore;~ ~ 3311 III, 319 | In boiling surge pours to the Pontic deep~ ~ 3312 II, 166 | Drew from the city; for the surgeon knife~ ~ 3313 V, 646 | Black horror marked the surging of the sea;~ ~ 3314 VII, 687 | s life. Not yet hath he surpassed~ ~ 3315 III, 79 | Their yield surpasses, when the southern wind~ ~ 3316 IV, 850 | 850 On every side surround them: leader, men --~ ~ 3317 IV, 5(1) | was killed, and Juba, the survivor, put an end to himself.~ ~ 3318 II, 58 | Rush forth from Susa; Scythian Ister curb~ ~ 3319 Bib | TRANSLATIONS --~ ~Braund, Susan H.: "Lucan: Civil War" ( 3320 VIII, 590 | 590 Suspected by his victor. Why alone~ ~ 3321 IX, 532 | And hung in air suspended, till amazed~ ~ 3322 I, 506(19)| also to betray a lingering suspicion that the doctrine may in 3323 IV, 215 | Sustain the order of material things,~ ~ 3324 IX, 511 | No root finds sustenance, nor kindly Jove~ ~ 3325 IV, 658 | name was given; and thus a swain retold~ ~ 3326 II, 751 | Were swallowed by the vortex of the sea;~ ~ 3327 IV, 175 | Short on the sward, and day was at the height.~ ~ 3328 IX, 344 | vessels. So when bees in swarm~ ~ 3329 IV, 592 | Swarmed with the galleys and their 3330 IX, 821(23)| dire Or in such numbers swarming ne'er she showed." -- Carey. ( 3331 VII, 187 | more, the standards, hid by swarms of bees~ ~ 3332 VI, 741 | Swathing her pallid features, stole 3333 IX, 393 | Shook off the tempest; but a sweeping tide~ ~ 3334 IV, 710 | 710 The muscle swelled and all the joints grew 3335 IV, 824(25)| reptile, and with remarkable swiftness and agility leaped upon 3336 IV, 99 | Swims on the rising flood; the 3337 III, 739 | The oarsmen driving, swings a bench in air.~ ~ 3338 IV, 775 | Which wields the guiding switch: the hunter, too,~ ~ 3339 III, 815 | Recovering from his swoon, when ruthless grief~ ~ 3340 VIII, 782 | yet man had not learned by swoop of sword~ ~ 3341 V, 683 | Swooped on the boat and tore away 3342 IX, 777 | Swooping. Cyllenian Harp 21 did he 3343 VII, 184 | The melted sword-blade flowed upon the hilt:~ ~ 3344 VII, 891 | The absent sword-hilt. Thou had'st said that groans~ ~ 3345 VII, 118 | Sought for the sword-thrust, and within our ranks~ ~ 3346 IV, 876 | And sidelong sword-thrusts slain: nor wounds alone,~ ~ 3347 I, 439 | His comrades swore consent with lifted hands~ ~ 3348 III, 545 | head, which, poised and swung,~ ~ 3349 VIII, 955 | Records no syllable of the lengthy tale~ ~ 3350 III, 457 | Prisoned the air within. No sylvan nymphs~ ~ 3351 III, 259 | Of Memphis, carving symbols upon walls~ ~ 3352 VIII, 348(11)| probably have failed. Lucan's sympathies were probably with Lentulus.~ ~ 3353 III, 201(11)| fountain of Arethusa at Syracuse. A goblet was said to have 3354 IV, 790 | 790 (Ta'en in Corfinium's hold) 23 3355 I, 703 | Be void of truth, and Tages (famous seer)~ ~ 3356 IV, 492 | Of tainted feathers poisoning the air;~ ~ 3357 IV, 839 | The craft that taints a Carthaginian war."~ ~ 3358 X, 346 | fiery Cancer's heat, thou tak'st thy rise~ ~ 3359 IV, 932(27)| describes him as a man of talent, and finds a resemblance 3360 IV, 228 | wile the sleepless hours in talk away;~ ~ 3361 IV, 200 | Another with his schoolmate talks again~ ~ 3362 VIII, 336 | Taller the war-horse, stronger 3363 IX, 1075 | Then tamarisk and costum, Eastern herbs,~ ~ 3364 X, 62 | Was come the boyish king, taming the rage~ ~ 3365 IX, 844 | Tapering; and Natrix who in bubbling 3366 X, 600 | Lamps drenched with reeking tar. Nor slow the fire~ ~ 3367 I, 500 | 500 And Taranis' altars cruel as were those~ ~ 3368 V, 889 | Some tardy rumour of thy fall may come?~ ~ 3369 IX, 24 | Tarried awhile, and roused his angered 3370 X, 479 | Nor do thou tarry: full of wine and feast~ ~ 3371 III, 262 | Next Persean Tarsus and high Taurus' groves~ ~ 3372 I, 501(18)| Diana was worshipped by the Tauri, a people who dwelt in the 3373 V, 61 | On cold Taygetus; Massilia's sons~ ~ 3374 IX, 668 | Shall teach us this more surely than 3375 IX, 1043 | He conquers misery, teaching by his mien~ ~ 3376 VII, 659(22)| That is, lashes on his team terrified by the Gorgon 3377 X, 96 | Tearless approached him, though in 3378 VII, 894 | That earthly darkness teemed with gibbering ghosts~ ~ 3379 III, 327(22)| Effusis telis". I have so taken this difficult 3380 VIII, 284 | Escaped the windings of Telmessus' bay;~ ~ 3381 III, 656 | Here fated Telon also steered his ship:~ ~ 3382 X, 280 | 280 Tempering the torrid heat of Egypt' 3383 IX, 577 | When warmth dispersed the tempest-driven air,~ ~ 3384 I, 150(8) | he alludes to, I may be tempted to an act of presumption -- 3385 VI, 752 | Its ghostly tenants had obeyed her call,~ ~ 3386 VI, 432(21)| mortal, and accordingly he tended the flocks of Admetus for 3387 IX, 576 | Which tending downwards hid the Northern 3388 VIII, 206 | Towards Syria tends, till bright Canopus 3 shines,~ ~ 3389 V, 428(22)| Reading "tenet", with Hosius and Francken; 3390 X, 338(18)| starving troops cast lots by tens for the one man who was 3391 V, 819 | Strikes on their pinions tense, in loose array~ ~ 3392 V, 772 | When lo! a tenth gigantic billow raised~ ~ 3393 III, 28(3) | I take "tepido busto" as the dative case; 3394 V, 856(35)| Reading "Teque tuus decepit amor", as preferred 3395 IX, 662 | worth aught? And doth its term~ ~ 3396 IV, 932(27)| this change that he was termed the prime mover of the civil 3397 IX, 821(23)| crowd within Of serpents terrible, so strange of shape And 3398 VI, 424(18)| usually placed in the Argive territory.~ ~ 3399 IV, 791 | Been tested, nor to Caesar in the wars~ ~ 3400 VIII, 237(5) | Tetrarch of Galatia. He was always 3401 VII, 262 | Galatia's tetrarchs and the greater kings;~ ~ 3402 I, 499 | Savage Teutates, Hesus' horrid shrines,~ ~ 3403 III, 106 | Thank the high gods no eastern 3404 V, 336 | A thankless chief: as fortune's gift 3405 IX, 848(25)| whom the Numidian Seps did thaw Into a dew with poison, 3406 I, 150(8) | Plausuque sui gaudere theatri.' Quoted by Mr. Pitt, in 3407 I, 609(22)| note, citing Statius, "Thebiad")~ ~ 3408 IX, 270 | 270 For Ocean theft again; Pompeius gone,~ ~ 3409 IX, 1134 | all the hero's shades, the theme of song.~ ~ 3410 V, 125(11)| would keep them safe; which Themistocles interpreted as meaning their 3411 VIII, 348(11)| fact; and says that it was Theophanes of Lesbos who dissuaded 3412 VI, 361(10)| other after the battle of Thepsus to avoid falling into Caesar' 3413 | therefore 3414 | therein 3415 II, 689(33)| Theseus, on returning from his successful 3416 VI, 152 | Where groves of trees and thickets gave approach~ ~ 3417 I, 383 | his victory o'er Cilician thieves~ ~ 3418 I, 377 | That reeking weapon ever thirsts for more.~ ~ 3419 VIII, 514(14)| Thus rendered by Sir Thomas May, of the Long Parliament:~ ~ " 3420 VI, 258 | Maddened by dart from Libyan thong propelled,~ ~ 3421 VI, 233 | Flung by the twisted thongs of mighty slings.~ ~ 3422 VIII, 927 | rest unburied? Why, with thoughtless hand~ ~ 3423 V, 428 | suffer 22 holds in surest thrall~ ~ 3424 IX, 760 | 760 Her sisters. She could threat the sea and sky~ ~ 3425 V, 155 | left its ancient gorge and thro' the world~ ~ 3426 VII, 369 | down from heaven by the throes of Rome,~ ~ 3427 I, 40 | 40 Gain thrones in heaven; and if the Thunderer~ ~ 3428 IX, 46 | Thronging the sea with keels? Round 3429 VIII, 629 | That throngs Pelusian Canopus raise~ ~ 3430 III, 536 | Deflect their engines, throwing still the bolts~ ~ 3431 III, 346(24)| Persians sixty years later. See Thucydides I. 13; Grote, "History of 3432 V, 883 | The thunder-bolts of ruin to withstand~ ~ 3433 VII, 534 | At grim Thyestes' feast 19 untimely night~ ~ 3434 IX, 348 | On thyme to taste its bitterness -- 3435 III, 233 | Mixed with the tidal wave; the land through which~ ~ 3436 IX, 186 | And plunge his body in the tideless marsh?~ ~ 3437 II, 309 | What joy for Caesar, if the tidings come~ ~ 3438 II, 375 | their houses in a closer tie.~ ~ 3439 IV, 473 | By tightened chains made firm, in double 3440 II, 718 | Rouse Egypt's kings; Tigranes, wholly mine,~ ~ 3441 V, 470 | 470 Of heaven, or tigress dam: until he reached~ ~ 3442 III, 281 | Of Cappadocians, tilling now the soil,~ ~ 3443 VII, 224 | And where Timavus broadens in the meads,~ ~ 3444 III, 451 | earth and brushwood stood, a timber frame~ ~ 3445 III, 526 | from the mountain top some time-worn rock~ ~ 3446 I, 715 | And fields refuse their timely fruit? The streams~ ~ 3447 V, 428(22)| Hosius and Francken; not "timet", as Haskins. The prospect 3448 VI, 782 | Even the timorous ear shall speak the man.~ ~ 3449 III, 274 | With tints of saffron, and with coloured 3450 VI, 309 | Tireless, which tempests force upon 3451 V, 374 | Who tires of victories which gild 3452 VI, 865 | Tisiphone, Megaera, heed ye not?~ ~ 3453 IX, 904 | Wasted the tissue of his calves and knees:~ ~ 3454 VI, 437(23)| Enipeus, Apidanus, and Titaresus (or Eurotas). The Styx is 3455 I, 665 | And Titian brethren; and the priest 3456 IV, 665 | Or Tityos: 'twas in mercy to the gods~ ~ 3457 III, 661 | To-morrow's light would bring. His 3458 V, 619 | dangerous to brave the deep to-night.~ ~ 3459 VII, 557(20)| Crastinus, shall we win today?" "We shall win with glory, 3460 II, 23 | Adorned the togas of the chiefs of Rome;~ ~ 3461 I, 299 | doubted more; and Fortune toiled to make~ ~ 3462 I, 389 | these at least of long and toilsome war~ ~ 3463 VI, 693 | what spoils from Magnus' tombless corse~ ~ 3464 V, 734 | Scarce topped the watery height on either 3465 II, 328 | To gaze unawed upon a toppling world?~ ~ 3466 IV, 363 | With torments as of flame; the swollen 3467 IV, 327 | Torpor upon the limbs, the blood 3468 VII, 675 | Corvini, Lepidi, Torquati too,~ ~ 3469 X, 145 | Shells of the tortoise gleamed, from Indian seas,~ ~ 3470 VII, 938 | should it please thy soul to torture more~ ~ 3471 IX, 877 | Fled from his eyelids. Tortured by the fire~ ~ 3472 IV, 702 | Began to totter. Breast to breast they strive~ ~ 3473 II, 558 | And ere it totters rush upon the bridge."~ ~ 3474 III, 577(28)| islands off the coast near Toulon, now called the Isles d' 3475 III, 490 | Cleaving a mighty oak that towered to heaven,~ ~ 3476 I, 276 | And Caesar towering o'er the throng was seen,~ ~ 3477 II, 215 | Saw all her townsmen hurried to their deaths~ ~ 3478 IX, 1121 | He traced in vain; then, rumour for 3479 X, 135 | With richest tracery, the beams were bound~ ~ 3480 VIII, 923 | Traces the sacred name: HERE MAGNUS 3481 VI, 414 | Thamyris 14 vanquished: Trachis; Melibe~ ~ 3482 I, 363(13)| The harbours and places of trade were placed under his control 3483 II, 370(14)| charged him with making a traffic of his marriage; but Plutarch 3484 VI, 356 | Oh tragic destiny! Nor Munda's fight~ ~ 3485 III, 766 | Well trained was he to dive beneath the 3486 V, 416 | Lie, traitors, prone on earth, stretch 3487 VII, 871 | And trample chiefs in dashing on their 3488 VII, 899 | Deep in the trances of the night his sire~ ~ 3489 Bib | 1965)~ ~Gardner, Jane F. (Trans.): "Caesar: The Civil War" ( 3490 VI, 520 | 520 Of fiction e'er transcended; all their art~ ~ 3491 IX, 969 | lance by which thou didst transfix~ ~ 3492 III, 218 | His transformation 12, join the host; and those~ ~ 3493 Bib | English translation.~ ~ OTHER TRANSLATIONS --~ ~Braund, Susan H.: " 3494 IV, 304 | By this dread path Death trapped his captive prey.~ ~ 3495 VIII, 64 | Shaded; the dust of travel on his garb.~ ~ 3496 VIII, 961 | Of passing traveller or Roman guest~ ~ 3497 V, 507 | on the surface, and the travelling wheel~ ~ 3498 VII, 694(24)| disgraced with cruelty and treachery, on the field of Pharsalia" ( 3499 III, 178 | Gave up the treasure which for centuries~ ~ 3500 VIII, 141 | The treasures of our temples and the gold,~ ~ 3501 III, 148 | Not from our treasury reward for guilt~ ~ 3502 IV, 249 | That Caesar deign to treat his slaves alike,~ ~ 3503 VIII, 975(24)| for Iris departure they treated him as a mortal and not 3504 IX, 1214 | Seal we this treaty. Take the Pharian realm~ ~ 3505 II, 53 | On Cannae's uplands or by Trebia's stream~ ~ 3506 V, 178 | No burst of words with tremor in their tones,~ ~ 3507 IX, 228(6) | from historical truth" (Trevelyan's "Life and Letters", vol. 3508 I, 493 | its source. Thou, too, oh Treves,~ ~ 3509 X, 352(19)| possible that there was another tribe of this name dwelling in 3510 I, 368(14)| Consul, had surrounded the tribunal with soldiers, who at one 3511 IV, 932(27)| about the period of his tribuneship (B.C. 50-49), become a supporter 3512 II, 474 | By tributary waters not his own.~ ~ 3513 III, 184 | up by saving sires; the tribute sent~ ~ 3514 IV, 339 | To water trickled on the gravel bed,~ ~ 3515 IX, 1150 | 1150 Scarce trickling through the arid plain he 3516 IV, 121 | And thou, trident-god who rul'st the sea~ ~ 3517 IX, 415 | And called herself Tritonis. Lethe's flood~ ~ 3518 VII, 270 | 270 None grace in future a triumphal car;~ ~ 3519 II, 145(7) | was the grandfather of the triumvir.~ ~ 3520 V, 733 | Thence sinking to the middle trough, their mast~ ~ 3521 VII, 321 | that will start to hear our trump,~ ~ 3522 VIII, 910 | which thy fame by rumour trumpet-tongued~ ~ 3523 IX, 409(10)| He was Neptune's son and trumpeter. That Pallas sprang armed 3524 VIII, 444 | poisoned blades is placed; but trustest thou~ ~ 3525 VII, 71 | For Tullius, of all the sons of Rome~ ~ 3526 IX, 946 | More dreadful sights. On Tullus great in heart,~ ~ 3527 IX, 934 | One tumour huge concealed. A ghastly 3528 I, 210 | 210 Great tumults pondering and the coming 3529 VII, 151 | With beats tumultuous throbs against his breast;~ ~ 3530 V, 365 | Upon a turfy mound unmoved he stood~ ~ 3531 V, 728 | with heaven.~ ~ ~ ~ In such turmoil~ ~ 3532 V, 856(35)| Reading "Teque tuus decepit amor", as preferred 3533 VIII, 336 | the war-horse, stronger twangs the bow;~ ~ 3534 II, 616(27)| had, at the early age of twenty-five, demanded and obtained his 3535 VII, 16(4) | and Africa, at the age of twenty-four. Sulla at first objected, 3536 III, 336 | Two-horned Ammon, rears his temple, 3537 X, 316 | judge such difference, 'twould seem that since~ ~ 3538 V, 114 | Or as Typheus on Campania's shore~ ~ 3539 X, 327(16)| s edition, that Maximus Tyrius informs us that the object 3540 IX, 866 | Tyrrhenian Aulus, bearer of a flag,~ ~ 3541 X, 495(21)| Reading "ibi fas ubi proxima merees", with Hosius.~ ~ 3542 IV, 351 | The swollen udder, and where milk was not,~ ~ 3543 I, 274(10)| it:~ ~ ...And swords With ugly teeth of black rust foully 3544 VII, 1022(30)| command of the seas, but was ultimately defeated by the fleet of 3545 II, 521 | For Libo fled Etruria; Umbria lost~ ~ 3546 II, 486 | Sabine turns the ploughshare; Umbrian kine~ ~ 3547 III, 346 | Phocaea's 24 manhood with un-Grecian faith~ ~ 3548 V, 193 | Into her unaccustomed breast the god,~ ~ 3549 IX, 500 | yields the seeker: pure and unalloyed~ ~ 3550 IX, 1243 | He, Caesar, who with mien unaltered spurned~ ~ 3551 VII, 425 | Unasked the risks of war. Our soldiers 3552 VII, 509 | Parthia boasts her triumphs unavenged:~ ~ 3553 II, 328 | To gaze unawed upon a toppling world?~ ~ 3554 II, 11 | And realms unbalanced, fix by stern decree'~ ~ 3555 I, 506(19)| transmigration rather with doubt and unbelief, as a possible form of future 3556 VI, 153 | Safe, unbetrayed by dust.~ ~ ~ ~ Up from 3557 VI, 185 | whom the foe would break. Unbought by blood~ ~ 3558 II, 171 | And anger reigned unbridled by the law.~ ~ 3559 III, 118 | Of Senators, uncalled, for none could call.~ ~ 3560 VIII, 870 | 870 "Neglected shade, uncared for, dear to none,~ ~ 3561 VI, 557 | Uncaused by Jupiter. From their flowing 3562 II, 644 | He calls an ocean? or unchallenged sought~ ~ 3563 V, 120 | 120 Of things unchangeable the song divine;~ ~ 3564 X, 70 | 70 Unchaste. For as the Spartan queen 3565 Note | and Seneca the Younger his uncle), and seems to have befriended 3566 IX, 516 | Unclothed their race, and living on 3567 VI, 581 | Uncoil their circles, and extended 3568 III, 442 | Eternal, deathless, for that uncompelled~ ~ 3569 IX, 118 | Urged by his sire's unconquerable will~ ~ 3570 IV, 606 | Plunge blades uncounted on the moment drawn.~ ~ 3571 VIII, 960 | 960 With characters uncouth, such as the glance~ ~ 3572 VI, 897 | Fierce glared his eyes uncovered, and the life~ ~ 3573 VI, 26 | Shall undermine her. Nature's hand has raised~ ~ 3574 X, 370(20)| passage of difficulty. I understand it to mean that at this 3575 V, 607 | Too little understood! what mansion wall,~ ~ 3576 V, 585(29)| mariner could be induced to undertake it. Lucan colours it with 3577 III, 530 | 530 In fragments undistinguished and in blood.~ ~ 3578 VIII, 728 | That waits on thine undoing. Whose strikes,~ ~ 3579 IV, 764 | Stretch forth unending 'neath the torrid zone,~ ~ 3580 IV, 753 | Unequal, challenged his barbarian 3581 VII, 1015 | All bare and unexplored thy soil should lie,~ ~ 3582 VIII, 451 | Thy lot is happy; death, unfeared by men,~ ~ 3583 X, 611 | Unfed by matter, glides the ball 3584 I, 76 | such deeds I purpose to unfold~ ~ 3585 IX, 1166 | Live unforgotten in the age to come.~ ~ ~ ~ 3586 II, 10 | 10 Matter unformed to his subduing hand,~ ~ 3587 VII, 917(27)| Caesar's character, and unfounded in fact. Pompeians perished 3588 V, 812 | But night unfriendly from the seamen snatched~ ~ 3589 V, 126 | Hath been unfruitful, or polluted air~ ~ 3590 I, 395 | Unfurl your standards; victory 3591 X, 165 | Thick daubed with unguents, nor with throne content~ ~ 3592 V, 202 | to the ground; her steps unguided turn~ ~ 3593 IX, 69 | Of that unhallowed rite, "Fortune, didst thou~ ~ 3594 II, 473 | Unhelped upon his journey through 3595 IV, 567 | And tempt us with a base unhonoured life.~ ~ 3596 I, 74 | And Nysa keep her Bacchus, uninvoked.~ ~ 3597 IX, 15 | The buried dead, in union with the spheres,~ ~ 3598 VI, 550 | 550 Or loving couch unites. All things on earth~ ~ 3599 VII, 135 | Thy prayers unjustly, Caesar, have prevailed:~ ~ 3600 V, 865 | with all its weight. If unkind heaven~ ~ 3601 III, 476 | Unkindled; and that snakes in frequent 3602 X, 68 | Caesar unknowing, entered: Egypt's shame;~ ~ 3603 VI, 627 | For things unlawful, lest they hear again~ ~ 3604 I, 147 | Had unlearned war; but thirsting for applause~ ~ 3605 IV, 448 | And sons unlettered Fortune leaves him free~ ~ 3606 | unlikely 3607 IX, 184 | Of that unmanly tyrant. Shall I spare~ ~ 3608 VII, 489 | Stand on the page unmarked? Alas, the fates!~ ~ 3609 IV, 59 | With snow unmelted, and the lower plains~ ~ 3610 VII, 1017 | Or palled by snows unmelting! But, ye gods,~ ~ 3611 VII, 532 | Unmeriting such chastisement, and leave~ ~ 3612 IX, 1061 | Casts from the nest. Thus of unmixed descent~ ~ 3613 VIII, 294 | Flies unmolested past Cilician shores;~ ~ 3614 III, 466 | Stagnant the air, unmoving, yet the leaves~ ~ 3615 VIII, 815 | Unmutilated, for his kinsman's eye~ ~ 3616 II, 481 | And Macra's swift unnavigable stream~ ~ 3617 VII, 380 | 380 Let no fond memories unnerve the arm, 15~ ~ 3618 VIII, 962 | Might pass unnoticed.~ ~ ~ ~ Thou Egyptian land~ ~ 3619 III, 133 | As yet unopened. 'Tis the love of gold~ ~ 3620 III, 414 | strength by sturdy forests unopposed,~ ~ 3621 IV, 846 | from the height in loose unordered lines~ ~ 3622 I, 32 | Rugged with brambles and unploughed for years,~ ~ 3623 V, 93 | And with unpractised darts the Python slew.~ ~ 3624 II, 187 | Of murders else unpublished. Not on gates~ ~ 3625 VIII, 964 | In civil warfare, not unreasoning sang~ ~ 3626 IX, 1103(30)| those given by Lucan are unreliable. The temple of Hammon is 3627 IV, 773 | And those whose coursers unrestrained by bit~ ~ 3628 V, 360 | through right and through unright,~ ~ 3629 V, 525 | Unrippled slept the surface of the 3630 II, 694 | Yet insecure the spot, unsafe in storm,~ ~ 3631 IX, 787 | The fatal face unscathed. Nor yet in sleep~ ~ 3632 VIII, 92 | While yet I breathe, unseemly. O'er my tomb~ ~ 3633 VIII, 712 | Unsheathed their swords; which when 3634 IX, 986 | Unshielded from the fates they laid 3635 II, 229 | Unshuddering sat the author of the whole,~ ~ 3636 II, 420 | 420 Were still unsoftened, and the hoary hair~ ~ 3637 II, 256 | wreak his vengeance with unsparing sword.~ ~ 3638 V, 914 | Remained unspoken. This the saddest day~ ~ 3639 IV, 204 | Upon their kisses; each, unstained by blood,~ ~ 3640 V, 638 | And trod the margin with unsteady gait.~ ~ 3641 II, 757 | The billows thus unstemmed, 'twas Caesar's will~ ~ 3642 I, 308(11)| who endeavoured, though unsuccessfully, to expel Curio from the 3643 II, 289 | That thou hast lived untainted? This were all~ ~ 3644 IX, 269 | Untamed Cilician, is thy course 3645 IX, 245 | Untarnished. Mid the peoples great his 3646 IX, 720 | 720 Untasted, "Vain," he cried, "your 3647 VII, 478 | Untenanted her dwellings and her fields:~ ~ 3648 II, 424 | His beard untended grew. 'Twas his alone~ ~ 3649 VII, 556 | Poised yet unthrown. Now may th' avenging gods~ ~ 3650 VIII, 345 | Untipped with poison: from the rancorous 3651 IV, 917 | There Curio lies; untombed his noble corpse,~ ~ 3652 IX, 347 | Untrammelled seek the air, nor slothful 3653 V, 560 | 560 Untried to which I call? To unknown 3654 X, 392 | In all our ancient lore "untrodden" named~ ~ 3655 IX, 594 | Sole in all Libya, th' untutored tribes~ ~ 3656 IV, 714 | thus he feared, though then unused to war,~ ~ 3657 I, 278 | And thoughts unuttered stirred within their souls.~ ~ 3658 I, 164 | Keen and unvanquished 9, where revenge or hope~ ~ 3659 X, 249 | Unvexed by storms abides a temperate 3660 IX, 1059 | With eves unwavering, for the use of heaven~ ~ 3661 I, 112 | Unwelcome to the rivals; and alone~ ~ 3662 VI, 191 | With throats unyielding. In the distant lines~ ~ 3663 V, 872 | now is left wherewith to upbraid~ ~ 3664 II, 370(14)| of filthy lucre is like upbraiding Hercules with cowardice." 3665 I, 612 | In huge upheaval Ocean raised his waves~ ~ 3666 II, 220 | 220 And Earth upheaved, have laid such numbers 3667 VIII, 767 | While friendly hands upheld her fainting form;~ ~ 3668 VI, 564 | Uphill; the summer heat no longer 3669 VIII, 609 | Shalt thou, king, uphold him? Shalt thou dare~ ~ 3670 VII, 632 | Upholding yet the fight. Not here 3671 IX, 803 | Uplifted on his wings and sought 3672 VI, 854 | And head uplifting, present saw the ghost.~ ~ 3673 VI, 216 | Above the swords upraised, till in mid throng~ ~ 3674 IX, 6 | Upreaching to the poles that bear on 3675 IX, 610 | 610 Hammon uprears a wood; a fount the cause~ ~ 3676 II, 451 | Upsoaring, with the seas on either 3677 VII, 998 | Cease to upturn the slaughtered hosts of 3678 VII, 668 | Urges the flagging ranks and stirs 3679 VI, 467(27)| should produce the thing most useful to man; whereupon Athena 3680 II, 823 | Which ushers in the day, was lost in 3681 | using 3682 I, 544(20)| without making the sacrifices usual before wars. ("Pomp." 61.)~ ~ 3683 VI, 424(18)| the river of that name is usually placed in the Argive territory.~ ~ 3684 II, 770 | 770 And land usurped the entrance to the main.~ ~ ~ ~ 3685 VI, 551 | at their bidding; night usurps the day;~ ~ 3686 I, 206 | Then covetous usury rose, and interest~ ~ 3687 VI, 358 | Encrimsoned Utica, nor Nilus' stream,~ ~ 3688 VI, 814 | She utters, scarce articulate: the 3689 II, 719 | And Pharnaces and all the vagrant tribes~ ~ 3690 I, 506(19)| line 933). But all was vague and uncertain, and he appears 3691 I, 504 | The fame of valorous deeds in battle done,~ ~ 3692 VI, 176 | How valourous deeds in civil war may be~ ~ 3693 IX, 282 | For us is vanished: in our failing years~ ~ 3694 I, 755 | No foe to vanquish -- Rome on either hand?~ ~ 3695 I, 459 | Nor pleasant Var, since then Italia's bound;~ ~ 3696 II, 404(15)| appears to be a better variation according to the manuscripts.~ ~ 3697 III, 332 | Nor e'er met nations varied thus in garb~ ~ 3698 V, 723 | darkness: and the heavenly vaults~ ~ 3699 IX, 821(23)| Of her sands Let Libya vaunt no more: if Jaculus, Pareas, 3700 VII, 325 | these cowards and their vaunted kings:~ ~ 3701 VII, 114 | shunned, not sought? We've ravished from our foe~ ~ 3702 I, 305 | With Curio hasten, who of venal tongue,~ ~ 3703 X, 136 | golden coverings; no scant veneer~ ~ 3704 III, 838(32)| the naval victory over the Veneti some seven years before; 3705 IV, 519 | Here, with Venetian settlers for its load,~ ~ 3706 IV, 149 | Venetians float; and on th' encircling 3707 VIII, 400 | 400 Shall venge Hesperia's wrongs ere Rome 3708 VII, 897 | Already heard the hiss of vengeful flames~ ~ 3709 VI, 641 | Venting her rage she tears, the 3710 III, 556 | The Greeks had hoped; now, venturing attack,~ ~ 3711 IX, 220 | render to the fields their verdant growth;~ ~ 3712 II, 302 | The lower air that verges on the earth~ ~ 3713 I, 146 | Now verging towards decay, in times 3714 V, 47(4) | Mommsen says, "they were veritably emigrants. This Roman Coblentz 3715 IX, 842 | In vernal frosts his slough; and thirsty 3716 I, 645 | desolate Luca, came, well versed in all~ ~ 3717 I, 38(3) | who describes these latter verses as Written with all the 3718 I, 656 | Follows the lesser crowd: the Vestals come~ ~ 3719 II, 478 | Rise there, and Liris with Vestinian wave~ ~ 3720 I, 393 | Shall to our veterans yield? Will Magnus say~ ~ 3721 IV, 9 | Asturians 2 swift, and Vettons lightly armed,~ ~ 3722 II, 404(15)| by Windham.) I have read "vetuit" in this passage, though " 3723 II, 315 | Vexes my spirit; and should Cato 3724 | Via 3725 II, 359 | vain the guardian: this vicarious life~ ~ 3726 IV, 782(22)| to have been stained with vice.~ ~ 3727 I, 144(7) | causa Diis placuit, sed victa Catoni.'~ ~ 3728 IV, 197(10)| miseries of a civil war. "Victi victoresque in lacrumas 3729 IV, 197(10)| miseries of a civil war. "Victi victoresque in lacrumas effusi, sortem 3730 I, 144(7) | disastrous to himself, `Victrix causa Diis placuit, sed 3731 VII, 13 | his theatre; the benches vied~ ~ 3732 IX, 790 | 790 In vigilant watch, some reaching forth 3733 I, 164(9) | read or heard of a man more vigorous in action or more moderate 3734 II, 628 | Still vigorously flings the dart afield.~ ~ 3735 III, 136 | But for this dross, the vilest cause of all,~ ~ 3736 V, 709(31)| surrounding stream. ("Prom. Vinc.", lines 291, 308.)~ ~ 3737 IX, 777(21)| of Io (Conf. "Prometheus vinctus", 579.) Hermes was born 3738 VIII, 371 | Then must kind Fortune vindicate my lot~ ~ 3739 IX, 512 | the furrow nor matures the vine.~ ~ 3740 VI, 179(8) | The vinewood staff was the badge of the 3741 VI, 775 | Dread vipers hissed, beneath her streaming 3742 IX, 677 | In virtuous deeds; in all that thou 3743 IX, 935 | puffed from inwards as the virulent juice~ ~ 3744 VI, 931 | Bear visages of sorrow. Sire and son~ ~ 3745 VII, 901 | In long array were visioned to the eyes~ ~ 3746 V, 216(16)| Referring to the visit of Aeneas to the Sibyl. ( 3747 II, 404(15)| in this passage, though "vitat" appears to be a better 3748 IV, 197(10)| how the troops of Otho and Vitellius wept over each other after 3749 VII, 169(6) | The volcanic district of Campania, scene 3750 II, 751 | Were swallowed by the vortex of the sea;~ ~ 3751 I, 451 | upon the beetling crags of Vosges~ ~ 3752 III, 125 | wish; and for themselves to vote~ ~ 3753 I, 143 | Each for his cause can vouch a judge supreme;~ ~ 3754 V, 118 | forth the god; no whispered vow,~ ~ 3755 I, 440 | 440 And vowed to follow wheresoe'er he 3756 V, 876 | share the ignoble lot of vulgar lives:~ ~ 3757 IX, 222 | Of Vultur, and the pasture of the 3758 VII, 515 | When Romulus, aided by the vulture's flight,~ ~ 3759 II, 476 | Deep-flowing Rutuba, Vulturnus swift,~ ~ 3760 V, 634 | To wade among the shallows, borne 3761 VI, 819 | And more -- the waft of waters on the rock,~ ~ 3762 III, 506 | They seize the country wagons; and the hind,~ ~ 3763 IX, 993 | In frequent wail, "the arms from which we 3764 VIII, 687 | Stood silent, anxious, waiting for the end:~ ~ 3765 V, 923 | All that next night she waked;~ ~ 3766 I, 126(5) | Percy and the Prince of Wales." -- "1 Henry IV", Act v., 3767 I, 626 | strange voices; spirits walked the earth:~ ~ 3768 II, 651 | Twice filled her orb and waned, compelled to flight~ ~ 3769 VI, 832 | Hold silent converse; warder of the gate~ ~ 3770 IV, 583 | Warmed his brave comrades' hearts; 3771 VI, 333 | Warned of Circeian tempest, furls 3772 VI, 228 | novel combat, for there warred~ ~ 3773 VI, 790 | 790 Still fervent, washing from his wounds the gore.~ ~ 3774 VIII, 195 | The well-skilled watcher of the silent skies:~ ~ 3775 VII, 608 | The foremost ranks might waver. These at his word,~ ~ 3776 IX, 345 | Desert their waxen cells, forget the hive~ ~ 3777 VII, 575 | And wayward Fortune upon whom she wills~ ~ 3778 VII, 78 | He lent persuasion to the weaker cause.~ ~ 3779 II, 274 | And make my weakness strength. While Caesar some,~ ~ 3780 III, 736 | The soldier weaponless; yet their rage found arms:~ ~ 3781 I, 488 | Cotta's blood, and those who wear~ ~ 3782 VII, 664 | As fell the wearer, and of sword on sword~ ~ 3783 IV, 725 | He flung his wearying limbs upon the sand~ ~ 3784 VIII, 110 | strike thee. Wherefore did I wed~ ~ 3785 V, 817 | Of wedge-like figures 34 first ascend 3786 VII, 580 | Pompeius' ranks, shield wedged to shield,~ ~ 3787 V, 468 | all untilled, to sluggish weeds a prey~ ~ 3788 VIII, 862 | Weeps not beside him at his obsequies,~ ~ 3789 IV, 806 | Who weighs the cause? With whom the 3790 X, 502 | With Magnus welcomed, the Lagean house?~ ~ 3791 IX, 473 | The brave man welcomes, and the patient breast~ ~ 3792 IX, 139 | Resigned to death and welcoming the storm.~ ~ ~ ~ 3793 VI, 477 | To weld them, shapeless; here in 3794 I, 409 | The well-earned crown for Roman life preserved,~ ~ 3795 I, 527 | Then empty rumour to well-grounded fear~ ~ 3796 VIII, 195 | The well-skilled watcher of the silent skies:~ ~ 3797 VII, 701 | The dark blood welling forth and death at hand,~ ~ 3798 X, 331 | their feet. Sesostris 17 westward far~ ~ 3799 I, 374 | from rage; e'en so this whelp~ ~ 3800 | Whereby 3801 | whereupon 3802 V, 872 | Nought, Magnus, now is left wherewith to upbraid~ ~ 3803 VII, 167 | fit the bridle rein and whet the spur.~ ~ 3804 II, 681 | Whets on opposing trunks his growing 3805 V, 205 | angry Phoebus; nor with whip alone~ ~ 3806 VI, 866 | wretched soul before your whips~ ~ 3807 IV, 518 | In that famed whirlpool on Sicilian shores.~ ~ ~ ~ 3808 IV, 869 | As by some Thracian whirlwind stirred; and veiled~ ~ 3809 VII, 181 | And thirsty whirlwinds mixed with meteor bolts~ ~ 3810 IX, 1285 | Lest men should whisper that I did not damn~ ~ 3811 V, 402 | One whit more firm to me if, neither 3812 VIII, 743 | May do such work? But whosoe'er thou art~ ~ 3813 IV, 639 | More widely blazed. Yet meaner men, 3814 I, 193 | once narrow bounds, and widening tracts~ ~ 3815 V, 924 | Then first what means a widowed couch she knew,~ ~ 3816 VIII, 439 | The sword which, wielded by a stalwart arm,~ ~ 3817 IV, 775 | Which wields the guiding switch: the 3818 V, 585(29)| Lucan colours it with his wildest and most exaggerated hyperbole.~ ~ 3819 IV, 228 | They wile the sleepless hours in talk 3820 II, 173 | Just as he wished or willed. The fatal steel~ ~ 3821 IV, 146 | Of hoary willow bark they build, which bent~ ~ 3822 VII, 575 | wayward Fortune upon whom she wills~ ~ 3823 II, 404(15)| volume i., p. 88, Edition by Windham.) I have read "vetuit" in 3824 VIII, 284 | Escaped the windings of Telmessus' bay;~ ~ 3825 III, 250 | Ninus great of yore; from windy plains~ ~ 3826 IX, 218 | with his obsequies. Thus at winter-tide~ ~ 3827 I, 405 | Their wishes urging them; the thoughts 3828 VII, 311 | Gainst all the world. Wishful myself for life~ ~ 3829 VI, 578 | Furnish the witches' arts. Tigers athirst~ ~ 3830 IV, 53 | Forced to withdrawal, gained the day in vain.~ ~ ~ ~ 3831 VI, 643 | Upon the withered hand: she gnaws the noose~ ~ 3832 IX, 961 | Of direst growth Sabaean wizards brew.~ ~ ~ ~ 3833 V, 861 | A woeful world to misery and arms.~ ~ 3834 VI, 657 | panting entrail. Pregnant wombs~ ~ 3835 II, 362(13)| So Cicero: "Our Cnaeus is wonderfully anxious for such a royalty 3836 VI, 15 | hidden path between the wooded fields~ ~ 3837 V, 125(11)| the Athenians that their wooden walls would keep them safe; 3838 VI, 396 | middle course, Othrys with woody top~ ~ 3839 IX, 871 | In silence working as consuming fire~ ~ 3840 V, 189 | Of this world-war, this tumult of mankind,~ ~ 3841 I, 430 | 430 By all thy world-wide triumphs, though with hand~ ~ 3842 X, 218 | Their mysteries, who worthier than I~ ~ 3843 IX, 707 | His country's father, worthiest of thy vows;~ ~ 3844 VIII, 11 | His life not worthless; mindful of the fates:~ ~ 3845 I, 400 | 400 This would-be ruler of subservient Rome~ ~ 3846 IX, 519 | shoals: and with the world by wrecks~ ~ 3847 III, 769 | firmly bite the sands, to wrench it free.~ ~ 3848 II, 787 | To greet the anchor wrenched from stubborn sand;~ ~ 3849 VI, 647 | Wrenches the iron, and from the unbending 3850 IV, 687 | As one who wrestles at Olympia's feast,~ ~ 3851 VII, 223(11)| John's College, Cambridge. (Wright, "Celt, Roman, and Saxon", 3852 I, 772(28)| is common among the Roman writers. (See the note to Merivale, 3853 VII, 975(29)| Wrongly supposed by Lucan to feed 3854 IX, 1151 | Nor knew 'twas Xanthus: deep in grass he placed,~ ~ 3855 II, 522(20)| inhabitants. (Merivale, chapter xiv.) Auximon in a similar way 3856 III, 346(24)| History of Greece", chapter xxii.~ ~ 3857 VI, 467(27)| event in Thessaly. ("Iliad", xxiii., 247.)~ ~ 3858 I, 772(28)| note to Merivale, chapter xxvi.)~ ~ 3859 III, 279(18)| publicly. (Merivale, chapter xxxiv.)~ ~ 3860 III, 218(12)| As a serpent. XXXXX is the Greek word for serpent.~ ~ 3861 I, 713 | Shall Earth yawn open and engulph the towns?~ ~ 3862 III, 723 | Wide yawned his chest; blood issued 3863 VI, 48 | of Caesar strides: wide yawns the moat,~ ~ 3864 II, 345 | Yea! let the cruel gods exact 3865 VII, 975 | the armies. Cranes 29 who yearly change~ ~ 3866 VII, 573 | wound: others, in secret, yearn~ ~ 3867 V, 375 | an unconquered chief, and yearns for flight.~ ~ 3868 | Yes 3869 VII, 887 | Where yesternight his brother or his sire.~ ~ 3870 II, 464(18)| Phaethon's sisters, who yoked the horses of the Sun to 3871 Bib | Tyrant" (DaCapo Press, New York, 1965)~ ~Gardner, Jane F. ( 3872 IX, 203 | While praising, calmed the youthful chieftain's rage.~ ~ ~ ~ 3873 IV, 746(20)| Referring to the battle of Zama.~ ~ 3874 III, 279(18)| Augustus in B.C. 19, when Zarmanochanus, an Indian sage, declaring


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