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Alphabetical    [«  »]
pouring 5
pours 10
poverty 3
pow 118
power 1
powerful 1
powers 1
Frequency    [«  »]
119 sight
118 hands
118 one
118 pow
117 foes
117 night
116 aeneas
Virgil
Aeneid

IntraText - Concordances

pow

    Book, Verse
1 1, 59 | Nor can my powr divert their happy course.~ 2 1, 74 | What nations now to Juno’s powr will pray,~ 3 1, 80 | With powr imperial curbs the struggling 4 1, 98 | The powr of tempests and of winds 5 1, 199 | His powr to hollow caverns is confin’ 6 1, 317 | How could my pious son thy powr incense?~ 7 1, 382 | length aton’d, her friendly powr shall join,~ 8 1, 579 | thousand bleeding hearts her powr invoke.~ 9 1, 803 | and join your friendly powrs~ 10 1, 870 | goddess-born; what angry powrs~ 11 1, 937 | my strength, whose mighty powr alone~ 12 1, 1022| rites, thy sacred name and powr;~ 13 2, 101 | Thoplungd by Fortune’s powr in misery,~ 14 2, 102 | T is not in Fortune’s powr to make me lie.~ 15 2, 207 | Inviolable powrs, adord with dread!~ 16 2, 239 | Her injurd powr, and better omens brought.~ 17 2, 332 | had embarkd their naval powrs~ 18 2, 470 | And heavn’s protecting powrs are deaf to prayrs.~ 19 2, 542 | When heavn’s propitious powrs refuse their aid!~ 20 2, 561 | Grecians rally, and their powrs unite,~ 21 2, 1058| wandring ways for you the powrs decree;~ 22 3, 30 | And all the powrs that rising labors aid;~ 23 3, 76 | Who, when he saw the powr of Troy decline,~ 24 3, 210 | Those powrs are we, companions of 25 3, 488 | And Juno’s angry powr forbids to tell.~ 26 3, 648 | obnoxious to the Grecian powrs.~ 27 3, 689 | ring, thus implord the powrs divine:~ 28 3, 786 | Now, by the powrs above, and what we share~ 29 4, 66 | Implore the favor of the powrs above,~ 30 4, 79 | Preferring Juno’s powr, for Juno ties~ 31 4, 302 | Thy temples, and adore thy powr divine~ 32 4, 355 | The mark of sovreign powr, his magic wand;~ 33 4, 410 | offended lover and the powrful queen?~ 34 4, 422 | suffer what the sovreign powr decrees:~ 35 4, 547 | Of heavnly powrs were touchd with human 36 4, 738 | And thrice invokes the powrs below the ground.~ 37 4, 755 | And evry powr, if any rules above,~ 38 4, 813 | swiftly hence, while thou hast powr to fly.~ 39 4, 829 | O sacred powr, what pow’r soeer thou 40 4, 829 | O sacred pow’r, what powr soeer thou art,~ 41 4, 876 | All powrs invokd with Dido’s dying 42 4, 978 | I to raise the pile, the powrs invoke,~ 43 5, 304 | And succor from the watry powrs demands:~ 44 5, 810 | we, whom not the Grecian powr,~ 45 5, 1041| my son to your protecting powr.~ 46 5, 1079| The marshal’d powrs in equal troops divide~ 47 5, 1112| pilot, vanquishd by the powr divine,~ 48 6, 81 | this delay?” she cried—”the powrs invoke!~ 49 6, 88 | Indulgent god, propitious powr to Troy,~ 50 6, 98 | Here cease, ye powrs, and let your vengeance 51 6, 119 | Write not, but, what the powrs ordain, relate.”~ 52 6, 158 | The Fates, without my powr, shall be without my care.~ 53 6, 176 | Yours is the powr; nor Proserpine in vain~ 54 6, 275 | O may thy powr, propitious still to me,~ 55 6, 353 | A powrful name in hell and upper 56 6, 467 | the prince: “What envious powr, O friend,~ 57 6, 473 | Is this thunerring powr?” The ghost replied;~ 58 6, 568 | Which, mixd with powrful drugs, she cast before~ 59 6, 621 | And all the powrs that rule the realms 60 6, 711 | Avenging powrs! with justice if I pray,~ 61 6, 1076| and grasps his promisd powr.~ 62 6, 1082| Afric and India shall his powr obey;~ 63 7, 24 | their fate, whom Circe’s powr,~ 64 7, 132 | From powrs above, and from the fiends 65 7, 234 | d the marks of sovreign powr;~ 66 7, 262 | Then, mixing powrful herbs, with magic art,~ 67 7, 354 | The powrs,” said he, “the pow’rs 68 7, 354 | The pow’rs,” said he, “the powrs we both invoke,~ 69 7, 430 | If native powr prevail not, shall I doubt~ 70 7, 433 | Hell shall the powr of Heavn and Jove supply.~ 71 7, 610 | Let him, in arms, the powr of Turnus prove,~ 72 7, 726 | The powrs of Troy, then issuing 73 7, 761 | Speak, and my powr shall add this office 74 7, 815 | when he found that Juno’s powr prevaild,~ 75 7, 871 | their arms: th’ Atinian powrs,~ 76 7, 981 | And all th’ Eretian powrs; besides a band~ 77 8, 1 | Turnus had assembled all his powrs,~ 78 8, 80 | To Juno’s powr thy just devotion pay;~ 79 8, 96 | Tiber’s flood, and thus the powrs bespoke:~ 80 8, 195 | will they stretch their powr athwart the land,~ 81 8, 417 | first the seat of sylvan powrs,~ 82 8, 425 | Saturn came, who fled the powr of Jove,~ 83 8, 442 | By fortune’s powr, and fate’s resistless 84 8, 492 | fate conspird with Grecian powrs,~ 85 8, 503 | O still propitious powr, that rules my heart!~ 86 8, 521 | Then thus the powr, obnoxious to her charms,~ 87 8, 550 | downy couch the forging powr.~ 88 8, 631 | the crown, with arbitrary powr.~ 89 8, 657 | and choice of all their powr,~ 90 8, 661 | This powrful people; seek a foreign 91 9, 19 | the grace of heavn, what powr divine~ 92 9, 28 | And loads the powrs above with offerd vows.~ 93 9, 88 | What powr, O Muses, could avert 94 9, 880 | is the way to heavn: the powrs divine~ 95 10, 26 | O powr immense, eternal energy,~ 96 10, 51 | The powr of Jove, or fix another 97 10, 524 | Nor powrs above, nor destinies 98 10, 868 | From your almighty powr your pleasing wife~ 99 10, 879 | Since in my powr and goodness you confide,~ 100 10, 895 | And you (for you have powr) prolong his years!”~ 101 11, 76 | farther debt, but to the powrs below.~ 102 11, 366 | Supreme in powr, and reverencd for his 103 11, 427 | Presumd against immortal powrs to move,~ 104 11, 504 | commissiond hence with ample powrs,~ 105 11, 566 | desire of fame, and thirst of powr,~ 106 11, 663 | chiefs and princes join their powrs:~ 107 11, 1154| Phoebus, the ruling powr among the gods,~ 108 11, 1159| Give me, propitious powr, to wash away~ 109 12, 208 | d the field, the Trojan powrs,~ 110 12, 273 | All powrs of ocean, all ethereal 111 12, 289 | His powr in peace, or his command 112 12, 295 | And all the powrs that all the three contain;~ 113 12, 301 | And all those powrs attest, and all their 114 12, 583 | Preferrd the powr of plants, and silent 115 12, 721 | Invokes the powrs of violated peace,~ 116 12, 796 | fell, whom not the Grecian powrs,~ 117 12, 926 | For to what powr can Turnus have recourse,~ 118 12, 1170| vengeance, wrath, and unresisted powr,~


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