Book, Verse
1 1, 457 | But tell a stranger, long in tempests
2 1, 573 | Or force to tell the causes of their way.~
3 2, 10 | Nor stern Ulysses tell without a tear.~
4 2, 15 | restrain my tears, and briefly tell~
5 2, 94 | And freely tell us what he was, and whence:~
6 2, 201 | But truly tell, was it for force or guile,~
7 2, 488 | What tongue can tell the slaughter of that night?~
8 2, 1002| I lost Creusa: hard to tell~
9 3, 54 | Scarce dare I tell the sequel: from the womb~
10 3, 239 | And tell the pleasing news. In little
11 3, 439 | O tell me how his mother’s loss
12 3, 488 | s angry pow’r forbids to tell.~
13 3, 552 | And if prophetic Phoebus tell me true,~
14 3, 799 | I bade him boldly tell his fortune past,~
15 4, 273 | To tell of prodigies and cause affright.~
16 4, 615 | Tell him, I did not with the
17 5, 925 | To tell events, and what the fates
18 5, 1030| the causes of her hatred tell;~
19 6, 528 | And tell thy name, and bus’ness in
20 6, 717 | Or tell what other chance conducts
21 7, 270 | Tell me, ye Trojans, for that
22 7, 362 | Tell him he should not send the
23 7, 365 | Besides this answer, tell my royal guest,~
24 7, 614 | You tell me, mother, what I knew
25 7, 618 | made you dote, and vainly tell~
26 7, 634 | time has made to dote, and tell~
27 8, 112 | Wondrous to tell!—She lay along the ground:~
28 8, 461 | what god, they could not tell—~
29 9, 90 | Tell: for the fact, thro’ length
30 9, 145 | And, strange to tell, like dolphins, in the main~
31 9, 703 | remember, and alone can tell.~
32 9, 1002| Tell him a new Achilles sent
33 10, 52 | What should I tell of tempests on the main,~
34 10, 687 | The lifeless body, tell him, I bestow,~
35 10, 1179| fellow ghosts with glory tell:~
36 11, 177 | This is the way (so tell him) to possess~
37 11, 272 | Tell him, that, if I bear my
38 11, 383 | And tell th’ important cause for
39 12, 725 | What god can tell, what numbers can display,~
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