Book, Verse
1 1, 465 | gentle youth, in Libyan lands you are—~
2 1, 646 | disasters fill ev’n foreign lands:~
3 3, Arg | adventures, till at length he lands on Sicily, where his father
4 3, 6 | To seek in foreign lands a happier seat.~
5 3, 213 | Thro’ seas and lands as we thy steps attend,~
6 3, 247 | And Latian lands; but who could then have
7 3, 531 | And where the lands retir’d, the rushing ocean
8 3, 690 | Ye gods, presiding over lands and seas,~
9 4, 311 | A narrow space of Libyan lands to plow;~
10 4, 379 | wings, and stoop’d on Libyan lands:~
11 4, 450 | To lands unknown, and foreign coasts
12 4, 497 | invites me to the Latian lands.~
13 4, 879 | wretch should find the Latian lands,~
14 5, 68 | Grecian seas, or hostile lands:~
15 5, 816 | from shores to shores, from lands to lands,~
16 5, 816 | to shores, from lands to lands,~
17 6, 430 | hasty flight to happier lands;~
18 6, 938 | What length of lands, what oceans have you pass’
19 6, 1054| now they lie obscure, and lands without a name.~
20 6, 1093| Nor Hercules more lands or labors knew,~
21 7, 105 | parts on earth; his army lands;~
22 7, 202 | warlike Latins hold the happy lands.~
23 7, 323 | Oft our alliance other lands desir’d,~
24 7, 750 | His lands a hundred yoke of oxen till’
25 7, 962 | Fescennian or Flavinian lands.~
26 7, 1086| who plow the rich Rutulian lands;~
27 7, 1092| Ufens glides along the lowly lands,~
28 10, 12 | peace, and gave the Latian lands?~
29 10, 45 | The Latian lands my progeny receive,~
30 10, 211 | Pactolus floats the fruitful lands,~
31 10, 392 | sons, your houses, and your lands,~
32 10, 972 | At length she lands him on his native shores,~
33 12, 284 | Join’d in their laws, their lands, and their abodes;~
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