Book, Verse
1 1, 327 | Troy was ruin’d in that cruel war?~
2 1, 483 | long from her conceal’d the cruel deed.~
3 1, 489 | The cruel altars and his fate he tells,~
4 1, 564 | Unkind and cruel! to deceive your son~
5 1, 659 | And wakeful Diomede, whose cruel sword~
6 1, 763 | And drive us to the cruel seas again?~
7 1, 790 | dismiss your fears; my cruel fate,~
8 2, 468 | Come, finish what our cruel fates ordain.~
9 2, 848 | About the roots the cruel ax resounds;~
10 2, 1028| Instead of her, the cruel Greeks I met;~
11 3, 860 | T is all I ask, this cruel race to shun;~
12 4, 653 | wretched queen, pursued by cruel fate,~
13 4, 888 | And when, at length, the cruel war shall cease,~
14 4, 952 | Clogg’d in the wound the cruel weapon stands;~
15 5, 812 | wretched we, reserv’d by cruel fate,~
16 6, 491 | The cruel nation, covetous of prey,~
17 6, 687 | But cruel fate, and my more cruel
18 6, 687 | cruel fate, and my more cruel wife,~
19 6, 788 | Salmoneus, suff’ring cruel pains, I found,~
20 6, 809 | Her crooked beak and cruel talons tried;~
21 7, 473 | Of envy, discord, and of cruel deeds:~
22 7, 506 | would, in vain, reverse your cruel doom;~
23 8, 492 | While cruel fate conspir’d with Grecian
24 8, 924 | Her cruel fate, nor saw the snakes
25 9, 271 | This thy request is cruel and unjust.~
26 9, 568 | That cruel sight the lover could not
27 9, 641 | could’st thou leave me, cruel, thus alone?~
28 10, 1236| murther’d Lausus, on his cruel foe;~
29 12, 732 | jarring nations join’d in cruel fight,~
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