Book, Verse
1 1, 92 | safe within, oppress’d with mountain loads;~
2 1, 120 | and hurl’d against the mountain side~
3 1, 255 | AEneas climbs the mountain’s airy brow,~
4 1, 429 | Tall trees surround the mountain’s shady sides;~
5 1, 856 | While trees the mountain tops with shades supply,~
6 2, 846 | Rent like a mountain ash, which dar’d the winds,~
7 3, 515 | And on the mountain’s brow Petilia stands,~
8 3, 697 | d, as a landmark, on the mountain’s height.~
9 3, 862 | had he said, when on the mountain’s brow~
10 4, 218 | The cry pursues the mountain goats: they bound~
11 4, 236 | seek the homely cots, or mountain’s hollow side.~
12 4, 640 | This way and that the mountain oak they bend,~
13 4, 709 | Pale ghosts ascend, and mountain ashes fall.~
14 6, 918 | said, he led them up the mountain’s brow,~
15 7, 934 | cloud-born Centaurs, from the mountain’s height~
16 7, 1027| And led the mountain troops that Nursia sent.~
17 8, 297 | broke the heavy links, the mountain clos’d,~
18 8, 308 | gibbous from behind the mountain’s back;~
19 9, 917 | firs that on their mother mountain rise,~
20 10, 193 | large, it half deserv’d a mountain’s name:~
21 10, 1087| Or like a mountain ash, whose roots are spread,~
22 11, 206 | Oak, mountain ash, and poplar spread the
23 11, 795 | High o’er the vale a steepy mountain stands,~
24 11, 987 | Thy spear, of mountain ash, Eumenius first,~
25 12, 138 | golden metal those, and mountain brass.~
26 12, 173 | The morn ensuing, from the mountain’s height,~
27 12, 991 | when a fragment, from a mountain torn~
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