Book, Verse
1 1, 283 | An hour will come, with pleasure
2 1, 1023| nations this auspicious hour!~
3 2, 323 | and curs’d th’ unhappy hour;~
4 2, 437 | fatal day, th’ appointed hour, is come,~
5 2, 878 | Since ev’ry hour and moment I expire,~
6 4, 245 | From this ill-omen’d hour in time arose~
7 5, 811 | destroy’d, in Troy’s unhappy hour!~
8 5, 833 | calls you now; the precious hour employ:~
9 5, 1100| Now steal an hour of sweet repose; and I~
10 6, 770 | To his last hour of unrepenting death.~
11 6, 1075| mighty Caesar waits his vital hour,~
12 7, 25 | d the moon and planetary hour,)~
13 7, 182 | Enjoy the present hour; adjourn the future thought.”~
14 7, 714 | Who watch’d an hour to work her impious will,~
15 8, 549 | concern’d, nor at a later hour,~
16 8, 630 | d Mezentius, in a fatal hour,~
17 9, 13 | Now snatch an hour that favors thy designs;~
18 9, 167 | Their promis’d hour is pass’d, and mine remains.~
19 9, 318 | Expect each hour to see him safe again,~
20 9, 644 | In an ill-boding hour to slaughter sent!~
21 10, 696 | In an ill hour insulting Turnus tore~
22 10, 821 | Thy fatal hour is come, and this the field.”~
23 11, 31 | I, at Heav’n’s appointed hour, may find~
24 12, 1169| giv’n thee, and a lawful hour~
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