Liber,  Caput

 1    I,       V|          habet, quibus in varios campos erumpit. Illic facillime
 2    I,      VI|        fistulisque ad ulteriores campos deductus, qui commodissimo
 3    I,     XII|   tulisset curiosos, in proximos campos sui oris securus fugere
 4    I,    XVII|      mirati quod iste per invios campos ageret equum nitereturque
 5    I,      XX|         pacis deae, pinguibusque campos~ ~Exornas oleis; & ipsa
 6   II,    XXII|       visceribus hoc tormento in campos mittuntur. Adhuc fuligine
 7   II,    XXII|         circumlati, obruant alte campos, & deprehensas segetes enecent
 8  III,       I|        erat per patentes facilis campos & ad ipsa hostium ducebat
 9  III,   XXIII| amoenitas (nam referebat Elysios campos) Minoëm, Aeacum, Rhadamanthum
10  III,   XXIII|    Neptunus se abdidit, Pluto in campos retro non pervios facibus
11   IV,      IV| multiplicatis cohortibus impleat campos, par illis numquam erit
12   IV,    VIII|      nobiles amnes, pinguissimos campos intersecant, pars est Galliarum
13   IV,      XX|   disciplinam. Hi avios petivêre campos, si princeps errasset, compellatum
14   IV,      XX|      fossas aut munitos saepibus campos ad suum vallum contendit.
15    V,       I|      nostrosque subit quo limite campos?"~ ~Substitit incertus primum;
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA2) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License