Acknowledgments |
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xiii | |
Preserving the Metaphor: Translating Propertius |
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xv | |
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``Cynthia was the first. She caught me with her eyes'' |
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3 | (4) |
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``nude Love doesn't love artifice in beauty'' |
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7 | (4) |
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``although a pair commanded me, gripped with lust'' |
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11 | (4) |
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``Cynthia is tried by no curse more gravely / than when grace abandons her'' |
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15 | (4) |
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``she comes with a price'' |
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19 | (4) |
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``I wasn't born to praise or fighting'' |
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23 | (4) |
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``This is how my life's used up'' |
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27 | (2) |
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``Can your tender feet brave the frosts?'' |
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29 | (2) |
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``Rare Cynthia is mine!'' |
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31 | (2) |
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``I told you how love would be, and you laughed'' |
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33 | (4) |
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``not light is the medicine in my words'' |
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37 | (4) |
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``in the Bay of Naples no love is safe'' |
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41 | (4) |
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``Cynthia was the first, Cynthia will be the last'' |
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45 | (2) |
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``She will be punishment for the despised pain of all of them'' |
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47 | (4) |
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``I'll despise Alcinous' gifts'' |
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51 | (2) |
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``be whatever you want, just not alien'' |
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53 | (4) |
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``Once I was opened to great triumphs'' |
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57 | (4) |
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``God damn him! who first prepared ship and sail'' |
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61 | (4) |
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``let the rocks be full of your name'' |
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65 | (4) |
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``There, whatever I'll be, I'll always be called your image'' |
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69 | (2) |
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``You've been warned, Gallus: protect your love'' |
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71 | (4) |
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``Gallus . . . / tried to escape unknown hands---but was not able'' |
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75 | (2) |
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``What class I am and from where'' |
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77 | (4) |
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``The girl alone erects my genius'' |
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81 | (6) |
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``Love got the better of me'' |
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87 | (2) |
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``You are the first Roman girl to recline at Jove's table'' |
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89 | (6) |
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``Let him like boys, if he will be my friend'' |
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95 | (2) |
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``this verse, Cynthia, will be your pallor'' |
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97 | (4) |
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``A wife never, never will a friend lead me astray'' |
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101 | (4) |
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``conquered nations are worth nothing in love'' |
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105 | (2) |
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``Are you going to die then, Propertius, still so young?'' |
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107 | (4) |
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``My blood will be your greatest triumph'' |
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111 | (4) |
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``I . . . / would not shrink from death, as long as you too die'' |
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115 | (2) |
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``it's time to refresh Helicon with other choruses'' |
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117 | (4) |
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``Let others write about you, or you will be unknown'' |
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121 | (2) |
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``He was the first to see that lovers live without logic'' |
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123 | (2) |
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``may it please me to have recited in the arms of an educated girl'' |
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125 | (2) |
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``My procession will be grand enough if it contains my three chapbooks'' |
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127 | (4) |
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``one more night like that, and I'll be immortal'' |
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131 | (4) |
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``With such varied embrace we exchange positions!'' |
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135 | (6) |
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``Can just anyone purchase love with gifts?'' |
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141 | (6) |
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``Nothing on earth is harder than the life of the lover'' |
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147 | (2) |
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``If you've seen something, always deny you've seen it!'' |
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149 | (2) |
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``Aurora did not despise Tithonus' aging'' |
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151 | (2) |
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``Have you gone nuts? You imitate the painted Britons?'' |
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153 | (2) |
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``without me you'll experience only bleak fields'' |
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155 | (4) |
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``I desist not easily, nor rashly do I begin'' |
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159 | (4) |
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``that pretty boyfriend of yours has a wife!'' |
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163 | (2) |
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``Everywhere I go, I get lucky'' |
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165 | (4) |
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``If you're tough, say no: if not, come on!'' |
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169 | (2) |
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``To hell with them who keep their portals shut!'' |
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171 | (2) |
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``it should be no wonder to you I seek out cheap girls'' |
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173 | (2) |
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``the kind of cheap gifts that glitter on the Via Sacra'' |
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175 | (2) |
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``Just now you were praising me and reading my poems'' |
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177 | (4) |
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``that beauty will become, through my books, the most famous'' |
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181 | (4) |
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``I saw you in a dream, my love, in a shipwreck'' |
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185 | (2) |
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``I hope she never says, `Poet, get out of my bed'' |
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187 | (2) |
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``A single plank will be enough to hold two lovers'' |
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189 | (4) |
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``Our head again tossed into the tumult, we moan'' |
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193 | (2) |
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``A big mouth and beauty brought you to this'' |
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195 | (4) |
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``The twisted rhombuses and their magic incantation have failed'' |
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199 | (2) |
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``Neither beauty nor fortune is permanent'' |
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201 | (2) |
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``a band of little boys . . . suddenly appeared'' |
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203 | (2) |
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``from that moment on, I haven't had a happy night'' |
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205 | (2) |
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``even though you may sin, he is a forgiving god'' |
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207 | (2) |
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``Can it be wrong to live for one woman, contented?'' |
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209 | (2) |
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``Phoebus' golden / portico was opened by mighty Caesar'' |
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211 | (2) |
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213 | (6) |
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``Already the dreary ritual returns'' |
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219 | (2) |
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``Languid, you drink: midnight can't break you'' |
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221 | (2) |
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``Why would anyone entrust their mistress' beauty to Love?'' |
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223 | (10) |
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``Let the verse be finished with light pumice'' |
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233 | (4) |
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``These poems will be so many monuments to your beauty'' |
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237 | (2) |
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``I had put my little mouth to this gushing source'' |
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239 | (4) |
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``The god Caesar plans war against the luxurious Indians'' |
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243 | (2) |
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``Love is a god of Peace'' |
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245 | (4) |
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``Tell me what you really know about my girl'' |
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249 | (4) |
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``Money, you are the cause of life's problems!'' |
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253 | (6) |
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``It's not real passion that you don't turn to reproaches'' |
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259 | (4) |
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``Be happy, since no girl's as pretty'' |
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263 | (2) |
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``Huge sails don't fit my raft'' |
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265 | (6) |
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``May the day pass without clouds, may winds stand in the air'' |
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271 | (4) |
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``Why do you wonder if a woman perverts my life'' |
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275 | (6) |
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``may all you greedy bastards perish'' |
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281 | (4) |
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``You ask why a night with gluttonous girls costs so much'' |
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285 | (6) |
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``We marvel, Sparta, at the rules of your wrestling school'' |
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291 | (4) |
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``she knowingly moistened my raw spirit'' |
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295 | (4) |
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``Middle of the night, and a letter comes from my mistress'' |
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299 | (4) |
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``give me calm, father, and favorable sails'' |
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303 | (4) |
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``hateful Baiae . . . / what hostile god stands in your water?'' |
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307 | (4) |
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``Our lust is often tossed in my face by you'' |
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311 | (4) |
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``A stiff who could trade his girl for profit!'' |
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315 | (4) |
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``I am forced to make the Great Tour to learned Athens'' |
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319 | (4) |
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``Here, Anio, you flow through Tibur, Clitumnus near the Umbrian / path'' |
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323 | (4) |
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``It seems my clever tablets have disappeared'' |
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327 | (2) |
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``Your confidence in your beauty is unfounded, woman'' |
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329 | (2) |
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``I was a joke at dinner parties among the set tables'' |
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331 | (4) |
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``Rites and holy days I'll sing, and ancient names of places'' |
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335 | (14) |
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``learn the origins of the god Vertumnus'' |
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349 | (6) |
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``I cover the chapels with flowers, I fill the crossroads with vervain'' |
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355 | (6) |
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``a lofty dowry comes to you---Rome betrayed'' |
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361 | (8) |
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``Should she will it, loadstone will lose its power to attract iron'' |
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369 | (8) |
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``Muse, we will tell of the temple of Palatine Apollo'' |
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377 | (8) |
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``Spirits do exist. Death doesn't end it all'' |
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385 | (8) |
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``Learn what scandalized the well-watered Esquiline last night'' |
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393 | (8) |
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``The Amphitryonid had driven the oxen through / a tempest'' |
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401 | (6) |
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``Now I begin, revealing the stories of Jove Feretrius'' |
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407 | (4) |
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``I lived distinguished between the two torches'' |
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411 | (8) |
Notes |
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419 | (32) |
Index of First Lines |
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451 | (4) |
General Index |
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455 | |