Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  16|       wound being received in war, why, when the enemy are
 2  II,  38|    the greatest experience in war, skilled in taking cities;
 3  II,  39|       hatred and enmity, make war upon each other, subdue
 4  II,  67|    When you are preparing for war, do you hang out a flag
 5  II,  67|   encountering the dangers of war, do you begin to hope also,
 6 III,  21|  concerned with the duties of war, that Vulcan, the lord of
 7 III,  26|      he claims the madness of war, why do wars rage every
 8 III,  28|   believe in gods of love and war, that there are gods to
 9  IV,  28|      he, in a way, made civil war upon his father, and deprived
10  IV,  33|   wounded, maltreated, making war upon each other with hot
11  IV,  37|     are exceedingly strong in war and in military power, you
12   V,  38|     different. Can the Trojan war be turned into the condemnation
13  VI,   2|      part in the slaughter of war and devastation of cities;
14 VII,  12| arrayed against each other in war, enriched the altars of
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