bold = Main text
Caput grey = Comment text
1 II | greed of the trader, is led over all lands and all seas by
2 V | own master and towering over all others. For what can
3 VII | lay them aside and says over and over: "When will this
4 VII | aside and says over and over: "When will this year be
5 VII | When will this year be over!" That man gives games,18
6 X | instructed, not merely wept over. Life is divided into
7 X | For the last is the one over which Fortune has lost control,
8 XII | a solemn debate is held over each separate hair? while
9 XII | In very truth, they pass over more than they invent, and
10 XIII | the whole of their life over chess or ball or the practice
11 XIII | triumphed after his victory over the Carthaginians in Sicily,
12 XVI | amusement, they want to skip over the days that lie between.
13 XVII | the anxious thought comes over them: How long will these
14 XVII | feeling has led kings to weep over the power they possessed,
15 XVII | his pride, spread his army over the vast plains and could
16 XVII | undertaking; victorious over Hannibal, victorious over
17 XVII | over Hannibal, victorious over Antiochus, the glory of
18 XVIII(43)| Xerxes, who laid a bridge over the Hellespont. ~~
19 XX | delayed45 heir. I cannot pass over an instance which occurs
|