Book, Par.
1 I, 26| meditated polluting with the blood of their Emperor; it was
2 I, 36| world, but is stained with blood and foul with crime, or,
3 I, 46| Forum yet streamed with blood, when he was borne in a
4 I, 57| imbued his hands in the blood of Capito. Consequently
5 I, 82| imbrue their hands in the blood of centurions and tribunes,
6 II, 3 | It is forbidden to pour blood on the altar; the place
7 II, 55| had been stained with the blood of the dying man. In the
8 III, 8 | that should cost neither blood nor tears, and other objects
9 III, 32| the baths to wash off the blood; and when he found fault
10 III, 35| The soil poisoned with blood forbade the enemy to remain
11 III, 51| them to reward this act of blood, the necessities of the
12 III, 75| moderate temper, sparing of the blood of his countrymen. One thing
13 III, 83| In one spot were pools of blood and heaps of corpses, and
14 III, 84| both hearth and altar with blood; and they clung to these
15 IV, 1 | and temples reeked with blood, for men were massacred
16 IV, 1 | could be gratified only by blood, soon passed into the greed
17 IV, 15| with our spoils and our blood, then they are changed,
18 IV, 18| left in Italy? It is by the blood of the provinces that the
19 IV, 33| reward do you expect for the blood which you have shed so often?
20 IV, 43| steeped your soul in noble blood, when, though you had snatched
21 IV, 50| already stained with the blood of the legate. He then severely
22 IV, 57| faithless, stained too with the blood of their generals. Still
23 IV, 68| Germans, our kinsmen by blood. With respect to our fortifications,
24 IV, 75| spoils of our armies and the blood of our generals. Let the
25 V, 7 | or iron. It shrinks from blood or any cloth stained by
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