Book,  Par.

 1     I,      7|      the tribune) knew this, fearing that the charge would be
 2    II,     27| added nothing about himself, fearing jealousy, or thinking that
 3    II,     88|     of guilty complicity and fearing accusation, had slain Vonones.~ ~
 4   III,      4|     tears in public, or else fearing that, if all eyes scrutinised
 5   III,     11|      accused did not refuse, fearing, as he did, the bias of
 6    IV,     93|   once a soldier in our pay, fearing betrayal, had perished by
 7    VI,      5|      nights of riot, and not fearing in his indolence even the
 8    VI,     10|     multiplicity of them, or fearing that what they had themselves
 9    XI,     38|     concealed all else. Then fearing that they would be themselves
10    XI,     48|   his passion returning, and fearing, in the event of delay,
11   XII,     34|    of fighting. They however fearing to be hemmed in on one side
12   XII,     52|    attachment of his people, fearing too his own declining years,
13   XII,     78|     was thoroughly dismayed. Fearing the worst, and defying the
14  XIII,     57|     about to go, and she was fearing nothing, he stabbed her
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