Book,  Par.

 1     I,     93|     having a dry shore, or the waves coming in gently. After
 2     I,     93|     Men were swept away by the waves or sucked under by eddies;
 3     I,     93|       the adverse force of the waves. There was nothing to distinguish
 4    II,      7|       that they might bear the waves more easily; some flat-bottomed,
 5    II,     18|     exposing limbs battered by waves and storms to a foe full
 6    II,     28|      mass of clouds, while the waves rolled hither and thither
 7    II,     28| through their sides, while the waves too dashed over them. ~ ~
 8    II,     32|     losses which the winds and waves had inflicted, and which,
 9   III,     75|      at the mercy of uncertain waves and storms. And unless masters,
10    VI,     48|       in winter rolls back the waves, and when the sea is driven
11   XIV,      5|     committed by the winds and waves? The emperor would add the
12    XV,     57|       spite of the fury of the waves, started from Formiae, and
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