Book,  Par.

 1     I,     61|        imperial dignity, which inspired the greatest awe at a distance.
 2    II,     95|        humanity to enemies. He inspired reverence alike by look
 3    II,    111|       and decreed, as men were inspired by affection for him or
 4    IV,     78|      like talk, was not indeed inspired with any guilty ambition,
 5    XI,     22|                  The fear thus inspired variously affected his own
 6    XI,     37|     good nature of the emperor inspired confident hope that if they
 7  XIII,     49|   occupants, capitulated. This inspired them with confidence to
 8   XIV,     82|        nature and a promptness inspired by previous atrocities,
 9    XV,      5|     attack from the enemy, had inspired their comrades with rage
10    XV,     45|      limbs, either from terror inspired by the deity or because,
11    XV,     60| planned it, or whose prompting inspired a scheme into which so many
12    XV,     62|      the chance arise. He thus inspired the hope that he could be
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