Book,  Par.

 1    II,     62|  blazed out amid the ruin. The calamity fell most fatally on the
 2    IV,     80|      was near Rome. And so the calamity was all the more fatal.
 3    IV,     81| banished. At the moment of the calamity the nobles threw open houses
 4    IV,     86|       of the human heart under calamity, burst into tears, which
 5    VI,     69|  Aventine quarter itself. This calamity the emperor turned to his
 6   XII,      6|        people feared, issue in calamity to the State. These scruples
 7   XII,     51|    were regarded as a token of calamity. Nor were there merely whispered
 8  XIII,     73|  grievously from an unexpected calamity. Fires suddenly bursting
 9   XIV,     78|        farce than as an actual calamity.~ ~
10    XV,     38|       now," they thought, "the calamity is reversed; Tiridates is
11    XV,     48|      were involved in the same calamity. At last, doubting what
12   XVI,      9|     enduring a most undeserved calamity, he was suddenly seized
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