Book,  Par.

 1   III,      2|    but wearing all a studied expression of grief. When Agrippina
 2   III,     83|  though studiously modest in expression, were taken to be extremely
 3   III,     98|   drift rather than its mere expression, and persisted in his veto.
 4    IV,     16|    than in heart, put on the expression and accents of sorrow, while
 5    IV,     52|      of myself was linked an expression of reverence towards the
 6    VI,      2|     Togonius, guarded in its expression, and he urged nothing beyond
 7   XII,     20|       Adapting his dress and expression of countenance as much as
 8  XIII,      4|    sometimes forcible in the expression of his thoughts, or else
 9  XIII,     22|    but who now wore a gloomy expression. He went through the whole
10    XV,     30| followed, as rumour says, an expression from the emperor, in which
11   XVI,     39|    inferred from his earnest expression of face and from words heard
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