Book,  Par.

 1     I,     85|      on the other hand, were familiar with fighting in fens; they
 2    II,     67|      round him a roving band familiar with robbery, for plunder
 3   III,     80|    partner in trials already familiar to him. ~ ~
 4    IV,     94| indeed hurrying crowds are a familiar sight, from the extent of
 5   XII,     11|     them a better sovereign, familiar with Roman habits." ~ ~
 6  XIII,     53|  exile. "The man," he said, "familiar as he was only with profitless
 7  XIII,     60|    cut off from Nero's usual familiar intercourse, and then even
 8    XV,     52|    the jewels and gold, long familiar objects, quite vulgarised
 9    XV,     77|  kept up their friendship by familiar intercourse; that Seneca'
10   XVI,     33|   countenance, and eye, that familiar grief to which a thick succession
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