Book,  Par.

 1     I,     69|    source of joy and also of anxiety to Tiberius. He rejoiced
 2     I,    105|     of aversion to any fresh anxiety, he retained what he had
 3    II,     71| aware, but his most pressing anxiety was to be first in reaching
 4   III,     61|    good men were saddened by anxiety for the country, but many
 5    IV,     37|    money. Cornutus, weary of anxiety and feeling that peril was
 6   XII,     77|   Under this great burden of anxiety, he had an attack of illness,
 7  XIII,     17| execution for prolonging his anxiety while they were thinking
 8   XIV,     77|   emperor, if harassed by no anxiety, would be more merciful.
 9    XV,     46|   feared, always their chief anxiety, scarcity of corn, should
10   XVI,      4|    the judges with pretended anxiety. And then the city-populace,
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