Book,  Par.

1     I,     14|  himself of both their armies, wrested the consulate from a reluctant
2     I,     25|   clearly showed that they had wrested by compulsion what they
3    II,     59| legions, of spoils and weapons wrested from the Romans, and still
4   III,     98|       said, "ought not to have wrested from it the power of deciding
5    IV,     26|      But Augustus's bounty was wrested from him, and the claims
6    IV,     59|      of poets, but it had been wrested from, they said, by the
7    XV,      1|      and its borders are being wrested from us, and unless the
8    XV,     32|  petitioning for what they had wrested from us, and Nero consulted
9   XVI,      1|        crazed imagination, who wrested a vision seen in the slumber
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