Book,  Par.

1     I,     38|              their bodies were flung outside the entrenchments for all
2     I,     39|       mutineers. Some as they roamed outside the camp were cut down by
3     I,     42|            lifeless, they flung them outside the entrenchments or into
4     I,     44|            to the spot, and met them outside the camp, eyes fixed on
5    II,     40|       ancient custom, by the consuls outside the Esquiline Gate, after
6    VI,     71|             were to seek a successor outside of his house, he feared
7  XIII,     44|          them to have their quarters outside the lines. There they were
8  XIII,     51| interposition. While the whole space outside the town, up to its buildings,
9  XIII,     61|            his pleasures more freely outside the city. So Graptus, taking
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