Book,  Par.

1     I,    106|                           I can hardly venture on any positive
2    II,     57|  inflame his ambition. He would hardly be the inferior of Tiberius,
3    IV,     10| affliction. Most mourners could hardly bear even the soothing words
4    IV,     58| flattery of the whole assembly, hardly restored his composure.
5    VI,     74|  changed, Caius Caesar, who had hardly completed his boyhood, was
6   XIV,     80|       dared in peace what could hardly happen in war. "Those arms,"
7    XV,     15|  rashness. They, however, could hardly be dragged out of their
8    XV,     69|     such as rigid censors would hardly approve. As to the bandages
9    XV,     72|    strangers and those whom she hardly knew, when freeborn men,
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