Book,  Par.

 1     I,     51|       rights of ambassadors, on the dreadful and undeserved peril of
 2     I,     58|        stamped with the horror of a dreadful remedy no less than with
 3    II,     12|            resources of Caesar, the dreadful punishment in store for
 4    II,     37|         which marks were affixed of dreadful or mysterious significance.
 5    IV,     15|             rumour too always has a dreadful side in regard to the deaths
 6    IV,     80|             had at least under such dreadful circumstances the advantage
 7    IV,     94|            there hung over them the dreadful doom of that ill-starred
 8     V,      4|         that day passed without any dreadful result.~ ~
 9    VI,      9|  prosecution. And this was the most dreadful feature of the age, that
10   XII,     60|           love and familiarity with dreadful deeds, he unsheathed his
11  XIII,     19|          longer seem a premature or dreadful event, though it happened
12  XIII,     21|          put the charge in the most dreadful form. ~ ~
13   XIV,     15|            ever before his eyes the dreadful sight of that sea with its
14   XIV,     41|           heaven, and pouring forth dreadful imprecations, scared our
15   XIV,     77| father-in-law, representing that no dreadful peril hung over him, and
16    XV,     48|            worse, however, and more dreadful than any which have ever
17    XV,     67|            she even held over him a dreadful thought, that many had been
18   XVI,     12|     proceedings in the Senate and a dreadful sentence were hanging over
19   XVI,     34|           before the Senate have no dreadful result. ~ ~
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