Book,  Par.

 1     I,     26|         with blows. Their chief rage was against Aufidienus Rufus,
 2     I,     27|  resentment and pity, alarm and rage. They all rushed to the
 3     I,     33|        a conflict, with special rage against Cneius Lentulus,
 4     I,     42|         them. Indeed, the blind rage of so many had robbed him
 5    II,     24|         caused keener grief and rage among the Germans than their
 6    II,     59| deserved to be driven out, with rage as furious as that with
 7    II,     86|     hesitating between fear and rage, preferred to be charged
 8    II,     88|         s custody, in pretended rage, pierced him with his sword.
 9    IV,     71|           Agrippina in stubborn rage, with the grasp of disease
10    XI,     10|        alone refusing his rule. Rage against the place, which
11   XII,     46|         were the Silures, whose rage was fired by words rumoured
12  XIII,     20|       bribery. But his mother's rage no lavish bounty could allay.
13   XIV,     61|         while between shame and rage, he at last wrote to them
14    XV,      5|    inspired their comrades with rage rather than fear. But the
15    XV,     37|  Against the name of Corbulo no rage, nothing of the hatred of
16    XV,     78|      advisers in his moments of rage, he asked whether Seneca
17    XV,     85|        discovery, some in their rage becoming informers to betray
18   XVI,      6|       from a casual outburst of rage in her husband, who felled
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