Book,  Par.

 1     I,     21|       gathered round him all the worst spirits.~ ~
 2     I,     50|   Calpurnius, saved him from the worst violence, the blood of an
 3     I,     64|     objects of fury, some of the worst mutineers too had seized
 4     I,     97|         the accuser selected the worst features of the emperor'
 5     I,    105|      danger to himself, from the worst, disgrace to the State.
 6    II,     93|       plots, I have ended by the worst of deaths the most miserable
 7   III,     19|          it might be, and in the worst event, to be his companion
 8    XI,     47|          throng submitted to the worst degradation. ~ ~
 9   XII,     64|        he had, as a rival in the worst wickedness, Ventidius Cumanus,
10   XII,     69|          prompted to exhibit the worst cruelty by the artifices
11   XII,     78| thoroughly dismayed. Fearing the worst, and defying the immediate
12  XIII,     19|     murder, Nero had offered the worst insult to the boyhood of
13   XIV,     11|         bustle and tokens of the worst catastrophe. As the girl
14    XV,     46|        thought what happened the worst alternative. ~ ~
15    XV,     75| fortified his spirit against the worst, till a troop of soldiers
16    XV,     82|          ever ready to think the worst, there were persons who
17   XVI,     22|        had a heart eager for the worst wickedness, and he also
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License