Book,  Par.

 1    II,     35|          often invited him to his table, showing no unfriendliness
 2    II,     38|        overturned the lamp on the table at his side, and in the
 3   III,     77|            and that luxury of the table which from the close of
 4    IV,     72|         avoid her father-in-law's table. Knowing not how to dissemble,
 5    IV,     72|        fruit as it was set on the table and passed it with his own
 6    VI,      6| misrepresented and the freedom of table talk might not be construed
 7    VI,     13|        excluded from the prince's table. He then tried the knife
 8    VI,     77|           renewed, and sat at the table longer than usual, by way,
 9    XI,      2|           him, why he sat down to table without his wife, and was
10  XIII,     18|           of their kinsfolk, at a table of their own, furnished
11  XIII,     59|           rose from the emperor's table, was he heard repeatedly
12   XIV,      4|      administered at the imperial table, the result could not be
13   XIV,      6|           received, and seated at table above the emperor. Nero
14   XIV,     30|           the Simbruine lake, the table with the banquet was struck
15    XV,     69|           his will. Certainly his table had always been profusely
16    XV,     90|          those who had sat at his table, and it was only at a late
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