Book,  Par.

 1     I,     13|          prince. The ocean and remote rivers were the boundaries of the
 2     I,     55|          envoys imprisoned, camps and rivers stained with blood, while
 3     I,     73|               heavy rains and swollen rivers. But so suddenly did he
 4     I,     80|               the country between the rivers Amisia and Luppia was ravaged,
 5     I,    104|         inundations of the Tiber, the rivers and lakes which swell its
 6     I,    104|       interests in having assigned to rivers their mouths, their channels,
 7     I,    104|             groves, and altars to the rivers of their country. Tiber
 8    II,      8|            territory begins, into two rivers, retaining its name and
 9    II,     28|              the hilly lands and deep rivers of Germany came with a huge
10    II,     52| representations of the mountains, the rivers and battles; and the war,
11    II,     82|         beyond the Danube between the rivers Marus and Cusus, under a
12    IV,     73|             war, and of their copious rivers, of their climate, and the
13    VI,     54|              fluctuating character of rivers exhibited omens which vanished
14    VI,     55|            the waters of those famous rivers, the Euphrates and Tigris,
15   XII,     19|              and difficult positions, rivers and cities, alike yielded
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