Book,  Par.

 1     I,     16|     either from fear or out of jealousy. ~ ~
 2     I,     23|      from their purpose by the jealousy with which every one sought
 3     I,     54|  nothing moved them so much as jealousy towards the Treveri. They
 4    II,     27| nothing about himself, fearing jealousy, or thinking that the conciousness
 5    II,     33|       was hurried away through jealousy from the glory he had already
 6    II,     57|    that Augusta, with feminine jealousy, had suggested to Plancina
 7    IV,      4|        to avert his mistress's jealousy, divorced his wife Apicata,
 8    VI,     66|    some from fear, some out of jealousy of Abdageses, who then ruled
 9   XII,      1|        were fired with no less jealousy. Each insisted on her rank,
10   XII,      2|         she would be free from jealousy, and would take the place
11   XII,     74|       from motives of feminine jealousy. Lepida indeed as the daughter
12  XIII,      7|   friends by putting aside all jealousy and selecting some eminent
13   XIV,     54|      made a bargain, or in the jealousy of a love in which he could
14    XV,     96|      perfectly innocent out of jealousy or fear. However, that a
15   XVI,     19|      his approval of it. Hence jealousy on the part of Tigellinus,
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