Book,  Par.

 1     I,     51| legion had brought itself, he dwelt with the eloquence of pity,
 2     I,     76|     her bosom, and eyes which dwelt on her hope of offspring.
 3     I,     90|   renown would be theirs." He dwelt on all that was dear to
 4    II,     78|    related how once there had dwelt in Thebes seven hundred
 5    IV,     73|    With little variation they dwelt on antiquity of race and
 6    VI,     18| corn-supplying provinces, and dwelt on the far larger amount
 7    VI,     39|     Lepidus also died. I have dwelt at sufficient length on
 8   XII,      2|                     Narcissus dwelt on the marriage of years
 9   XII,     71|     the people of Cos, and he dwelt much on their antiquity. "
10  XIII,      4|       panegyric, and while he dwelt on the antiquity of his
11  XIII,      5|      of the soldiery, he then dwelt on the counsels and examples
12   XIV,     54| slave-establishment which had dwelt under the same roof should
13    XV,     17|       to go. Thereupon Paetus dwelt on the memories of the Luculli
14    XV,     38|       policy. Tiridates first dwelt much on the nobility of
15    XV,     67|       his servile imagination dwelt on the rewards of perfidy,
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