Book,  Par.

 1     I,      6|      was hard-hearted enough to destroy any of his kinsfolk, nor
 2    IV,     31|     that his wife had chosen to destroy herself. Without a moment'
 3    IV,     37| equivalent to ruin, hastened to destroy himself. But the accused
 4    IV,     40|  informers, a class invented to destroy the commonwealth, and never
 5    IV,     48|      even the conqueror did not destroy, so too is not some portion
 6    IV,     84|      was now himself seeking to destroy his own noble race, his
 7    VI,      7|      all the gods and goddesses destroy me more miserably than I
 8    VI,     43|         was no less powerful to destroy, the enmity of Macro, who
 9    XI,     22|     Chauci to submission and to destroy Gannascus by stratagem.
10  XIII,     22|  bewilderment and impatience to destroy his mother, could not be
11  XIII,     29|       was a reproach, forced to destroy himself. Nero was for the
12  XIII,     48|        possessions, prepared to destroy their fortresses, himself
13   XIV,      4|     might dwell, he resolved to destroy her, merely deliberating
14   XIV,     42|      too no difficult matter to destroy the colony, undefended as
15   XVI,     25|         the empire; should they destroy it, they will attack freedom
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