Book,  Par.

 1     I,     55|         from them, it would be a strange and unworthy thing should
 2    II,     21|        rear and the flanks. And, strange to relate, two columns of
 3    II,     96| treachery of their own people in strange lands. But Germanicus was
 4   III,     17|      dared such an attempt among strange servants, in the sight of
 5   III,     73|    jewels, diverts our wealth to strange or hostile nations? ~ ~
 6    VI,     21|         put down, still, through strange artifices, reappeared. On
 7    VI,     37|      Meanwhile Agrippina's ruin, strange to say, dragged Plancina
 8    VI,     44|   emperor be master of all else. Strange as this story was, it derived
 9    XI,     34|     adulteries, was rushing into strange excesses, when even Silius,
10    XI,     45| throughout, Claudius preserved a strange silence; Vitellius seemed
11  XIII,     43|       and the fosse were new and strange sights, men without helmets
12  XIII,     72|     entire youth were slain in a strange land, and all who could
13   XIV,      3|         because the thought of a strange passion seemed comparatively
14   XIV,     43|        destruction; ravings in a strange tongue, it was said, were
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