Book,  Par.

 1     I,     93|         or drowned. The voice of mutual encouragement availed not
 2    II,    103|          for battle, and then in mutual fear confined themselves
 3    IV,      5| difficult as it is for power and mutual harmony to exist side by
 4    IV,     67|         others of destruction by mutual blows. Some there were who
 5    IV,     93|        betrayal, had perished by mutual slaughter. ~ ~
 6     V,     14| continued their enmity and their mutual menaces till they retired
 7   XII,     66|   released from the necessity of mutual slaughter. ~ ~
 8  XIII,     21|          while there were secret mutual dislikes, because Sextius
 9  XIII,     72|          And so they parted with mutual exasperation. The Ampsivarii
10   XIV,     37|         state by their unity and mutual attachment, but strangers
11   XIV,     41|      their general's appeals and mutual encouragements not to quail
12    XV,     19|      tears. There was scarce any mutual salutation for weeping.
13    XV,     35|       alliance with Rome than by mutual injuries. I know how much
14    XV,     77|          Seneca's reply was that mutual conversations and frequent
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