bold = Main text
   Book,  Verse     grey = Comment text

 1      I,   270   |    strife: roused from their sleep the men~ ~
 2    III,     9   |          Sank in the arms of sleep. But Julia's shape,~ ~
 3     IV,   446   | trumpet call shall break his sleep again:~ ~
 4      V,   581   |                          And sleep, blest guardian of the poor
 5      V,   589   |                    At such a sleep. Pacing the winding beach,~ ~
 6      V,   791   |     slumber! Shame upon such sleep!~ ~
 7      V,   840   |              840 When drowsy sleep had fled, Cornelia sought~ ~
 8     VI,   910   |      reach, and thy Lethaean sleep~ ~
 9    VII,     2(1)|        Had all the weight of sleep and death hung at it!"~ ~ ~
10    VII,    10   |               10 In troubled sleep an empty dream conceived.~ ~
11    VII,    28   |   gave. Break not his latest sleep,~ ~
12    VII,    33   |      poor man's happiness of sleep regain?~ ~
13    VII,   916   |                 Broke on his sleep.~ ~ ~ ~ Yet when the golden
14     IX,   426   |                              Sleep never fell, was coiled around
15     IX,   513   |                              Sleep binds all nature and the
16     IX,   692   |                 Spare in his sleep, the last to sip the spring~ ~
17     IX,   787   |   face unscathed. Nor yet in sleep~ ~
18     IX,   956   |                           In sleep was victim, for around his
19      X,   428   |                          And sleep in luxury, for the Queen
20      X,   615   |                           To sleep its season; swifter than
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