bold = Main text
   Book,  Verse      grey = Comment text

 1      I,    38    |     fates could find no other way 3~ ~
 2      I,   404    |     the listening crowd, this way and that~ ~
 3     II,     9    |    When first the flames gave way and yielding left~ ~
 4     II,   134    |        From neck unknown. One way of life remained,~ ~
 5     II,   522(20)|    xiv.) Auximon in a similar way rose against Varus.~ ~
 6     II,   662(31)|     and where the shadow both way falls, "Meroe, Nilotick
 7     II,   761    |                    Prepared a way across the rapid strait~ ~
 8    III,    80    |                      80 Gives way to northern and permits
 9    III,   552    |       The roof at length gave way; and worn with toil~ ~
10    III,   611    |       The tide contends, this way the waves are driven~ ~
11     IV,   127    |                  Shaken, make way for floods. Let Rhine o'
12     IV,   171    | coming battle find for them a way~ ~
13     IV,   815    |   till their camp opposed his way.~ ~
14      V,   661    |                               Way be too distant."~ ~ ~ But
15     VI,   237    |                     Pompeius' way to freedom. Now he trusts~ ~
16     VI,   487    |    barred the constellations' way.~ ~ ~ ~
17     VI,   672    |    middle course, he took his way~ ~
18    VII,   679(23)|   battle escaped and made his way to Larissa, whence he wrote
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