bold = Main text
   Book,  Verse      grey = Comment text

 1     II,   127(4) |    crime enough that they had lives: to~ ~ strike but only those
 2     II,   715    |                     Of Magnus lives, where, through thy father'
 3     IV,   250    |     like yours, your leaders' lives? 12~ ~
 4     IV,   250(12)|   that you should beg for the lives of your leaders?" Mr. Haskins
 5     IV,   313    |       Scorning their own base lives and hating light,~ ~
 6     IV,   920    |                           920 Lives by its own imperishable
 7     IV,   931    |                  Lords of our lives. But who had power like
 8      V,    20    |                      20 Still lives your fathers' vigour, look
 9      V,   394    |                          Your lives and deaths. The fortunes
10      V,   427    |                         Their lives and swords alike, beyond
11      V,   782    |     Caesar? Were these humble lives~ ~
12      V,   876    |     the ignoble lot of vulgar lives:~ ~
13      V,   915    |                  Of all their lives: for other woes that came~ ~
14    VII,   851    |     bade halt, and gave their lives to those~ ~
15   VIII,   564    | Virtue's the bane of rule; he lives in dread~ ~
16   VIII,   764    |                  Ah! still he lives, nor is it mine as yet~ ~
17     IX,    10    |     10 Who by their blameless lives and fire of soul~ ~
18     IX,   322    |                           Now lives one tyrant only of the three;~ ~
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