Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   8|     his writings, that those cruel floods and those conflagrations
 2   I,  11| added to animals monsters so cruel.
 3   I,  40|    have experienced the most cruel forums of death, as Aquilius,
 4   I,  40|     and tortured in the most cruel kind of death? No innocent
 5   I,  41|   gods men slain by the most cruel tortures; or if there is
 6  II,  14|  into which certain fiercely cruel beings shall cast them,
 7  II,  46|      agonies some unseen and cruel power, adverse to men, should
 8  II,  61|      know the Supreme God, a cruel death awaits you when freed
 9 III,  23|    in their summer pastures, cruel, infectious, and destructive
10 III,  25|    them dispositions fierce, cruel, savage, ever rejoicing
11  IV,   3|    wild beast restrained its cruel teeth, that she both began
12  IV,  33| unseemly wailings accuse the cruel fates; you are astonished
13   V,  29|  punishments, and by fear of cruel torture? Are these the gods
14   V,  38|  battle of Cannae become the cruel proscription of Sulla? A
15  VI,   2|      none, should not find a cruel pleasure in the ills of
16  VI,  26|      to lessen the number of cruel deeds, and to quell them
17 VII,   9|      man? Is not this, then, cruel, monstrous, and savage?
18 VII,  16|  they are fond of what is so cruel, and take delight in foul
19 VII,  40|     by the soothsayers, that cruel and very sad mischances
20 VII,  43|    to obey, than to try more cruel methods, and vent his rage
21 VII,  43|  himself to be seized by the cruel pestilence. Would it not
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