Book,  Par.

 1    II,     20|   quite ready and prepared to form in line of battle according
 2    II,     29|    soldiers, finding there no form of human life, perished
 3    II,     73|       had been reduced to the form of a province, received
 4    IV,     21|       formerly, the primitive form of marriage having been
 5    IV,     81|      a general resemblance of form and age, had baffled their
 6    VI,     64|  chosen for wealth or wisdom, form a kind of senate, and the
 7    XI,     17|   Latin letters have the same form as the oldest Greek characters.
 8   XII,      6| celebrate the nuptials in due form, for there was no precedent
 9  XIII,     21|   charge in the most dreadful form. ~ ~
10   XIV,     37|      of every grade, so as to form a state by their unity and
11   XIV,     79|       was dismissed under the form of an ordinary divorce,
12   XVI,      1|  quantity of gold, not in the form of coin, but in the shapeless
13   XVI,     33|     same moment the venerable form of Thrasea rose before their
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