Book,  Par.

 1     I,     72|     united hearts became with bitter foes incentives to fury.~ ~
 2    II,      4|        His son, Artaxias, our bitter foe because of his father'
 3    II,     13|       By degrees they fell to bitter words, and even the river
 4    II,     70|    and then reviled them in a bitter speech, with indirect reflections
 5    IV,     88|    them for having punished a bitter foe to the State, and the
 6     V,      2|  ridicule Tiberius with those bitter jests which the powerful
 7   XII,      9|      enemy to Claudius from a bitter sense of wrong.~ ~
 8   XII,     49|     this to her husband, with bitter complaint, as the beginning
 9  XIII,     21| Agrippina and Domitia were in bitter rivalry, Atimetus urged
10   XIV,     25|   against them, there arose a bitter feeling towards the judge,
11   XIV,     60|    eulogy of Caesar, and most bitter censure of Antistius, argued
12    XV,     89|    largely on facts, leaves a bitter memory behind it. There
13   XVI,     18|    still enjoyed life, though bitter foes to the prince. It was
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