Book,  Par.

 1     I,     15|     sought glory for himself by a contrast of extreme wickedness."
 2     I,     64|                   The scene was a contrast to all civil wars which
 3     I,    101|      gloomy temper, and a fear of contrast with the gracious presence
 4    II,      3|    provoked their disdain, by his contrast with their ancestral manners,
 5   III,     43|         and consulships. He was a contrast to the manners of antiquity
 6   III,     57|       freedom, if only they would contrast their own vigour with the
 7    IV,     45|          opposites by too close a contrast. But I return to my work.~ ~
 8    VI,     50|        renown of the Arsacids, in contrast to the despicable Iberian
 9   XII,     17|           to the power of Rome in contrast with the rebel Mithridates.
10   XIV,     26| refinement of his life, which the contrast of his character to that
11    XV,     19|           as to shame them by the contrast. His men, in their grief
12    XV,     86|          his defence on his moral contrast to the others, implying
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