Book,  Par.

 1     I,     45|     offered him a drawn sword, saying that it was sharper than
 2    II,     35|      he wished to know all his saying and doings, though it was
 3     V,     12| whither she was being dragged, saying that she would do so no
 4    XI,      3|      and dined cheerfully, and saying that he had better have
 5    XI,     25|       discredit of his origin, saying, "Curtius Rufus seems to
 6   XII,     57|       favour of a safe course, saying "that any crime in a foreign
 7   XII,     76|        the like, he was always saying, and he would embrace Britannicus,
 8    XV,     45|        his purpose, repeatedly saying that all his plans were
 9    XV,     84|   persons of integrity. Even a saying of Flavus was popularly
10    XV,     87|      too shallow and confined, saying to the soldiers around him, "
11    XV,     87| vaunted his brutality to Nero, saying that he had slain him with
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