Book,  Par.

 1     I,     72|     nation, continued to be at feud, his resentment being heightened
 2   III,     59|     the same state, who was at feud with Florus and therefore
 3    IV,     25|   under colour of a hereditary feud, humoured the malignity
 4     V,     14|        the year a long growing feud between the consuls broke
 5    VI,     73|   interposed his veto. Hence a feud between Vitellius and Otho,
 6   XII,     34|        they are perpetually at feud, sent envoys and hostages
 7   XII,     52| Rhadamistus pretended to be at feud with his father as though
 8   XII,     64|       peoples had long been at feud, and now less than ever
 9  XIII,     10|      for him. Then there was a feud between the two generals;
10  XIII,     45|       keenly than ever his old feud with the Armenians. Then,
11    XV,      3|      would himself abandon his feud with the Hyrcanians, and
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