Book,  Par.

 1     I,     77|         friends and foes with an eye to your advantage, not from
 2    II,     11|           and for having lost an eye by a wound, a few years
 3    II,     17|       frames are terrible to the eye and formidable in a brief
 4    II,     21|       them, caught the general's eye. "Go," he exclaimed, "follow
 5    II,     25|     positions, with what met the eye, and what was hidden, and
 6   III,     29|       though pierced through the eye, he resolutely faced the
 7    IV,     86| conspired to attack him, with an eye to the consulship, to which
 8   XII,     69|        gardens she cast a greedy eye. Priscus had served under
 9   XIV,     73|       and of Germany. "I have no eye," he said, "like Burrus,
10   XVI,     33|          voice, countenance, and eye, that familiar grief to
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