Book,  Par.

 1     I,     39|      there still lingered the dread of the divine wrath; nor
 2    II,      1|  friendship, not so much from dread of us as from distrust of
 3    II,     52|     Still, there was a latent dread when they remembered how
 4    II,    100|       guilt, and you need not dread feeble suspicions or vague
 5    VI,     42|     deaths eagerly sought was dread of the executioner, and
 6    VI,     45|      of their king Artabanus. Dread of Germanicus had made that
 7    VI,     56|     recent crimes. Under this dread, Fulcinius Trio, unwilling
 8   XIV,     42|      by these insults and the dread of worse, reduced as they
 9   XIV,     55| domestics, who, even with the dread of punishment before them,
10    XV,     26|     more steadily. For as the dread of a charge of extortion
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