Book,  Par.

1    II,     12|     enemies; the other, of the claims of fatherland, of ancestral
2    IV,     26|      wrested from him, and the claims of the imperial exchequer
3    IV,     53| discern alike human and divine claims; to the first, that, when
4   XII,      1|    fortune, and pointed to her claims to such a marriage. But
5  XIII,     25|      lacked confidence, or her claims on him by way of reproach,
6  XIII,     27|      he was reviving forgotten claims of the exchequer, were burnt. ~ ~
7  XIII,     66|      should be published; that claims which had been dropped should
8    XV,     31|        his former and frequent claims to the holding of Armenia,
9    XV,     45|     Rome had the most powerful claims and must be obeyed in their
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