Book,  Par.

1     I,    100|   followed by a destruction of buildings and of life. Thereupon Asinius
2   III,     33|        very Pompey, the public buildings and statues of whom stood
3  XIII,     51|    outside the town, up to its buildings, was bright with sunlight,
4    XV,     47| adjacent grove and surrounding buildings resounded with song, and
5    XV,     49|  Campus Martius and the public buildings of Agrippa, and even his
6    XV,     50|      by the destruction of all buildings on a vast space, so that
7    XV,     53|   cargoes of this rubbish. The buildings themselves, to a certain
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