Book,  Par.

1    II,     36| jaded with fear and mental anguish, or, as some have related,
2    II,     38| and seen; when Libo, whose anguish drove him from the very
3    II,     54|  before the Senate. In his anguish and in the weariness of
4    VI,      7| from having to confess the anguish of his heart and his self-inflicted
5    XV,     78|  But he spared himself the anguish of a word or of a look,
6    XV,     81|   knees. Worn out by cruel anguish, afraid too that his sufferings
7   XVI,     41|   brought with it grievous anguish, turning his eyes on Demetrius~ ~[
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