Book,  Par.

 1     I,      4|     sickly frame, and the end was near and new prospects opened,
 2     I,     44|    ordered the throng which stood near him, as it seemed a promiscuous
 3     I,     81|     everywhere or piled in heaps. Near, lay fragments of weapons
 4    II,     15|          the decisive crisis drew near, that he ought thoroughly
 5    II,     28|         frozen north which was so near to them, and instantly caught
 6    II,     45|      rejection was solaced by the near prospect of office. What
 7    II,     51|           was consecrated an arch near the temple of Saturn to
 8    II,     64|         Liber, Libera, and Ceres, near the Great Circus, which
 9    II,     92|   exhausted, and, as his end drew near, he spoke as follows to
10   III,     29|          hemmed in a Roman cohort near the river Pagyda. The position
11   III,     90|     statue to the Divine Augustus near the theatre of Marcellus
12    IV,      9|      emperor's son was alive. How near was the step of declaring
13    IV,     34|          their tents and encamped near a half-demolished fortress,
14    IV,     66|            He then moved his camp near to the enemy, leaving in
15    IV,     67|          dying of want of fodder; near them lay human bodies which
16    IV,     76|      conjectured that his end was near and spread the rumour; for
17    IV,     76|           country or on the coast near Rome and often close to
18    IV,     80|          the place because it was near Rome. And so the calamity
19    VI,     19|           was, at any rate, found near the Straits of the Sicily,
20    VI,     20|          he never so much as went near the walls of Rome, much
21    VI,     24| ex-praetor, seeing their doom was near, destroyed themselves. It
22    VI,     25|    friends were not allowed to be near them, to weep over them,
23    VI,     41|         is completed and death is near, the phoenix, it is said,
24    VI,     69|            and part of the circus near the Aventine hill was burnt,
25    VI,     69|        the end of his life was so near. ~ ~
26    VI,     77|          way, that he was drawing near his end. There was a physician,
27    XI,     37|      vigorous intellect, with the near prospect of the consulship,
28    XI,     39|       Cleopatra, who was standing near and waiting for the question,
29   XII,     15|          the chase and place them near his temple. When the horses
30   XII,     24|      exposed to the people's gaze near the Rostra, under military
31   XII,     44|         also to Agrippina who sat near, conspicuous on another
32   XII,     66|    emperor, with Agrippina seated near him, presided; he wore a
33   XII,     77|          fear that Claudius, when near his end, might, on detecting
34  XIII,     17|          this, and as the day was near on which Britannicus would
35  XIII,     21|           one to comfort or to go near her, except a few ladies,
36  XIII,     73|          localities are specially near to heaven, and that mortal
37   XIV,      7|          Crepereius Gallus, stood near the helm, while Acerronia,
38   XIV,      8|           honour, how also it was near the shore, not from being
39   XIV,     13|           on the road to Misenum, near the country house of Caesar
40   XIV,     33|      escaped an unforeseen peril. Near his tent, a barbarian of
41   XVI,      1|         there, with bars standing near them in another part of
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