Book,  Par.

 1     I,     42|        cleared a passage with his sword through the armed and opposing
 2     I,     45|          his loyalty, plucked his sword from his side, raised it
 3     I,     45|   Calusidius, offered him a drawn sword, saying that it was sharper
 4     I,     56|        the man who offered me the sword. At any rate I should have
 5     I,     63|         time for falling with the sword on all the vilest and foremost
 6     I,     67|         fifty miles with fire and sword. Neither sex nor age moved
 7     I,     72|           fell by fate and by the sword of Arminius, with whom Segestes,
 8    II,     10|       their perfidy with fire and sword. ~ ~
 9    II,     38|          his slaves, and thrust a sword into them. In their confusion,
10    II,     88|        rage, pierced him with his sword. Hence there was more ground
11   III,     19|         with his throat cut and a sword lying on the ground. ~ ~
12   III,     28|         some it is certain by the sword, others it was believed
13   III,     61|         murderous missives by the sword. Even war is a good exchange
14    IV,     68|           of example, plunged his sword into his heart. And there
15     V,      5|          remained but to take the sword and chose for their generals
16     V,     10|          last scene, he fell on a sword which he had concealed in
17    VI,     62|       reduced to surrender by the sword, the rest by drought.~ ~
18    XI,     21|          the trenches without his sword, another for wearing nothing
19    XI,     26|       knight, was found wearing a sword amid a crowd who were paying
20    XI,     28|          our armies with fire and sword, and actually besieged the
21   XII,     22|        claim his surrender by the sword. To this last he was urged
22   XII,     53|        complete the affair by the sword. Meanwhile Pharasmanes invented
23   XII,     56|         no violence either by the sword or by poison. At the same
24   XII,     56|            neither unsheathed the sword nor used poison against
25  XIII,      7|         counsels more than by the sword and hand. The emperor would
26   XIV,      4| accomplished by poison, or by the sword, or by any other violent
27   XIV,     10|         his message, threw down a sword at his feet, then ordered
28   XIV,     12|           the centurion bared his sword for the fatal deed, presenting
29   XIV,     13|        ran himself through with a sword, either from love of his
30   XIV,     36|      Having harried with fire and sword all whom he had ascertained
31   XIV,     47|         they have recognised that sword and that courage of their
32   XIV,     49|      orders, threw himself on his sword. ~ ~
33   XIV,     50|        were ravaged with fire and sword. Nothing however distressed
34   XIV,     70|     passed my years in arms, your sword and right hand would not
35   XIV,     80|           and at the point of the sword. Whatever changes had been
36    XV,     40|         or have to deliver up his sword, or be debarred the honour
37    XV,     73|        whether he should draw his sword in the middle of the trial
38    XV,     77|    anxious to accomplish with the sword what poison had failed to
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