Book,  Par.

 1     I,     34|      arose and obstructed their sight, and it was thought she
 2     I,     54|       sound? What meant the sad sight? Here were ladies of rank,
 3     I,     93| Daylight restored land to their sight, and they pushed their way
 4    II,     24|                            That sight caused keener grief and
 5    II,     28|         quarter, rendered clear sight impossible, and the steering
 6    II,    113|         she was banished out of sight to the island of Seriphos. ~ ~
 7   III,      4|         the heart to endure the sight of so great an affliction.
 8   III,     17|        strange servants, in the sight of so many bystanders, and
 9   III,     63|      war had their faculties of sight and hearing quite paralysed.
10    IV,      3|       same moment, and that the sight of their numbers and strength
11    IV,     44|         to study those at first sight trifling events out of which
12    IV,     94|  hurrying crowds are a familiar sight, from the extent of the
13    VI,     77|        recovering his voice and sight, and calling for persons
14   XII,     66|        itself, eager to see the sight or to show respect to the
15   XII,     67|                        When the sight was over, the outlet of
16  XIII,      6|       enough to shut her out of sight, but not out of hearing.
17  XIII,     18|         of the same age, in the sight of their kinsfolk, at a
18  XIII,     18|  earliest infancy, and that his sight and senses would gradually
19   XIV,      6|   hypocrisy or because the last sight of a mother on the even
20   XIV,     11|       to wish her joy, till the sight of an armed and threatening
21   XIV,     15|    before his eyes the dreadful sight of that sea with its shores (
22   XIV,     41|      soldiers by the unfamiliar sight, so that, as if their limbs
23   XIV,     78|         brought to Rome. At its sight the emperor exclaimed (I
24    XV,     38|         the more intense by the sight which yet lingered before
25    XV,     45|         under mischances by the sight of the emperor. Hence, as
26    XV,     71|       They could not endure the sight and the threat of torture.
27   XVI,     32|      has long lost and the very sight of which he has now put
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