Book, Chapter

 1    1,   7|      by setting snares for the ears -- so it is with the teachers
 2    1,  22|        that hung down about my ears. "I will declare a truce
 3    2,  50|   Primigenius,' I din into his ears every day, 'whenever you
 4    2,  71|    wouldn't cut off her little ears. We'd have everything as
 5    2,  72|     deep"; never before had my ears been assailed by a sound
 6    3,  88|        troubles into another's ears, I explained my misfortune
 7    3,  89|      protest against having my ears insulted by such filthy
 8    4, 104|        too familiar, struck my ears, my heart fluttered. And
 9    4, 106|     taken for Jews, pierce our ears so we will look like Arabs,
10    4, 109|     familiar voice reached the ears of Tryphaena; nor was she
11    4, 109|       Tryphaena turned willing ears, she had recognized that
12    4, 111| explanation could come to your ears just as candidly as the
13    4, 125|     clangor of arms thrills my ears, and rings loudly:~Thou,
14    5, 143|       outcries would reach the ears of Eumolpus who, in the
15    5, 144|        told of a king's hidden ears: this the earth straightway
16    5, 154|          which may impress the ears of the vulgar with astonishment
17    5, 158|      which prescribes that the ears and nostrils of the infant
18    5, 160|      trouble maker, you're all ears and tongue and nothing else,
19    6     |    shoulders, or fall over her ears and temples, more luxuriant
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