Book, Chapter

 1    1,   6|   tradition of the past was broken, eloquence halted and was
 2    1,  14|    purpose as the tinkle of broken glass or the interpretation
 3    2,  55| glass vial that couldn't be broken. On that account he was
 4    2,  58|   gladly have seen his neck broken, but because such an unlucky
 5    2,  74|     come pouring out of the broken jars but oysters and scallops,
 6    2,  75|     won't run out; show one broken and a boy crying over it.
 7    3,  83|    the flints and pieces of broken tile, till we were extricated,
 8    3,  83|   Ascyltos, "Since you have broken faith by this outrage,"
 9    3,  93|    billows dash high; to be broken, and leap back~To form a
10    3,  99|     foeman, and avenged his broken head with a shower of blows.
11    3, 100|    when the handle had been broken and jerked out, and I wished
12    3, 102|      for the doors had been broken and could keep no one out. "
13    5, 138| blow, she might easily have broken my arms or my head. I groaned
14    5, 140|     The neck of the pot was broken, putting out the fire, which
15    5, 140|    She banked her fire with broken reeds, piled some pieces
16    5, 144|    confidence thus has been broken,~As rumor but grows in the
17    5, 152|     girlish figure amid the broken crust of the pie. The figure
18    6     |     arms of knights who had broken lances at tournaments, or
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