Book, Chapter

 1  Int,   2|     of a rapier; but, when we bear in mind the fact that he
 2    1,  18|  Detractors of the times, who bear the Cynic's scrip, are known~
 3    2,  70|   wild boar and, says I, if a bear eats a man, shouldn't that
 4    2,  70|     reason for a man to eat a bear? The last course was soft
 5    3,  97|    verse today?" I demanded; "bear in mind your promise and
 6    4, 118|         the sea will at least bear us longer, joined together,
 7    4, 121|     road. But Giton could not bear up under his unaccustomed
 8    4, 126|     crowned with my triumphs,~Bear witness! Unwillingly summon
 9    5, 134|    naked to my mistress; only bear in mind that it was not
10    5, 135|     urban Procne undertook~To bear true witness; hovering,
11    5, 143|      arms~Knowing not he must bear the brunt; Ulysses feared
12    5, 145|       6), "Quirites, I cannot bear to see Rome a Greek city,
13    5, 145|       Orient, today, will but bear out this hypothesis. The
14    5, 154|    the domestic officers, who bear a rod as an ensign of authority,
15    6     | astonishment.~The books which bear the most remarkable resemblance
16    6     |     and those pains easier to bear, which we share with others.
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