Book, Chapter

 1    1,   8|     immediately recover the weight and splendor of its majesty.
 2    1,  15|    to collect, and, to give weight to my argument, I pointed
 3    1,  30| Giton after her, by her own weight. He was not hurt, but the
 4    2,  35|   Trimalchio's name and the weight of the silver in each. Dormice
 5    2,  53|     apertures, by their own weight, immediately tumbled out.~
 6    2,  80| them with wine -- worth its weight in gold, it was then --
 7    3,  97|      No matter how heavy, a weight on the market! The whore~
 8    4, 111|   that annoying and useless weight before they came aboard,
 9    4, 123|     seas~Were roiled by the weight of his deep-laden keels;
10    4, 124| ashes, unable to suffer~The weight of so many tombs. These
11    4, 126|  its menacing shoulders~The weight of the world could sustain.
12    5, 140|   down under the old lady's weight and let her fall upon the
13    5, 143|  Herakles once suffered the weight of heaven's displeasure
14    5, 154|     to ascertain their real weight; and, while the more rational
15    5, 154|     malady is of sufficient weight to excuse the visits of
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