Book, Chapter

 1  Int,   2|             realism, a natural-born story teller, and a gentleman.~
 2  Int,   4|          the book. There is another story to the effect that he had
 3    1,   5|            since I promised you the story of my adventures, that I
 4    2,  52|           labors of Hercules or the story of Ulysses, how the Cyclops
 5    2,  67|     astonishment, when "I take your story for granted," said Trimalchio, "
 6    2,  75|           if I live: to make a long story short, I'm freeing all of
 7    2,  79|           will tell you a different story, but as for myself, I'm
 8    3,  92| EIGHTY-EIGHTH.~Heartened up by this story, I began to draw upon his
 9    3,  93|          will attempt to unfold the story in verse:~And now the tenth
10    4, 116|        TWELFTH.~"But to make a long story short, you know the temptations
11    5, 144|          that Midas was king in the story.~"Every word of this is
12    5, 145|           ii, 18); and the peculiar story of the Bacchanalian cult
13    5, 153|            gracious to me as in the story old to the maiden fleet
14    6     |        worth while to transmit this story to us, for the instruction
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