Book, Chapter

 1  Int,   4|       Inquisition by a timely flight into France. He arrived
 2    1,  10|     that I did not notice the flight of Ascyltos, and while I
 3    1,  15|     awake and out of bed, our flight remained undiscovered, for
 4    1,  15|      a towering rage when our flight was established for certain,
 5    1,  15|       upon the subject of our flight, but he was met with raised
 6    1,  30|      but battered as we were, flight seemed more to our taste
 7    2,  41|       estates as broad as the flight of a kite is long, and piles
 8    3,  94|     followed after him in his flight and came to the seashore,
 9    4, 104|     soon put my uneasiness to flight.) "It is unfortunate," (
10    4, 127|       chooses by land to seek flight: to another, the water~Appeals,
11    4, 127|     marks the length of their flight! In confusion~The people
12    4, 127| worshipped! Disgraceful their~Flight! Title and glory forsaking!
13    5, 129|   would be nothing for it but flight and, in a fresh state of
14    5, 142|     the result of my headlong flight. (I got home as quickly
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