Book, Chapter

 1    1,  15|    with a piece of iron. The fall of the lock roused us, for
 2    1,  15|      wakened by the crashing fall of the lock, and Ascyltos,
 3    2,  38|     a small dish happened to fall to the floor, in the scurry,
 4    2,  39|       Trimalchio urged us to fall to: "Let us fall to, gentlemen,
 5    2,  39| urged us to fall to: "Let us fall to, gentlemen, I beg of
 6    2,  64|  fear some rope-walker would fall down, and the rest of the
 7    2,  76|     the death of me." "Let's fall in with his suggestion,"
 8    4, 126|   its fire. Showers of blood fall from heaven~These portents
 9    4, 127|       and men, horses, arms, fall in heaps, in confusion.~
10    5, 130|   anything I could say would fall far short. Her hair, naturally
11    5, 140|    lady's weight and let her fall upon the hearth. The neck
12    5, 140|      the ashes raised by her fall. I jumped up in dismay and,
13    5, 160|   the tiniest bit happens to fall upon the floor, the very
14    6     |      adorn her shoulders, or fall over her ears and temples,
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