Book, Chapter

 1    1,  15|   strength between us and our enemies. Until Tryphaena and Doris
 2    1,  15|        So humiliated were our enemies by the guffaws of the mob,
 3    1,  19|    not less so at that of our enemies, for by it they had returned
 4    2,  52|       man and a rich man were enemies," Agamemmon began, when: "
 5    2,  61|     your whole carcass. I had enemies in his house, too, who would
 6    3, 102|     for all these crimes. Two enemies would be reconciled if I
 7    4, 106|        we can impose upon our enemies!" "Yes, indeed," sneered
 8    4, 111|        and we are merciful to enemies who have surrendered. What
 9    4, 119|   pyre raised by the hands of enemies, while Eumolpus, fixing
10    5, 145| elsewhere, have branded their enemies; and Juvenal in bursts of
11    5, 154|      Italy, the neighbors and enemies of the rising city. In the
12    6     |    salute thee, O Queen!" His enemies maintained that he was the
13    6     |       purity. He answered his enemies who reproached him with
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