Book, Chapter

 1    2,  34|   enough of these novelties and started to enter the dining-room
 2    2,  34|     wrong way; nevertheless, we started out, stepping off together
 3    2,  40|   echoed the applause which was started by the servants, and fell
 4    2,  43|    guests, happy with wine, had started a general conversation:
 5    2,  56|        been done than the slave started running around the room
 6    2,  69|         feet upon the floor and started to get up, but Agamemnon
 7    2,  71|        Habinnas threatened, and started to get up; and then, at
 8    2,  79| something to bawl for, but as I started to say, it was my thrift
 9    5, 135|      out, "see what a hare I've started, for someone else to course!" (
10    5, 140|     together all my belongings, started to leave the house. I had
11    5, 145|       soul!" (Eumolpus had just started reading the first clauses
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