Book, Chapter

 1    1,  14|         the remembrance of that injury recurred to my mind and, "
 2    1,  15|      repression of any sense of injury as well, so, loading Giton
 3    1,  21|         age than I am by my own injury, for it is my belief that
 4    1,  22|     exacted satisfaction for my injury and reparation for my dignity!~
 5    4, 103| especially sorry for the latest injury I had done him. I began
 6    4, 111|       their destination without injury. When penitence manages
 7    4, 117|       might revenge my supposed injury in some poetic lampoon, (
 8    5, 145|    might make known to all, the injury she was suffering. The Emperor
 9    5, 154|    sensibility for any personal injury, and a contemptuous indifference
10    5, 156|      the severest manner for an injury he had received; for, having
11    5, 160|        could do a man no graver injury than to call him a dancer,"
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