Book, Chapter

1    3,  98|       conscious of feeling any pain. The razor, it turned out,
2    4, 117|  uttered an involuntary cry of pain. One of her maids rushed
3    5, 132|      Restoring perspective and pain,~The phantasm lives to the
4    5, 136|       their feet for all their pain?~"Why will our Catos with
5    5, 137|  memories which can only cause pain," said I to myself. I then
6    5, 151| probably bore an expression of pain, which Horace humorously
7    6     |     his passion at first feels pain, even to tears, but when,
8    6     |       when, by repetition, the pain becomes less keen, while
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