Book, Chapter

1    1,  15|      necessities of life, his immense wealth to the contrary notwithstanding.)~
2    2,  44|     was served a wild boar of immense size, wearing a liberty
3    3,  99|      not mates, dragged in an immense dog on a chain, and "sicked"
4    4, 119|     scribbling verses upon an immense sheet of parchment! Astounded
5    5, 145|    that you may come into the immense legacies I have put you
6    5, 145|      lighted, as they were by immense windows. Seneca (Epist.
7    5, 145|   enter all day long, through immense windows; men call baths-for-night-moths;
8    5, 154| continually driving round the immense space of the city and suburbs.
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