Caput
1 1 | authority, apply to the man who saw Drusilla going heavenward;
2 1 | the gods. If you ask this man he will tell you privately;
3 1 | even if he should see a man murdered in the middle of
4 3 | do you let the wretched man be tormented? Isn’t he ever
5 3 | over to death: let a better man reign in his place.’” ~
6 5 | had come, a rather tall man, quite gray-headed; that
7 5 | he didn’t recognize the man’s language, but he wasn’
8 5 | find out what sort of a man it was. Hercules at the
9 5 | however, it appeared to be a man. He approached him and thus
10 8 | son-in-law, just because the man preferred that his sister,
11 9 | July, being a very shrewd man, who always sees at once
12 10| phrase of that most clever man, Messala Corvinus, ‘I am
13 11| to be called Magnus; this man returned him the name, but
14 11| do you want to make this man a god? Look at his body,
15 11| father-in-law Crassus Frugi, a man as like himself as one egg
16 11| regions, ~ “Whence they say no man returns.” ~
17 12| cries.~Nobly has fallen a man most sagacious,~Than whom
18 12| dominion.~Mourn for the man than whom no one more quickly~
19 14| boon companion of his, a man skilled in the Claudian
20 15| and with his fists. The man was adjudged to C. Caesar;
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