Book,  Par.

 1     I,      3|    they had yet laid aside the dress of boyhood he had most fervently
 2    II,     77|   expressed disapproval of his dress and manners, pronounced
 3   III,     78|      old-fashioned both in his dress and diet. Henceforth a respectful
 4    IV,      5|        Germanicus, assumed the dress of manhood, with a repetition
 5    IV,     37|      With studious elegance of dress and cheerful looks, the
 6   XII,     20| alliance with us. Adapting his dress and expression of countenance
 7   XII,     49|  prematurely invested with the dress of manhood, that he might
 8   XII,     49|   favour, Britannicus wore the dress of boyhood, Nero the triumphal
 9  XIII,     57|     dagger concealed under his dress. Then, as usual in lovers'
10  XIII,     70|      some persons in a foreign dress on the seats of the senators.
11   XIV,     20|      Apollo, and it was in the dress of a singer that that great
12    XV,     55| mingled with the people in the dress of a charioteer or stood
13    XV,     84|       harp, so did Piso in the dress of a tragedian. ~ ~
14   XVI,     22|      had sung in a tragedian's dress at Patavium, his birth-place,
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