Book,  Par.

 1     I,      3|    gained such a hold on the aged Augustus that he drove out
 2     I,     12| deeds. "Now," they said, "an aged sovereign, whose power had
 3    II,     59|      for the reason that the aged uncle scorned to obey a
 4    II,     78|    past grandeur. One of the aged priests, who was desired
 5   III,     22|    son rather than he to his aged father! And therefore I
 6   III,     60|  while, as he was infirm and aged, yielded to Silius who was
 7   III,     83|    his father's counsels. An aged emperor may indeed shrink
 8    IV,     16| influence. She thus made her aged grandmother, whose nature
 9    VI,     13|     tried the knife with his aged hand, but again bound up
10    VI,     14|      made a crime. Vitia, an aged woman, mother of Fufius
11    VI,     45|       while he disdained the aged and, as he thought, unwarlike
12    XI,     12|    the illustrious few among aged princes, had he sought to
13    XV,     81|   their arms. Seneca, as his aged frame, attenuated by frugal
14   XVI,     35|   the consuls' tribunal, the aged parent, and opposite to
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