Book,  Par.

1    IV,      4|   youthful manhood and grown-up grandsons. As it would be unsafe to
2    IV,      9|         of Cneius Pompeius; his grandsons would be of the same blood
3    IV,     11|   Augusta, the childhood of his grandsons, and his own declining years,
4    IV,     56|    jealousies break out, and my grandsons are torn asunder by the
5    VI,     71|      empire, first, between his grandsons. Of these, the son of Drusus
6    VI,     72| embraced the younger of his two grandsons with a flood of tears, and,
7   XII,     29|         stepsons, though he had grandsons to be his stay, had been
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