Book,  Par.

1    II,    100|           you need not dread feeble suspicions or vague rumours. Your strife
2    IV,     14|            handed it to Drusus. His suspicions were increased when Drusus,
3    IV,     72| daughter-in-law. This increased the suspicions of Agrippina, and without
4   XII,      5|      inclined him the more to admit suspicions against his son-in-law.
5    XV,     67|     ignorance and then first caught suspicions, as most authors have inferred
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