Book,  Par.

  1     I,      4|        Augustus in the vigour of life, could maintain his own
  2     I,     13|      empire and the close of his life, and, again, that he had
  3     I,     13|           spoke variously of his life with praise and censure.
  4     I,     15|                     The domestic life too of Augustus was not
  5     I,     15|    manners, style, and habits of life, which he meant as reproaches,
  6     I,     22|          day is the value set on life and limb; out of this, clothing,
  7     I,     22|    relief can come from military life being entered on under fixed
  8     I,     28|       restores to my brother his life, or my brother to myself?
  9     I,     52|          Germanicus held his own life cheap, why should he keep
 10     I,     60|       Tiberius, in the vigour of life, to sit in the Senate and
 11     I,     70|       name, which his degenerate life had dishonoured. Some have
 12     I,     79|          ancestors, your ancient life to tyrants and to new colonies,
 13     I,     96|   Cassius, a buffoon of infamous life, and that he had also in
 14     I,     97|        then entered on a line of life afterwards rendered notorious
 15     I,    100|  destruction of buildings and of life. Thereupon Asinius Gallus
 16     I,    105|          men to the end of their life with the same armies and
 17     I,    106|   describing their origin, their life and military career, so
 18    II,     29|   finding there no form of human life, perished of hunger, except
 19    II,     37|        case affecting a master's life, Tiberius, with his cleverness
 20    II,     38|          have interceded for his life, guilty though he was, but
 21    II,     54|        against him, he ended his life, by his own act or by a
 22    II,     56|       wisdom, of Germanicus; own life was on the decline, and
 23    II,     67|       because of his unambitious life, enjoyed without harm. ~ ~
 24    II,     81|         an excessive clinging to life.~ ~
 25    II,     94|      that they would sooner lose life than revenge. ~ ~
 26    II,    111|           where he had ended his life. The number of his statues,
 27    II,    118|  completed thirty-seven years of life, twelve years of power,
 28   III,     24|        for ten years, Plancina's life being spared in consideration
 29   III,     30|     honour of saving a citizen's life, and was rewarded by Apronius
 30   III,     33|         attempted their master's life by poison. ~ ~
 31   III,     35|    Divine Augustus in his public life enjoyed unshaken prosperity,
 32   III,     35|          to myself, I prolong my life for further labours.~ ~
 33   III,     69| self-inflicted death. Lutorius's life is still safe; if spared,
 34   III,     95|       that no one of disgraceful life and notorious infamy should
 35   III,     98|       well as a virtuous private life. ~ ~
 36    IV,      5|     their own choice a soldier's life. Tiberius also rapidly enumerated
 37    IV,     30|         man of mean origin and a life of crime, but a powerful
 38    IV,     39|         water, and that he whose life was spared, ought to be
 39    IV,     39|       allowed the necessaries of life. And so Serenus was conveyed
 40    IV,     40|        treason put an end to his life by his own act before the
 41    IV,     46|          resolved to give up his life, began thus:- ~ ~
 42    IV,     49|         the Senate and ended his life by starvation. His books,
 43    IV,     53|         to the last, that, to my life's close, it grant me a tranquil
 44    IV,     55|        enough for him would be a life completed while such a sovereign
 45    IV,     56|        marry or rather to endure life in the same home, and that
 46    IV,     56|      persons of singularly quiet life, wholly free from political
 47    IV,     57|        already in the decline of life, would soon, when enervated
 48    IV,     57|    declaim against the laborious life of the capital, the bustling
 49    IV,     64|      Thracian tribes, whose wild life in the highlands of a mountainous
 50    IV,     68|       who had a stronger love of life than of renown. The young
 51    IV,     71|       posterity the story of her life and of the misfortunes of
 52    IV,     75|       and to hide his voluptuous life. According to one account
 53    IV,     80|         from them still retained life, while they recognised their
 54    IV,     85|         public and their private life were I may say regularly
 55    IV,     88|         and having attempted his life, and he claimed vengeance
 56    IV,     88|     added that he had an anxious life, that he apprehended treachery
 57     V,      1|        In the purity of her home life she was of the ancient type,
 58     V,      2|         change in his voluptuous life, excused himself by letter
 59     V,      3|        mother was the habit of a life, and Sejanus did not dare
 60    VI,      2|         of the Senate House? His life was not of so much worth
 61    VI,     11|     duties of civil and military life. His kinsfolk and connections
 62    VI,     19|      expenditure and a luxurious life, had been a friend of Sejanus,
 63    VI,     27|      brief span of power late in life, on the strength of his
 64    VI,     29|      beginning or the end of our life, or, in short, with mankind
 65    VI,     29|         capacity of choosing our life, maintaining that, the choice
 66    VI,     32|           after having prolonged life for eight days on the most
 67    VI,     33|           and then, when hope of life was gone, denounced him
 68    VI,     34|      vain the last sustenance of life. ~ ~
 69    VI,     36|         friends were to fly from life without any cause for death.
 70    VI,     41|        infuses into it a germ of life from which an offspring
 71    VI,     42|    severed his veins and let his life ebb from him. His wife,
 72    VI,     43|        advocate, but of infamous life. He fell, not through the
 73    VI,     61|    defence she put an end to her life.~ ~
 74    VI,     69|      accepted, as the end of his life was so near. ~ ~
 75    VI,     74|    persons. He had had enough of life, and all he regretted was
 76    VI,     78|         was a bright time in his life and reputation, while under
 77    XI,      7|        men raised by a blameless life and by eloquence to the
 78    XI,      9|        needs and the business of life that the resource of eloquence
 79    XI,      9|          of others. Some support life by the profession of arms,
 80    XI,     19|     private, dangerous in public life, had nothing to hope except
 81    XI,     22|          stealthy attempt on the life of a deserter and a traitor
 82    XI,     47|    admitted. A young man of pure life, yet of singular beauty,
 83    XI,     48|     Lucullus, was struggling for life, and writing letters of
 84    XI,     48|       wait for the executioner. "Life," she said, "was over; all
 85   XII,      1|  impatient as he was of a single life and submissive to the rule
 86   XII,      9|       time prolonged his hope of life, or else choosing that day
 87   XII,     37|    reward for saving a citizen's life. ~ ~
 88   XII,     43|          whereas, if you save my life, I shall be an everlasting
 89   XII,     49|          qualified for political life. The emperor willingly complied
 90   XII,     51|         and Egypt, and trust the life of the Roman people to ships
 91   XII,     58|   Claudius, who, when in private life, used to beguile the dullness
 92   XII,     60|     breathed and showed signs of life on the calm water at the
 93   XII,     69|         put a violent end to his life before the Senate's decision
 94   XII,     75|          that he would sacrifice life to his welfare. Messalina
 95  XIII,      1|         mature age, of blameless life, of noble birth, and, as
 96  XIII,     21|          woman in the decline of life, not to secure Africanus
 97  XIII,     36|         name. There was his long life of ninety-three years, his
 98  XIII,     39|       This Pomponia lived a long life of unbroken melancholy.
 99  XIII,     43|        paid the penalty with his life. This was shown by experience
100  XIII,     56| supported that lonely exile by a life of ease and plenty. When
101  XIII,     57|        exhausted, and as for his life, which was all that was
102  XIII,     59|       was to Otho by a manner of life, which no one equalled. "
103  XIII,     67|          he prolonged beyond the life of those by whose corrupt
104  XIII,     74|       till it began to renew its life with fresh shoots.~ ~
105   XIV,     26|         by the refinement of his life, which the contrast of his
106   XIV,     42|    soldiers, who lived a similar life and hoped for similar licence.
107   XIV,     49|       Boudicea put an end to her life by poison. Poenius Postumus
108   XIV,     60|    longer he drags on his guilty life, the more wretched will
109   XIV,     69|    travel, so in this journey of life, old as I am and unequal
110   XIV,     70|     gifts to me will, as long as life holds out, be lasting possessions;
111   XIV,     73|   restless, and eager for a busy life." ~ ~
112   XIV,     75|        to murder Plautus, as his life was dear to many. The distance
113   XIV,     77|         a precarious and anxious life. At all events, he was surprised
114   XIV,     78|     notwithstanding her virtuous life, because her father's name
115   XIV,     80|      that was dearer to her than life, but that her very life
116   XIV,     80|          life, but that her very life was brought into jeopardy
117   XIV,     82|       the rescue of the prince's life against a plotting mother.
118   XIV,     83|         s thoughts. But they had life's prime for their stay;
119   XIV,     84|          Agrippina, during whose life she had endured a marriage,
120    XV,     12|          to their fidelity while life lasted. ~ ~
121    XV,     50|    though there was less loss of life, the temples of the gods,
122    XV,     56|         while he used to support life on the very simple diet
123    XV,     60|          mind by excess, and his life, accordingly, was one of
124    XV,     61|         guard, a man of esteemed life and character, to whom Tigellinus
125    XV,     66|        have lent her name at her life's peril to a hopeless project,
126    XV,     67|        and care for his patron's life, together with the remembrance
127    XV,     69|     profusely furnished, and his life luxurious, such as rigid
128    XV,     74|         if prematurely robbed of life, justify your death to your
129    XV,     77|           but still that his own life depended on Piso's safety.
130    XV,     79|          him, the pattern of his life, which, if they remembered,
131    XV,     80|        in the contemplation of a life virtuously spent, to endure
132    XV,     80|      shown you ways of smoothing life; you prefer the glory of
133    XV,     82|         yielded to the charms of life. To this she added a few
134    XV,     83|      drug which extinguished the life of those who were condemned
135    XV,     83|     power he was thinking of his life's close. ~ ~
136    XV,     90|          veins were opened; with life still strong in him, he
137    XV,     91|          feet and hands, and the life gradually ebbing from his
138    XV,     91|         past effeminacy of their life, and then the remaining
139    XV,     96|       death was pleading for his life. He called him an enemy
140   XVI,     12|          unwilling to disgrace a life which had clung to freedom
141   XVI,     12|      they prayed that the ebbing life might have a quick departure,
142   XVI,     15|         remarks on the birth and life of Ostorius Scapula, he
143   XVI,     18|   Anicius Cerialis still enjoyed life, though bitter foes to the
144   XVI,     19|        business and pleasures of life. Indolence had raised him
145   XVI,     20|        Yet he did not fling away life with precipitate haste,
146   XVI,     29|       undisgraced, seek to close life with the glory of those
147   XVI,     30|          now abandon a scheme of life in which for so many years
148   XVI,     30|      this, the path of political life on which you enter." He
149   XVI,     32|       nothing. Let him sever his life from a country all love
150   XVI,     38|         be admitted to political life. The prosecutors, Eprius
151   XVI,     39|       counselled to preserve her life, and not rob the daughter
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