Book,  Par.

  1     I,      3|      Caius and Lucius, into the house of the Caesars; and before
  2     I,      3|         now a young man, in his house; but he did it that he might
  3     I,      4|       own position, that of his house, and the general tranquillity.
  4     I,      4|      been reared in an imperial house; consulships and triumphs
  5     I,      5|        Livia had surrounded the house and its approaches with
  6     I,      7|      divulge the secrets of her house or the counsels of friends,
  7     I,      9|     went with him to the Senate House. He sent letters to the
  8     I,     13|        days at Nola in the same house and room as his father Octavius.
  9     I,     15|         mother, terrible to the house of the Caesars as a stepmother.
 10     I,     96|    Augustus, who in every great house were associated into a kind
 11     I,     99|     that the foundations of his house had been weakened by the
 12     I,     99|       paid him the value of his house, for he liked to spend money
 13     I,    102|        Senator should enter the house of a pantomime player, that
 14    II,     34|       his imperial cousins, his house crowded with ancestral busts,
 15    II,     36|       the highest rank, went to house after house, entreating
 16    II,     36|       rank, went to house after house, entreating his relatives,
 17    II,     36|         the doors of the Senate House, and leaning on his brother
 18    II,     38|       the Senate. Meanwhile his house was surrounded with soldiers;
 19    II,     42|        rose to leave the Senate House. Tiberius was much excited,
 20    II,     43|         litter to the emperor's house; nor did Piso give way,
 21    II,     43|         question her at her own house, although the Vestal virgins,
 22    II,     46|         the doors of the Senate House, the Senate then sitting
 23    II,     46|    hereditary possession of our house, I was satisfied if my narrow
 24    II,     47|     order that we might in this house increase our private business
 25    II,     47|         for a senator, when the house has met on other matters,
 26    II,     48|       show any pity, though the house of Hortensius sank into
 27    II,     65|      though she was to Caesar's house. Adultery, it was thought,
 28    II,     84|        the gods of their common house, and to the hospitable board.
 29    II,    112|     still further depressed the house of Germanicus. ~ ~
 30    II,    115|      impaired the honour of his house by a divorce. The emperor
 31   III,     10|    provoked men's anger was his house towering above the forum,
 32   III,     14|         and exclude him from my house, and I shall avenge a personal
 33   III,     15|  inquiry into his death in this house instead of in the forum,
 34   III,     18|   people in front of the Senate House, threatening violence if
 35   III,     19|        was conveyed back to his house, where, seemingly by way
 36   III,     23|         blood of a most unhappy house."~ ~
 37   III,     25|         who had dishonoured the house of Augustus, still remained.
 38   III,     32|         concerning the imperial house. The accused was defended
 39   III,     41|    polluted the nobility of his house and to have yet further
 40   III,     42|        up the wealth which that house enjoyed to a boundless extent. ~ ~
 41   III,     52|         threshold of the Senate House, Annia Rufilla, whom he
 42   III,     64|          to an adjacent country house. There by his own hand he
 43   III,     64|  mutually inflicted wounds. The house was fired over their heads,
 44   III,     68|       his vanity read it in the house of Publius Petronius before
 45   III,     81|         be set up in the Senate House in letters of gold, was
 46    IV,      1|      and prosperity for his own house, for he counted Germanicus'
 47    IV,      4|        ambition in the imperial house with its many princes, a
 48    IV,     10| Tiberius, he went to the Senate house during the whole time of
 49    IV,     13|        the father of the Julian house, all the Alban kings, Romulus,
 50    IV,     14|         was dining at his son's house. Thus deceived, the old
 51    IV,     23|       was never friendly to the house of Germanicus, was then
 52    IV,     29|      that he kept poison in his house and wore a dagger whenever
 53    IV,     31|      delay Tiberius went to the house and inspected the chamber,
 54    IV,     56|  marriage rends, so to say, the house of the Caesars into two
 55    IV,     70|       sustained by the imperial house, came the first step towards
 56    IV,     77|        were dining in a country house called "The Cave," between
 57    IV,     82|       statue of Tiberius in the house of one Junius, a senator,
 58    IV,     86|     forsaken after its fall the house of which he had been the
 59    IV,     86|         went continually to his house, and imparted to him his
 60    IV,     87|        streets, drew him to his house and to the room, as if he
 61    IV,     93|         taken possession of the house of one Cruptorix, once a
 62     V,      1|      that he brought her to his house actually pregnant, not allowing
 63     V,      4|        and that the fall of the house of Germanicus might one
 64     V,      4|       being plotted against his house. And so that day passed
 65    VI,      2|  whenever he entered the Senate House. The man had actually believed
 66    VI,      2|         threshold of the Senate House? His life was not of so
 67    VI,     20|     honourable, though plebeian house, at Rome. Though he was
 68    VI,     28|      make use of the top of the house and of the confidence of
 69    VI,     28|       precipitous path (for the house stood on rocks), and then,
 70    VI,     33|      sons, and filled his whole house with bloodshed, so might
 71    VI,     34|         speak, the walls of his house and display his grandson
 72    VI,     39|        even the members of that house whose morals were corrupt,
 73    VI,     42|         forbid the person their house, and so put an end to friendship. "
 74    VI,     43|    Scaurus, as befitted the old house of the Aemilii, forestalled
 75    VI,     46|         consent, a scion of the house of Arsaces should show himself
 76    VI,     57|   bloodshed as it streamed from house to house, and the strokes
 77    VI,     57|       it streamed from house to house, and the strokes of the
 78    VI,     60|         the prosperity of their house, Tiberius had withheld,
 79    VI,     66|         actual power was in the house of Abdageses. ~ ~
 80    VI,     71|        successor outside of his house, he feared that the memory
 81    VI,     78|     descended from the Claudian house, though his mother passed
 82    VI,     78|  admitted as a stepson into the house of Augustus, he had to struggle
 83    VI,     78|      the emperor's now heirless house for twelve years, and the
 84    XI,      1|     rouse nations allied to his house. Claudius made no further
 85    XI,      4|        that they had lent their house for the meetings of Mnester
 86    XI,      6|       himself in the advocate's house, on ascertaining his collusion
 87    XI,     15|         numerous retinue to his house, she haunted his steps,
 88    XI,     19|      but one scion of the royal house, Italicus by name, who lived
 89    XI,     19|     heart on the honours of his house. "Never before," he said, "
 90    XI,     45|       his order, the paramour's house was thrown open and the
 91   XII,      1|    Messalina shook the imperial house; for a strife arose among
 92   XII,      3|      rank, the scion of a noble house and a link to unite the
 93   XII,      3|       the Caesars to some other house.~ ~
 94   XII,      6|         a niece into an uncle's house. It was positively incest,
 95   XII,     59|        that not a member of his house might be without kingly
 96   XII,     75|   convulsing the whole imperial house, with far greater disgrace
 97  XIII,      5|  dangerously formidable. In his house there should be nothing
 98  XIII,     15|         mothers of the imperial house had been seen to glitter,
 99  XIII,     16|  wickedness of that ill-starred house, of her own marriage, to
100  XIII,     17|     expulsion from his father's house and from supreme power.
101  XIII,     20|         what had been Antonia's house; and whenever he went there
102  XIII,     22|   single person from an enemy's house, and this the night with
103  XIII,     41|       But the honour of a noble house was further increased by
104  XIII,     53|      had been a paramour in his house. Was it to be thought a
105  XIII,     59|        style were grand; at his house everything worthy of the
106   XIV,      6|       was the name of a country house, washed by a bay of the
107   XIV,      7|        lake, and so entered her house. ~ ~
108   XIV,     11|    Anicetus then surrounded the house with a guard, and having
109   XIV,     13|       Misenum, near the country house of Caesar the Dictator,
110   XIV,     30|      reclining at dinner in his house named Sublaqueum on the
111   XIV,     38|      from private judges to its house, were to incur the same
112   XIV,     42|         put his kingdom and his house out of the reach of wrong.
113   XIV,     42|    plundered by centurions, his house by slaves, as if they were
114   XIV,     55|        has been murdered in his house by the treachery of slaves,
115   XIV,     60|       when he was dining at the house of Ostorius Scapula. He
116   XIV,     79|      received possession of the house of Burrus and of the estates
117   XIV,     80|         am about to give to the house of the Caesars a lawful
118   XIV,     83|     brought, as she was, into a house where she had nothing but
119    XV,      1|       is the glory of a private house to keep its own, it is the
120    XV,     47|       so to say, as his private house. Of these entertainments
121    XV,     49|         the fire approached his house, which he had built to connect
122    XV,     49|       devouring the palace, the house, and everything around it.
123    XV,     59|    descendant of the Calpurnian house, and embracing in his connections
124    XV,     61|       on the stage, or when his house was in flames and he was
125    XV,     66|      and shut himself up in his house or gardens, used to go to
126    XV,     67|         betrayal began from the house of Scaevinus. The day before
127    XV,     75|    sought the retirement of his house, and there fortified his
128    XV,     77|         evening, surrounded the house with troops of soldiers,
129    XV,     90|      youths. For Vestinus had a house towering over the Forum,
130    XV,     92|    thanks to the gods, deck his house with laurels, prostrate
131   XVI,      7|         war and revolt from the House of the Caesars. And that
132   XVI,     16|      barred every exit from the house, disclosed the emperor's
133   XVI,     28|         him to enter the Senate house said that they counted confidently
134   XVI,     31|      the senators entered their house. A speech from the emperor
135   XVI,     32|         him the decrees of this house, the offices of State, the
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