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  1     I,      1|              did not last beyond two years, nor was the consular jurisdiction
  2     I,      4|          Tiberius Nero was of mature years, and had established his
  3     I,      4|            younger days; even in the years which, on the pretext of
  4     I,     13|         continuance for thirty-seven years of the tribunitian power,
  5     I,     15|             in fact, Augustus, a few years before, when he was a second
  6     I,     17|             admirable deeds for many years as a civilian. Still, he
  7     I,     22|             our tameness for so many years, in having to endure thirty
  8     I,     22|              and which after sixteen years are restored to their homes,
  9     I,     25|           from service after sixteen years. He was to have the rest
 10     I,     32|              discharge after sixteen years, of the rewards of completed
 11     I,     70|         endured an exile of fourteen years. Then the soldiers who were
 12     I,     71|      character. But a people so many years indulgently treated, he
 13     I,     82|            army now on the spot, six years after the disaster, in grief
 14    II,      2|              an endurance of so many years' slavery, were to rule over
 15    II,      6|         which during more than three years of war had fallen to his
 16    II,     11|             an eye by a wound, a few years ago, when Tiberius was in
 17    II,     34|          practices which for so many years have eaten into the heart
 18    II,     45|            should be held every five years, and that the commanders
 19    II,     45|       election was deferred for five years! How could he foresee through
 20    II,     45|          fixed on promotion for five years? It was in fact a multiplying
 21    II,     46|             whose numbers and boyish years you behold I have reared,
 22    II,     54|              of Cappadocia for fifty years, and Tiberius hated him
 23    II,     62|     sesterces, and remitted for five years all they paid to the exchequer
 24    II,     67|        routed, and after a number of years the name of Furius won military
 25    II,     81|              left Italy for eighteen years, living to old age and losing
 26    II,     96|             had much exceeded thirty years of age, and both fell by
 27    II,    115|           Occia, who for fifty-seven years had presided with the most
 28    II,    118|            He completed thirty-seven years of life, twelve years of
 29    II,    118|   thirty-seven years of life, twelve years of power, and he is still
 30   III,     22|            wickedness. By forty-five years of obedience, by my association
 31   III,     24|           should be banished for ten years, Plancina's life being spared
 32   III,     40|    maintaining. Then followed twenty years of continuous strife; custom
 33   III,     41|      candidate for quaestorship five years earlier than the law allowed.
 34   III,     44|             son were colleagues. Two years previously the association
 35   III,     49|              were it for a number of years to be forgotten, just as
 36   III,     67|          dangerous power of his last years. ~ ~
 37   III,     80|         after an experience of eight years, after having quelled mutinies
 38   III,     82|        public duty. For seventy-five years after the suicide of Cornelius
 39   III,     82|            ceased. If during so many years it was possible for there
 40   III,     83|           the weariness of declining years and the toils of the past.
 41    IV,     10|             as was ascertained eight years later. As for Tiberius,
 42    IV,     11|     grandsons, and his own declining years, he begged the Senate to
 43    IV,     17|              by a remission of three years' tribute. Vibius Serenus
 44    IV,     23|           equally with his declining years. He summoned the pontiffs,
 45    IV,     24|     commanded a great army for seven years, and won in Germany the
 46    IV,     38|          this Tiberius revived eight years later, charging on him various
 47    IV,     48|           not fall more than seventy years ago, and as they are known
 48    IV,     73|              that for twelve hundred years their homes had not been
 49    IV,     75|            he passed six consecutive years in the same solitude after
 50    IV,     76|             from his home for eleven years. Soon afterwards it was
 51    IV,     84|             needy adventurer of many years who had squandered his lately
 52    IV,     91|           There she endured a twenty years' exile, in which she was
 53     V,      7|              a space of nearly three years, are lost. Newer editions
 54    VI,     12|              day, but of his sixteen years of power. We actually adored
 55    VI,     16|        Statilius, though in advanced years, sustained it admirably;
 56    VI,     16|              then Piso, after twenty years of similar credit, was,
 57    VI,     22|           without interest for three years, provided the borrower gave
 58    VI,     31|      presence. Just as if in a three years' interval an opportunity
 59    VI,     33|              by his side for so many years, to note his looks, his
 60    VI,     35|             penalty of his crime two years before, a fact, he said,
 61    VI,     35|         perished, through all future years, an offering should be consecrated
 62    VI,     38|             kept at home now for ten years, that he might not go to
 63    VI,     41|          nature. As to the number of years it lives, there are various
 64    VI,     41|          tradition says five hundred years. Some maintain that it is
 65    VI,     41|       fourteen hundred and sixty-one years, and that the former birds
 66    VI,     41|            of less than five hundred years. Consequently some have
 67    VI,     41|               For when the number of years is completed and death is
 68    VI,     47|        fashions to which for so many years he had been accustomed,
 69    VI,     56|       miseries at home. Though three years had elapsed since the destruction
 70    VI,     58|          triumph. During twenty-four years he had the charge of the
 71    VI,     66|            insultingly of the boyish years of Tiridates, hinting that
 72    VI,     76|           banished from Rome for ten years, till her younger son would
 73    VI,     78|            heirless house for twelve years, and the Roman world, with
 74  Miss        |            of a period of nearly ten years, from A.D. 37 to A.D. 47.
 75  Miss        |            A.D. 37 to A.D. 47. These years included the reign of Caius
 76  Miss        |         Agrippina, and the first six years of the reign of Claudius.
 77  Miss        |             Caesar's reign was three years ten months and eight days
 78    XI,     11|            capitulated to him, seven years after its revolt, little
 79    XI,     27|        Aemilius Mamercus sixty-three years after the expulsion of the
 80   XII,      2|             dwelt on the marriage of years gone by, on the tie of offspring,
 81   XII,     20|           Romans have sought so many years by land and sea, stands
 82   XII,     27|        safety, which for twenty-five years had been neglected, should
 83   XII,     29|          some support for the tender years of Britannicus. "So," he
 84   XII,     30|           son, though he was but two years older, and made a speech
 85   XII,     33|             from slavery after forty years some survivors of the defeat
 86   XII,     35|           had enriched during thirty years of plunder and of tribute.
 87   XII,     42|              to the conquerors, nine years after the beginning of the
 88   XII,     42|           great man, who for so many years had defied our power. Even
 89   XII,     48|            For Didius, burdened with years and covered with honours,
 90   XII,     48|   propraetors, and occupying several years, I have closely connected,
 91   XII,     52|        fearing too his own declining years, tempted him with other
 92   XII,     68|          Haterius, Nero, now sixteen years of age, married Octavia,
 93   XII,     68|            tribute remitted for five years.~ ~
 94   XII,     73|        tribute was remitted for five years. ~ ~
 95  XIII,      7|            eighteenth and nineteenth years respectively, bore the brunt
 96  XIII,     36|            long life of ninety-three years, his conspicuous wealth,
 97  XIII,     39|     Messalina's treachery, for forty years she wore only the attire
 98  XIII,     53|    philosophy had Seneca within four years of royal favour amassed
 99  XIII,     65|          into odium what for so many years had been endured without
100  XIII,     68|         embankment begun sixty-three years before by Drusus to confine
101  XIII,     71|      Germanicus, and that to a fifty years' obedience he was adding
102  XIII,     74|              the Comitium, which 840 years before had sheltered the
103   XIV,      3|            woman, who in her girlish years had allowed herself to be
104   XIV,     14|                                 Many years before Agrippina had anticipated
105   XIV,     18|             that for many subsequent years Nero prolonged his reign
106   XIV,     24|             public gathering for ten years, and all associations they
107   XIV,     27|            to be repeated every five years was established at Rome
108   XIV,     28|            profession during the 200 years following the triumph of
109   XIV,     28|              a few nights every five years were devoted, and in these
110   XIV,     40|            he lived for the next two years. Now, however, Britain was
111   XIV,     67|                       It is fourteen years ago, Caesar, that I was
112   XIV,     67|            your prospects, and eight years since you have been emperor.
113   XIV,     69|            that on which for so many years your eyes were fixed, supreme
114   XIV,     70|               And if I had passed my years in arms, your sword and
115    XV,      1|             hostage, who for so many years had been numbered among
116    XV,      7|             he had earned in so many years. For, as I have related,
117    XV,     15|            which guarded those whose years unfitted them for war. He
118    XV,     32|            and the enemy for so many years, was appointed to conduct
119    XV,     35|             the obstructions of long years. Envoys who came to him
120    XV,     51| conflagrations into equal numbers of years, months, and days. ~ ~
121    XV,     79|           the preparation of so many years' study against evils to
122    XV,     82|           she added a few subsequent years, with a most praise worthy
123   XVI,     23|           the Senate-house for three years, and very lately, when all
124   XVI,     30|            life in which for so many years I have persevered. You are
125   XVI,     41|              told about the last two years of Nero's reign.]~ ~THE
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