Book,  Par.

 1     I,     15|      Caesars as a stepmother. No honour was left for the gods, when
 2     I,     23|       every one sought the chief honour for his own legion, they
 3     I,     43|     memory of Drusus was held in honour by the Roman people, and
 4     I,     56|       aid, to have the glory and honour of having rescued the name
 5     I,     81|          longing to pay the last honour to those soldiers and their
 6     I,     82|    rendering thus a most welcome honour to the dead, and sharing
 7     I,     90|          that testified to their honour in the camp, without any
 8     I,     93|          was destruction without honour. Daylight restored land
 9     I,     96|         decreed to him, that the honour might be turned to the destruction
10    II,      2|      Caesar thought this a great honour to himself, and loaded Vonones
11    II,      9|    funeral games in his father's honour. To raise a new barrow was
12    II,     41|          theatre, in rank and in honour, might be also maintained
13    II,     44|        that the State might have honour of its Senate and knights
14    II,     67|         ornaments of triumph, an honour which Camillus, because
15    II,     70|           had derogated from the honour of the Roman name in having
16    II,     76|    concord, and that he would in honour of Germanicus yield the
17    II,     87|          pretence of showing him honour, and the tribunes and centurions,
18    II,    115|         Agrippa had impaired the honour of his house by a divorce.
19   III,      4|         rendered any conspicuous honour to the deceased, though
20   III,      6|         before the rostra; every honour devised by our ancestors
21   III,     13|   previous summer, postponed the honour and entered Rome. Then the
22   III,     30|          common soldier, won the honour of saving a citizen's life,
23   III,     44|         and Tiberius in the same honour had not been agreeable to
24   III,     53|   results were represented as an honour to Drusus. By moving in
25   III,     66|          he was old an unmeaning honour for a tour in the neighbourhood
26   III,     81|         Marcus Silanus sought to honour the princes by a slur on
27   III,     83|        which had been decreed in honour of Drusus's tribunitian
28   III,     83|          has received so high an honour does not go as a worshipper
29   III,    106|          the legions, an ancient honour conferred on generals who
30   III,    107|        he might be raised by the honour of this promotion above
31    IV,      4|       her descendants, giving up honour and a sure position for
32    IV,     35|         while the refusal of the honour heightened Dolabella's renown.
33    IV,     42| subsequently it redounded to his honour when Suillius returned from
34    IV,     45|          themselves. Again, even honour and virtue make enemies,
35    IV,     48|          posterity gives his due honour, and, if a fatal sentence
36    IV,     52|      thing to receive the sacred honour of images representing the
37    IV,     53|      will more than sufficiently honour my memory by believing me
38    IV,     53|           that, when I die, they honour my career and the reputation
39    IV,     55|      there was one most glorious honour he had won, the reputation
40    IV,     62|       under that of student. Yet honour was paid him in death, and
41    IV,     73|       cities were rivals for the honour, of which they were all
42    IV,     74|       said, to build a temple in honour of Rome, during the consulship
43    IV,     82|         where heaven showed such honour to the emperor. ~ ~
44    VI,     15|        and had won in Thrace the honour of a triumph. But his chief
45    VI,     53|         who had no perception of honour, or any scruple about a
46    VI,     55|          had been raised to high honour, and appointed governor
47    VI,     55|         us, each maintaining his honour and his loyalty. This done,
48    VI,     66|          when they pledged their honour that they had come to restore
49    VI,     77|           apparently, of showing honour to his departing friend.
50    XI,     24|          Rufus obtained the same honour. He had opened mines in
51    XI,     27|         our ancestors' days this honour had been a reward of virtue,
52    XI,     48|          could be looked for was honour in death." But in that heart,
53   XII,      4|        for popular favour by the honour of triumphal distinctions
54   XII,     34|        Pomponius was decreed the honour of a triumph; a mere fraction
55   XII,     57|     vengeance. Few cared for the honour of the State; most argued
56   XII,     63|      Pallas was content with the honour, and that he limited himself
57   XII,     75|        could doubt that she held honour, modesty and her very person,
58  XIII,      3|    provoked disgust. Still every honour was openly heaped on Agrippina,
59  XIII,     17|        care nothing for right or honour, had long ago been provided
60  XIII,     20|       troops, added as a further honour. He also gave her a separate
61  XIII,     22|      whose friendship he rose to honour. Proposing as I do to follow
62  XIII,     41|         the same office. But the honour of a noble house was further
63  XIII,     53|         self-learned position of honour to bow before an upstart
64  XIII,     64|       giving what was due to the honour of the senators, in making
65  XIII,     70|         they were told that this honour was granted to envoys from
66   XIV,      5|        The emperor would add the honour of a temple and of shrines
67   XIV,      6|        among other things, to do honour to his mother; for she had
68   XIV,      8|         treated with conspicuous honour, how also it was near the
69   XIV,     20|      poets and was meant to show honour to the gods. Songs indeed,
70   XIV,     21|      Thus they lived in fame and honour, as if on the strength of
71   XIV,     69|         likewise redound to your honour that you have raised to
72    XV,     14|       emperor's hand the special honour of a crown for a rescued
73    XV,     17|       had granted them a further honour, well worthy of the Arsacids,
74    XV,     29|          were to be exhibited in honour of the Claudian and Domitian
75    XV,     30|          rushed out to Antium to honour the recent birth, Thrasea
76    XV,     40|        sword, or be debarred the honour of embracing the governors
77    XV,     42|       emperor's train to pay him honour or for various objects.
78    XV,     66|           which is celebrated in honour of Ceres, as the emperor,
79   XVI,      4|        of the judges, to win the honour by merit. First, he recited
80   XVI,     15|        heard that there was such honour for informers and that the
81   XVI,     27|     glory and to tarnish his own honour. When it turned out otherwise,
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License