Book,  Par.

 1     I,      5|        having been the cause of her husband's destruction. Whatever
 2     I,     43|          her purity and love of her husband gave a right direction to
 3     I,     70| disobedience and hatred towards her husband; and a letter which Julia
 4     I,     76|         exhibited the spirit of her husband rather than of her father,
 5    II,     95|            her by the memory of her husband and by their common offspring
 6    II,     96|     temperate in his pleasures, the husband of one wife, with only legitimate
 7    II,    113|             grandfather, father, or husband had been a Roman knight
 8    II,    113|          Titidius Labeo, Vistilia's husband, was judicially called on
 9    II,    115|         lived with one and the same husband, while Agrippa had impaired
10   III,     19|         gradually withdrew from her husband and separated her defence
11   III,     49|          other names; for it is the husband's fault if the wife transgresses
12   III,     49|            of others. Even with the husband's personal vigilance the
13   III,     50|             his own experience as a husband. "Princes," he said, "must
14   III,    107|             Drusus and the intended husband of the emperor's granddaughter.
15    IV,      4|             sovereignty, and of her husband's destruction. And she,
16    IV,     21|           wife, as passing into the husband's control. So the Senate,
17    IV,     22|      functions, was to be under the husband's control, but in other
18    IV,     31|      charged with having caused her husband's insanity by magical incantations
19    IV,     55|           of Roman knights, so if a husband were sought for Livia, he
20    IV,     61|       himself been chosen to be the husband of the younger Antonia,
21    IV,     71|   loneliness and provide her with a husband; her youth still fitted
22     V,      1|              took her away from her husband, whether against her wish
23     V,      1|            for the diplomacy of her husband and the dissimulation of
24    VI,     24|        sentenced to banishment. Her husband Argolicus and her father-in-law
25    VI,     42|          wife, Paxaea, emulated her husband. What made such deaths eagerly
26    VI,     61|          though she had pursued her husband with ceaseless accusations,
27    XI,      2|             afterwards he asked her husband Scipio, who was dining with
28    XI,      5|        between the affection of the husband and the necessities of the
29    XI,     35|          because the lady loved her husband, but from a fear that Silius,
30    XI,     39|             Act at once, or the new husband is master of Rome." ~ ~
31    XI,     42|       resolved to meet and face her husband, a course in which she had
32   XII,     25|        Memmius Regulus formerly her husband (for of her marriage to
33   XII,     49|      Agrippina reported this to her husband, with bitter complaint,
34   XII,     60|           the enemy and love of her husband, the first part of the flight,
35   XII,     74|        Agrippina, and sister of her husband Cneius, thought herself
36  XIII,     21|       Messalina had driven from her husband, Caius Silius, as I have
37  XIII,     21|          and wealthy widow out of a husband's control. Silana having
38  XIII,     39| superstition and handed over to her husband's judicial decision. Following
39  XIII,     57|            then into abandoning her husband. He had offered her marriage
40  XIII,     57|            the prospect of a richer husband, she repudiated her promises.
41  XIII,     58|            no distinction between a husband and a paramour, while she
42  XIII,     59|           and could not give up her husband attached as she was to Otho
43   XIV,     18|             by a thunderbolt in her husband's embrace. Then the sun
44   XIV,     79|             a paramour, then as her husband, instigated one of Octavia'
45   XIV,     80|           they will soon find her a husband."~ ~
46    XV,     75|             had taken away from her husband, one of his friends. Her
47    XV,     75|           Galla; that of her former husband, Domitius Silus. The tame
48    XV,     80|       virtuously spent, to endure a husband's loss with honourable consolations.
49    XV,     82|            the glory of sharing her husband's death, but that after
50    XV,     82|           worthy remembrance of her husband, and with a countenance
51    XV,     93|             had once been Poppaea's husband. It was the splendour of
52   XVI,      6|             outburst of rage in her husband, who felled her with a kick
53   XVI,     11|           seen the murderers of her husband Plautus. She had clasped
54   XVI,     35|            widowed and forlorn, her husband Annius Pollio having lately
55   XVI,     37|             the charges against her husband. "Treat separately," he
56   XVI,     39|           who aspired to follow her husband's end and the example of
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