Book,  Par.

 1     I,      3|         that he drove out as an exile into the island of Planasia,
 2     I,      4|        of seclusion he spent in exile at Rhodes, he had had no
 3     I,     70|      end from the length of her exile. He had a like motive for
 4     I,     70|    Cercina, where he endured an exile of fourteen years. Then
 5    II,     80|       formerly been driven into exile by the might of Maroboduus,
 6   III,     35|         paramours with death or exile. Calling, as he did, a vice
 7   III,     36|       saw clearly that it meant exile; and it was not till Tiberius'
 8    IV,     17|  Cercina to be his companion in exile. There he grew up among
 9    IV,     30|     case of Cassius Severus' an exile. A man of mean origin and
10    IV,     37|        the father, dragged from exile in filth and squalor now
11    IV,     37|        would restore him to his exile, where he might live far
12    IV,     38|      the old grudge he bore the exile Serenus. For after Libo'
13    IV,     42|     when Suillius returned from exile. The next age saw him in
14    IV,     43|        deprecated a sentence of exile, but did not oppose his
15    IV,     58|  persons, punished Aquilia with exile for the crime of adultery
16    IV,     60|      Volcatius Moschus, also an exile, had been received with
17    IV,     62|     Massilia, where the name of exile might be masked under that
18    IV,     76|    contingency of his voluntary exile from his home for eleven
19    IV,     91|         endured a twenty years' exile, in which she was supported
20     V,      1|     with Tiberius Nero, who, an exile during the Perusian war,
21    VI,      3|        that he would endure his exile with equanimity, since he
22    VI,     55|   thousand cavalry. Formerly an exile, he had rendered conspicuous
23    VI,     56|        old age, and the virtual exile of continuous retirement.
24    VI,     78|        were his lot. Himself an exile, he was the companion of
25   XII,      9|       Seneca a remission of his exile, and with it the praetorship.
26   XII,     22|         the offer and spare the exile, whose punishment would
27   XII,     25|      sesterces were left to the exile. Calpurnia too, a lady of
28   XII,     61|      resented the misfortune of exile which she had suffered in
29   XII,     61|     credit of clemency. But the exile did not live long after
30  XIII,     16|         crippled Burrus and the exile Seneca, claiming, forsooth,
31  XIII,     27|     prosecutor was sentenced to exile, and the account-books in
32  XIII,     40|     accusers were punished with exile, as though they had imperilled
33  XIII,     53|       most righteously deserved exile. "The man," he said, "familiar
34  XIII,     56|        he supported that lonely exile by a life of ease and plenty.
35  XIII,     71|     homeless outcasts, a secure exile. Their cause was pleaded
36   XIV,     18|       returned from her distant exile, when the power of Agrippina,
37   XIV,     24| disturbance, were punished with exile. ~ ~
38   XIV,     77| resource before him, an unarmed exile as he was, or he was weary
39   XIV,     82|      Sardinia, where he endured exile without poverty, and died
40   XIV,     83|        island of Pandataria. No exile ever filled the eyes of
41    XV,      1|      conquered." Tiridates too, exile as he was from his kingdom,
42    XV,     93|         and Musonius Rufus into exile. Verginius encouraged the
43   XVI,      9|      consulted and sentences of exile were passed on Cassius and
44   XVI,     15|          had been punished with exile for repeated satires on
45   XVI,     15|       himself, one Pammenes, an exile in the same place, noted
46   XVI,     15|         a brief reprieve of his exile. Anteius and Ostorius were,
47   XVI,     32|        ever threatening us with exile, let us not enable such
48   XVI,     33|        positively driven out an exile because he had exhibited
49   XVI,     38|        property and driven into exile; so impartially indifferent
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