Book,  Par.

 1     I,      5|        herself for having been the cause of her husband's destruction.
 2     I,     21|        could be traced to no fresh cause except the change of emperors
 3     I,     25|          was pleading their common cause clearly showed that they
 4     I,     28|          German army in our common cause, he was last night butchered
 5     I,     33| threatening gestures which are the cause of strife and the beginning
 6     I,     34|          in their ignorance of the cause regarded as an omen of their
 7     I,     42|           resentment and the first cause of savage fury. They threw
 8     I,     46|          the upper army into their cause; that the capital of the
 9     I,     64|            everywhere visible; the cause was a mystery. All else
10    II,     43|           State, that in a certain cause which was tried by the Senate
11    II,     57|          Africa, then embraced the cause of Brutus and Cassius, and,
12    II,     67|     contemptible tribe, into their cause, when Furius Camillus, proconsul
13    II,     85|          the right or wrong of his cause without hearing it. He was
14   III,     60|           proposed to unite in his cause their parents and kinsfolk.
15   III,     69|             while we shall have no cause to regret either leniency
16    IV,      1|     cruelty in others. Of this the cause and origin was Aelius Sejanus,
17    IV,     75|      historians in attributing the cause of his retirement to the
18    VI,     21|           Rome and a most frequent cause of sedition and discord,
19    VI,     36|          fly from life without any cause for death. Nerva turned
20    VI,     38|           which saddened Rome, one cause of grief was the marriage
21    VI,     76|         himself from a height. The cause was ascribed to his mother
22    XI,      4|         surname of Petra. The real cause of their destruction was
23    XI,      6|           or a gift for pleading a cause. ~ ~
24    XI,      9|          they began to plead their cause. "Who," they asked, "can
25    XI,     48|           the morrow and plead her cause. Hearing this, seeing too
26   XII,     36|        their subjects, whether the cause was in themselves or in
27   XII,     52|          and Iberians, and was the cause of very serious disturbances
28   XII,     68|           orator, he advocated the cause of the people of Ilium,
29  XIII,      1|          of Augustus. This was the cause of his destruction. The
30  XIII,      6|           a present for pleading a cause; the quaestors-elect were
31  XIII,      6|            pleading their nation's cause before Nero, she actually
32  XIII,     39|     precedent, he heard his wife's cause in the presence of kinsfolk,
33  XIII,     71|    outcasts, a secure exile. Their cause was pleaded by a man, famous
34  XIII,     72|    dissociated themselves from the cause. When upon this the Tencteri
35   XIV,     30|          to some new and hazardous cause. This alarmed Nero, and
36   XIV,     38|           those who referred their cause to the emperor. Hitherto
37   XIV,     43|     Meanwhile, without any evident cause, the statue of Victory at
38   XIV,     75|           had gone over to the new cause. These absurdities, like
39    XV,      2|        bloodshed, by having a good cause rather than by arms, that
40    XV,      8|        fright without any apparent cause and fled to the rear. A
41    XV,     18|          up everything, so that no cause for fighting might arise.
42    XV,     65|          he feared, rise up in the cause of freedom, or, by choosing
43    XV,     73|        they entered to plead their cause, a smile of joy on any of
44    XV,     96|            especially who had most cause to mourn, abased himself
45   XVI,     15|    cupidity, and that this was the cause of the destruction of many.
46   XVI,     18|           that he died without any cause for punishment, while Rufius
47   XVI,     29| abominations, and we have far more cause to fear that he will vent
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