Book,  Par.

 1     I,      3|       was rather to wipe out the disgrace of the loss of Quintilius
 2     I,     48|         of the Ubii, marching in disgrace, since sums of money which
 3     I,     51|         Plancus, and also on the disgrace into which the legion had
 4     I,     62|         save the whole army from disgrace, and themselves from destruction. "
 5     I,     70|       left her in banishment and disgrace, deprived of all hope after
 6     I,    105|         himself, from the worst, disgrace to the State. He went so
 7    II,     17|        without, any shame at the disgrace, without any regard to their
 8    II,     41|          and that men should not disgrace themselves with silken clothing
 9    II,     46|      narrow means were neither a disgrace to myself nor burden to
10    II,     57| Pomponius Atticus, who seemed to disgrace the ancestral images of
11    II,     60|        of Germany and to his own disgrace, since his wife and his
12   III,     23|         with shame and conscious disgrace, alleging in excuse the
13   III,     29|          regarded the siege as a disgrace. Cheering on his men to
14   III,     47|         and needy man, who was a disgrace to his ancestors, and therefore
15   III,     72|  effected, would necessitate the disgrace and infamy of men of distinction,
16   III,     74|         his (all the more to our disgrace) have become obsolete through
17   III,     98|  persisted in his veto. Capito's disgrace was the more conspicuous,
18    IV,     19|       public peace, and to bring disgrace on private families, and
19    IV,     25|  malignity of Sejanus to his own disgrace. The accused begged a brief
20    IV,     45|        who endured punishment or disgrace under Tiberius, the descendants
21    IV,     69|       gained and the more marked disgrace which would follow repulse,
22    IV,     79|         which his career did not disgrace; Haterius was of a senatorian
23    VI,     50|          if victorious, the more disgrace and peril they would incur
24    VI,     68|       thus relieved all from the disgrace of desertion. ~ ~
25    VI,     78|        into every wickedness and disgrace, when fear and shame being
26    XI,     32|        voluntary resignation the disgrace might be softened.~ ~
27   XII,     16|          his own clemency, and a disgrace to us. After this Gotarzes
28   XII,     22|       would be small, while much disgrace would ensue on defeat. Why
29   XII,     75|          house, with far greater disgrace than would have resulted
30  XIII,     32|       law, much to the emperor's disgrace, by whose direction a decision
31  XIII,     44|          There they were kept in disgrace, and were released only
32   XIV,      3|          own peril and at Nero's disgrace, told him that the incest
33   XIV,     16|     obedience to a woman, to the disgrace of the Senate and people;
34   XIV,     21|        Still, not yet wishing to disgrace himself on a public stage,
35   XIV,     31|   gratification involved Nero in disgrace and danger. He had plunged
36   XIV,     52|      punishment rather than from disgrace by the memory of his ancestors
37   XIV,     60|     without judicial cruelty and disgrace to our age. Rather send
38   XIV,     71|         the very act of bringing disgrace on his friend." ~ ~
39    XV,      1|     fresh and further tidings of disgrace goaded him to action. Tigranes,
40    XV,     19|          invented to enhance our disgrace, yet about the rest of the
41    XV,     31|       the Parthians, not without disgrace to Rome. Only lately, he
42    XV,     37|          his renown. Nor did the disgrace of Paetus trouble him, as
43    XV,     84|        it mattered not as to the disgrace if a harp-player were removed
44   XVI,      3|         been deluded, he escaped disgrace and danger by a voluntary
45   XVI,      4|       indifference to the public disgrace. ~ ~
46   XVI,     12|         notion, and unwilling to disgrace a life which had clung to
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