Book,  Par.

 1     I,     18|  afterwards destroyed by various charges through the contrivance
 2     I,     27|         men convicted on capital charges. ~ ~
 3     I,     98|   accused to be acquitted of the charges of treason. As for the question
 4    II,     36|        emperor then read out the charges and the accusers' names,
 5    II,     37|    counsel, offered to state the charges against him singly, and
 6    II,     54|      certainly, from fear of the charges fabricated against him,
 7    II,     74|     added lies, alleging various charges against Piso, Plancina,
 8    II,     98|           who were preparing the charges and the indictment as if
 9    II,    105|    private animosity under lying charges. "Only," he said, "stand
10   III,     15|        you not to take as proven charges alleged, merely because
11   III,     16|          bringing forward of the charges, and after six days' interval,
12   III,     32|       man. Then, too, there were charges of adulteries, of poisonings,
13   III,     32|      Senate not to deal with the charges of treason, and subsequently
14   III,     48|        of extortion, most of the charges are directed against the
15   III,     53|          Caecilianus, with false charges of treason. Both these results
16   III,     93|          help him in his danger, charges of treason were added, a
17    IV,     29|         to be tried on the other charges, a multitude of which were
18    IV,     50| proconsul of Asia, on proof that charges brought against him by Vibius
19     V,     10|          heaped a number of foul charges on Blaesus. ~ ~
20    VI,      6|                          Several charges were next brought, as soon
21    VI,      6|        to convict him on all the charges. When they pressed the case,
22    VI,     35|         his wrath in the foulest charges. He reproached her with
23    VI,     37|      asserted itself. Pursued by charges universally notorious, she
24    VI,     42|          Labeo, being pressed by charges of maladministration in
25    XI,     39|          said, he would not make charges of adultery, and seem to
26   XII,      5|       favour, and began to bring charges against Silanus, whose sister,
27  XIII,     21|       the old and often-repeated charges about Agrippina's mourning
28  XIII,     23|          that she might know the charges against her, and either
29  XIII,     23|          had fully explained the charges with the authors' names,
30  XIII,     39|        crushed in the past under charges of extortion, was restored
31  XIII,     56|        of the father and of some charges of extortion, the emperor
32   XIV,     16|              He even revived the charges of a period long past, how
33   XIV,     65|     assailed Seneca with various charges, representing that he continued
34    XV,     24|      Timarchus of Crete, on such charges as often fall on very influential
35    XV,     69|       but as all the man's other charges were absurd, he added an
36   XVI,     21|     Thermus had brought criminal charges against Tigellinus, such
37   XVI,     23|        against him the following charges:- "Thrasea," he said, "at
38   XVI,     27|          he demanded to know the charges against him, and asserted
39   XVI,     37|          was not involved in the charges against her husband. "Treat
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