Book,  Par.

 1     I,     14|          was a peace stained with blood; there were the disasters
 2     I,     23|           imbrue your hands in my blood: it will be less guilt to
 3     I,     50|           the worst violence, the blood of an envoy of the Roman
 4     I,     55| threatened, may be expiated by my blood only, and that you may not
 5     I,     55|           and rivers stained with blood, while I am myself dragging
 6     I,     82|         kinsfolk and of their own blood, while their wrath rose
 7     I,     87|    Quintilius Varus, covered with blood, rising out of the swamps,
 8     I,     87|       horses. Staggering in their blood on the slippery marsh, they
 9     I,     88|           food, soiled by mire or blood, they bewailed the darkness
10    II,      4|          Artabanus, an Arsacid by blood, who had grown to manhood
11    II,     17|         sprinkled with the sacred blood, another more beautiful
12    II,     21|         smeared his face with his blood, that he might not be known.
13    II,     26|       themselves with the enemy's blood. Our cavalry fought with
14    II,     57|           son and born of his own blood. As for Germanicus, his
15    II,     89|   half-burnt cinders smeared with blood, and other horrors by which
16    II,     93|      bright prospects, by ties of blood, or even by envy towards
17   III,     15|  affliction. Do you, whom ties of blood or your own true-heartedness
18   III,     23|    grandmother and uncle with the blood of a most unhappy house."~ ~
19    IV,      9|    grandsons would be of the same blood as the family of the Drusi.
20    IV,     70|         image, sprung of heavenly blood, and she perceives her danger,
21    IV,     95|          to his alliance with the blood of the Caesars, for he could
22     V,      1|            she united the noblest blood of Rome. Her first marriage,
23     V,      1|   Agrippina and Germanicus to the blood of Augustus, her great-grandchildren
24    VI,     71|          of Drusus was nearest in blood and natural affection, but
25    XI,     48|         to accomplish the deed of blood. Such, he said, was the
26   XII,     56|        tight knot; then, when the blood has flowed into the extremities,
27   XII,     56|          as being sealed with the blood of both parties. On this
28  XIII,     36|      broken health by letting the blood trickle from his veins,
29   XIV,     32|         daring at the cost of the blood of the foreigner. ~ ~
30   XIV,     41|       cover their altars with the blood of captives and to consult
31   XIV,     43|      ocean had worn the aspect of blood, and, when the tide ebbed,
32   XIV,     84|           were opened; but as her blood was congealed by terror
33    XV,     58|           propitiation with noble blood. Human and other births
34    XV,     64|           stain with an emperor's blood, however bad he might be,
35    XV,     67|        and the means of stanching blood to be prepared by the same
36    XV,     81|          frugal diet, allowed the blood to escape but slowly, severed
37    XV,     91|           Annaeus Lucanus. As the blood flowed freely from him,
38   XVI,     16|      allowed but a scanty flow of blood, he used the help of a slave,
39   XVI,     41|           of each arm, he let the blood flow freely, and, as he
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