Book,  Par.

 1     I,     21|               factions, then became a common soldier, had a saucy tongue,
 2     I,     25|              s son was pleading their common cause clearly showed that
 3     I,     26|            Rufus, who had long been a common soldier, then a centurion,
 4     I,     28|              the mutiny. Vibulenus, a common soldier, was hoisted in
 5     I,     28|             by the German army in our common cause, he was last night
 6     I,     35|           qualities were liked by the common soldiers. These men made
 7     I,     35|              offence? Demands made in common are granted slowly; a separate
 8     I,     38|               to be put to death. The common account is that they were
 9     I,     64|           where day saw them at their common meals, night resting from
10     I,     92|       ambition to parade her son in a common soldier's uniform, and wish
11    II,     24|              battle and flew to arms. Common people and chiefs, young
12    II,     59|          irregular bands, formerly so common with the Germans. Prolonged
13    II,     70|           encourage the lowest of the common soldiers, removing the old
14    II,     84|            king, to the gods of their common house, and to the hospitable
15    II,     95|              her husband and by their common offspring to lay aside her
16   III,     10|            Africa. It was a matter of common talk how he had repeatedly
17   III,     16|               he had so corrupted the common soldiers by licence and
18   III,     30|           engagement Rufus Helvius, a common soldier, won the honour
19   III,     52|      conviction to be confined in the common prison. ~ ~
20   III,     98|          statue of the emperor to the common use of silver plate; but
21    IV,     55|            hardships, like one of the common soldiers, for the emperor'
22    XI,     30|          sudden innovation, but was a common practice in the old commonwealth.
23   XII,      7|              novelty. True; but it is common in other countries, and
24   XII,     21|       Claudius there was the tie of a common victory. Wars had glorious
25   XII,     56|               barbarian; and soon the common people, whom he had held
26  XIII,     18| unconsciousness, said that this was a common occurrence, from a periodical
27  XIII,     32|              annul any right to their common injury. Soon afterwards,
28  XIII,     47|               consideration for their common good, in the presence of
29  XIII,     71|             and lands uninhabited are common to all." Then looking up
30  XIII,     73|               they had been soiled by common use. ~ ~
31   XIV,     33|            even more burdens than the common soldier. Subsequently, they
32   XIV,     79|               remonstrances among the common people, who have less discretion
33   XIV,     84|         sister, and appealed to their common ancestors, the Germanici,
34    XV,     14|              they were bound. If each common soldier were to have bestowed
35    XV,     14|           these and like words into a common enthusiasm, and some too
36    XV,     53|               proper wall, not by one common to others. These changes
37    XV,     94|           thousand sesterces to every common soldier, with an addition
38   XVI,     17|               are not confounded in a common burial, so in the record
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