Book,  Par.

 1     I,     14|            Senate he had usurped the high functions and authority
 2     I,     24|              and it was quite breast high when, at last overcome by
 3     I,     42|        Caesar, being then a youth of high spirit, cleared a passage
 4     I,     50|            Plancus especially, whose high rank had deterred him from
 5    II,     19|          posted by themselves on the high ground, so as to rush down
 6    II,     95|           offspring to lay aside her high spirit, to submit herself
 7    II,    106|           lines of the fortress on a high and precipitous hill, with
 8   III,     23| compassionating at the same time the high rank of the family and the
 9   III,     47|          inherited poverty, with the high rank in which he had lived
10   III,     83|            youth who has received so high an honour does not go as
11    IV,      8|            indeed suffered much from high prices, but this was no
12    IV,     10|            he reminded them of their high office and of their proper
13    IV,     17|            not escape the dangers of high rank. Had not his innocence
14    IV,     55|           the gods. The splendour of high distinctions he had never
15    VI,     15|         death, a rare incident in so high a rank. Never had he by
16    VI,     18|         During the same consulship a high price of corn almost brought
17    VI,     44|       Sejanus lived in safety and in high favour, Tiberius bearing
18    VI,     55|           whom he had been raised to high honour, and appointed governor
19    VI,     78|              private citizen or held high offices; a time of reserve
20    XI,     25|       province as proconsul." Raised high in hope by such a presage,
21    XI,     25|            his equals, he gained the high office of the consulship,
22   XII,     12|              the envoys and bestowed high praise on the young foster-son
23   XII,     18|              of Uspe, which stood on high ground, and had the defence
24   XII,     25|             Calpurnia too, a lady of high rank, was ruined, simply
25   XII,     74|           thought herself of equally high rank. In beauty, youth,
26  XIII,     13|            loathed his wife Octavia, high born as she was, and of
27  XIII,     23|        Agrippina, calling up all her high spirit, exclaimed, "I wonder
28  XIII,     59|             was going to her, to the high birth and beauty which had
29   XIV,     21|            rank nor age nor previous high promotion hindered any one
30   XIV,     30|     inherited through his mother the high nobility of the Julian family.
31   XIV,     60|           was upon this impeached of high treason by Cossutianus Capito,
32    XV,     89|     cowardice, while Nero feared the high spirit of his friend, who
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License