Book,  Par.

 1     I,     54|          used to call in soldiers' fashion, Caligula, because he often
 2     I,     57|            by one in the following fashion. In front of the throng
 3    II,      4|           long, though, in foreign fashion, they were united in marriage
 4    II,     67|            who were armed in Roman fashion within a camp, and familiarised
 5    II,     77|         apparelled after the Greek fashion, in imitation of Publius
 6   III,      6|          journey, was burnt in any fashion in foreign lands, still
 7   III,     60|            clad after the national fashion in a complete covering of
 8   III,     74|     against all our most brilliant fashion, that not a citizen is safe
 9   III,     77| expenditure, gradually went out of fashion. It is as well that I should
10   III,    101|           munificence was still in fashion, and Augustus had not hindered
11   III,    103|           encountered in a similar fashion. ~ ~
12    IV,      9|       graciousness, but in a blunt fashion which often alarmed, he
13    IV,     67|           close to them, after the fashion of barbarians, were dying
14    IV,     82|       omens." They began in vulgar fashion to trace ill-luck to guilt,
15    VI,      1|         unrestrainedly that in the fashion of a despot he debauched
16    VI,     48|         from both sides, after the fashion of their countrymen, and
17    VI,     49|           with his picquets in the fashion of a blockade, till the
18    VI,     62|            were compelled in Roman fashion to render an account of
19    XI,     19|           swordsman both after our fashion and that of his country.
20  XIII,     13|          Senecio, two young men of fashion, the first of whom was descended
21  XIII,     47|     provided they came in peaceful fashion, without breastplates and
22  XIII,     60|         the civil wars, not in the fashion of his disgraceful past,
23   XIV,     20|          the harp, in a theatrical fashion, when he was at dinner.
24   XIV,     29|     festival, had then gone out of fashion. ~ ~
25   XIV,     59|         and senators after the lax fashion of the Greeks.~ ~
26    XV,     26|        showing their power in this fashion, but as for false praise
27    XV,     53|           any regularity or in any fashion, but with rows of streets
28   XVI,     12|      should be punished in ancient fashion." Nero interposed his veto,
29   XVI,     18|      easiest mode of death then in fashion, opened his veins, after
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