Book,  Par.

 1     I,      5|    Augustus still breathing or quite lifeless. For Livia had
 2     I,     24|     mound piled up, and it was quite breast high when, at last
 3     I,     90|  bravest fighters in the army, quite impartially, that these
 4    II,      3|     them. And as his ways were quite alien from theirs they hated
 5    II,     20|       the allies. The men were quite ready and prepared to form
 6    II,     37|    questions of the same sort, quite senseless and idle; if leniently
 7    II,     41|       thing with the Fabricii, quite another with the Scipios.
 8    II,     45|  candidates every year. It was quite evident that this motion
 9    II,     54|      for it. Archelaus, either quite unsuspicious of treachery,
10   III,     30|      enemy, ventured on a deed quite exceptional at that time
11   III,     63| faculties of sight and hearing quite paralysed. Silius, on the
12   III,     67|      the town of Lanuvium, was quite unconnected. An indefatigable
13   III,     96|      has behaved in a province quite otherwise than was hoped
14    IV,      2|        and watchful, qualities quite as mischievous when hypocritically
15    IV,     80|        were away from home for quite a different reason, still
16    VI,      9|     strangers, or say what was quite recent, or what half-forgotten
17    VI,     28|    confidence of one freedman, quite illiterate and of great
18    VI,     28|       his dangers and on being quite safe. Taking what he had
19    XI,     40|    thought of vengeance. It is quite certain that Claudius was
20   XII,      7|        of the Caesars. This is quite alien to the propriety of
21   XII,     44|       It was indeed a novelty, quite alien to ancient manners,
22  XIII,      3|   Pallas, by a surly arrogance quite beyond a freedman, had provoked
23   XIV,     18|   lightning. All this happened quite without any providential
24   XIV,     71|        still vigorous manhood, quite equal to the labours of
25    XV,     11|        would fall back on some quite different and inferior plan.
26    XV,     34|       of the remainder, seemed quite unfit for battle, and led
27    XV,     52|         long familiar objects, quite vulgarised by our extravagance,
28    XV,     79|                        Seneca, quite unmoved, asked for tablets
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