Book,  Par.

 1    II,     57|           wife of Drusus. Yet the brothers were singularly united,
 2    IV,     78|           the usual feuds between brothers, was inflamed with envy
 3    IV,     80|         the report were bewailing brothers, kinsmen or parents. Even
 4     V,     11|      courageous firmness of their brothers who became their sureties.
 5    VI,     26|         nor the banishment of his brothers extorted from him a single
 6    XI,     31|        Gauls cling to the name of brothers of the Roman people. ~ ~
 7   XII,      8|      marriages between uncles and brothers' daughters should be legal.
 8   XII,     11|        and to the people. Already brothers, relatives, and distant
 9   XII,     41| Caractacus were captured, and his brothers too were admitted to surrender. ~ ~
10   XII,     42|          Next were to be seen his brothers, his wife and daughter;
11   XII,     44|           to his wife, and to his brothers. Released from their bonds,
12   XII,     47|           stratagems captured the brothers and kinsfolk of Venutius.
13   XII,     52|          by the retirement of his brothers. Pharasmanes had been long
14  XIII,     19|           the immemorial feuds of brothers and the impossibility of
15  XIII,     62|        request transferred to the brothers Scribonii, to whom was given
16    XV,      2|        old feuds and rivalries of brothers. The Romans thwart me, and
17    XV,     14|        their own by the perils of brothers and kinsfolk, they hurried
18    XV,     17|         that he must wait for his brothers Pacorus and Tiridates, that
19    XV,     39|           a previous visit to his brothers and his mother. Meanwhile
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