Book,  Par.

 1     I,      2|          the populace with cheap corn, and all men with the sweets
 2     I,      8|        the superintendent of the corn supplies. Then the Senate,
 3    II,     77|          He reduced the price of corn by opening the granaries,
 4    II,    116|         of the cruel dearness of corn, he fixed a price for grain
 5    IV,      8|              As to the duties on corn, the indirect taxes and
 6    VI,     18|       consulship a high price of corn almost brought on an insurrection.
 7    XI,     40| Turranius, superintendent of the corn market; next, Lusius Geta,
 8  XIII,     26|       The superintendence of the corn supply was given to Faenius
 9  XIII,     66|      provinces the conveyance of corn was rendered less costly,
10   XIV,     50|       been careless about sowing corn, people of every age having
11    XV,      9|  winter-camp or provided for his corn supply, hurried his army
12    XV,     13|      number of camels laden with corn, to keep off famine as well
13    XV,     19|         had such an abundance of corn that they fired the granaries,
14    XV,     21|          Nero threw the people's corn, which was so old as to
15    XV,     46|       chief anxiety, scarcity of corn, should he be absent. The
16    XV,     49|          towns, and the price of corn was reduced to three sesterces
17    XV,     53|       ships which had brought up corn by the Tiber, should sail
18    XV,     94|      with an addition of as much corn without payment, as they
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