Book,  Par.

 1     I,      4|           war, but he had the old arrogance inbred in the Claudian family,
 2     I,     95|       pointed at his cruelty, his arrogance, and his dissensions with
 3    II,     57|  obedience, with indeed a natural arrogance inherited from his father
 4    II,     74|         little joy because of the arrogance of Piso. Though he had been
 5    II,     95|          the hatred that waits on arrogance.~ ~
 6    II,    102|          Germanicus of luxury and arrogance, and asserting that, having
 7   III,     57| oppressive usury, the cruelty and arrogance of their governors, hinting
 8    IV,     16|     inveighed against Agrippina's arrogance, and worked powerfully on
 9    IV,     94|       sufficiently clear that his arrogance was increased by gazing
10    XI,     25| sycophancy to those above him, of arrogance to those beneath him, and
11   XII,      8|           sternness and generally arrogance in public, no sort of immodesty
12  XIII,      3|            and Pallas, by a surly arrogance quite beyond a freedman,
13  XIII,     16|       with those who abetted such arrogance in a woman, removed Pallas
14  XIII,     27|        please men so much, as his arrogance offended them. When his
15   XIV,      1|        wrath of the people at the arrogance and rapacity of his mother.
16   XIV,     36|          their hatred of Parthian arrogance preferred a king given them
17    XV,     40|  Accustomed, forsooth, to foreign arrogance, he had no knowledge of
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