Book,  Par.

 1     I,     94|    had at hand, arms, horses, gold. Germanicus having praised
 2    II,     41| decided that vessels of solid gold should not be made for the
 3    II,     78|      the weight of silver and gold, the tale of arms and horses,
 4   III,     73|      The masses of silver and gold? The marvels in bronze and
 5   III,     81|    Senate House in letters of gold, was laughed at as an old
 6   III,     83|       proposed inscription in gold, so contrary to national
 7    VI,     48|   into crime by a quantity of gold. At the same instant the
 8    XI,     30|       let them bring us their gold and their wealth rather
 9   XII,     66|     she, a mantle of cloth of gold. A battle was fought with
10  XIII,     11|   Statues to himself of solid gold and silver he forbade, in
11    XV,     47|  These vessels glittered with gold and ivory; the crews were
12    XV,     52|       in which the jewels and gold, long familiar objects,
13    XV,     56|   Rome were despoiled and the gold carried off, which, for
14   XVI,      1|  contained a vast quantity of gold, not in the form of coin,
15   XVI,      1|     hostile, might by lust of gold be provoked to war. ~ ~
16   XVI,      2|       usual harvests, and the gold of the mine with its alloy,
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