Book,  Par.

 1   III,      9|   himself in consequence of a rival's removal. Tiberius, to
 2   III,     24|  pressed the prosecution with rival zeal, and there was no reply,
 3    IV,      4| Drusus, who could not brook a rival and was somewhat irascible,
 4    VI,     47|       as Artabanus, to be his rival, and the Iberian Mithridates
 5   XII,     64|      acts; while he had, as a rival in the worst wickedness,
 6  XIII,      8|      rose up at this crisis a rival to Vologeses in his son
 7  XIII,     14|     having a freedwoman for a rival, a slave girl for a daughter-in-law,
 8  XIII,     60|    might not be the emperor's rival at Rome. There he lived
 9   XIV,     40| allows no one to be without a rival, vied with Corbulo, and
10   XIV,     80|      not in the position of a rival fighting for marriage, though
11    XV,      7|    Corbulo could not endure a rival, so Paetus, who would have
12    XV,     60|       the foolish vanity of a rival, had forbidden him to publish
13   XVI,     12|     again on both, while with rival earnestness they prayed
14   XVI,     19|        who looked on him as a rival and even his superior in
15   XVI,     23|     were rushing thither with rival eagerness to put down Silanus
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