Book,  Par.

 1     I,     70|     Tiberius, her persistent paramour inflamed her with disobedience
 2    II,     65| hundred miles from Rome. Her paramour, Manlius, was forbidden
 3   III,     36|         Decimus Silanus, the paramour of the granddaughter of
 4    IV,      4|     Drusus, for a provincial paramour, foully disgraced herself,
 5    IV,     70|  with having Furnius for her paramour, and with attempts on the
 6    VI,     35|      had Asinius Gallus as a paramour and being driven by his
 7    XI,     15|     in the possession of the paramour. ~ ~
 8    XI,     45|   control. By his order, the paramour's house was thrown open
 9   XII,     29|    her marriage, then as her paramour, he still urged Claudius
10   XII,     75|   seeing that Pallas was her paramour, so that no one could doubt
11  XIII,     24|     my Nero. Now through her paramour, Atimetus, and the actor,
12  XIII,     53|      while Seneca had been a paramour in his house. Was it to
13  XIII,     58|      between a husband and a paramour, while she was never a slave
14   XIV,     79|     and ruled him first as a paramour, then as her husband, instigated
15    XV,     61|      he had been Agrippina's paramour, and from sorrow at her
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