IntraText Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library |
Publius (Gaius) Cornelius Tacitus Annals Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
bold = Main text Book, Par. grey = Comment text
503 XV, 47| resounded with song, and shone brilliantly with lights. Nero, who polluted 504 XI, 7| the violence of disease brings fees to the physician, so 505 II, 8| Gallic bank, its flow is broader and gentler; it is called 506 XV, 85| Scaevinus, in answer to his browbeating and menaces, said with a 507 I, 93| many of them with bare or bruised limbs, in a plight as pitiable 508 XIV, 6| a lingering even in that brutal heart.~ ~ 509 I, 3| qualities, and having only the brute courage of physical strength, 510 VI, 34| centurion's lash, amid the buffetings of slaves, craving in vain 511 I, 96| brotherhood, one Cassius, a buffoon of infamous life, and that 512 XV, 18| through the trickery of its builders. But those who ventured 513 I, 45| the conveyance of fodder, building-timber, firewood, and whatever 514 VI, 41| the phoenix, it is said, builds a nest in the land of its 515 I, 5| strict watch, and favourable bulletins were published from time 516 IV, 92| selected hides of wild bulls as the standard according 517 XIII, 43| mortified as he was carrying a bundle of wood, so that sticking 518 I, 62| carefully weighed; when war bursts on us, innocent and guilty 519 IV, 80| outwards, precipitating and burying an immense multitude which 520 I, 40| rested with Germanicus, then busily employed in conducting the 521 XIII, 52| classification of sacred and business-days, that so they might observe 522 XI, 41| with ivy and wearing the buskin, moved his head to some 523 IV, 57| life of the capital, the bustling crowds and streaming multitudes, 524 XV, 43| originally introduced as a butt. After a time he grew so 525 VI, 22| hoarded up all their money for buying land. The facilities for 526 XV, 57| talk of Spartacus, and of bygone calamities. Soon afterwards, 527 XVI, 34| various states. These were bygones, but there was a fresh charge 528 III, 39| expulsion, the people, to check cabals among the Senators, devised 529 XII, 25| prosecution of the Bithynians, Cadius Rufus, was condemned under 530 XI, 17| Tradition indeed says that Cadmus, visiting Greece in a Phoenician 531 VI, 62| lesser of which was named Cadra, the other Davara. Those 532 XV, 93| Aegean Sea assigned to them. Caedicia, the wife of Scaevinus, 533 IV, 83| afterwards called Caelius by Caeles Vibenna, who led the Etruscan 534 XV, 48| adjoins the Palatine and Caelian hills, where, amid the shops 535 I, 97| treason by his quaestor, Caepio Crispinus, and the charge 536 XVI, 1| credulity and the promises of Caesellius Bassus, a Carthaginian by 537 XV, 7| Armenia, and it was heard that Caesennius Paetus was on his way. And 538 I, 66| forced march, cut through the Caesian forest and the barrier which 539 III, 31| himself in a regular camp, Caesianus was despatched by his father 540 XI, 47| In the cases of Suilius Caesoninus and Plautius Lateranus, 541 I, 57| mutineers in chains to Caius Caetronius commander of the first legion, 542 XII, 65| the barbarian forces, by cajolery of the people and treachery 543 XV, 8| Vettonianus and the second by Calavius Sabinus, entered Armenia, 544 XII, 46| mere heedlessness or to calculation, to fury or to lust of plunder, 545 XI, 14| exhibited. I say nothing of the calculations of the two princes, which 546 I, 20| Augustus and added to the Calendar as the Augustales. Money 547 VI, 20| descent; he was born at Cales, his father and grandfather 548 XV, 58| Placentia, close to the road, a calf was born with its head attached 549 XI, 45| ordered to execution. Decius Calpurnianus too, commander of the watch, 550 III, 34| within a short interval the Calpurnii had lost Piso and the Aemilii 551 II, 57| had suggested to Plancina calumnious insinuations against Agrippina. 552 I, 45| and a soldier, by name Calusidius, offered him a drawn sword, 553 XV, 13| followed by a great number of camels laden with corn, to keep 554 XI, 29| Alba, the Coruncanii from Camerium, the Porcii from Tusculum, 555 I, 61| attendants, provided his camp-equipage, and prepared a fleet; then 556 II, 102| flocked to him, armed the camp-followers, crossed with his ships 557 I, 35| sentries and guards of the camp-gates, suggesting hope or holding 558 I, 50| Then roaming through the camp-streets, they met the envoys, who 559 XI, 21| vessels up the estuaries and canals to which they were adapted. 560 I, 50| at the Senate's orders to cancel the concessions they had 561 XII, 49| of Nero's adoption and a cancelling at home of the Senate's 562 XV, 15| before them the examples of Candium and Numantia. "Neither the 563 III, 9| generally all the simplicity and candour of youth, now had recourse 564 XII, 38| was marched against the Cangi; their territory was ravaged, 565 I, 73| while the rest leaving their cantons and villages dispersed themselves 566 I, 20| nominated without rejection or canvass. Meanwhile the tribunes 567 XIV, 27| novelties, it was variously canvassed. There were some who declared 568 I, 106| disturb the elections by canvassing, he would promise his own 569 XV, 21| erected in the centre of the Capitoline hill; these had been decreed 570 II, 78| and their neighbours, the Cappadocians, from the Bithynian to the 571 XI, 47| Messalina, who was equally capricious in her passions and dislikes. 572 XIII, 59| passion and that she was captivated by Nero's person. Soon, 573 XIII, 70| it a necessity for them, capturing or slaughtering those who 574 XV, 55| charioteer or stood aloft on a car. Hence, even for criminals 575 IV, 47| Brutus and Cassius, whose careers many have described and 576 XV, 53| sail down the river with cargoes of this rubbish. The buildings 577 VI, 53| with the Hyrcanians and Carmanians. Meantime the Parthians, 578 I, 80| possessions, and amid the carnage and plunder, found the eagle 579 XI, 43| a seat in the emperor's carriage. ~ ~ 580 XII, 56| away in different covered carriages till the orders of Pharasmanes 581 XI, 42| city, and, mounting on a cart used to remove garden refuse, 582 XVI, 1| of Caesellius Bassus, a Carthaginian by birth and a man of a 583 XIII, 4| in other directions; he carved, painted, sang, or practised 584 VI, 48| Sarmatae into Armenia by the Caspian route. Meanwhile those who 585 XIV, 78| have been a Nero?" Then casting off all fear he prepared 586 XIV, 11| and tokens of the worst catastrophe. As the girl rose to depart, 587 IV, 15| work shall come, not to catch eagerly at wild and improbable 588 IV, 85| cutting winds. In summer it catches the western breezes, and 589 I, 37| Drusus's staff, with Justus Catonius, a first-rank centurion, 590 XV, 93| Julius Agrippa, Blitius Catulinus, Petronius Priscus, Julius 591 IV, 47| we read of Bibaculus and Catullus are crammed with invectives 592 I, 81| and to raise bridges and causeways over watery swamps and treacherous 593 II, 112| This, as a rare event, causing joy even in humble homes, 594 XVI, 8| had been frightened into caution by his uncle's destruction. 595 VI, 51| swords. Sometimes, as in a cavalry-action, there would be alternate 596 XIV, 32| were who hid themselves in caverns with all that they held 597 XV, 25| while public opinion may cease to say of us, that the estimate 598 XI, 17| According to one account, it was Cecrops of Athens or Linus of Thebes, 599 XIII, 72| past friendship he would cede the lands in question. Boiocalus 600 XII, 6| they did not yet dare to celebrate the nuptials in due form, 601 XII, 9| universally welcome, from the celebrity of his attainments, and 602 II, 105| position in Cilicia, named, Celenderis. He had raised to the strength 603 IV, 70| persecute his posterity. The celestial spirit has not transferred 604 III, 37| enforcing the penalties on celibacy and for enriching the exchequer. 605 II, 1| some of his children, to cement the friendship, not so much 606 III, 86| their own country a river Cenchrius, a grove Ortygia, where 607 II, 111| in the public service. A cenotaph was raised at Antioch, where 608 II, 41| this was not a time for censorship, and that if there were 609 XI, 33| closed the lustrum, the census for which gave a total of 610 I, 81| the measurements of its central space clearly indicated 611 III, 48| they appear; there are two centres of government, and the women' 612 I, 42| to destruction. Cassius Chaerea, who won for himself a memory 613 XIV, 44| with him. Those who were chained to the spot by the weakness 614 II, 111| in the song of the Salii; chairs of state with oaken garlands 615 XII, 73| pointed to the people of Chalcedon, who, though they arrived 616 II, 13| him, full of menaces and challenging him to conflict. Much of 617 XIII, 71| these fields belonged to the Chamavi; then to the Tubantes; after 618 XIII, 53| consent, than to pollute the chambers of the imperial ladies? 619 I, 91| equal ground, with equal chances. The sound of trumpets, 620 XV, 48| irregular streets, which characterised old Rome. Added to this 621 VI, 51| javelins, and galloping chargers, Pharasmanes with the greater 622 XI, 12| against him to the river Charinda; a fierce battle was fought 623 XV, 64| villa, whither the emperor, charmed by its loveliness, often 624 III, 85| states were to send their charters and envoys to Rome. Some 625 V, 12| no more, and a childish chastisement was enough for her correction. 626 IV, 48| or if a person aimed at chastising, he retaliated on satire 627 XIV, 46| scourged body, the outraged chastity of my daughters. Roman lust 628 XII, 75| person, everything, in short, cheaper than sovereignty."~ ~ 629 XIV, 49| twentieth, feeling that he had cheated his legion out of like glory, 630 III, 39| alluring promises and the cheating them by tribunes vetoes. 631 XI, 3| exercise, then bathed and dined cheerfully, and saying that he had 632 III, 106| State were saluted with cheers of joyful enthusiasm by 633 V, 13| enjoying the present and cherishing idle hopes of the future, 634 V, 11| prefect, and the military chest in aid of a revolution. 635 VI, 32| most wretched of food, even chewing the stuffing, his bed. According 636 XIII, 57| lovers' quarrels, there were chidings, entreaties, reproaches, 637 V, 12| would do so no more, and a childish chastisement was enough 638 XV, 91| from him, and he felt a chill creeping through his feet 639 XV, 83| and he drank it in vain, chilled as he was throughout his 640 XVI, 3| increased, on the strength of a chimerical hope, and ancient wealth 641 XI, 41| head to some lascivious chorus. It is said that one Vettius 642 XV, 54| their abominations, called Christians by the populace. Christus, 643 XV, 54| Christians by the populace. Christus, from whom the name had 644 IV, 85| were I may say regularly chronicled. And persons were actually 645 XII, 48| remembered. I now return to the chronological order. ~ ~ 646 IV, 17| relieving the cities of Cibyra and Aegium in Asia and Achaia, 647 IV, 47| Again, that book of Marcus Cicero, in which he lauded Cato 648 II, 105| strength of a legion the Cilician auxiliaries which the petty 649 VI, 16| during the civil wars gave Cilnius Maecenas, a Roman knight, 650 II, 89| leaden tablets, half-burnt cinders smeared with blood, and 651 XIV, 57| be dragged to execution. Cingonius Varro had proposed that 652 II, 67| consternation. They had forced the Ciniphii, a far from contemptible 653 I, 1| duration. The despotisms of Cinna and Sulla were brief; the 654 XV, 5| is far from contemptible, circled a portion of its walls, 655 VI, 54| white foam was curling into circles like a diadem, an omen of 656 VI, 20| avoid his native city by circuitous routes. ~ ~ 657 III, 15| of the vulgar gaze, and circulate a story among foreigners 658 IV, 44| aristocracy. My labours are circumscribed and inglorious; peace wholly 659 III, 104| to save the villages of Cirta from being ravaged with 660 XI, 28| the past. To this day we cite examples, which under our 661 II, 108| that rulers disliked a citizen-like temper in their sons, and 662 I, 71| amusements, and he thought it citizenlike to mingle in the pleasures 663 XIII, 31| well as the cohorts of the city-guard; very many too of the knights 664 VI, 17| should be deposited with the city-praetor, and after which it should 665 II, 67| even then with none of the civilisation of cities, took up arms 666 II, 25| into the forest, and part clamber up the earthwork which confronted 667 XI, 40| truth, the whole company clamoured in concert that he must 668 XIV, 47| entreaties to disdain the clamours and empty threats of the 669 I, 104| Florentia begged that the Clanis might not be turned out 670 II, 18| to call their respective clansmen to witness that "these Romans 671 VI, 51| breast to breast, with the clash of arms, they repulsed the 672 IV, 65| their war songs and the clashing of their arms. ~ ~ 673 XIV, 50| to peace, because Julius Classicanus, who had been sent as successor 674 XIII, 52| therefore there ought to be a classification of sacred and business-days, 675 XIV, 53| subsequently by collusion. A clause was added to the Senate' 676 XV, 35| days by Lucius Lucullus, clearing away the obstructions of 677 XV, 56| freedman, whose name was Cleonicus. This Seneca avoided through 678 VI, 26| little. Hence the fame of a clever remark from the orator Passienus, 679 VI, 28| impressed his questioner by cleverly revealing his imperial destiny 680 II, 37| life, Tiberius, with his cleverness in devising new law, ordered 681 XVI, 37| prosecution had excited pity. A client of Soranus, and now hired 682 III, 78| his name and his numerous clientele. After the savage massacres 683 XII, 66| wore a splendid military cloak, she, a mantle of cloth 684 I, 87| But when the baggage was clogged in the mud and in the fosses, 685 II, 17| javelins and swords and closefitting armour. Shower your blows 686 XV, 45| private relationships the closest ties were the strongest, 687 XII, 66| cloak, she, a mantle of cloth of gold. A battle was fought 688 XIII, 51| suddenly shrouded in a black cloud, seamed with lightning-flashes, 689 XIII, 73| beasts, with the blows of clubs and other weapons. At last 690 II, 28| the sailors or giving them clumsy aid, neutralized the services 691 XIII, 20| her natural rapacity, she clutched at money everywhere, seemingly 692 III, 40| everywhere fell into its clutches. Many men's fortunes were 693 XV, 93| teachings of philosophy. Cluvidienus Quietus, Julius Agrippa, 694 XIV, 27| some who declared that even Cnius Pompeius was censured by 695 VI, 14| Libo, and it was with the co-operation of Marinus that Sejanus 696 II, 29| all around were hostile coasts, or an expanse so vast and 697 I, 85| advanced, limbs burdened with coats of mail, and the impossibility 698 III, 38| tired of kings, preferred codes of laws. These were at first 699 XIV, 63| which he gave the title of "Codicils." Talius Geminus, the prosecutor, 700 III, 55| countrymen to go unpunished. The Coelaletae, Odrusae and Dii, powerful 701 III, 53| Considius Aequus too and Coelius Cursor, Roman knights, were 702 XIV, 77| teachers of philosophy, Coeranus from Greece and Musonius 703 I, 12| heirs with abundant means to coerce the State, requires forsooth 704 XII, 71| antiquity. "The Argives or Coeus, the father of Latona, were 705 VI, 49| and the vacant kingdom of Colchi. They have many traditions 706 XI, 35| The suggestion was coldly received, not because the 707 XIII, 65| Many companies for the collection of the indirect taxes had 708 III, 90| the pontiffs, augurs, the colleges of the Fifteen and of the 709 XVI, 40| Then he went out into a colonnade, where he was found by the 710 II, 69| along Asia, and touched at Colophon, to consult the oracle of 711 XIII, 43| soldier, who had quitted his colours, instantly paid the penalty 712 XI, 28| the chief men of Gallia Comata, as it was called, who had 713 I, 85| the men at work and the combatants. Everything alike was unfavourable 714 IV, 28| quit Rome because of the combinations of the informers, and had 715 I, 23| so far as to propose to combine the three legions into one. 716 II, 52| heightened by the striking comeliness of the general and the chariot 717 XI, 48| open by the rush of the new comers, and there stood at her 718 I, 88| for the rank and file, no comforts for the wounded. As they 719 IV, 41| succession of horrors. Caius Cominius, a Roman knight, was spared 720 XIII, 74| fact that the tree in the Comitium, which 840 years before 721 II, 55| kings respectively of the Commageni and Cilicians, these nations 722 I, 9| the praetorian cohorts, as commander-in-chief. He had the guard under 723 XV, 29| the type of the ceremonies commemorative of Actium, and golden images 724 I, 73| the Romans as they were commencing a bridge. Subsequently they 725 IV, 45| elements, it is easy to commend but not to produce; or, 726 XII, 3| selected Agrippina for special commendation because she would bring 727 III, 41| was met with favourable comments, but it was heard with disgust 728 II, 80| first by the freedom of commerce, next by the desire of amassing 729 IV, 74| have under him a special commissioner to undertake the charge 730 XIV, 27| they serve on the knights' commissions for the honourable office 731 I, 103| cent. tax on all saleable commodities, Tiberius declared by edict " 732 II, 3| his keeping under seal the commonest household articles. But 733 IV, 44| the struggles between the commons and the aristocracy. My 734 XIV, 17| imperilling himself, without communicating to the other senators any 735 IV, 44| record. But no one must compare my annals with the writings 736 IV, 86| highly of Germanicus and compassionately of Agrippina. Sabinus, with 737 III, 23| refused a father's orders, compassionating at the same time the high 738 XIII, 48| protracted, and also to compel the Armenians to defend 739 IV, 27| favour of Tiberius. This compels me to doubt whether the 740 II, 32| their hearts at having been compensated for their disasters at sea 741 XI, 27| support him, was allowed to compete for office. At first there 742 XII, 25| detested Lollia, for having competed with her for the emperor' 743 XIII, 35| ex-praetors of approved competency.~ ~ 744 VI, 5| bitterness, as he was himself competent to provide remedies. This 745 XIV, 27| be under the necessity of competing. As it was, the morality 746 II, 98| Sentius as an older and keener competitor. Sentius at once sent to 747 XV, 45| citizens, he heard their secret complainings at the prospect of his entering 748 II, 71| were inclined to a corrupt compliance, as a whispered rumour gained 749 XII, 49| life. The emperor willingly complied with the flatteries of the 750 XVI, 32| Curtius Montanus, the habitual composer of abominable verses. I 751 XIII, 4| of horses, occasionally composing verses which showed that 752 I, 70| was supposed to be the composition of Gracchus. He was accordingly 753 XIV, 22| who had some skill in such compositions, but not yet generally recognised. 754 IV, 47| s mother, who are alone comprehended under the law of treason. 755 II, 108| because they had the idea of comprehending in a restored era of freedom 756 I, 92| who, with his thorough comprehension of the character of Tiberius, 757 XII, 2| Callistus argued that she was compromised by her long separation, 758 VI, 15| would suggest judicious compromises. His father, as I have related, 759 III, 32| rest of the Senators from a compulsory assent, while others ascribed 760 XV, 51| be easy to enter into a computation of the private mansions, 761 I, 83| having bidden his men to concentrate themselves and keep close 762 I, 61| possibility that he could conciliate or crush those who resisted 763 II, 27| jealousy, or thinking that the conciousness of the achievement was enough. 764 XII, 55| now urged Mithridates to conclude a treaty. He reminded him 765 XV, 96| was begun, matured, and conclusively proved was not doubted at 766 VI, 35| refused her and a fiction concocted of a death that might seem 767 XIII, 24| Paris, she is, so to say, concocting a drama for the stage. She 768 II, 50| centre of interest to a vast concourse as well as to secret gatherings 769 XII, 52| the offspring of a Greek concubine, and he obtained the throne 770 III, 94| island of Gyarus. The rest concurred, with the exception of Cneius 771 XIII, 5| of the senators and the concurrence of the soldiery, he then 772 XVI, 32| the silence by which he condemns everything. Is it the peace 773 II, 43| the Senate she would not condescend to appear as a witness. 774 I, 47| campaigns; that there was a conditional release for those who had 775 XIII, 43| first or second offense condoned, but the soldier, who had 776 XII, 8| immodesty at home, unless it conduced to power. A boundless greed 777 XV, 53| arrangement had been more conducive to health, inasmuch as the 778 II, 53| the way, under pretence of conferring distinction, and for this 779 XV, 96| entered on records, and the confessions of the condemned. He was 780 XIV, 47| such a crisis. Though he confided in the valour of his men, 781 IV, 9| a few persons. Even his confidences, now that his wife had been 782 I, 62| Caecina read the letter confidentially to the eagle and standardbearers, 783 IV, 55| engendered the habit of confiding his hopes and wishes to 784 XV, 7| to have wintered on the confines of Cappadocia in hastily 785 VI, 67| allure the wavering and confirm the willing.~ ~ 786 XIV, 60| him to some island, after confiscating his property; there, the 787 XV, 51| interval between these two conflagrations into equal numbers of years, 788 VI, 21| settle his private accounts conformably to the requirements of the 789 XVI, 4| entered the theatre, and conformed to all the laws of harp-playing, 790 XII, 27| precincts of the capital, in conformity with the ancient usage, 791 XI, 32| to retire, that by this confounding together of the decision 792 XIV, 84| opened; but as her blood was congealed by terror and flowed too 793 VI, 77| with a numerous throng of congratulating followers to take the first 794 XII, 8| himself in the forum to their congratulations; then entering the Senate, 795 IV, 76| caused ruin for many who conjectured that his end was near and 796 XI, 48| of approaching night and conjugal recollections, Narcissus 797 XIV, 46| in this battle you must conquer or die. This is a woman' 798 II, 27| Caesar, after thoroughly conquering the tribes between the Rhine 799 XVI, 4| and was certain, in the conscientious opinion of the judges, to 800 III, 89| same deity, bidding them consecrate a statue and a fane to Neptune. 801 XIII, 22| Proposing as I do to follow the consentient testimony of historians, 802 I, 30| There was in addition a considerable part of the Praetorian cavalry, 803 IV, 56| herself decide whether she considers that, after Drusus, she 804 XIII, 73| and Mercury, a vow which consigns horses, men, everything 805 XIII, 47| selected a place partly consisting of gently sloping hills, 806 IV, 10| had sought a more manly consolation in the bosom of the commonwealth." ~ ~ 807 XV, 80| husband's loss with honourable consolations. She declared, in answer, 808 XII, 38| fresh enterprise till he had consolidated his previous successes. 809 XIV, 86| huge fabric of unsuccessful conspiracies against Nero. ~ ~ 810 III, 41| and ancient usage was more constantly before men's eyes, while 811 XII, 34| generation, with whom his poems constitute his chief glory. ~ ~ 812 XIV, 25| licence in wrong, as if it constituted right and justice. Consequently, 813 III, 97| Such constitutional sentiments were so rare 814 XIII, 70| territory from the emperor, constrained Verritus and Malorix to 815 IV, 67| had opportunely began to construct; then he drew a fosse and 816 IV, 93| possessions. Next, he began constructing solid roads and bridges 817 I, 3| princes of the youth," and be consuls-elect. When Agrippa died, and 818 XV, 84| Flavus had held a secret consultation with the centurions, and 819 XVI, 15| frequent messages and the consultations, and he learnt at the same 820 XII, 28| Palatine hill to the altar of Consus, soon afterwards, to the 821 XIII, 28| demoralised when no longer in contact with the licence of the 822 VI, 9| were, infected with the contagion of the malady. ~ ~ 823 IV, 47| the harangues of Brutus contain reproaches against Augustus, 824 XVI, 24| and the Divine Julius. He contemns religious rites; he annuls 825 XV, 80| perpetual sorrow, and, in the contemplation of a life virtuously spent, 826 II, 3| their cities, and by his contemptuous dislike of their national 827 I, 18| Marcus Lepidus as able but contemptuously indifferent, Gallus Asinius 828 IV, 6| and at Ravenna, and the contiguous coast of Gaul by ships of 829 IV, 27| others depend, like other contingencies, on a fate and destiny to 830 IV, 76| foresaw the very improbable contingency of his voluntary exile from 831 I, 13| Caius Marius combined, the continuance for thirty-seven years of 832 I, 45| Thereupon, as though he were contracting the pollution of guilt, 833 III, 46| through the dishonesty of contractors and the negligence of officials, 834 XI, 44| while the emperor broke into contradictory exclamations, now inveighing 835 III, 6| of a state-funeral, and contrasted the splendid honours conferred 836 I, 43| of wonderful kindliness, contrasting strongly with the proud 837 XVI, 15| important news which would contribute to his safety, if he could 838 I, 59| comrades, and unmoved by their contrition, they still retained their 839 XV, 52| views. The directors and contrivers of the work were Severus 840 IV, 40| commonwealth, and never enough controlled even by legal penalties, 841 XIII, 16| acted, so to say, as the controller of the throne. The story 842 II, 8| landing-places, and its convenience for receiving the army and 843 III, 54| Macedonia nor Thrace were conveniently accessible. ~ ~ 844 XVI, 20| again opened them, while he conversed with his friends, not in 845 III, 98| accused of treason, for having converted a statue of the emperor 846 III, 48| through panic in war, and converts a Roman army on the march 847 IV, 93| infantry and cavalry. Instantly conveying both armies down the Rhine, 848 III, 46| mercilessly attacked by convictions and confiscations.~ ~ 849 I, 17| not be separated, but to convince him by his own admission 850 XI, 4| The senators were then convoked, and Suilius proceeded to 851 XII, 75| treacherous schemes were convulsing the whole imperial house, 852 III, 61| attention amid such political convulsions to the calumnies of informers. " 853 XIII, 17| society, the lad with perfect coolness commenced some verses which 854 II, 99| Piso was at the island of Coos when tidings reached him 855 IV, 49| by the aediles; but some copies were left which were concealed 856 II, 28| lighten the hulls which leaked copiously through their sides, while 857 XVI, 24| rather his satellites, who copy, not indeed as yet the audacious 858 III, 1| arrived at the island of Corcyra, facing the shores of Calabria. 859 XIV, 84| then tightly bound with cords, and the veins of every 860 XII, 16| sufficient force, made the river Corma a line of defence, and though 861 IV, 44| with tribunes, land and corn-laws, and the struggles between 862 XIV, 64| his administration of the corn-supplies without profit to himself; 863 VI, 18| people. He named too the corn-supplying provinces, and dwelt on 864 XIV, 52| were condemned under the Cornelian law. Marcellus was saved 865 XII, 51| clamour and drove him to a corner of the forum, where they 866 VI, 66| celebrating the day fixed for the coronation, some from fear, some out 867 IV, 8| on the part of governors. Corporal punishments and confiscations 868 VI, 25| and followed the rotting corpses, till they were dragged 869 XIII, 64| condition that he sought to correct such decrees, but that he 870 III, 69| no limit, penalties and correctives are moderated by the clemency 871 I, 42| sixty to one, so as to correspond with the number of centurions. 872 XIII, 58| Her fortune adequately corresponded to the nobility of her descent. 873 III, 39| Drusus too, as flagrant a corrupter in the Senate's name; hence, 874 XI, 2| There Suilius accused him of corrupting the troops, of binding them 875 III, 73| publishing what are the corruptions with which we cannot cope. 876 II, 80| strong force, and, having corruptly won over the nobles to join 877 XI, 29| Julii came from Alba, the Coruncanii from Camerium, the Porcii 878 I, 13| he had equalled Valerius Corvus and Caius Marius combined, 879 II, 49| the deceased, sailed to Cosa, a promontory of Etruria, 880 XV, 28| Cornelia, of the family of the Cossi. ~ ~ 881 XVI, 12| carry, leaving only three couches for the last scene. Then 882 IV, 9| to be known as an upright counsellor, and there was one whose 883 IV, 56| her mother and grandmother counsellors nearer and dearer to her. 884 IV, 8| actually endeavoured to counteract barren soils and stormy 885 XIV, 7| emergency, and others, by counteracting the attempt, gave an opportunity 886 XVI, 2| sycophancy, confidently counting on the facility of his belief. ~ ~ 887 VI, 77| promontory of Misenum in a country-house once owned by Lucius Lucullus. 888 XV, 77| Campania, and had stopped at a countryhouse four miles from Rome. Thither 889 XVI, 14| which destroyed everywhere countryhouses, plantations and crops, 890 XV, 59| even for strangers he had a courteous address and demeanour. He 891 XIV, 19| enthusiastic, all the vilest courtiers, and of these never had 892 III, 66| triumphs in his youth, to covet now that he was old an unmeaning 893 XIII, 15| on her a choice and much coveted present. Agrippina, however, 894 VI, 45| unwarlike Tiberius, eagerly coveting Armenia, over which, on 895 XV, 74| accomplished on trial which cowards think arduous. It is vain 896 XII, 64| the bench with the view of cowing the ardour of the prosecutors. 897 IV, 47| Bibaculus and Catullus are crammed with invectives on the Caesars. 898 XVI, 1| by birth and a man of a crazed imagination, who wrested 899 I, 95| But he did not thereby create a belief in his patriotism, 900 XV, 91| him, and he felt a chill creeping through his feet and hands, 901 XV, 12| centurion of whom, Tarquitius Crescens, dared to defend a tower 902 IV, 87| their ears to apertures and crevices. Latiaris meanwhile having 903 III, 68| not a word. But those who criminated him fatally were rather 904 XVI, 19| intimate associates, as a critic in matters of taste, while 905 VI, 17| having the verses read and criticised, as was usual, by its presidents, 906 III, 108| the theme of much popular criticism, for, with her vast wealth, 907 XIV, 19| a court a more abundant crop, argued against his hesitation 908 XV, 54| perished, or were nailed to crosses, or were doomed to the flames 909 IV, 80| men and women of every age crowding to the place because it 910 II, 59| showed who could claim the crowning success in war. ~ ~ 911 II, 75| Nabataeans, when some golden crowns of great weight were presented 912 VI, 5| in his indolence even the cruellest of princes, he yet plotted 913 XI, 10| Gotarzes, among his many cruelties, had caused the death of 914 III, 60| steel. They were called crupellarii, and though they were ill-adapted 915 IV, 93| possession of the house of one Cruptorix, once a soldier in our pay, 916 VI, 64| summoned to help a faction crushes them all. This had lately 917 XI, 39| at the emperor's knees, crying out that Messalina was married 918 VI, 65| influence, and meanwhile Ctesiphon, the seat of empire, was 919 II, 17| The German has neither cuirass nor helmet; even his shield 920 XI, 45| demanding the names of the culprits and their punishment. Brought 921 XII, 51| distress. But we prefer to cultivate Africa and Egypt, and trust 922 XIV, 33| they reached lands under cultivation, and reaped the crops, and 923 XV, 64| unguarded and without the cumbrous grandeur of his rank, he 924 XIII, 22| was still sitting over his cups, when Paris entered, who 925 III, 76| utter ruin to the State. The cure for other evils must be 926 XI, 27| revival by Brutus of the lex curiata plainly shows. The consuls 927 XI, 9| Publius Clodius and Caius Curio were wont to speak! We are 928 XV, 51| Rome. Others have pushed a curious inquiry so far as to reduce 929 II, 89| sending emissaries to note curiously every unfavourable symptom 930 VI, 54| that the white foam was curling into circles like a diadem, 931 XI, 44| It was currently reported in after times 932 III, 33| without ceasing, savage curses on Quirinus, "to whose childless 933 III, 53| Considius Aequus too and Coelius Cursor, Roman knights, were punished 934 III, 86| its privileges were not curtailed. They had afterwards been 935 XIII, 6| behind them, screened by a curtain which was enough to shut 936 XIII, 72| Avitus, having written to Curtilius Mancia, commander of the 937 IV, 36| of the movement was Titus Curtisius, once a soldier of the praetorian 938 II, 82| between the rivers Marus and Cusus, under a king, Vannius, 939 XVI, 9| die, he would not let a cutthroat have the glory of the service. 940 III, 78| in all things a kind of cycle, and there may be moral 941 III, 86| after the slaughter of the Cyclops, shunned the wrath of Jupiter; 942 II, 62| of Hierocaesarea, Myrina, Cyme, and Tmolus, were; it was 943 XVI, 39| Demetrius, a professor of the Cynic philosophy. With him, as 944 III, 88| two miles. Then came the Cyprians on behalf of three shrines, 945 II, 74| At length the two met at Cyrrhus, the winterquarters of the 946 III, 97| retire by preference to Cythnus. This, he added, was also 947 IV, 50| Salvianus. Next, the people of Cyzicus were accused of publicly 948 III, 10| Piso, after crossing the Dalmatian sea and leaving his ships 949 VI, 55| in the completion of the Dalmatic war, and had for this been 950 IV, 82| a furious conflagration damaged the capital to an unusual 951 XI, 41| were dancing, as Bacchanals dance in their worship or their 952 IV, 65| themselves with songs and dances in front of the rampart, 953 XI, 41| women girt with skins were dancing, as Bacchanals dance in 954 XII, 18| reached Soza, a town in Dandarica, which Mithridates had abandoned, 955 XII, 17| drove out the king of the Dandaridae, and possessed himself of 956 XIII, 5| of a few favourites grow dangerously formidable. In his house 957 XIV, 18| Then the sun was suddenly darkened and the fourteen districts 958 VI, 6| I shall have that of my darling Tiberius." But the leading 959 III, 81| be inscribed, to mark the date, the names, not of the consuls, 960 VI, 62| was named Cadra, the other Davara. Those who dared to sally 961 XIV, 15| of reason, he awaited the dawn as if it would bring with 962 IV, 34| along at quick march. Day dawned, and with the sound of trumpets 963 IV, 55| Sejanus meanwhile, dazed by his extravagant prosperity 964 XIV, 69| surrendered the splendours which dazzle me, I will henceforth again 965 XIII, 17| as not at once to prove deadly. But Nero, impatient at 966 I, 87| selfish haste and all ears deaf to the word of command he 967 III, 64| Then there was a deafening cheer; the cavalry threw 968 XV, 80| him for insult one whom he dearly loved, replied: "I have 969 II, 116| complained of the cruel dearness of corn, he fixed a price 970 IV, 27| defiant independence and a debasing servility, free from ambition 971 V, 4| emperor to register its debates was therefore supposed to 972 VI, 1| the fashion of a despot he debauched the children of free-born 973 XVI, 20| companions and their novelties in debauchery, and sent the account under 974 III, 84| same refuge screened the debtor against his creditor, as 975 III, 59| allegiance. A host however of debtors and dependents took up arms, 976 XVI, 37| virtuous tastes are false and deceitful in friendship, as of men 977 XIII, 11| begin with the month of December, in which he was born, he 978 XIV, 13| raised into a mound, or even decently closed. Subsequently, she 979 XII, 39| deriving an advantage from the deceptiveness of the country, he at once 980 XIV, 43| from the procurator, Catus Decianus. All he did was to send 981 II, 15| tumultuous host. And so as the decisive crisis drew near, that he 982 XI, 45| were ordered to execution. Decius Calpurnianus too, commander 983 XV, 92| return thanks to the gods, deck his house with laurels, 984 XII, 66| was occupied by marines on decked vessels. An immense multitude 985 IV, 57| empty show. So he began to declaim against the laborious life 986 II, 41| and that if there were any declension in manners, a promoter of 987 IV, 36| freeborn populace daily decreased. ~ ~ 988 III, 29| position was commanded by Decrius, a soldier energetic in 989 I, 89| the gates. Of these the decuman gate was the point chiefly 990 XIV, 41| superstitions, were destroyed. They deemed it indeed a duty to cover 991 XIV, 18| and his crimes. Still, to deepen the popular hatred towards 992 XII, 67| interval the excavations were deepened, and to attract a crowd 993 I, 95| which Cassius Severus had defamed men and women of distinction 994 III, 87| generals, after respectively defeating Antiochus and Mithridates, 995 III, 7| had patiently endured the defeats of armies, the destruction 996 XII, 58| the barbarians, utterly defenceless, he went to Rhadamistus, 997 XIII, 44| engagement. The charge of these defensive positions he entrusted to 998 XIII, 8| apparently intending to defer hostilities. ~ ~ 999 IV, 75| his purpose and frequent deferment of it, the emperor retired 1000 IV, 65| drawn up in some wooded defiles. Some ventured to show themselves 1001 VI, 21| passed by Caesar the Dictator defining the terms of lending money 1002 I, 30| praetorian cohorts, without any definite instructions, to take suitable