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Publius (Gaius) Cornelius Tacitus Annals Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
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1003 XV, 43| a shoemaker's shop, of a deformed person and vulgar wit, originally 1004 XII, 78| Fearing the worst, and defying the immediate obloquy of 1005 XIV, 27| to be seen at Rome, and a degeneracy bred by foreign tastes was 1006 VI, 47| intimacy with Claudius, he degenerated into a servility so base 1007 XIII, 27| used writing, so as not to degrade his voice in such company. 1008 IV, 94| those whom Sejanus had not deigned to accost or to look on, 1009 XI, 3| When Claudius began to deliberate about the acquittal of Asiaticus, 1010 I, 101| I cannot believe that he deliberately gave his son the opportunity 1011 XIV, 56| matter already weighed in the deliberations of wiser men than ourselves? 1012 IV, 27| who knew nothing of the delinquencies of others should be punished 1013 XV, 25| correction follows after delinquency. And therefore, to meet 1014 III, 86| Apollo were not born at Delos, as was the vulgar belief. 1015 II, 69| it is not a woman, as at Delphi, but a priest chosen from 1016 IV, 76| between such science and delusion and in what obscurity truth 1017 II, 34| thoughtless and an easy prey to delusions, to resort to astrologers' 1018 I, 22| asked, in the tone of a demagogue, why, like slaves, they 1019 XI, 17| Etrurians learnt them from Demaratus of Corinth, and the Aborigines 1020 XII, 63| that those who had thus demeaned themselves, without the 1021 XVI, 10| his accomplice Claudius Demianus, whom Vetus, when proconsul 1022 XI, 11| resistance after their governor, Demonax, had ventured on a battle 1023 XIV, 32| his army, with no hostile demonstrations, lest might cut off all 1024 IV, 3| citizens. His pretexts were the demoralisation incident to a dispersed 1025 I, 21| This was the beginning of demoralization among the troops, of quarreling, 1026 I, 22| have just got their two denarii per man, and which after 1027 XV, 82| a degree of pallor which denoted a loss of much vital energy. ~ ~ 1028 XIV, 34| They also handed him a gift denoting friendship, a golden crown, 1029 III, 76| burdens. But if they wish to denounce vice, and when they have 1030 IV, 68| sentries were strengthened with denser masses of troops. Night 1031 XIII, 11| slave accused, or of Julius Densus, a knight, whose partiality 1032 VI, 16| government. It is said that Denter Romulius was appointed by 1033 IV, 59| in which the territory of Denthelia (where the temple stood) 1034 IV, 7| administration in the other departments of the State, inasmuch as 1035 IV, 27| their antipathy to others depend, like other contingencies, 1036 XI, 19| would be by the bread of dependence, by slavery, by luxury, 1037 XIII, 45| meantime who, besides his own dependencies, had the powerful aid of 1038 VI, 29| and events, yet it is not dependent on wandering stars, but 1039 IV, 52| aware, Senators, that many deplore my want of firmness in not 1040 IV, 11| Then deploring the extreme age of Augusta, 1041 III, 11| not as accusers, but as deponents and witnesses to facts. 1042 II, 5| on the throne, nor was he deposed without disaster to ourselves. 1043 III, 43| was afterwards the chief depository of imperial secrets, and 1044 XV, 70| denounced him as an infamous and depraved wretch, with so fearless 1045 XV, 47| which could heighten his depravity, till a few days afterwards 1046 IV, 57| deeper alarm, rejoined by deprecating the whispers of suspicion, 1047 IV, 40| Cornutus, it was proposed to deprive informers of their rewards 1048 IV, 51| time Further Spain sent a deputation to the Senate, with a request 1049 VI, 16| Latin festival some one is deputed to exercise the consul's 1050 XII, 77| rare compound which might derange his mind and delay death. 1051 XVI, 14| beings without any such derangement of the atmosphere as to 1052 XII, 39| in military strength, but deriving an advantage from the deceptiveness 1053 II, 70| Germanicus, who, he said, had derogated from the honour of the Roman 1054 II, 69| of the applicants. Then descending into a cave and drinking 1055 XI, 21| vessels, had made piratical descents specially on the coast of 1056 IV, 47| same Brutus, he nowhere describes as brigands and traitors, 1057 I, 106| names of the candidates, describing their origin, their life 1058 I, 16| and read. This contained a description of the resources of the 1059 IV, 45| gives very little pleasure. Descriptions of countries, the various 1060 II, 55| became excited, a majority desiring the Roman rule, some, that 1061 III, 5| tomb of Augustus, was now desolate in its silence, now distracted 1062 XV, 52| himself of his country's desolation, and erected a mansion in 1063 XVI, 24| The prince's prosperity he despises. Can it be that he is not 1064 XV, 56| the temples in Rome were despoiled and the gold carried off, 1065 III, 48| women's orders are the more despotic and intemperate. Formerly 1066 I, 70| by a lingering death of destitution, with the idea that an obscurity 1067 VI, 30| not know, and that this destroys the credit of a science, 1068 XIV, 5| might by a contrivance be detached, when out at sea, so as 1069 III, 73| observe them and, as it were, detect them. Had those energetic 1070 XII, 77| near his end, might, on detecting the treachery, return to 1071 XV, 26| better than its close, which deteriorates, when we are anxiously seeking 1072 I, 67| Caesar, to spread devastation widely, divided his eager 1073 XII, 10| either, and was likely to develop still more important results. 1074 I, 3| Agrippa Postumus, who, though devoid of worthy qualities, and 1075 III, 60| noblest youth of Gaul, there devoting themselves to a liberal 1076 XI, 37| apathy of Claudius, of his devotion to his wife and of the many 1077 XV, 6| suddenly appearing, had devoured every blade of grass and 1078 XV, 49| however, be stopped from devouring the palace, the house, and 1079 XI, 45| them a few words at the dictation of Narcissus. Shame indeed 1080 II, 46| succession of consuls and dictators. Not to excite odium do 1081 I, 13| neither of a kingdom nor a dictatorship, but under that of a prince. 1082 I, 1| established by Lucius Brutus. Dictatorships were held for a temporary 1083 XVI, 1| the present. Phoenician Dido, as he sought to show by 1084 VI, 33| Attius, a centurion, and Didymus, a freedman, openly exhibited 1085 I, 79| great Augustus, ranked among dieties, and his chosen heir Tiberius, 1086 VI, 30| that some things happen differently from what has been foretold 1087 VI, 41| creature sacred to the sun, differing from all other birds in 1088 III, 69| ancestors and yourselves. Folly differs from wickedness; evil words 1089 XIII, 31| they contended, "a widely diffused body; from it, the city 1090 XV, 52| impossible, endeavoured to dig through the nearest hills 1091 I, 88| extent their implements for digging earth and cutting turf. 1092 VI, 30| when the time comes, not to digress too far from my subject. ~ ~ 1093 IV, 44| related, with a free scope for digression, the strifes of consuls 1094 III, 55| Coelaletae, Odrusae and Dii, powerful tribes, took up 1095 I, 77| treaty. I was put off by that dilatory general, and, as I found 1096 I, 39| impious host, the stars grew dim and storms burst over them. 1097 III, 73| the old standard? The vast dimensions of country houses? The number 1098 XIII, 31| themselves, there should be no diminution of the rights of the entire 1099 IV, 68| One of their chiefs, Dinis, an old man who well knew 1100 V, 1| she was a match for the diplomacy of her husband and the dissimulation 1101 IV, 33| Moors, Dolabella in person directing every operation. ~ ~ 1102 XV, 52| and extensive views. The directors and contrivers of the work 1103 IV, 52| homage paid to Augustus will disappear if it is vulgarised by indiscriminate 1104 II, 77| having gently expressed disapproval of his dress and manners, 1105 XII, 37| his troops, he prepared to disarm all whom he suspected, and 1106 I, 60| and the people, feeble and disarmed as they were, while the 1107 XIII, 65| income and the necessary disbursements. Certainly some restraint, 1108 XII, 49| incorruptible fidelity were discarded on the following provocation. 1109 IV, 53| tranquil mind, which can discern alike human and divine claims; 1110 XIII, 18| thither, while those whose discernment was keener, remained motionless, 1111 I, 52| had been made by granting discharges and money, indeed, by conciliatory 1112 VI, 29| ancients and among their disciples you will find conflicting 1113 III, 55| most of them, and the best disciplined, besieged the king in the 1114 IV, 90| emperor should be requested to disclose his apprehensions to the 1115 XVI, 16| every exit from the house, disclosed the emperor's orders to 1116 III, 63| the rebel Turoni had been discomfited by a single cohort, the 1117 II, 61| hills. This was a sign of discomfiture. He was gradually stripped 1118 XIII, 69| the governor of Belgica, discouraged the work by seeking to deter 1119 IV, 15| tortured, have sought to discover the traitor, in short, would 1120 IV, 87| to communicate some fresh discoveries. There he talked much about 1121 XI, 11| to a sudden agreement, on discovering a plot among their people, 1122 VI, 9| both had enjoyed, though discreetly, the friendship of Sejanus. 1123 VI, 12| all without difference and discrimination? No; it is to be restricted 1124 XIII, 47| they would do better to discuss matters requiring consideration 1125 I, 18| last conversations he was discussing who would refuse the highest 1126 I, 11| left the point to them with disdainful moderation, he then admonished 1127 II, 46| that he listened somewhat disdainfully to the request of Marcus 1128 XII, 17| Aquila, a Roman knight, disdaining both, roused the neighbouring 1129 III, 74| treatment, so the fever of a diseased mind, itself polluted and 1130 II, 10| brought up the river. He disembarked the troops, which were to 1131 III, 40| of the legal knots were disentangled and some light temporary 1132 XIV, 74| hairs as if they were a disfigurement. ~ ~ 1133 III, 90| brooded over it with deep and disguised resentment. However the 1134 IV, 72| nor did she touch a single dish, till at last Tiberius noticed 1135 XII, 77| to bring in and taste the dishes. ~ ~ 1136 XIV, 41| like the Furies, with hair dishevelled, waving brands. All around, 1137 III, 46| or impassable through the dishonesty of contractors and the negligence 1138 II, 89| the floor and in the walls disinterred remains of human bodies, 1139 II, 108| perfectly true, that rulers disliked a citizen-like temper in 1140 XV, 72| for with her limbs all dislocated she could not stand), she 1141 I, 62| who were least tainted by disloyalty, and urged them to save 1142 IV, 44| but slightly disturbed, dismal misery in the capital, an 1143 V, 10| converse, or, if otherwise, dismissing them, he thus spent part 1144 XV, 37| Corbulo, was the first to dismount, and Corbulo hesitated not 1145 I, 70| paramour inflamed her with disobedience and hatred towards her husband; 1146 III, 74| incrimination. Yet as even bodily disorders of long standing and growth 1147 II, 5| from them, bewildered and disorganised, rather indeed without a 1148 VI, 66| concubines, he gave them time to disown their compact. Phraates 1149 XI, 14| other lands. Nero, never a disparager of himself, was wont to 1150 IV, 45| ancient historian has but few disparagers, and no one cares whether 1151 I, 60| experience, who was the supreme dispenser of rigour or of bounty. 1152 V, 13| Silanus, and that, after the dispersion of a number of his followers' 1153 I, 99| tribunal, but so as not to displace him from the official seat. 1154 IV, 65| manner of their country were disporting themselves with songs and 1155 XI, 44| should have an opportunity of disproving the charge. Meanwhile the 1156 XII, 1| that adviser, summoned the disputants to a conference and bade 1157 IV, 73| embassies from Asia on a disputed question as to the city 1158 VI, 6| Arruntius, with whom he had disputes on many matters, he had 1159 XIII, 7| the close of the year came disquieting rumours that the Parthians 1160 II, 35| himself. Caesar, without disregarding the information, declined 1161 III, 45| censured in severe decrees disrespect on the part of the young, 1162 I, 97| Marcellus that he had made some disrespectful remarks about Tiberius, 1163 XI, 28| and we are by no means dissatisfied with the Rome of the past. 1164 XIII, 61| was, in fact, an artful dissembler. Graptus, one of the emperor' 1165 VI, 77| him, but not his skill in dissembling. There was the same stern 1166 XI, 21| free, as it happened, from dissension at home and emboldened by 1167 V, 1| diplomacy of her husband and the dissimulation of her son. Her funeral 1168 II, 50| military force or allow time to dissipate a silly credulity. Sometimes 1169 III, 71| preparations for gluttony and dissipation were the theme of incessant 1170 XIII, 72| extermination unless they dissociated themselves from the cause. 1171 XIII, 65| conception, pointed out "that the dissolution of the empire must ensue 1172 XIV, 24| defiance of the laws were dissolved. Livineius and the others 1173 III, 22| the other, Marcus Piso, dissuaded me from returning to Syria. 1174 VI, 28| the positions and relative distances of the stars, he first paused, 1175 XII, 56| orders of Pharasmanes were distinctly ascertained. The lust of 1176 IV, 81| dispute would arise, when some distorted face, bearing however a 1177 IV, 56| surprising that, with so many distracting cares, foreseeing too the 1178 XVI, 14| this same amount for the distresses of Rome. ~ ~ 1179 XII, 52| the cause of very serious disturbances between Parthia and Rome. 1180 I, 72| towards us. Arminius was the disturber of Germany. Segestes often 1181 XII, 75| magical incantations, and was disturbing the peace of Italy by an 1182 XV, 67| it was blunted from long disuse, he ordered it to be sharpened 1183 XI, 17| his reign and subsequently disused. These may still be seen 1184 XIV, 73| emperor's complicity in guilt, dived into Nero's most secret 1185 IV, 73| Tiberius, to divert people's talk, continually 1186 I, 104| swell its waters should be diverted from their courses. A hearing 1187 III, 73| for the sake of jewels, diverts our wealth to strange or 1188 XV, 7| else they were to share or divide between them according to 1189 XV, 58| followed an explanation of the diviners, that another head was preparing 1190 IV, 4| his mistress's jealousy, divorced his wife Apicata, by whom 1191 XIV, 23| the wrangles of opposing dogmatists. And some there were who 1192 XV, 54| beasts, they were torn by dogs and perished, or were nailed 1193 XIII, 1| charge of the emperor's domains in Asia. They gave the proconsul 1194 XVI, 19| prince's cruelty, which dominated every other passion, charging 1195 VI, 50| been free from Parthian domination, and that the grander their 1196 VI, 35| endure equality and loved to domineer, was with her masculine 1197 IV, 39| be confined in Gyaros or Donusa, but this he rejected, on 1198 XIV, 86| most powerful freedmen, Doryphorus, on the pretext of his having 1199 I, 13| latter sank into feeble dotage and the former had been 1200 XI, 37| follow such a marriage." Doubtless there was thrill of alarm 1201 XV, 47| the ceremony, the wedding dower, the couch and the nuptial 1202 XI, 4| ears of which were turned downwards, and, from this appearance, 1203 II, 115| over though she was, with a dowry of a million sesterces. ~ ~ 1204 XVI, 5| for closing his eyes in a doze, and that having with difficulty 1205 XIV, 60| property; there, the longer he drags on his guilty life, the 1206 XIII, 53| Italy and the provinces were drained by a boundless usury. His 1207 XIII, 24| so to say, concocting a drama for the stage. She at her 1208 II, 54| unsuspicious of treachery, or dreading compulsion, should it be 1209 III, 97| further said that Gyarus was a dreary and uninhabited island, 1210 XIV, 29| emperor was victorious. Greek dresses, in which most people showed 1211 III, 48| woman had presided at the drill of the cohorts and the evolutions 1212 II, 69| descending into a cave and drinking a draught from a secret 1213 VI, 62| by the sword, the rest by drought.~ ~ 1214 II, 2| out Antonius, if Caesar's drudge, after an endurance of so 1215 XIV, 41| brands. All around, the Druids, lifting up their hands 1216 VI, 20| emperor married respectively Drusilla and Julia, Germanicus's 1217 XIII, 73| other countries, by the drying up of an overflow of the 1218 XIII, 70| been their ancestors', when Dubius Avitus, who had succeeded 1219 XV, 21| ex-consuls, Lucius Piso, Ducennius Geminus, and Pompeius Paulinus, 1220 II, 64| vegetable market by Caius Duilius, who was the first to make 1221 XII, 58| life, used to beguile the dullness of his leisure with the 1222 IV, 41| did not indeed err from dulness, and it is easy to see when 1223 IV, 88| magistrates should not open the dungeons as well as the temple and 1224 XVI, 1| Fortune soon afterwards made a dupe of Nero through his own 1225 I, 64| it was from those same dwellings where day saw them at their 1226 VI, 41| third king of the Macedonian dynasty, with a multitude of companion 1227 I, 50| sanctity. And had not the eagle-bearer, Calpurnius, saved him from 1228 XIV, 47| that a small force should earn the renown of an entire 1229 IV, 17| which had suffered from earthquakes, by a remission of three 1230 VI, 47| intrusted the whole of his eastern policy to Lucius Vitellius. 1231 II, 34| which for so many years have eaten into the heart of the State. 1232 VI, 42| his veins and let his life ebb from him. His wife, Paxaea, 1233 I, 93| ground more lightly at the ebb-tide. Vitellius at first pursued 1234 XV, 40| Media, and Vologeses at Ecbatana, who was by no means unconcerned 1235 IV, 69| recognise friend or enemy, echoes, seemingly in their rear, 1236 I, 87| under the hills and the echoing glens with merry song or 1237 I, 93| waves or sucked under by eddies; beasts of burden, baggage, 1238 XII, 14| several days in the town of Edessa. Although a certain Carenes 1239 XII, 60| calm water at the river's edge, was perceived by some shepherds, 1240 XI, 16| functions as censor, published edicts severely rebuking the lawlessness 1241 XIV, 28| consulted, when a permanent edifice was erected for a theatre, 1242 V, 7| three years, are lost. Newer editions of Tacitus mark the division 1243 VI, 47| and an old age of infamy effaced the virtues of youth. ~ ~ 1244 VI, 51| which at a shorter range are effective, rushed on with pikes and 1245 IV, 3| dispersed soldiery, the greater effectiveness of simultaneous action in 1246 III, 78| of emulation proved more efficacious than legal penalties or 1247 XV, 83| frame closed against the efficacy of the poison. At last he 1248 XV, 34| legions, troops in thorough efficiency, and trained by frequent 1249 XV, 3| noble, he entrusted a highly efficient body of cavalry, which was 1250 II, 111| in procession behind his effigy on the fifteenth of July. 1251 III, 92| it was, by his unblushing effronteries. Brutidius who was rich 1252 XII, 62| retaining their seats, added effrontery to poverty. ~ ~ 1253 XV, 92| wives, Artoria Flaccilla and Egnatia Maximilla. The latter possessed 1254 I, 14| murders at Rome of the Varros, Egnatii, and Juli." ~ ~ 1255 XVI, 37| appearance among them of Publius Egnatius provoked as much indignation 1256 II, 81| he never left Italy for eighteen years, living to old age 1257 XIII, 7| Caesar Octavianus, in their eighteenth and nineteenth years respectively, 1258 XIV, 42| people out of their houses, ejected them from their farms, called 1259 IV, 31| struggling and of her forcible ejection. He reported this to the 1260 I, 69| his greatness in language elaborated for effect, more so than 1261 XIV, 28| were exhibited with greater elaboration, and yet no one at Rome 1262 V, 10| there was still time to elapse before the last scene, he 1263 VI, 56| Though three years had elapsed since the destruction of 1264 XII, 35| might otherwise, in the elation of success, disturb also 1265 IV, 21| spoke on the subject of electing a priest of Jupiter in the 1266 XI, 27| by the good nature of the electors, till at Dolabella's suggestion 1267 XVI, 19| thought nothing charming or elegant in luxury unless Petronius 1268 XV, 18| pride. Seated himself on an elephant, he crossed the river Arsanias, 1269 II, 79| penetrate. He then came to Elephantine and Syene, formerly the 1270 III, 41| and to have yet further elevated Sejanus, whom they already 1271 III, 95| notorious infamy should be eligible for a province, and that 1272 II, 36| relatives, and imploring some eloquent voice to ward off his perils; 1273 XII, 68| people of Ilium, and having eloquently recounted how Rome was the 1274 III, 104| he would attack, would elude pursuit, and still arrange 1275 VI, 68| their aid the Armenians and Elymaeans and other nations in their 1276 XVI, 6| with fragrant spices and embalmed, and then consigned to the 1277 XIII, 68| the first completed the embankment begun sixty-three years 1278 II, 6| to its defenders. But by embarking on the sea, invasion would 1279 XI, 10| considerations of policy, made him embarrass himself with the siege of 1280 II, 62| equal rank, and consequent embarrassment.~ ~ 1281 II, 34| profligacy and desperate embarrassments, thereby to entangle him 1282 III, 101| Senate's leave to restore and embellish, at his own expense, the 1283 I, 13| allies. The capital had been embellished on a grand scale; only in 1284 XIII, 54| and that there had been embezzlement of public monies. Then, 1285 IV, 35| an ivory sceptre and an embroidered robe, gifts anciently bestowed 1286 VI, 50| bands with their golden embroidery; warriors, as he said, on 1287 I, 68| moment the troops of the van emerged from the woods and intrenched 1288 VI, 16| justice and provide for emergencies, so that the capital might 1289 XI, 22| fresh attacks on Germany, so emphatically as to order the garrisons 1290 III, 92| occupation. Junius Otho's old employment had been the keeping of 1291 III, 9| message intended to pacify the emporer, and then made his way to 1292 I, 102| that the praetors should be empowered to punish with banishment 1293 VI, 42| from him. His wife, Paxaea, emulated her husband. What made such 1294 IV, 3| the establishment of an encampment at a distance from the temptations 1295 IV, 45| deaths of great generals, enchain and refresh a reader's mind. 1296 XVI, 36| invoked no impious deities, no enchantments, nor aught else in my unhappy 1297 XV, 3| As he spoke, he encircled Tiridates' brow with a diadem, 1298 II, 8| continuously in a single channel or encircling merely insignificant islands, 1299 IV, 67| drew a fosse and stockade enclosing an extent of four miles, 1300 XIII, 51| bright with sunlight, the enclosure within the walls was suddenly 1301 IV, 10| might be reproached for thus encountering the gaze of the Senate after 1302 XII, 46| woods and morasses, with encounters due to chance or to courage, 1303 III, 78| remained. But the chief encourager of strict manners was Vespasian, 1304 I, 86| the wounded and the more encumbered troops were in advance. 1305 VI, 21| by the number of persons endangered to refer the matter to the 1306 III, 66| Cornelius Dolabella alone, in endeavouring to outdo the other Senators, 1307 | ending 1308 XII, 21| victory. Wars had glorious endings, whenever matters were settled 1309 IV, 57| of life, would soon, when enervated by retirement, more readily 1310 XV, 60| Scaevinus, indeed, had enfeebled his mind by excess, and 1311 XI, 6| a body, and demanded the enforcement of the Cincian law, an old 1312 III, 37| statutes, for yet further enforcing the penalties on celibacy 1313 XIII, 31| all. Again, two kinds of enfranchisement had been instituted, so 1314 IV, 55| of Tiberius, the son, had engendered the habit of confiding his 1315 I, 85| throw themselves on the engineering parties, which they harassed, 1316 XI, 17| history, are still seen engraved on stone. The Egyptians 1317 IV, 59| this event still existed, engraven on stone and ancient bronze. 1318 XIII, 22| to heighten the emperor's enjoyments, but who now wore a gloomy 1319 VI, 39| and I need not further enlarge on his noble descent. Assuredly 1320 IV, 44| emperor careless about the enlargement of the empire, such is my 1321 VI, 70| he had prompted his wife Ennia to inveigle the young prince 1322 III, 98| convicted of extortion. Lucius Ennius, a Roman knight, was accused 1323 XIII, 40| this crime veiled his other enormities. Cossutianus Capito was 1324 XI, 37| could overpower him by the enormity of the charge, she might 1325 XIV, 51| Polyclitus, who with his enormous suite had been a burden 1326 XI, 7| corruption of the forum might enrich the advocate. They should 1327 III, 37| penalties on celibacy and for enriching the exchequer. And yet, 1328 XI, 29| our citizenship, and when, enrolling in our ranks the most vigorous 1329 XIV, 37| additional name. A further enrolment of veterans in Tarentum 1330 II, 18| or to die before we are enslaved?~ ~ 1331 IV, 56| wholly free from political entanglements? Still, if the hesitation 1332 XV, 61| escape, that foe to all great enterprises, which held him back. ~ ~ 1333 IV, 55| marrying his daughter, had even entertained some thoughts of Roman knights, 1334 XV, 90| duties as consul, and was entertaining some guests, fearless of 1335 XI, 20| The people enthusiastically applauded him. After a fierce 1336 I, 3| reluctance, that they should be entitled "princes of the youth," 1337 XIV, 41| their deities through human entrails. ~ ~ 1338 VI, 77| clothes, and all to quit the entrance-hall. ~ ~ 1339 XIV, 32| out after filling up the entrances and exits with brushwood 1340 II, 86| his consequent ability to entrap him. ~ ~ 1341 I, 77| youth and error of my son I entreat forgiveness. As for my daughter, 1342 IV, 56| sentiments of Sejanus and briefly enumerating the favours he had bestowed 1343 XIII, 53| the ignorance of boyhood, envied those who employed a lively 1344 XV, 68| one of Nero's freedmen, Epaphroditus, and by him to Nero, whom 1345 III, 69| productions are as empty and ephemeral as they are replete with 1346 IV, 73| very fact they relied. The Ephesians and Milesians had, it seemed, 1347 II, 111| burnt, a lofty mound at Epidaphna, where he had ended his 1348 XIII, 18| occurrence, from a periodical epilepsy, with which Britannicus 1349 VI, 5| pay the penalty. By way of episode, Haterius Agrippa inveighed 1350 XIV, 21| emperor's person and voice the epithets of deities. Thus they lived 1351 XII, 46| the battle. Their strength equalized the conflict, which after 1352 VI, 3| would endure his exile with equanimity, since he had chosen the 1353 I, 93| of the north wind and the equinoctial season, when the sea swells 1354 XII, 15| bids the priests in a dream equip horses for the chase and 1355 XIV, 6| distinguished from others by its equipment, seemingly meant, among 1356 XV, 26| provinces will be ruled more equitably and more steadily. For as 1357 XIII, 13| favour by debaucheries and equivocal secrets, and even the prince' 1358 II, 108| comprehending in a restored era of freedom the Roman people 1359 III, 24| Piso's name ought to be erased from the public register, 1360 II, 5| government of a woman named Erato and having soon afterwards 1361 XI, 12| distant service. So after erecting monuments on which he recorded 1362 IV, 41| courses. He did not indeed err from dulness, and it is 1363 I, 57| guilty, pardon those who had erred, and lead them against the 1364 III, 27| into falsehood, and both errors find encouragement with 1365 IV, 75| bald head, a face full of eruptions, and covered here and there 1366 VI, 17| throughout Samos, Ilium, Erythrae, and even in Africa, Sicily 1367 IV, 60| temple of Venus at Mount Eryx, which had fallen to ruin 1368 XIV, 6| after protracted festivity, escorted her on her departure, clinging 1369 I, 44| Tiberius, dwelling with especial praise on his glorious achievements 1370 III, 40| ownerless properties. But this espionage became too searching, and 1371 XI, 48| her mother, who, though estranged from her daughter in prosperity, 1372 II, 57| Germanicus, his uncle's estrangement had increased the affection 1373 XIV, 43| with wailings, and in the estuary of the Tamesa had been seen 1374 XI, 9| to anticipate in hope an eternity of renown? It is for the 1375 VI, 48| flooded by the force of the Etesian gales. The south wind in 1376 II, 78| Rhamses conquered Libya, Ethiopia, Media, Persia, Bactria, 1377 IV, 83| Caeles Vibenna, who led the Etruscan people to the aid of Rome 1378 XIV, 79| guilty lover was one by name Eucaerus, an Alexandrine by birth, 1379 II, 48| who make it a practice to eulogise everything coming from sovereigns, 1380 XVI, 6| himself from the rostra eulogized her beauty, her lot in having 1381 XV, 20| Corbulo also demanded the evacuation of Armenia by the garrisons 1382 III, 93| allowing him to rebut or evade them, and he had often even 1383 I, 97| Tiberius, a charge not to be evaded, inasmuch as the accuser 1384 II, 16| gracious manner and the evenness of his temper, whether he 1385 | everyone 1386 XV, 67| was himself depressed, and evidently in profound thought, though 1387 IV, 86| as he was a terror to the evil-minded. Latinius Latiaris, Porcius 1388 III, 39| occasionally directed against evildoers for some crime, were oftener 1389 XI, 48| was the emperor's bidding. Evodus, one of the freedmen, was 1390 II, 35| Libo for the purpose of evoking by incantations spirits 1391 XIV, 53| Pompeius Aelianus, a young ex-quaestor, suspected of complicity 1392 II, 78| as magnificent as is now exacted by the might of Parthia 1393 VI, 21| prohibited any one from exacting more than 10 per cent., 1394 XIII, 66| collectors to cover their illegal exactions. In our transmarine provinces 1395 XII, 50| Agrippina, too, continued to exalt her own dignity; she would 1396 XII, 42| and the emperor, while he exalted his own glory, enhanced 1397 XIV, 55| that I might not seem to be exalting my own profession out of 1398 XVI, 2| this, without sufficiently examining the credibility of the author 1399 XIII, 72| they parted with mutual exasperation. The Ampsivarii now called 1400 XII, 67| Consequently after an interval the excavations were deepened, and to attract 1401 II, 96| much more easily as he had excelled Alexander in clemency, in 1402 III, 30| ventured on a deed quite exceptional at that time and derived 1403 XIV, 61| voted with him, with but few exceptions. Among these, the most enthusiastic 1404 III, 61| sword. Even war is a good exchange for a miserable peace." 1405 II, 99| then for the first time exchanged for the gayest attire the 1406 III, 52| used a growing freedom in exciting insult and obloquy against 1407 III, 14| affliction, I shall hate him and exclude him from my house, and I 1408 III, 36| severity he experienced was exclusion from the emperor's friendship, 1409 V, 6| matter should be left to his exclusive decision. Without further 1410 XV, 7| had asked for a general exclusively for the defence of Armenia, 1411 VI, 16| he selected one of the exconsuls to overawe the slaves and 1412 XV, 45| bear so much as his brief excursions, accustomed as they were 1413 IV, 87| shameful as the treachery was execrable. They applied their ears 1414 VI, 5| accused, both alike objects of execration, presented a most welcome 1415 I, 70| offered his neck to the executioners, dying with a courage not 1416 XII, 68| he gained for his clients exemption from all public burdens. 1417 XII, 13| ancient discipline, kept exercising the legions, in short, used 1418 I, 44| more laboriously did he exert himself for Tiberius, and 1419 III, 45| kinsmen of Sulla strenuously exerted themselves. There was a 1420 III, 57| their own vigour with the exhaustion of Italy, the unwarlike 1421 IV, 80| amphitheatre at Fidena for the exhibition of a show of gladiators, 1422 XIII, 48| suitable for storming them, he exhorted his soldiers to strip of 1423 IV, 5| power and mutual harmony to exist side by side, had the character 1424 IV, 59| Records of this event still existed, engraven on stone and ancient 1425 XIV, 40| had merely retained our existing possessions, and his successor 1426 XIV, 32| filling up the entrances and exits with brushwood and bushes. 1427 II, 29| were hostile coasts, or an expanse so vast and deep that it 1428 VI, 50| array, the Parthian leader expatiated on the empire of the East, 1429 I, 70| found him on a promontory, expecting no good. On their arrival, 1430 II, 40| Senate were also passed to expel from Italy astrologers and 1431 II, 114| There was a debate too about expelling the Egyptian and Jewish 1432 VI, 69| million of sesterces was expended in this munificence, a boon 1433 I, 96| moderate fortune, the first experiments at such accusations, in 1434 I, 55| thereby threatened, may be expiated by my blood only, and that 1435 XVI, 26| though it were a kingly exploit. ~ ~ 1436 II, 79| depth which no line of the explorer can penetrate. He then came 1437 I, 34| night which threatened an explosion of crime was tranquillised 1438 VI, 36| Nerva turned away from his expostulations and persisted in his abstinence 1439 II, 87| Trebellienus Rufus, an expraetor, was appointed to govern 1440 II, 62| Marcus Aletus, one of the expraetors, was chosen, from a fear 1441 XV, 54| guilt and inflicted the most exquisite tortures on a class hated 1442 II, 81| Maroboduus. The speech is extant, and in it he magnifies 1443 XIV, 40| prevented by death from extending the war. While he lived, 1444 II, 79| Roman empire, which now extends to the Red Sea.~ ~ 1445 III, 82| Junius Blaesus received an extension of his government of Africa, 1446 XV, 1| people on its border, too extensively and continuously for mere 1447 II, 70| Athens, who indeed had been exterminated by repeated disasters, but 1448 XIII, 72| and threatened them with extermination unless they dissociated 1449 XII, 71| not seek to veil under any external considerations a concession 1450 XV, 48| persons who forbade the extinguishing of the flames, because again 1451 XVI, 22| men, at last aspired to extirpate virtue itself by murdering 1452 II, 118| as he should be, while we extol the past and are indifferent 1453 III, 70| with his usual ambiguity, extolling their loyalty in so sharply 1454 II, 37| singly, and produced an extravagantly absurd accusation, according 1455 IV, 25| Unquestionably, they could not extricate themselves from the charge 1456 IV, 87| very roofs and walls, were eyed with suspicion. ~ ~ 1457 XI, 36| aware that it will seem a fable that any persons in the 1458 XIV, 86| and gave rise to a huge fabric of unsuccessful conspiracies 1459 II, 54| from fear of the charges fabricated against him, he ended his 1460 II, 41| were one thing with the Fabricii, quite another with the 1461 XIV, 63| accusation caused the downfall of Fabricius Veiento. He had composed 1462 XI, 14| they seemed to guard, a fabulous tale invented to match the 1463 XV, 20| him on the plains, which facilitated their movements. Paetus 1464 XV, 18| apparently with the view of facilitating his march. It was the Parthians, 1465 III, 63| nothing of war had their faculties of sight and hearing quite 1466 XIII, 4| intellect did not wholly mar his faculty of speech. Nor did Claudius, 1467 XV, 74| Rather let the soldiers fail, the people be traitors, 1468 II, 41| phrases, by a confession of failings with which his audience 1469 III, 73| odium of every person's failures. For what am I first to 1470 VI, 77| food to revive him from his faintness. Then ensued a universal 1471 II, 6| beaten in the field and on fair ground; they were helped 1472 XI, 7| fame with posterity the fairest recompense of eloquence. 1473 IV, 45| incessant prosecutions, faithless friendships, the ruin of 1474 XIV, 56| felled by the club, the lot falls also on the brave. There 1475 I, 1| they were in power, were falsified through terror, and after 1476 XIV, 42| Prasutagus, king of the Iceni, famed for his long prosperity, 1477 XIV, 55| his father or because a family-slave was taken from him? Let 1478 XIV, 20| He had long had a fancy for driving a four-horse 1479 II, 30| as he returned from some far-distant region, told of wonders, 1480 XII, 65| dared to do violence to the farmers and townsfolk, frequently 1481 XIV, 42| ejected them from their farms, called them captives and 1482 XIII, 10| be added to the imperial "fasces." I have closely connected 1483 XIV, 3| s aid against a woman's fascinations, and hurried in Acte, the 1484 XIII, 58| attracted by the youth and fashionable elegance of Otho, and by 1485 VI, 72| even while his strength was fast failing he gave up none 1486 V, 13| and the Greek mind eagerly fastens on what is new and marvellous. 1487 XIII, 13| virtue, either from some fatality, or because vice is overpoweringly 1488 III, 40| shrank from the privileges of fatherhood, the State, as universal 1489 I, 72| son-in-law detested, and fathers-in-law also at enmity, what are 1490 VI, 68| that ill-arrayed levies fatigued by a long march could not 1491 VI, 10| saddening would be equally fatiguing to their readers. For myself, 1492 XV, 26| as fraud or tyranny. More faults are often committed, while 1493 XII, 61| In the consulship of Faustus Sulla and Salvius Otho, 1494 XVI, 25| birth to the Tuberones and Favonii, names hateful even to the 1495 III, 5| the enthusiasm kindled in favor of Agrippina, whom men spoke 1496 II, 30| ebbed and the wind blew favourably, the shattered vessels with 1497 XV, 60| centurion, was proved by the fearlessness of their death. Lucanus 1498 XIII, 17| wide popularity. During the feast of Saturn, amid other pastimes 1499 XII, 78| introduced into his throat a feather smeared with some rapid 1500 VI, 9| this was the most dreadful feature of the age, that leading 1501 XV, 29| decreed to the goddess of fecundity, as well as games and contests 1502 XIII, 42| possession of Armenia, which, feebly begun, had hitherto dragged