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1503 VI, 67| that men do not necessarily feign hatred because they are 1504 I, 14| the Consul's legions, and feigned an attachment to the faction 1505 II, 22| dashed to the ground by the felling of the trees. ~ ~ 1506 I, 65| that the shades of their fellow-soldiers could be appeased only by 1507 XII, 41| the rude, ill-compacted fence of stones was torn down, 1508 I, 85| familiar with fighting in fens; they had huge frames, and 1509 XV, 66| Fortune, in the town of Ferentum, and used to wear the weapon 1510 I, 3| dress of boyhood he had most fervently desired, with an outward 1511 II, 3| dislike of their national festivities. They also ridiculed his 1512 XV, 61| Antonius Natalis, and Marcius Festus, all Roman knights. Of these 1513 XII, 56| he was dragged along by a fetter, an extreme degradation 1514 I, 29| some of the soldiers put fetters on the gladiators who were 1515 III, 74| painful treatment, so the fever of a diseased mind, itself 1516 XIV, 32| knowing, as he did, the fickle temper of the people, who 1517 IV, 80| build an amphitheatre at Fidena for the exhibition of a 1518 II, 115| the room of Occia, who for fifty-seven years had presided with 1519 I, 90| tribunes, to the bravest fighters in the army, quite impartially, 1520 XV, 8| because the Parthian foe fights with missiles. ~ ~ 1521 VI, 49| was really a ram or the figure-head of a ship.~ ~ 1522 XI, 17| symbolized ideas, and that by the figures of animals. These records, 1523 II, 21| the attack, ordered the finest of his cavalry to charge 1524 I, 44| of kissing it, thrust his fingers into their mouths, that 1525 III, 35| events of that time, if after finishing the work I have now proposed 1526 I, 45| fodder, building-timber, firewood, and whatever else had to 1527 XV, 54| so much of the crime of firing the city, as of hatred against 1528 I, 6| unarmed, a centurion of the firmest resolution despatched him 1529 XVI, 16| simply to hold up a dagger firmly, and then pressing the man' 1530 XII, 73| seas, as immense shoals of fish pour out of the Pontus and 1531 XIII, 24| the magnificence of her fishponds, when I was planning in 1532 IV, 4| casual dispute, raised his fist at Sejanus, and, when he 1533 XIV, 81| of revolutionary designs. Fittest for this seemed the perpetrator 1534 II, 45| multiplying of the magistrates five-fold, and a subversion of the 1535 II, 84| was little hesitation in fixing on a time, a place, finally 1536 XV, 92| by their wives, Artoria Flaccilla and Egnatia Maximilla. The 1537 XII, 14| enthusiasm of barbarians soon flags from delay or even changes 1538 II, 111| games of the circus; no flamen or augur, except from the 1539 I, 15| of the deities, and with flamens and priests. He had not 1540 XIV, 30| with similar credulity on a flash of lightning. While Nero 1541 XV, 58| evils. Never were lightning flashes more frequent, and a comet 1542 IV, 23| And though they gave a flat denial, he rebuked them 1543 XIV, 40| final words, he betrayed a flatterer's weakness; for, after heaping 1544 XIV, 73| a love of repose, but he flaunts before us his imitations 1545 VI, 41| whose first care, when fledged, is to bury its father. 1546 XVI, 1| show by inference, after fleeing from Tyre and founding Carthage, 1547 XIV, 33| off hunger solely by the flesh of cattle. Added to this 1548 IV, 92| refuge in a fortress, named Flevum, where a by no means contemptible 1549 I, 87| while in the Roman camp were flickering fires, broken exclamations, 1550 I, 93| baggage, lifeless bodies floated about and blocked their 1551 XIII, 71| lies open into which the flocks and herds of the Roman soldiers 1552 III, 30| derived from old tradition. He flogged to death every tenth man 1553 XVI, 20| gave liberal presents, a flogging to others. He dined, indulged 1554 I, 22| purchased. But indeed of floggings and wounds, of hard winters, 1555 II, 89| were found hidden in the floor and in the walls disinterred 1556 II, 64| had vowed; a temple to Flora in the same place, which 1557 I, 104| colonies, and the people of Florentia begged that the Clanis might 1558 XI, 21| Having sunk the enemy's flotilla, driven out Gannascus, and 1559 XVI, 25| the Bruti to multiply and flourish. Finally, write nothing 1560 V, 6| dignity had been publicly flouted, and he insisted that, after 1561 XIV, 80| Octavia, covering them with flowers, and setting them up in 1562 II, 81| crossed the Danube where it flows by the province of Noricum, 1563 XIII, 42| Besides, the Armenians in the fluctuations of their allegiance sought 1564 IV, 79| after age, the harmonious fluency of Haterius died with him.~ ~ 1565 IV, 41| struggle, spoke out freely and fluently whenever he came to a man' 1566 XIV, 3| even at that hour, was flushed with wine and feasting, 1567 XIV, 79| skilled in singing to the flute. As a consequence, her slave-girls 1568 XIV, 80| offspring of an Egyptian fluteplayer should be raised to the 1569 VI, 54| height, and that the white foam was curling into circles 1570 XI, 3| smoke should hurt the thick foliage of the trees. So complete 1571 XIV, 8| remedies to her wound, and fomentations to her person. She then 1572 XV, 52| nature had refused, and to fool away an emperor's resources. 1573 II, 17| father's and my uncle's footsteps, to stand a conqueror on 1574 IV, 67| cutting off their water and forage. He also threw up a rampart, 1575 III, 97| Knowing, as he did, how to be forbearing, when he was not under the 1576 XIII, 73| Hermunduri and the Chatti, both forcibly claiming a river which produced 1577 XII, 14| the river was most easily fordable and awaited the arrival 1578 XIV, 40| the cavalry followed by fording, or, where the water was 1579 II, 14| across the river by the fords. It was commanded by Stertinius 1580 XV, 30| spirit an affront which foreboded his doom. Then followed, 1581 XIV, 84| among the living by the forecast of doom, still could not 1582 I, 79| seizure of his wife and the foredooming to slavery of his wife's 1583 II, 45| five years! How could he foresee through so long an interval 1584 XVI, 14| deplored because they seemed to forestal the emperor's cruelty by 1585 I, 93| prudent from the careless, forethought from chance; the same strong 1586 VI, 25| himself, though they were forfeited to the State. Executions 1587 VI, 42| that the condemned, besides forfeiture of their property, were 1588 I, 68| confidence of recent success, and forgetful of the past, were placed 1589 XIII, 19| many were even inclined to forgive when they remembered the 1590 III, 64| unwieldy mass with pikes and forked poles, and they were left 1591 XVI, 35| of her age, widowed and forlorn, her husband Annius Pollio 1592 II, 115| over the Vestal worship. He formally thanked Fonteius Agrippa 1593 IV, 6| powerfully manned to the town of Forojulium. But chief strength was 1594 II, 51| of Tiberius; a temple of Fors Fortuna, by the Tiber, in 1595 VI, 72| in no obscure terms, with forsaking the setting and looking 1596 XV, 22| praetorships and provinces, forthwith dismissed from paternal 1597 I, 86| This was Caecina's fortieth campaign as a subordinate 1598 XVI, 41| times in which it is well to fortify the spirit with examples 1599 XV, 59| demeanour. He had, too, the fortuitous advantages of tall stature 1600 II, 51| Tiberius; a temple of Fors Fortuna, by the Tiber, in the gardens 1601 XVI, 10| savage wrath was furnished by Fortunatus, a freedman, who having 1602 III, 22| penalty of my wickedness. By forty-five years of obedience, by my 1603 V, 8| forty-four speeches were delivered 1604 I, 10| citizen, except a bequest of forty-three million five hundred thousand 1605 IV, 3| honoured in theatres, in forums, and at the head-quarters 1606 V, 3| to have been long before forwarded and to have been kept back 1607 IV, 85| at Rome Sejanus used to foster, and which he here excited 1608 II, 46| Quintus Hortensius, the foster-children of Augustus." ~ ~ 1609 VI, 55| grandfather Phraates, and his foster-father Caesar, and all that was 1610 XII, 12| high praise on the young foster-son of Rome, as one whose self-control 1611 XVI, 34| to the public welfare, by fostering seditious movements in the 1612 XIII, 14| wearied of his passion. The fouler her reproaches, the more 1613 IV, 4| for a provincial paramour, foully disgraced herself, her ancestors, 1614 IV, 74| s antiquity back to such founders as either Tantalus, the 1615 XIV, 20| had a fancy for driving a four-horse chariot, and a no less degrading 1616 XII, 34| honour of a triumph; a mere fraction of his renown with the next 1617 V, 7| of section 6 is obviously fragmentary.] ~ ~ 1618 I, 81| piled in heaps. Near, lay fragments of weapons and limbs of 1619 XVI, 6| princes was filled with fragrant spices and embalmed, and 1620 VI, 76| son would have passed the frail period of youth.~ ~ 1621 VI, 35| aspirations far removed from the frailties of women. The emperor further 1622 IV, 56| to her. I will deal more frankly. First, as to the enmity 1623 XI, 15| passion. She had grown so frantically enamoured of Caius Silius, 1624 I, 27| prisoners, and were in a moment fraternising with deserters and men convicted 1625 XV, 22| anxieties of nurture against fraudulent evasions and the brief ceremony 1626 XIII, 29| gladiators, who, when a fray began on a small scale and 1627 II, 83| emperor, he let loose bands of freebooters and razed the fortresses, 1628 XIII, 31| not emancipated with the freedom-giving rod, were still held, as 1629 XII, 63| consent, should be ranked as freedwomen. To Pallas, who, as the 1630 XVI, 19| talk and his doings, the freer they were and the more show 1631 VI, 75| ex-praetor, and Pontius Fregellanus were sentenced, respectively, 1632 XIV, 41| quail before a troop of frenzied women, they bore the standards 1633 XVI, 32| Priscus indulging similar frenzies, by Paconius Agrippinus, 1634 XIV, 83| by Tiberius, and the yet fresher memory of Julia, whom Claudius 1635 XII, 3| children and still in the freshness of youth, would not carry 1636 XIV, 81| arguments, tending both to frighten and to enrage, at once alarmed 1637 IV, 94| The Frisian name thus became famous 1638 XI, 22| their pride broken. The Frisians, who had been hostile or 1639 III, 24| Two days were frittered away over this mockery of 1640 XIV, 21| strength, some, from a natural frivolity, others from the hope of 1641 II, 110| exaggeration. They ran to and fro through the city and broke 1642 XIII, 61| by one of those youthful frolics which were then everywhere 1643 XV, 53| as a protection to the frontage of the blocks of tenements. 1644 IV, 94| dishonour fell on the extreme frontiers of the empire. Fear at home 1645 XIII, 43| the men had their limbs frost-bitten through the intensity of 1646 XII, 41| they had added to it, the frowning hilltops, the stern resistance 1647 II, 28| more frightful from the frozen north which was so near 1648 XV, 81| aged frame, attenuated by frugal diet, allowed the blood 1649 XIII, 18| own, furnished somewhat frugally. There Britannicus was dining, 1650 II, 99| reason of the ill-starred fruitfulness of her marriage. Piso was 1651 XV, 56| very simple diet of wild fruits, with water from a running 1652 I, 32| the name of Augustus to frustrate the wishes of the legions, 1653 XII, 66| the mountain between Lake Fucinus and the river Liris was 1654 III, 37| vices. This suggests to me a fuller discussion of the origin 1655 III, 91| regard as history's highest function, to let no worthy action 1656 XIII, 31| tribes, the various public functionaries, the establishments of the 1657 IV, 77| Amuclae and the hills of Fundi, in a natural grotto. The 1658 XIV, 15| believed that the notes of a funereal trumpet were heard from 1659 XV, 8| which was then commanded by Funisulanus Vettonianus and the second 1660 XIV, 41| in black attire like the Furies, with hair dishevelled, 1661 XV, 11| weakened by indiscriminate furloughs, till it was heard that 1662 IV, 92| their limited resources, the furnishing of ox hides for military 1663 XII, 28| is yoked to the plough, a furrow was drawn to mark out the 1664 XV, 53| wooden beams, of stone from Gabii or Alba, that material being 1665 XIV, 18| Valerius Capito and Licinius Gabolus, whom Agrippina had formerly 1666 IV, 61| triumphal distinctions over the Gaetuli, to have borne poverty with 1667 II, 50| force, and having bound and gagged him, dragged him to the 1668 XV, 67| thought, though he affected gaiety in desultory conversation. 1669 XII, 64| which was so divided that Galilea was governed by Cumanus, 1670 VI, 51| shout, with javelins, and galloping chargers, Pharasmanes with 1671 XIII, 29| same practices, and had gangs of their own, till night 1672 VI, 67| even cast off his miserable garb. He stooped to wiles and 1673 XI, 4| Claudius crowned with a garland of wheat, the ears of which 1674 I, 23| them to their threadbare garments and naked limbs. At, last, 1675 VI, 7| bare, there would be seen gashes and wounds; for, as the 1676 II, 90| to be besieged, if I must gasp out my last breath under 1677 XV, 68| he was conducted by the gatekeepers to one of Nero's freedmen, 1678 I, 89| himself to the earth in the gateway, and at last by an appeal 1679 III, 10| towering above the forum, gay with festal decorations, 1680 II, 99| first time exchanged for the gayest attire the mourning she 1681 III, 93| Gellius Publicola and Marcus Paconius, 1682 V, 12| were, were flung down the Gemoniae.~ ~ 1683 II, 14| them, it would not be good generalship to expose the legions to 1684 III, 98| still he should not be generous in the case of wrongs to 1685 XVI, 31| occupied the temple of Venus Genetrix. A group of ordinary citizens 1686 III, 49| changed into a better and more genial system. "Rome," he said, " 1687 II, 72| its people and from its geographical position, bordering, as 1688 XV, 90| despotism, and despatched Gerellanus, a tribune, with a cohort 1689 VI, 41| birth and infuses into it a germ of life from which an offspring 1690 XIV, 84| their common ancestors, the Germanici, and finally to the name 1691 XIV, 44| but on slaughter, on the gibbet, the fire and the cross, 1692 IV, 92| tribute were seized and gibbeted. Olennius anticipated their 1693 I, 81| his army, the number of gibbets for the captives, the pits 1694 XV, 63| State. Only let Proculus gird himself to do his part and 1695 XIV, 3| credible in a woman, who in her girlish years had allowed herself 1696 XI, 41| were overflowing; women girt with skins were dancing, 1697 XIII, 14| his name as the ostensible giver of the presents secretly 1698 I, 30| him, not as usual, with glad looks or the glitter of 1699 XI, 25| to have been the son of a gladiator, I would not publish a falsehood, 1700 I, 20| degrading solicitations, gladly upheld the change, Tiberius 1701 XI, 32| were undertaken with hearty gladness by the imperial censor. 1702 XIV, 16| answers to foreign nations! He glanced too with indirect censure 1703 I, 91| The sound of trumpets, the gleam of arms, which were so unexpected, 1704 XV, 8| again the soldiers' javelins gleamed with light, a prodigy the 1705 I, 87| the hills and the echoing glens with merry song or savage 1706 XV, 47| towing it. These vessels glittered with gold and ivory; the 1707 XV, 38| columns of our legions with glittering eagles and standards and 1708 XIV, 21| and which the profligate gloried in squandering. Hence a 1709 XV, 74| ignominious death. How much more gloriously will you die while you cling 1710 XV, 53| was scorched by a fiercer glow. ~ ~ 1711 XV, 55| the public good, but to glut one man's cruelty, that 1712 VI, 7| thus: "May all the gods and goddesses destroy me more miserably 1713 XIV, 71| the frailty of my youth goes in any respect astray, call 1714 VI, 25| ruin, Tiberius kept his gold-mines for himself, though they 1715 VI, 20| esteem more frequently by his good-nature than by his diligence. To 1716 XIII, 70| spectators hailed the act goodnaturedly, as due to the impulsiveness 1717 XIII, 29| comrades, who seized on goods exposed for sale and inflicted 1718 XII, 53| him into the fortress of Gorneas, which was strongly situated 1719 II, 80| of Maroboduus. Among the Gotones was a youth of noble birth, 1720 IV, 84| had squandered his lately gotten recompense was now preparing 1721 VI, 38| released from the farce of governing Syria, had become city-prefect, 1722 VI, 29| necessity or chance which governs the revolutions of human 1723 XI, 9| gains distinction from the gown. Take away the rewards of 1724 III, 39| other base ends. Hence the Gracchi and Saturnini, those popular 1725 XIII, 69| Aelius Gracilis, the governor of Belgica, 1726 IV, 9| this, not indeed with any graciousness, but in a blunt fashion 1727 XIII, 39| rank as a senator. Pomponia Graecina, a distinguished lady, wife 1728 II, 65| strength. Appuleia Varilia, grand-niece of Augustus, was accused 1729 XIV, 68| garden terraces, who paces grandly through these suburban parks, 1730 XII, 74| younger Antonia, as the grandniece of Augustus, the cousin 1731 I, 52| restored safely to their grandsire and to the State."~ ~ 1732 XII, 25| mother, Cotta Messalinus her granduncle, Memmius Regulus formerly 1733 XV, 6| devoured every blade of grass and every leaf. And so, 1734 VI, 56| hands on himself. Tarius Gratianus too, an ex-praetor, was 1735 III, 41| first entered the forum, a gratuity was given to the city-populace, 1736 XV, 61| Julius Augurinus, Munatius Gratus, Antonius Natalis, and Marcius 1737 III, 32| one of the Aemilii was the great-granddaughter of Lucius Sulla and Cneius 1738 XII, 80| the magnificence of her great-grandmother, Livia. But his will was 1739 XI, 1| same time she was looking greedily at the gardens which Lucullus 1740 XVI, 32| which vex him? A man who grieves at the country's prosperity, 1741 V, 3| beginning of an unmitigated and grinding despotism. As long indeed 1742 XII, 58| feebleness of mind and his grotesque personal appearance. He 1743 IV, 77| hills of Fundi, in a natural grotto. The rocks at its entrance 1744 XVI, 31| temple of Venus Genetrix. A group of ordinary citizens with 1745 I, 36| beginning of the mutiny they had grouped into one spot.~ ~ 1746 III, 3| thronged the road in scattered groups, every one weeping as he 1747 VI, 76| Senate, and, although she grovelled at the knees of the senators 1748 I, 42| to the tribunal and was grovelling at Caecina's feet, was persistently 1749 IV, 4| in youthful manhood and grown-up grandsons. As it would be 1750 III, 107| incurred the hatred which grows out of envy. ~ ~ 1751 I, 105| arrangement; others, that he grudged to see many enjoying promotion. 1752 I, 28| the corpse? Even an enemy grudges not burial. When, with embraces 1753 XV, 19| further stated that Paetus had guaranteed by an oath, before the standards, 1754 I, 27| the spot, broke open the guardhouse, unbound the prisoners, 1755 III, 55| tender age were under the guardianship of Trebellienus Rufus, it 1756 XIV, 32| tribe which is trained to guerilla warfare, and defended by 1757 I, 42| themselves. To those who could guess the temper of soldiers with 1758 XIII, 3| Annaeus Seneca. These two men guided the emperor's youth with 1759 III, 90| privileges of the sacred guilds, and quoting precedents. 1760 I, 92| he thought, "could not be guileless; it was not against a foreign 1761 IV, 77| The Cave," between the gulf of Amuclae and the hills 1762 I, 44| might touch their toothless gums; others showed him their 1763 IV, 39| he should be confined in Gyaros or Donusa, but this he rejected, 1764 III, 64| up hatchets and pickaxes, hacked at their bodies and their 1765 XV, 43| way to cross the sea of Hadria, he rested awhile at Beneventum, 1766 XIII, 24| resource, repaying an old hag for their hire by undertaking 1767 II, 16| carry off their wives. We hail the omen; we mean the women 1768 XIV, 80| applause for the emperor, men hailing the recalled Octavia. And 1769 II, 28| the sailing ships. Soon, a hailstorm bursting from a black mass 1770 XIV, 74| scoffed at its premature grey hairs as if they were a disfigurement. ~ ~ 1771 VI, 38| illustrious descent, and in a hale old age; and the fact of 1772 IV, 34| tents and encamped near a half-demolished fortress, by name Auzea, 1773 VI, 9| was quite recent, or what half-forgotten from lapse of time. People 1774 V, 14| censured Regulus as having been half-hearted in crushing the satellites 1775 II, 30| monsters of the sea, of forms half-human, half beast-like, things 1776 I, 66| languid and heedless ease of half-intoxicated people.~ ~ 1777 IV, 73| little hesitation about Halicarnassus, as its inhabitants affirmed 1778 XII, 77| administered by an eunuch, Halotus, who was accustomed to bring 1779 III, 62| loudly protesting against any halt for their usual rest or 1780 XV, 85| either speech or silence. Halting in his words and visibly 1781 VI, 63| also of the Parthian towns Halus and Artemita. There was 1782 XII, 41| down, and it was an equal hand-to-hand engagement, the barbarians 1783 I, 81| space clearly indicated the handiwork of three legions. Further 1784 VI, 15| which as city-prefect he handled an authority, recently made 1785 III, 72| being consulted had, without handling the matter, referred it 1786 XI, 15| enamoured of Caius Silius, the handsomest of the young nobility of 1787 II, 37| was one paper in Libo's handwriting, so the prosecutor alleged, 1788 I, 70| that an obscurity would hang over her end from the length 1789 IV, 48| and, if a fatal sentence hangs over me, there will be those 1790 II, 101| cannot be foreseen will haply turn out in his favour. 1791 XV, 34| called them together for an harangue, and began with grand allusions 1792 I, 45| but have an end of such harassing service, and repose without 1793 XII, 73| and take refuge in these harbours. Consequently the inhabitants 1794 I, 6| banishment. But he never was hard-hearted enough to destroy any of 1795 IV, 87| broken into utterance, is the harder to restrain. Instantly they 1796 XIII, 55| the service of that savage harlot? We must punish the instruments 1797 XV, 95| Caius Caesar, who liked even harlots, had also amused himself 1798 IV, 79| valued by an after age, the harmonious fluency of Haterius died 1799 III, 48| recounting at length how harmoniously he had lived with his wife, 1800 XV, 84| as to the disgrace if a harp-player were removed and a tragic 1801 XVI, 4| conformed to all the laws of harp-playing, not sitting down when tired, 1802 XIV, 36| the idea of war. Having harried with fire and sword all 1803 III, 64| but our men, snatching up hatchets and pickaxes, hacked at 1804 XI, 15| retinue to his house, she haunted his steps, showered on him 1805 XII, 74| beast, and of a pig with a hawk's talons, were reported. 1806 I, 46| they took counsel how to heal matters. For news was also 1807 I, 91| yet they found strength, healing, sustenance, everything 1808 VI, 77| be smothered under a huge heap of clothes, and all to quit 1809 XIII, 22| order, and so frightened his hearer as to make him resolve not 1810 IV, 12| filled the hearts of his hearers with sympathy and admiration. 1811 I, 55| carry to my father when he hears only joyful intelligence 1812 III, 97| were welcomed with all the heartier joy. Knowing, as he did, 1813 XV, 53| penetrated by the sun's heat, while now the open space, 1814 XV, 83| last he entered a pool of heated water, from which he sprinkled 1815 VI, 54| given in the earth or in the heavens, the fluctuating character 1816 XII, 41| even there, both light and heavy-armed soldiers rushed to the attack; 1817 III, 15| simply as others. Let no one heed the tears of Drusus or my 1818 VI, 78| ruled the emperor's now heirless house for twelve years, 1819 XI, 45| destroyed; next, how the heirlooms of the Neros and the Drusi 1820 VI, 41| flew into the city called Heliopolis successively in the reigns 1821 XIII, 1| Celer, a Roman knight, and Helius, a freedman, men who had 1822 XIV, 7| Crepereius Gallus, stood near the helm, while Acerronia, reclining 1823 XII, 78| secured. Under pretence of helping the emperor's efforts to 1824 III, 30| In this engagement Rufus Helvius, a common soldier, won the 1825 II, 31| in his front, others, to hem in his rear and open the 1826 II, 88| Armenia, thence to Albania and Heniochia, and to his kinsman, the 1827 XIV, 11| captain of the trireme, Herculeius, and Obaritus, a centurion 1828 II, 59| himself in the recesses of the Hercynian forest and then with presents 1829 XV, 47| himself to one of that filthy herd, by name Pythagoras, with 1830 II, 82| overwhelming strength of the Hermundusi led by Vibilius, he was 1831 I, 92| that base act. A woman of heroic spirit, she assumed during 1832 XII, 60| encouraged her, now admiring her heroism, now filled with a sickening 1833 | hers 1834 XII, 38| the sea, facing the island Hibernia, when feuds broke out among 1835 IV, 87| the roof and ceiling, a hiding-place as shameful as the treachery 1836 XIV, 32| those who had crept into hiding-places, burning them out after 1837 XI, 15| his bed Junia Silana, a high-born lady, and had her lover 1838 IV, 27| for that age a wise and high-principled man. Many a cruel suggestion 1839 IV, 64| whose wild life in the highlands of a mountainous country 1840 XII, 41| added to it, the frowning hilltops, the stern resistance and 1841 II, 28| the south, and from the hilly lands and deep rivers of 1842 XII, 35| instructions to Publius Atellius Hister, governor of Pannonia, that 1843 XV, 51| the ancient and genuine historical monuments of men of genius, 1844 XII, 15| Assyria, and a fortress, historically famous, as the spot where 1845 I, 1| sycophancy scared them away. The histories of Tiberius, Caius, Claudius, 1846 VI, 22| contrary, as the usurers had hoarded up all their money for buying 1847 I, 28| Vibulenus, a common soldier, was hoisted in front of the general' 1848 XIV, 55| been of no avail to its holder? Who will be kept safe by 1849 XIV, 70| me will, as long as life holds out, be lasting possessions; 1850 XIV, 19| meet him, the Senate in holiday attire, troops of their 1851 II, 83| at first they lived in a hollow friendship, but soon Rhescuporis 1852 II, 79| wealth of kings; the lake hollowed out of the earth to be a 1853 III, 67| stormed some fortresses of the Homonadenses in Cilicia. He was also 1854 XIII, 53| offence to obtain a reward for honest service with the litigant' 1855 III, 102| afterwards the emperor in honouring Junius Blaesus proconsul 1856 XIV, 43| interpreted by the Britons, as hopeful, by the veterans, as alarming. 1857 XIII, 17| forward and begin a song, hoping for a laugh at the expense 1858 III, 2| the fleet was seen on the horizon, not only the harbour and 1859 VI, 28| thoroughly ascertained his own horoscope, and the character of that 1860 II, 20| light-armed troops with horse-bowmen, and the remaining cohorts 1861 XI, 19| distinguished beauty, a skilful horseman and swordsman both after 1862 XV, 37| then took with him twenty horsemen. The king, seeing Corbulo, 1863 XV, 39| Corbulo added courtesy and hospitality. When the king continually 1864 VI, 16| then Numa Marcius by Tullus Hostilius, and Spurius Lucretius by 1865 I, 87| fallen. The struggle was hottest round the eagles, which 1866 XIV, 56| now that we have in our households nations with different customs 1867 XIII, 51| which were meanwhile to hover round the walls and begin 1868 II, 28| in order to lighten the hulls which leaked copiously through 1869 XIII, 53| changed, he was not so much humbled as his enemies wished, and 1870 VI, 38| Nero's late wife, into the humbler family of Rubellius Blandus, 1871 XIV, 34| language. Nothing was done to humiliate the city, that remaining 1872 IV, 2| before the world he affected humility; in his heart he lusted 1873 IV, 25| colour of a hereditary feud, humoured the malignity of Sejanus 1874 XI, 14| consulship, in the eight hundredth year after the foundation 1875 II, 88| sea-coast on the pretence of a hunting expedition, he struck into 1876 II, 30| told of wonders, of violent hurricanes, and unknown birds, of monsters 1877 I, 30| was, and most careful to hush up every very serious disaster, 1878 XV, 96| prince's clemency had been hushed up or forgotten. ~ ~ 1879 IV, 59| of their history and the hymns of poets, but it had been 1880 IV, 73| kings. But the people of Hypaepa, Tralles, Laodicaea, and 1881 I, 60| reproached Tiberius for the hypocritical irresolution with which 1882 II, 62| Apollonis, the Mostenians, and Hyrcanian Macedonians, as they were 1883 XIII, 43| covered as it was with ice, did not yield a place for 1884 XVI, 37| and language to exhibit an ideal of virtue. In his heart, 1885 II, 19| down into a plain named Idistavisus. It winds between the Visurgis 1886 XI, 22| unsuccessful, nor was it anything ignoble. Yet the Chauci were violently 1887 XIV, 8| against treachery was to ignore it. Then she sent her freedman 1888 II | BOOK II~ ~A.D. 16-19~ ~ 1889 III | BOOK III~ ~A.D. 20-22~ ~ 1890 III, 60| crupellarii, and though they were ill-adapted for inflicting wounds, they 1891 I, 103| veteran's discharge." Thus the ill-advised results of the late mutiny, 1892 VI, 68| prompt decision argued that ill-arrayed levies fatigued by a long 1893 II, 110| he met the intelligence, ill-authenticated as it was, and they again 1894 XII, 41| military testudo, and the rude, ill-compacted fence of stones was torn 1895 IV, 16| beginning of popularity and the ill-concealed ambition of their mother 1896 XII, 57| Rhadamistus might retain his ill-gotten gains, as long as he was 1897 IV, 82| vulgar fashion to trace ill-luck to guilt, when Tiberius 1898 I, 39| from misery was to quit an ill-omened and polluted camp, and, 1899 XIV, 19| excesses, which, though ill-restrained, some sort of respect for 1900 II, 70| with the past, with their ill-success against the Macedonians, 1901 XII, 14| detour, for Armenia, then ill-suited to their movements, as winter 1902 XIII, 66| collectors to cover their illegal exactions. In our transmarine 1903 XV, 53| which individual license had illegally appropriated, might flow 1904 XII, 6| rumour and by their own illicit love. Still, they did not 1905 VI, 28| confidence of one freedman, quite illiterate and of great physical strength. 1906 XV, 47| which I will describe as an illustration, that I may not have again 1907 I, 5| as he was just entering Illyria was summoned home by an 1908 I, 60| the result of affairs in Illyrium was not yet known, and men 1909 III, 49| wrong that because of the imbecility of one or two men, all husbands 1910 I, 23| the exclamation, "Better imbrue your hands in my blood: 1911 XII, 38| rebels, and as a means of imbuing the allies with respect 1912 III, 78| culture for posterity to imitate. May we still keep up with 1913 II, 115| had presided with the most immaculate virtue over the Vestal worship. 1914 XI, 14| but because this duty has immemorially belonged to the College 1915 XIV, 31| was thought that, by thus immersing his person in it, he had 1916 IV, 73| further augmented by the immigration of nations into that part 1917 XIII, 21| repeatedly spoke of her as an immodest woman in the decline of 1918 XII, 8| arrogance in public, no sort of immodesty at home, unless it conduced 1919 XV, 58| in which it is usual to immolate victims in a pregnant condition. 1920 I, 81| altars, on which they had immolated tribunes and first-rank 1921 III, 22| no place here, I call the immortal gods to witness that towards 1922 XVI, 20| repeated, not thoughts on the immortality of the soul or on the theories 1923 XIII, 66| soldiers should retain their immunities except when they traded 1924 XII, 66| skill of the pilots, the impact of the vessels, and the 1925 IV, 57| odium. That he might not impair his influence by closing 1926 IV, 86| continually to his house, and imparted to him his griefs, as to 1927 III, 9| removal. Tiberius, to show his impartiality, received the youth courteously, 1928 XIII, 43| long peace, endured most impatiently the duties of a Roman camp. 1929 VI, 5| silent after their threats of impeaching one another. "It must be 1930 XVI, 26| As for the impeachment of Barea Soranus, Ostorius 1931 XII, 75| the peace of Italy by an imperfect control of her troops of 1932 I, 60| not be quelled by the yet imperfectly-matured authority of two striplings. " 1933 XV, 53| Alba, that material being impervious to fire. And to provide 1934 VI, 51| Pharasmanes with the greater impetuosity, for he pierced his enemy' 1935 XII, 11| alliance, nor did their coming imply any revolt from the family 1936 XV, 61| approaching end of empire, and the importance of choosing some one to 1937 XV, 96| personal resentment, and thus importing fresh bitterness into what 1938 VI, 30| been foretold through the impostures of those who describe what 1939 VI, 33| feigning loss of reason, he imprecated in seeming madness fearful 1940 XIV, 41| and pouring forth dreadful imprecations, scared our soldiers by 1941 XV, 34| Paetus. He spoke with much impressiveness, which in him, as a military 1942 XI, 37| When an actor," they said, "impudently thrust himself into the 1943 XII, 14| reminded Meherdates that the impulsive enthusiasm of barbarians 1944 XIII, 70| goodnaturedly, as due to the impulsiveness of a primitive people and 1945 XII, 41| ascertained by a survey the inaccessible and the assailable points 1946 XII, 70| supposed that he had stumbled inadvertently into this opinion, its principle 1947 I, 71| Augustal game's which were then inaugurated, were disturbed by quarrels 1948 IV, 88| tightly bound, "that this was inaugurating the year; these were the 1949 IV, 50| ascended his tribunal for the inauguration of his office, Calpurnius 1950 I, 4| he had the old arrogance inbred in the Claudian family, 1951 XV, 86| charioteer, an actor, and an incendiary." I have given the man's 1952 XIV, 81| enrage, at once alarmed and incensed her listener. But the suspicion 1953 I, 72| became with bitter foes incentives to fury.~ ~ 1954 XII, 78| crimes are perilous in their inception, but well rewarded after 1955 XIII, 3| had ruined himself by an incestuous marriage and a fatal adoption 1956 IV, 45| of countries, the various incidents of battles, glorious deaths 1957 XVI, 20| haste, but having made an incision in his veins and then, according 1958 XIII, 59| fortunate. These and like incitements allowed but of brief delay. 1959 IV, 16| were induced to be always inciting her proud spirit by mischievous 1960 IV, 56| of Drusus, will have the inclination to pass her old age with 1961 III, 53| offence. Better that he should incline that way, spend his days 1962 I, 37| threats. Were he to see them inclining to submission and hear the 1963 IV, 34| which they relied, as it was inclosed by vast forests. Immediately 1964 IV, 31| father-in-law, he replied incoherently, representing that he was 1965 II, 46| He also increased the incomes of some of the Senators. 1966 XII, 49| freedmen, all who were of incorruptible fidelity were discarded 1967 VI, 9| lapse of time. People were incriminated for some casual remark in 1968 III, 74| not a citizen is safe from incrimination. Yet as even bodily disorders 1969 IV, 89| the old, now become a mere incubus. But these and other punishments 1970 V, 14| Trio, a reckless man in incurring enmities and a practised 1971 III, 47| was again disturbed by an incursion of Tacfarinas, and that 1972 IV, 19| vulgar, had become at once so indecent and so popular, that it 1973 VI, 47| revenge. With barbarians, indecision is a slave's weakness; prompt 1974 III, 67| was quite unconnected. An indefatigable soldier, he had by his zealous 1975 I, 105| Tiberius' character to prolong indefinitely military commands and to 1976 II, 118| throne by his countrymen's independent spirit. He was assailed 1977 XIV, 6| constraint, which seemed to indicate serious thought, and then, 1978 I, 81| its central space clearly indicated the handiwork of three legions. 1979 II, 35| the emperor, after first indicating the crime and the criminal 1980 XIV, 53| same degradation for having indicted the defendants before the 1981 III, 54| which then crowned all indictments. Antistius Vetus, one of 1982 I, 99| who sought because of his indigence to be excused from his rank 1983 XII, 13| reduces the enterprising and indolent to an equality. But Cassius, 1984 XIV, 16| share of empire, and at inducing the praetorian cohorts to 1985 I, 71| But a people so many years indulgently treated, he did not yet 1986 XVI, 32| son-in-law Helvidius Priscus indulging similar frenzies, by Paconius 1987 III, 59| routes, to meet them. Julius Indus from the same state, who 1988 IV, 40| complaining that the laws would be ineffective, and the State brought to 1989 XI, 49| terror she was applying it ineffectually to her throat and breast, 1990 II, 100| have not contracted any inexpiable guilt, and you need not 1991 XIV, 27| bred by foreign tastes was infecting the youth who devoted themselves 1992 IV, 67| carcases and stench and infection. To their confusion was 1993 XVI, 32| said, "the stubbornness of inferiors which lessens the clemency 1994 I, 5| topics were discussed, the infirmities of Augustus increased, and 1995 XIV, 44| weakness of their sex, or the infirmity of age, or the attractions 1996 XV, 66| that the lust of dominion inflames the heart more than any 1997 XV, 48| amid the shops containing inflammable wares, the conflagration 1998 II, 44| gathering from all Italy and the influx from the provinces ought 1999 XII, 54| further hostilities, to inform Ummidius Quadratus, the 2000 I, 102| not lawful for Tiberius to infringe his decisions. Many enactments 2001 II, 37| that, forsooth, without an infringement of the Senate's decree, 2002 VI, 41| the land of its birth and infuses into it a germ of life from


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