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2003 VI, 69| emperor such as each man's ingenuity suggested. It is a question 2004 XVI, 1| days. In fact, he said, ingots of great weight lay there, 2005 IV, 3| Senate too he sought to ingratiate himself, distinguishing 2006 XIII, 17| poison of previously tested ingredients was prepared close to the 2007 VI, 49| Iberians and Albanians, inhabiting as they did a densely wooded 2008 XVI, 32| Paconius Agrippinus, the inheritor of his father's hatred towards 2009 XIV, 65| seized on Nero. "Openly inimical to the prince's amusements, 2010 XII, 54| the Roman people, through iniquity and greed of gain. At last, 2011 XV, 71| Natalis however, taking the initiative, knowing as he did more 2012 XV, 35| with Rome than by mutual injuries. I know how much there is 2013 XIV, 56| precedent, which, though injurious to individuals, has its 2014 II, 30| several had ransomed from the inland tribes. Some had been carried 2015 XI, 29| from Tusculum, and not to inquire too minutely into the past, 2016 II, 11| particular place and battle, he inquired what reward he had received. 2017 II, 69| conceived in the mind of any inquirer. It was said that he prophesied 2018 XV, 1| they were victims to the inroads, not indeed of a Roman general, 2019 XI, 15| informers by a new and almost insane passion. She had grown so 2020 IV, 31| having caused her husband's insanity by magical incantations 2021 IV, 54| course; one thing they ought insatiably to pursue, that their memory 2022 XV, 79| for tablets on which to inscribe his will, and, on the centurion' 2023 II, 78| towering piles Egyptian inscriptions, with a complete account 2024 IV, 70| rare utterances of that inscrutable breast; he rebuked Agrippina 2025 I, 85| place with its deep swamps, insecure to the foot and slippery 2026 XIV, 82| Anicetus, with the moral insensibility of his nature and a promptness 2027 VI, 14| him to Rhodes and been his inseparable companions at Capreae. Vescularius 2028 VI, 56| an onslaught of accusers, inserted in his will several terrible 2029 V, 4| therefore supposed to have an insight into his secret purposes. 2030 XIV, 79| dangers than others from the insignificance of their position. Upon 2031 IV, 5| now the old plan, so often insincerely broached, of a progress 2032 XII, 31| stepmother, perceiving their insincerity. For he is said to have 2033 XIII, 34| officials of the exchequer, by insinuating that he stretched his right 2034 XV, 26| persons also, who were sent to inspect the provinces, and to report 2035 XIII, 15| time that the emperor after inspecting the apparel in which wives 2036 I, 37| rabble knows no mean, and inspires fear, unless they are afraid, 2037 I, 13| grand scale; only in a few instances had he resorted to force, 2038 XII, 77| one that was sudden and instantaneous, while if she chose a slow 2039 III, 57| revolt. Its most active instigators were Julius Florus among 2040 I, 36| another. Then by degrees the instinct of obedience returned. They 2041 VI, 41| Arabia, and with none of the instincts which ancient tradition 2042 IV, 22| religious questions, that the institution of the priests of Jupiter 2043 IV, 45| others. Still, though this is instructive, it gives very little pleasure. 2044 XV, 84| had been slain by Piso's instrumentality, Piso also was to be murdered, 2045 XI, 28| small thing that Veneti and Insubres have already burst into 2046 VI, 66| meant. Hiero then spoke insultingly of the boyish years of Tiridates, 2047 II, 32| Cherusci too and the other insurgent tribes, since the vengeance 2048 I, 1| famous historians; and fine intellects were not wanting to describe 2049 III, 26| whether the omission had been intentional, and it was only then that 2050 XIII, 4| of his thoughts, or else intentionally obscure. Even Caius Caesar' 2051 I, 104| used by the inhabitants of Interamna. The most fruitful plains 2052 II, 38| oath that he would have interceded for his life, guilty though 2053 XII, 28| matter. Still, I think, it is interesting to know accurately the original 2054 XIII, 52| divine ordinances and yet not interfer with human affairs. ~ ~ 2055 XIV, 50| let private animosities interfere with the public interest, 2056 XVI, 12| them to die without his interference. Such were the mockeries 2057 XIII, 50| utterly powerless by not interfering with the siege, and afraid 2058 III, 103| recruited his resources in the interior of Africa, and had become 2059 XI, 12| engagements subduing the intermediate tribes as far as the river 2060 III, 103| else threatening us with an interminable war. Never, it is said, 2061 II, 78| priests, who was desired to interpret the language of his country, 2062 XIV, 30| talk was confirmed by an interpretation put with similar credulity 2063 II, 34| promises, magical rites, and interpreters of dreams, dwelling ostentatiously 2064 I, 82| did not approve, either interpreting unfavourably every act of 2065 VI, 42| themselves, had their bodies interred, and their wills remained 2066 I, 82| soldier knowing whether he was interring the relics of a relative 2067 I, 93| pursued his route without interruption, having a dry shore, or 2068 II, 63| Musa, a rich woman who died intestate, on which the imperial treasury 2069 XII, 35| of neighbours, joined to intestine strife, was his ruin. Vibillius, 2070 VI, 45| Persia and Macedonia, and intimated, with a vainglorious threat, 2071 III, 15| merely because the case is intimately bound up with my affliction. 2072 III, 86| the grove at the divine intimation was consecrated. There Apollo 2073 II, 26| legions from the field, to intrench a camp, while the rest till 2074 I, 68| emerged from the woods and intrenched a camp. After this their 2075 XIV, 35| which had been closed by an intrepid band of youths, was not 2076 I, 91| surprise them in swampy and intricate ground. Inguiomerus, with 2077 III, 48| liberty, it is spiteful, intriguing and greedy of power. They 2078 XII, 2| It would be far better to introduce Lollia, for, as she had 2079 IV, 56| magistrates and nobles who intrude on you against your wishes 2080 XI, 19| of Italicus. "He was no intruder," they said, "on an unwilling 2081 VI, 2| suddenly Togonius Gallus intruding his own obscurity among 2082 XII, 6| troubles, to whom he might intrust his inmost thoughts and 2083 XIII, 22| written to Caecina Tuscus, intrusting to him the charge of the 2084 I, 104| in order to restrain the inundations of the Tiber, the rivers 2085 III, 96| enough power. Rights are invariably abridged, as despotism increases; 2086 IV, 77| part of prosecutors and to inveigh specially against Nero, 2087 VI, 70| prompted his wife Ennia to inveigle the young prince by a pretence 2088 II, 4| guise of friendship, had inveigled Artavasdes, king of the 2089 VI, 65| times, with a more copious inventiveness, have devised. Reproaches 2090 XVI, 28| the feeble and timid to invest their last moments with 2091 XIII, 32| their patrons, they were to investigate each case separately and 2092 I, 19| himself, but annoyed at the invidious proposal, and indeed regarding 2093 II, 31| Romans, they declared, were invincible, rising superior to all 2094 II, 105| for he had come at their invitation) but by Sentius, who was 2095 II, 81| former days he received invitations from many nations, he had 2096 XIII, 71| looking up to the sun and invoking the other heavenly bodies, 2097 Miss | Messalina contrived to involve this lady and her lover, 2098 IV, 80| violent shock, as it fell inwards or spread outwards, precipitating 2099 II, 68| Adriatic and afterwards the Ionian Sea. He accordingly devoted 2100 IV, 4| a rival and was somewhat irascible, had, in a casual dispute, 2101 III, 64| somewhat of an obstacle, as the iron plates did not yield to 2102 IV, 16| to tremble for her power, irreconcilably hostile to her grandson' 2103 IV, 65| soldiers along with some irregulars. Against the boldest of 2104 III, 16| began with some old and irrelevant accusations about intrigues 2105 III, 57| the fear of guilt was an irresistible stimulus to crime, they 2106 VI, 73| conspiracy, was charged with irreverence towards the emperor. With 2107 XIII, 30| loudly complained that the irreverent spirit which freedom had 2108 II, 65| condemned if she had spoken irreverently of Augustus. Her insinuations 2109 XIV, 6| children ought to bear with the irritability of parents and to soothe 2110 IV, 90| he was therefore the more irritated at an attempt to expose 2111 XI, 22| Why," men asked, "was he irritating the foe? His disasters will 2112 I, 1| death were written under the irritation of a recent hatred. Hence 2113 XII, 33| Upper Germany through an irruption of plundering bands of Chatti. 2114 III, 88| too the names of Perperna, Isauricus, and many other generals 2115 III, 89| Venus Stratonicis; and the islanders of Tenos, an utterance from 2116 XIII, 56| banished to the Balearic isles. Neither in the crisis of 2117 V, 4| argued that the highest issues turned on trivial causes, 2118 IV, 45| innocence, the same causes issuing in the same results, and 2119 V, 13| of Corinth and the narrow Isthmus, and having arrived by the 2120 XV, 33| Syria was intrusted to Caius Itius, and the military forces 2121 XII, 26| right enjoyed by Sicily. Ituraea and Judaea, on the death 2122 IV | BOOK IV~ ~A.D. 23-28~ ~ 2123 XI, 41| at her side, crowned with ivy and wearing the buskin, 2124 II, 36| the day the Senate met, jaded with fear and mental anguish, 2125 II, 64| aediles, and a temple to Janus, which had been erected 2126 VI, 49| Thessalians, at the period when Jason, after the departure of 2127 II, 11| military gifts, while Arminius jeered at such a paltry recompense 2128 I, 26| who restrained them with jeers and insults, last of all, 2129 XII, 58| leisure with the society of jesters. This Pelignus collected 2130 V, 2| Tiberius with those bitter jests which the powerful remember 2131 XIII, 15| seen to glitter, selected a jewelled robe and sent it as a gift 2132 II, 114| expelling the Egyptian and Jewish worship, and a resolution 2133 VI, 33| all, he ordered a daily journal of all that he said and 2134 XIV, 7| she reposed herself, spoke joyfully of her son's repentance 2135 IV, 20| partner of all his griefs and joys, the only senator who had 2136 II, 113| Vistilia's husband, was judicially called on to say why with 2137 I, 14| the Varros, Egnatii, and Juli." ~ ~ 2138 XI, 45| charge of the Games, and Juncus Virgilianus, a senator, 2139 II, 111| the theatre known as "the juniors," Germanicus's benches, 2140 III, 94| Silanus might find some justification in precedent, ordered the 2141 I, 6| and that the act must be justified to the Senate. ~ ~ 2142 XI, 30| and what we are this day justifying by precedents, will be itself 2143 I, 37| on Drusus's staff, with Justus Catonius, a first-rank centurion, 2144 XII, 1| such a marriage. But the keenest competition was between 2145 I, 28| gladiators whom the general keeps and arms for the destruction 2146 II, 77| province containing the key of the land and of the sea, 2147 V, 11| with having offered the keys of the treasury, of which 2148 XVI, 6| husband, who felled her with a kick when she was pregnant. That 2149 II, 74| indeed, as I have said, a kind-hearted man. But friends who knew 2150 XII, 40| making light of their fears, kindling their hopes, and by every 2151 XIII, 31| open to all. Again, two kinds of enfranchisement had been 2152 VI, 47| weakness; prompt action king-like. But now expediency prevailed, 2153 IV, 70| fury by the peril of her kinswoman, went straight to Tiberius 2154 VI, 13| table. He then tried the knife with his aged hand, but 2155 III, 60| the rest had spears and knives and other weapons used in 2156 III, 40| by whom most of the legal knots were disentangled and some 2157 I, 44| the highest hope, the more laboriously did he exert himself for 2158 VI, 7| wounds; for, as the body is lacerated by scourging, so is the 2159 VI, 24| Argolicus and her father-in-law Laco, leading men of Achaia, 2160 IV, 5| not unfriendly towards the lads. And now the old plan, so 2161 XV, 42| the consulship of Caius Laecanius and Marcus Licinius a yet 2162 XV, 28| one of the vestal virgins, Laelia, died, and in her place 2163 XIII, 36| same consulship, Vipsanius Laenas was condemned for rapacity 2164 XV, 60| been satirised by Nero in a lampoon, and was bent on avenging 2165 VI, 57| having there written some lampoons on the emperor. Tiberius 2166 III, 1| the nearest and safest landing place for a voyager.~ ~ 2167 II, 8| rendezvous, because of its easy landing-places, and its convenience for 2168 XV, 53| the debris, to the ground landlords. He also offered rewards 2169 I, 66| certainly was not-merely the languid and heedless ease of half-intoxicated 2170 II, 47| Otherwise industry will languish and idleness be encouraged, 2171 XV, 60| accordingly, was one of sleepy languor. Quintianus, infamous for 2172 III, 67| was born in the town of Lanuvium, was quite unconnected. 2173 IV, 73| people of Hypaepa, Tralles, Laodicaea, and Magnesia were passed 2174 VI, 64| fortified city which had never lapsed into barbarism, but had 2175 XIV, 16| opposed the usual donative and largess, and organised perilous 2176 II, 62| it attracted to them the largest share of sympathy. The emperor 2177 XII, 28| and then to the chapel of Larunda. The Roman forum and the 2178 XI, 41| moved his head to some lascivious chorus. It is said that 2179 II, 52| children. Still, there was a latent dread when they remembered 2180 IV, 47| Marcus Cicero, in which he lauded Cato to the skies, how else 2181 XIII, 4| no one could refrain from laughter, though the speech, which 2182 XV, 10| a formidable display, he launched on the river some vessels 2183 IV, 32| There were now in Rome three laurelled statues, and yet Tacfarinas 2184 XV, 92| gods, deck his house with laurels, prostrate himself at the 2185 V, 14| enmities and a practised lawyer, had indirectly censured 2186 III, 6| the head of the bier, the lays composed in commemoration 2187 II, 89| Germanicus inscribed on leaden tablets, half-burnt cinders 2188 XV, 6| blade of grass and every leaf. And so, hiding his fear 2189 II, 28| lighten the hulls which leaked copiously through their 2190 XIV, 65| removed, and Nero too began to lean on worse advisers. They 2191 III, 86| Ortygia, where Latona, as she leaned in the pangs of labour on 2192 II, 36| of the Senate House, and leaning on his brother he raised 2193 I, 45| the pollution of guilt, he leapt impetuously from the tribunal. 2194 IV, 45| hurtful, while most men learn wisdom from the fortunes 2195 III, 83| such the lesson he first learns from his father's counsels. 2196 II, 17| is not strengthened with leather or steel, but is of osiers 2197 XV, 58| its head attached to its leg. Then followed an explanation 2198 XV, 37| of the fifth legion as "legatus," entered the camp of Tiridates, 2199 VI, 41| this is full of doubt and legendary exaggeration. Still, there 2200 XV, 12| attack, and crushed the legionaires, only one centurion of whom, 2201 III, 38| Servius Tullius was our chief legislator, to whose laws even kings 2202 XV, 81| severed also the veins of his legs and knees. Worn out by cruel 2203 VI, 22| restored, and gradually private lenders were found. The purchase 2204 VI, 21| Dictator defining the terms of lending money and of holding estates 2205 II, 70| their pleasure. He went such lengths in demoralizing them, that 2206 XVI, 32| senators have hitherto been too lenient in allowing him to be mocked 2207 II, 37| quite senseless and idle; if leniently regarded, pitiable. But 2208 XIV, 52| Vinicius Rufinus and Terentius Lentinus, Roman knights, for his 2209 III, 104| the enemy's forays on the Leptitani and his retreat to the Garamantes. 2210 IV, 57| towards himself would be lessened when there was an end to 2211 XVI, 32| stubbornness of inferiors which lessens the clemency of our ruler. 2212 III, 83| ruler of mankind; such the lesson he first learns from his 2213 XIII, 3| severe manners, Seneca, with lessons of eloquence and a dignified 2214 XII, 78| perceived, from the emperor's lethargic, or intoxicated condition. 2215 XI, 27| revival by Brutus of the lex curiata plainly shows. The 2216 II, 64| restore. These were temples to Liber, Libera, and Ceres, near 2217 II, 64| These were temples to Liber, Libera, and Ceres, near the Great 2218 I, 80| his legions were said to lie unburied. ~ ~ 2219 IV, 33| under the command of his lieutenants and tribunes. Marauding 2220 XVI, 36| I would have given up my life-blood had they demanded it. They 2221 XV, 67| Last of all, he directed ligatures for wounds and the means 2222 II, 28| thrown overboard, in order to lighten the hulls which leaked copiously 2223 II, 54| one per cent. tax could be lightened, which, for the future, 2224 XV, 1| that subjection to Rome is lighter for those who surrender 2225 XIV, 69| and unequal even to the lightest cares, since I cannot any 2226 XV, 39| sound of a trumpet, and the lighting by a torch from beneath 2227 XIII, 51| black cloud, seamed with lightning-flashes, and thus the city was thought 2228 XV, 47| and shone brilliantly with lights. Nero, who polluted himself 2229 XVI, 16| on a remote estate on the Ligurian frontier. Thither a centurion 2230 II, 117| which Tiberius sought to liken himself to those generals 2231 II, 96| the country where he died, likened his end to that of Alexander 2232 II, 72| expelled, but the nation's likings inclined towards Zeno, son 2233 IV, 8| were retained without any limitation, so that most of them grew 2234 IV, 95| not only to his ancient lineage, but also to his alliance 2235 XI, 17| was Cecrops of Athens or Linus of Thebes, or Palamedes 2236 XV, 83| exclamation, "I offer this liquid as a libation to Jupiter 2237 XII, 66| Lake Fucinus and the river Liris was bored through, and that 2238 XI, 44| that the emperor should listen to the mother of Octavia 2239 XIV, 81| alarmed and incensed her listener. But the suspicion about 2240 I, 21| troops, of quarreling, of listening to the talk of every pestilent 2241 V, 11| penknife, avowedly, for his literary pursuits, and inflicted 2242 II, 26| their nimble movements and lithe frames, forced as they were 2243 XIII, 53| honest service with the litigant's consent, than to pollute 2244 VI, 78| adoption, first into the Livian, then into the Julian family. 2245 IV, 47| mentioned without eulogy. Titus Livius, pre-eminently famous for 2246 VI, 41| rashly done, but taking up a load of myrrh and having tried 2247 XII, 52| Mithridates, who was actually loading him with honours. ~ ~ 2248 XII, 15| was offering vows to the local divinities on a mountain 2249 VI, 22| of their property, being locked up in the imperial treasury 2250 I, 23| lash, others to their grey locks, and most of them to their 2251 XV, 6| want of food. A host of locusts, suddenly appearing, had 2252 IV, 54| it was said, "have the loftiest aspirations, and so Hercules 2253 XIV, 44| a hostile population to Londinium, which, though undistinguished 2254 IV, 71| begged him "to relieve her loneliness and provide her with a husband; 2255 II, 80| fortress. There he found the long-accumulated plunder of the Suevi and 2256 VI, 4| there came an outburst of long-concealed hatreds, and there must 2257 IV, 34| hardships and how often the longed-for conflict had been eluded, 2258 I, 61| the populace, last, and longest of all, the provinces.~ ~ 2259 I, 91| with its hopes, its eager longings, and the conflicting opinions 2260 VI, 69| Cneius Domitius, Cassius Longinus, Marcus Vinicius, Rubellius 2261 IV, 20| friend. This was Lucilius Longus, the partner of all his 2262 III, 48| Oppian and other laws; now, loosed from every bond, they rule 2263 VI, 19| tribune, while in confinement, loosened his chain, and having twisted 2264 XIII, 50| afraid, with the view of loosening our formation and falling 2265 IV, 69| hardened by fire, and boughs lopped from oaks; now filling up 2266 IV, 94| bent; but there, as they lounged in promiscuous crowds in 2267 XIV, 27| athletic sports, to idle loungings and low intrigues, with 2268 XV, 64| emperor, charmed by its loveliness, often went, and where, 2269 XI, 29| Senate from Etruria and Lucania and the whole of Italy, 2270 VI, 16| Tullus Hostilius, and Spurius Lucretius by Tarquinius Superbus. 2271 XIV, 7| which conveyed her to the Lucrine lake, and so entered her 2272 XV, 17| dwelt on the memories of the Luculli and Pompeii, and of all 2273 XV, 51| dedicated by Servius Tullius to Luna, the great altar and shrine 2274 XIII, 60| governor of the province of Lusitania, that he might not be the 2275 XIV, 21| on the stage, tuning his lute with elaborate care and 2276 II, 78| from the Bithynian to the Lycian sea. There was also to be 2277 III, 38| those of the Spartans, by Lycurgus, and, subsequently, those 2278 III, 86| Hercules, when he was subduing Lydia, the grandeur of the temple' 2279 IV, 73| Italy. The resources of the Lydians were yet further augmented 2280 I, 95| when consulted by Pompeius Macer, the praetor, as to whether 2281 VI, 24| Pompeia Macrina too was sentenced to banishment. 2282 IV, 38| to the accuser. The man, maddened by remorse, and terror-stricken 2283 I, 52| and a pregnant wife among madmen who outraged every human 2284 VI, 33| he imprecated in seeming madness fearful things on Tiberius, 2285 III, 53| having attacked the praetor, Magius Caecilianus, with false 2286 III, 87| fidelity and courage of the Magnesians by allowing the temple of 2287 II, 81| is extant, and in it he magnifies the man's power, the ferocity 2288 VI, 20| granddaughters, now that the maidens were of marriageable age, 2289 XVI, 13| Neroneus, was changed from Maius into the name of Claudius, 2290 | makes 2291 VI, 42| being pressed by charges of maladministration in his province and other 2292 XIII, 21| whether out of love or malice was doubtful. One of these 2293 II, 31| the Marsi, whose leader, Mallovendus, whom we had lately admitted 2294 I, 50| person, they reproached Manatius Plancus, an ex-consul and 2295 XIII, 72| having written to Curtilius Mancia, commander of the Upper 2296 I, 42| tearing them from the ground, mangled, and some lifeless, they 2297 IV, 6| sent by Augustus powerfully manned to the town of Forojulium. 2298 XIII, 47| troops of cavalry could manoeuvre. On the appointed day, arriving 2299 II, 71| evolutions of the cavalry and the manoeuvres of the cohorts, and would 2300 XV, 51| computation of the private mansions, the blocks of tenements, 2301 XII, 66| splendid military cloak, she, a mantle of cloth of gold. A battle 2302 III, 60| which he had had secretly manufactured. There were forty thousand, 2303 XIII, 4| intellect did not wholly mar his faculty of speech. Nor 2304 IV, 33| lieutenants and tribunes. Marauding parties were also led by 2305 VI, 56| About the same time Granius Marcianus, a senator, who was accused 2306 XIV, 32| along the frontier of the Mardi, he was incessantly attacked 2307 XV, 41| franchise the tribes of the maritime Alps. To the Roman knights 2308 VI, 11| taken a position by his marriage-alliance, it was your son-in-law, 2309 XIV, 83| Octavia, from the first, her marriage-day was a kind of funeral, brought, 2310 VI, 20| that the maidens were of marriageable age, selected Lucius Cassius 2311 I, 87| their blood on the slippery marsh, they shook off their riders, 2312 II, 67| rapine. After a while, he marshalled them like regular soldiers, 2313 XV, 92| folly of his end. Cornelius Martialis, Flavius Nepos, Statius 2314 XIV, 60| were believed, and Junius Marullus, consul-elect, proposed 2315 II, 82| Danube between the rivers Marus and Cusus, under a king, 2316 IV, 84| in the prosecution was a marvel, for he was of illustrious 2317 XIV, 51| of freedmen, and so they marvelled to see a general and an 2318 VI, 41| multitude of companion birds marvelling at the novelty of the appearance. 2319 XV, 48| houses fenced in by solid masonry, or temples surrounded by 2320 XIII, 48| all the adult inhabitants massacred, without the loss of a soldier 2321 III, 78| clientele. After the savage massacres in which greatness of renown 2322 XIII, 14| inflame him, till completely mastered by the strength of his desire, 2323 IV, 80| losses of a great war were matched by an unexpected disaster, 2324 XV, 53| from Gabii or Alba, that material being impervious to fire. 2325 XIII, 58| assumed the name of her maternal grandfather Poppaeus Sabinus, 2326 XII, 70| To mention after them the Matii, Vedii, and other too influential 2327 XV, 54| too, was entreated by the matrons, first, in the Capitol, 2328 XI, 24| in the territory of the Mattiaci for working certain veins 2329 I, 74| After burning Mattium, the capital of the tribe, 2330 II, 56| had not yet reached his maturity." Thereupon, by a decree 2331 IV, 6| subjugated, was held by three. Mauretania was king Juba's, who had 2332 XV, 92| Artoria Flaccilla and Egnatia Maximilla. The latter possessed at 2333 III, 67| related, on Lepida, and the meanness and dangerous power of his 2334 XVI, 4| made the place ring with measured strains of elaborate applause. 2335 XV, 53| of streets according to measurement, with broad thoroughfares, 2336 I, 81| wide circumference and the measurements of its central space clearly 2337 II, 10| drowned. While Caesar was measuring out his camp, he was told 2338 XIV, 8| upper part collapsed, like a mechanism anything but nautical. She 2339 III, 72| undignified it would be to meddle with what he could not succeed 2340 XIII, 63| more ought there to be no meddling with things wholly insignificant." ~ ~ 2341 II, 5| Armenians Ariobarzanes, a Mede by birth, whom they willingly 2342 VI, 49| after the departure of Medea and the children born of 2343 XII, 16| Vonones, who then ruled the Medes, was summoned to the throne. 2344 VI, 50| menacing array, and to the Median bands with their golden 2345 I, 77| be at the same time a fit mediator for a German people, should 2346 IV, 81| supplied indiscriminately medicines and physicians, so that 2347 I, 24| law of discipline, do you meditate violence? Decide on sending 2348 XV, 78| asked whether Seneca was meditating suicide. Upon this the tribune 2349 II, 70| disasters, but a miserable medley of tribes. As for the men 2350 I, 23| have a more conspicuous meeting-place. Amid the bustle Blaesus 2351 XV, 52| face of hills, where one meets with no moisture which could 2352 XV, 34| had been concentrated at Melitene, where he was preparing 2353 II, 79| were the stone image of Memnon, which, when struck by the 2354 IV, 71| historian, I have found in the memoirs of the younger Agrippina, 2355 II, 78| been buried there, when Menelaus on his return to Greece 2356 I, 49| soldiers. Such was the order of Mennius, the camp-prefect, more 2357 XI, 6| of all articles of public merchandise nothing was more venal than 2358 XIV, 50| a conqueror, would deal mercifully with those who had surrendered. 2359 III, 46| whose property and credit he mercilessly attacked by convictions 2360 XIII, 73| enemy's army to Mars and Mercury, a vow which consigns horses, 2361 XIII, 64| who attended even to the merest trifles, would not disguise 2362 XIII, 17| conspicuous, as night with its merriment had stript off all disguise. 2363 I, 87| and the echoing glens with merry song or savage shouts, while 2364 II, 15| and fears at the military mess, among themselves, and unwatched. ~ ~ 2365 III, 100| the precedent of Lucius Metellus, supreme pontiff, who had 2366 XI, 23| between the Rhine and the Meuse, as a means of avoiding 2367 XI, 41| ever, was celebrating in mid-autumn a representation of the 2368 I, 50| the Senate's decree. At midnight they began to demand the 2369 I, 41| apprehension to other and mightier armies, but there was sedition 2370 II, 77| small a force against the mightiest army, might distress Italy 2371 III, 33| though others had proposed a milder sentence. Subsequently, 2372 XII, 51| bounty of heaven and the mildness of the winter that its desperate 2373 XI, 28| will be crowded with these millionaires, whose ancestors of the 2374 XIII, 5| When he had done with his mimicries of sorrow he entered the 2375 V, 10| of his friends who were minded to stay with him and converse, 2376 XII, 56| Rhadamistus too, seemingly mindful of his oath, neither unsheathed 2377 XI, 24| same honour. He had opened mines in the territory of the 2378 II, 8| washes Germany, till it mingles with the ocean. On the Gallic 2379 II, 82| peace of the provinces by mingling with the population, were 2380 VI, 75| to prison. Those who had ministered to her profligacy, Carsidius 2381 XII, 63| numbered among the emperor's ministers. Claudius assured them that 2382 II, 87| Cotys. As these were still minors, Trebellienus Rufus, an 2383 III, 38| of the Cretans, framed by Minos; those of the Spartans, 2384 XVI, 28| was possible that the very miracle might impress even a Nero. 2385 I, 88| shared their food, soiled by mire or blood, they bewailed 2386 XVI, 24| set, bent on making your mirthfulness a reproach to you. He is 2387 I, 87| missiles, nor planted in the miry soil. Caecina, while he 2388 XV, 45| to cheer themselves under mischances by the sight of the emperor. 2389 V, 4| evidence of courage) or a misdirected acuteness which made him 2390 XII, 61| one who still resented the misfortune of exile which she had suffered 2391 IV, 6| account of them would be misleading, since they moved from place 2392 III, 11| distinguished from perverse misrepresentation by a single judge, where 2393 VI, 6| requested that words perversely misrepresented and the freedom of table 2394 | miss 2395 III, 6| Some there were who missed the grandeur of a state-funeral, 2396 III, 61| to check those murderous missives by the sword. Even war is 2397 XI, 38| Ostia, he sought two of the mistresses to whose society Claudius 2398 I, 18| against him, but simply mistrusted him, because he was rich 2399 IV, 57| freedom from vexations and misunderstandings, and their special opportunities 2400 III, 49| there was some remission and mitigation of them on grounds of expediency. 2401 XV, 73| horse and foot soldiers, mixed with Germans, whom the emperor 2402 XVI, 32| lenient in allowing him to be mocked with impunity by Thrasea 2403 II, 103| to defend himself. Piso mockingly replied that he would be 2404 III, 69| penalties and correctives are moderated by the clemency of the sovereign 2405 III, 83| s legal position, but he modified the ceremonies which had 2406 XIV, 51| the enemy nor was himself molested, and veiled this tame inaction 2407 II, 35| that they must consult on a momentous and terrible matter. ~ ~ 2408 XIV, 40| to attack the island of Mona which had a powerful population 2409 VI, 64| approaches closely to a monarch's caprice. ~ ~ 2410 III, 40| serve us in peace under a monarchy. Henceforth our chains became 2411 XIII, 54| been embezzlement of public monies. Then, as an entire year 2412 I, 34| Suddenly in a clear sky the moon's radiance seemed to die 2413 II, 67| took up arms and drew their Moorish neighbours into the war. 2414 XII, 46| like raids, in woods and morasses, with encounters due to 2415 II, 23| to us. From nine in the morning to nightfall the enemy were 2416 XI, 25| those beneath him, and of moroseness among his equals, he gained 2417 XV, 2| obedience, which the greatest of mortals must not despise, and which 2418 XIII, 43| was observed whose hands mortified as he was carrying a bundle 2419 II, 8| name too is changed for the Mosa river, through whose vast 2420 XIII, 45| won the friendship of the Moschi, a nation which became pre-eminently 2421 IV, 60| people of Smyrna. Volcatius Moschus, also an exile, had been 2422 II, 62| Philadelpheia, Aegae, Apollonis, the Mostenians, and Hyrcanian Macedonians, 2423 | mostly 2424 XIII, 6| was paralysed with alarm, motioned to the prince to go and 2425 XIV, 56| terror you can hold in such a motley rabble. But, it will be 2426 XII, 19| to the soldiers, who had mounted the walls by scaling ladders. 2427 V, 4| Germanicus might one day move the old man's remorse. At 2428 XIII, 29| women of distinction were multiplied, other persons too on the 2429 XVI, 25| allow rivals of the Bruti to multiply and flourish. Finally, write 2430 II, 45| years? It was in fact a multiplying of the magistrates five-fold, 2431 IV, 57| bustling crowds and streaming multitudes, while he praised repose 2432 XIII, 61| following falsehood. The Mulvian bridge was then a famous 2433 XV, 61| Araricus, Julius Augurinus, Munatius Gratus, Antonius Natalis, 2434 I, 104| given to embassies from the municipal towns and colonies, and 2435 III, 23| said, "to look a grandson's murderess in the face, to converse 2436 I, 44| silence or with but a slight murmur. ~ ~ 2437 II, 63| The property of Aemilia Musa, a rich woman who died intestate, 2438 XII, 78| poison was infused into some mushrooms, a favourite delicacy, and 2439 XIV, 27| to effeminate strains of music and sweet voices? Night 2440 II, 67| undisciplined rabble, but of the Musulamian people. This powerful tribe, 2441 IV, 33| beheaded some chiefs of the Musulamii, who were on the verge of 2442 XIV, 24| Nuceria, with their bodies mutilated by wounds, and many lamented 2443 IV, 16| he had an intrigue with Mutilia Prisca, and was consequently 2444 II, 39| of Gallus Asinius, Papius Mutilus, and Lucius Apronius. I 2445 III, 80| years, after having quelled mutinies and settled wars, after 2446 II, 62| towns of Hierocaesarea, Myrina, Cyme, and Tmolus, were; 2447 VI, 41| but taking up a load of myrrh and having tried its strength 2448 II, 69| attempted to see the sacred mysteries of the Samothracians, but 2449 XII, 68| other old traditions akin to myths, he gained for his clients 2450 II, 75| given by the king of the Nabataeans, when some golden crowns 2451 VI, 33| death, taunting him with nameless abominations and with a 2452 II, 82| Forum Julii, a colony of Narbonensian Gaul. The barbarians who 2453 XIV, 73| to Asia, Sulla to Gallia Narbonensis, he spoke much of their 2454 III, 10| road during the march. From Narnia, to avoid suspicion or because 2455 IV, 14| Drusus I have followed the narrative of most of the best historians. 2456 XIII, 22| the differences in their narratives under the writers' names. 2457 IV, 67| by degrees contracted and narrowed his lines, with the view 2458 IV, 5| our allies, and how much narrower then were the limits of 2459 XII, 48| under the command of Caesius Nasica fought with a similar result. 2460 IV, 74| declined to appoint, Valerius Naso, one of the ex-praetors, 2461 III, 73| number of slaves of every nationality? The masses of silver and 2462 XI, 28| with a senate. Once our native-born citizens sufficed for peoples 2463 XVI, 15| notes about the day of his nativity and his future career, which 2464 IV, 46| Satrius Secundus and Pinarius Natta, creatures of Sejanus. This 2465 XIV, 8| a mechanism anything but nautical. She pondered too the death 2466 XV, 52| actually undertaken to sink a navigable canal from the lake Avernus 2467 XVI, 9| he was to be conveyed to Naxos. He was afterwards confined 2468 XV, 26| while we are giving offence. Nay, some virtues are actually 2469 IV, 39| ought to be allowed the necessaries of life. And so Serenus 2470 III, 30| rewarded by Apronius with a neck-chain and a spear. To these the 2471 XII, 42| vassals, and the ornaments and neck-chains and the spoils which the 2472 I, 18| his right as Tribune to negative the motion of the Consuls. 2473 II, 32| wavering and consulting on negotiations for peace, and that, with 2474 VI, 1| landed at points in the neighborhood, visited the gardens by 2475 I, 104| unwilling to be deprived of his neighbour streams and to flow with 2476 II, 15| that they had heard the neighing of horses and the hum of 2477 XII, 33| directed the Vangiones and Nemetes, with the allied cavalry, 2478 III, 89| consecrate a statue and a fane to Neptune. Sardis preferred a more 2479 XVI, 13| too following April, or Neroneus, was changed from Maius 2480 XIII, 56| accusers attacked his son Nerullinus on the strength of men's 2481 XV, 66| and, being a man of strong nerve and huge frame, hurl him 2482 XV, 56| health, as though he had a nervous ailment, would not quit 2483 VI, 41| phoenix, it is said, builds a nest in the land of its birth 2484 II, 28| giving them clumsy aid, neutralized the services of the skilled 2485 I, 34| that this was a portent of never-ending hardship, and that heaven 2486 | nevertheless 2487 V, 7| nearly three years, are lost. Newer editions of Tacitus mark 2488 XIII, 73| to the very walls of the newly founded colony. Nor could 2489 XIV, 59| fact that he was a man of newly-risen family and of wealth which 2490 II, 61| fighting for ancient renown or newly-won freedom; the other side 2491 VI, 63| received the submission of Nicephorium, Anthemusias and the other 2492 XV, 5| In addition, the river Nicephorius, the breadth of which is 2493 I, 29| of a centurion, whom they nicknamed Sirpicus, while the men 2494 XIV, 56| knowledge. Could he pass the night-guard, could he open the doors 2495 II, 26| avail themselves of their nimble movements and lithe frames, 2496 XII, 66| four banks of oars, and nineteen thousand men; he lined the 2497 XIII, 36| There was his long life of ninety-three years, his conspicuous wealth, 2498 XII, 15| they captured the city of Ninos, the most ancient capital 2499 XV, 6| with the king at the town Nisibis, thirty-seven miles distant 2500 XIII, 57| made some impression by the nobleness of his example, when the 2501 XIII, 27| signified his wishes only by a nod or a gesture, or, if further 2502 XI, 9| When he had nodded assent, they began to plead


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