Book,  Par.

 1    II,     87|     had opposed his father's designs, and the sons of Cotys.
 2   III,     54|   had been implicated in the designs of Rhescuporis, when that
 3   III,     59|    meanwhile followed up his designs and tried to induce a squadron
 4    VI,      4|   Sejanus in his treacherous designs against Caius Caesar. When
 5    VI,     12| against the State, murderous designs against the emperor be punished.
 6   XII,      9|     of his counsels in their designs on the throne. For Seneca,
 7   XII,     25|     that she had mischievous designs on the State, and must have
 8   XII,     50|     charged with treason and designs on the throne. The emperor
 9  XIII,     21|   encourage in revolutionary designs Rubellius Plautus, who his
10   XIV,     81|      charge of revolutionary designs. Fittest for this seemed
11    XV,     20|    was uncertainty about the designs of the Parthians, he should
12    XV,     90|      orders to forestall the designs of the consul, to seize
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