Book,  Par.

 1     I,      3|        laid aside the dress of boyhood he had most fervently desired,
 2    VI,     74|       had hardly completed his boyhood, was thoroughly ignorant
 3   XII,      9|       was her wish too for the boyhood of Domitius to be trained
 4   XII,     49|  Britannicus wore the dress of boyhood, Nero the triumphal robe,
 5  XIII,      1|        was scarcely out of his boyhood and had gained the empire
 6  XIII,      4|      elegance. Nero from early boyhood turned his lively genius
 7  XIII,      5| administration of empire. "His boyhood," he said, "had not had
 8  XIII,     19|        the worst insult to the boyhood of Britannicus; so that
 9  XIII,     53|      and with the ignorance of boyhood, envied those who employed
10   XIV,      5|      had been tutor to Nero in boyhood and had a hatred of Agrippina
11   XIV,     65|      originated? Surely Nero's boyhood was over, and he was all
12   XIV,     70|  required, you watched over my boyhood, then over my youth, with
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