Book,  Par.

 1    II,     65|         having been convicted of adultery, allied though she was to
 2    II,     65|       she was to Caesar's house. Adultery, it was thought, was sufficiently
 3    II,     65|     Appuleia of treason. For her adultery, he deprecated the severer
 4   III,     54|        who had been acquitted of adultery, was recalled by the emperor
 5    IV,     58|      with exile for the crime of adultery with Varius Ligur, although
 6    IV,     62|       was capitally punished for adultery with Julia, and the son,
 7    IV,     91| condemned her on a conviction of adultery and had banished her to
 8    VI,     43| Cornelius, his accusers, alleged adultery with Livia and the practice
 9    VI,     61|      victim to the informers for adultery with a slave. There was
10    XI,      2|         share in every crime, of adultery with Poppaea, and finally
11    XI,     39|        would not make charges of adultery, and seem to be asking back
12  XIII,     12|       degraded from his rank for adultery with Messalina, and whom
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