Book,  Par.

 1    II,      3|         his contrast with their ancestral manners, by his rare indulgence
 2    II,     12|        claims of fatherland, of ancestral freedom, of the gods of
 3    II,     34|          his house crowded with ancestral busts, and urging him to
 4    II,     57|      who seemed to disgrace the ancestral images of the Claudii. Again,
 5   XII,     60|       he hurried to Iberia, his ancestral kingdom. Zenobia meanwhile (
 6  XIII,     41|       they had squandered their ancestral wealth in profligacy. ~ ~
 7   XIV,     18| increased, he restored to their ancestral homes two distinguished
 8   XIV,     30|      mischievous gossip. He had ancestral possessions in Asia, where
 9   XIV,     42|      gift, were stript of their ancestral possessions, and the king'
10   XVI,      7|     Cassius was eminent for his ancestral wealth and dignity of character,
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