Book,  Par.

 1     I,    101|    presence of Augustus. I cannot believe that he deliberately gave
 2   III,      4| affliction. But I can more easily believe that Tiberius and Augusta,
 3   III,      9|   resentment, but he preferred to believe that they were false and
 4    IV,     85|      solitude of the place was, I believe, its chief attraction, for
 5    IV,     85|       proneness to suspect and to believe, which even at Rome Sejanus
 6    IV,     88|         studied device to make us believe that there is no reason
 7    VI,     29|          others, on the contrary, believe that though there is a harmony
 8   XII,     24|        back to you; if you do not believe me, let me go and pursue
 9   XIV,      6|          doubt whether she was to believe it, was conveyed to Baiae
10   XIV,     11|         are here to do a crime, I believe nothing about my son; he
11   XIV,     16|          could be so stupid as to believe that it was accidental,
12   XIV,     56|        come to a decision, do you believe that a slave took courage
13   XVI,      6|         there was poison I cannot believe, though some writers so
14   XVI,     24|      shows the same spirit not to believe in Poppaea's divinity as
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