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  1     I,      8|           joy at the decease of one emperor nor sorrow at the rise of
  2     I,      8|            he hesitated about being emperor. Even the proclamation by
  3     I,     11|            to the funeral pile. The emperor left the point to them with
  4     I,     17|          did not thereby soften the emperor's resentment, for he had
  5     I,     19|           added "son of Julia." The emperor repeatedly asserted that
  6     I,     20|           important rested with the emperor's choice, some were settled
  7     I,     23|            to be in revolt from the emperor. Either living I will uphold
  8     I,     24|             from opportune that the emperor's cares, now in their first
  9     I,     30|        soldiery, which was then the emperor's guard. With them too was
 10     I,     32|             was a new thing for the emperor to refer to the Senate merely
 11     I,     33|            was going; was it to the emperor or to the Senate, there
 12     I,     35|           long will you besiege the emperor's son? What is to be the
 13     I,     49|              it was Tiberius, their emperor, whom they were insulting."
 14     I,     56|         Senate their envoys, to the emperor his due allegiance, to myself
 15     I,     61|      remained, if they despised the emperor? However, as if on the eve
 16     I,     92|            future hatreds which the emperor might treasure up and might
 17     I,     96|       religion of the State for the emperor's image, like those of other
 18     I,     97|           the worst features of the emperor's character and grounded
 19     I,     98|            of Augustus. At this the emperor's wrath blazed forth, and,
 20     I,     99|      proceedings in the Senate, the emperor would sit at one end of
 21     I,     99|            of the treasury, but the emperor helped him, and paid him
 22     I,    101|            to be transferred to the emperor. Drusus presided over a
 23     I,    106|           the first time under this emperor, or, indeed, subsequently,
 24    II,     35|           begged an audience of the emperor, after first indicating
 25    II,     36|            unmoved countenance. The emperor then read out the charges
 26    II,     37|         with his last prayer to the emperor. ~ ~
 27    II,     43|           went in her litter to the emperor's house; nor did Piso give
 28    II,     43|            not dishonoured, and the emperor rose in reputation. Urgulania'
 29    II,     44|         subject. Piso, although the emperor had said that he would be
 30    II,     45|        arose between Gallus and the emperor. Gallus proposed that the
 31    II,     45|           become praetorselect, the emperor nominating twelve candidates
 32    II,     46|             choice, but because the emperor advised me. At the same
 33    II,     46|            burden to others. At the emperor's bidding I married. Behold
 34    II,     50|            And although many of the emperor's household and knights
 35    II,     54|          was received by a pitiless emperor, and soon afterwards was
 36    II,     56|          provinces by lot or by the emperor's appointment. ~ ~
 37    II,     62|      largest share of sympathy. The emperor promised ten million sesterces,
 38    II,     62|             the exchequer or to the emperor's purse. Magnesia, under
 39    II,     63|      splendid public liberality the emperor added bounties no less popular.
 40    II,     63|        enmity with others, made the emperor their heir, he kept at a
 41    II,     65|          the charge of treason, the emperor insisted that it should
 42    II,     71|       rumour gained ground that the emperor was not averse to these
 43    II,     75|         given to the son of a Roman emperor, not of a Parthian king.
 44    II,     77|           to Alexandria without the emperor's leave, contrary to the
 45    II,     83|           he heard of the change of emperor, he let loose bands of freebooters
 46    II,     85|          innocence, but neither the emperor nor the Senate would decide
 47    II,     86|           self-inflicted. Still the emperor did not change the policy
 48    II,    101|       complicity of Augusta and the emperor's favour, though in secret,
 49    II,    107|    surrendering his arms, while the emperor was being consulted about
 50    II,    112|             homes, so delighted the emperor that he did not refrain
 51    II,    115|                            Next the emperor brought forward a motion
 52    II,    115|             house by a divorce. The emperor consoled his daughter, passed
 53    II,    116|    restricted and perilous under an emperor who feared freedom while
 54   III,      1|       thinking it respectful to the emperor, and still more following
 55   III,      3|                                 The emperor had despatched two praetorian
 56   III,      6|            of Germanicus. "Then the emperor himself," they said, "went
 57   III,     11|            previous career, and the emperor was requested to undertake
 58   III,     13|         secret whispers against the emperor or in the silence of suspicion. ~ ~
 59   III,     14|            resorting to my power as emperor. If however a crime is discovered
 60   III,     17|         reasons were merciless, the emperor, because war had been made
 61   III,     18|         them in pieces, when by the emperor's order they were rescued
 62   III,     19|   considered a question how far the emperor would be allowed to go against
 63   III,     20|          the Senate and upbraid the emperor, had he not been deluded
 64   III,     21|                                 The emperor, assuming an air of sadness,
 65   III,     23|        bewailed a Caesar, while the emperor and Augusta had defended
 66   III,     24|          for his vote (for when the emperor put the question, even those
 67   III,     25|       sentence was mitigated by the emperor. The name of Piso was not
 68   III,     26|           holding in reserve as the emperor of the future.~ ~
 69   III,     27|             few days afterwards the emperor proposed to the Senate to
 70   III,     30|           and a spear. To these the emperor added the civic crown, complaining,
 71   III,     32|             not easily perceive the emperor's feelings at her trial;
 72   III,     36|  experienced was exclusion from the emperor's friendship, saw clearly
 73   III,     41|            the son of Claudius. The emperor was thought to have polluted
 74   III,     43|           than the substance of the emperor's friendship. The same too
 75   III,     47|             it was decided that the emperor should choose to whom it
 76   III,     51|            them for throwing on the emperor every political care, and
 77   III,     52|         clasping some statue of the emperor. The very freedman or slave
 78   III,     52|          confronted by her with the emperor's image." There rose other
 79   III,     53|       knights, were punished on the emperor's proposal, by a decree
 80   III,     54|       adultery, was recalled by the emperor himself, with a censure
 81   III,     66|    Thereupon came a letter from the emperor, declaring that he was not
 82   III,     67|             was then at Rhodes. The emperor now made all this known
 83   III,     68|            reward in money from the emperor, was fastened on by an informer,
 84   III,     69|              Often have I heard our emperor complain when any one has
 85   III,     72|          matter, referred it to the emperor. Tiberius, after long considering
 86   III,     77|             When they had heard the emperor's letter, the aediles were
 87   III,     83|          father's counsels. An aged emperor may indeed shrink from the
 88   III,     90|        illness, which compelled the emperor to hasten his return to
 89   III,     90|            it was surmised that the emperor, regarding this as a slight
 90   III,     90|          over these Games. This the emperor opposed, distinguishing
 91   III,     93|      venturing on a memorial to the emperor, in which he mingled reproach
 92   III,     95|      province, and that of this the emperor should be judge. "Laws,
 93   III,     96|                                 The emperor opposed the motion. "Although,"
 94   III,     98|           converted a statue of the emperor to the common use of silver
 95   III,     98|            of silver plate; but the emperor forbade his being put upon
 96   III,     98|        unpunished. Granted that the emperor might be indifferent to
 97   III,    100|          were under discussion, the emperor now produced his answer
 98   III,    100|              This regulation of the emperor Augustus sufficiently proved
 99   III,    102|             an accidental fire, the emperor promised to rebuild, simply
100   III,    102|             And soon afterwards the emperor in honouring Junius Blaesus
101   III,    103|          Never, it is said, was the emperor so exasperated by an insult
102   III,    107|             intended husband of the emperor's granddaughter. The other
103   III,    108|           name, she passed over the emperor. Tiberius took the omission
104    IV,      1|            deranged everything; the emperor became a cruel tyrant, as
105    IV,      2|          various artifices that the emperor, ever dark and mysterious
106    IV,      5|            to his brother Nero. The emperor added a speech with warm
107    IV,      5|            was again discussed. The emperor's pretext was the number
108    IV,      7|            stooped to flattery, the emperor himself checked them. He
109    IV,      8|     companies of Roman knights. The emperor intrusted his own property
110    IV,      8|            this was no fault of the emperor, who actually endeavoured
111    IV,      9|                                 The emperor had only a few estates in
112    IV,      9|            the government while the emperor's son was alive. How near
113    IV,     11|           and presented them to the emperor. Taking them by the hand
114    IV,     12|         many a benediction. Had the emperor set bounds to his speech,
115    IV,     14|              Thus deceived, the old emperor, on sitting down to the
116    IV,     15|            the fact that he was the emperor's special favourite, and
117    IV,     16|           women to represent to the emperor that her pride as a mother
118    IV,     19|   complaints from the praetors, the emperor finally brought forward
119    IV,     20|         brought fresh sorrow to the emperor by being fatal to one of
120    IV,     20|              was tried by them, the emperor vehemently asserting "that
121    IV,     21|             About the same time the emperor spoke on the subject of
122    IV,     23|            offering prayers for the emperor's health, commended also
123    IV,     24|            revolution. All this the emperor regarded as undermining
124    IV,     25|             made her hateful to the emperor. The two, it was decided,
125    IV,     25|         consulship expired, but the emperor opposed the request. "It
126    IV,     28|             and summon her from the emperor's palace. Tiberius submitted
127    IV,     31|            When summoned before the emperor by Lucius Apronius, his
128    IV,     31|       equivalent to a hint from the emperor, because of the known intimacy
129    IV,     32|        hurried to join him, for the emperor, as if not an enemy remained
130    IV,     36|          very first beginnings. The emperor at once sent Staius, a tribune,
131    IV,     37|          alleged a plot against the emperor and that men had been sent
132    IV,     37|        never would have plotted the emperor's murder and a revolution
133    IV,     38|          the great confusion of the emperor, at finding a hostile rebellion
134    IV,     38|    conviction, Serenus had sent the emperor a letter, upbraiding him
135    IV,     39|         ancient precedent, when the emperor, to soften the odium of
136    IV,     40|           of being carried when the emperor, with a harshness contrary
137    IV,     41|           knight, was spared by the emperor, against whom he was convicted
138    IV,     42|             a venal creature of the emperor Claudius, whose friendship
139    IV,     44|           misery in the capital, an emperor careless about the enlargement
140    IV,     46|           accused; and then too the emperor listened with an angry frown
141    IV,     47|          yet these do not touch the emperor or the emperor's mother,
142    IV,     47|            touch the emperor or the emperor's mother, who are alone
143    IV,     50|             Sextus Marius. This the emperor openly censured, and it
144    IV,     51|       mother. On this occasion, the emperor, who had generally a strong
145    IV,     55|         addressed a memorial to the emperor. For it was then the custom
146    IV,     55|            common soldiers, for the emperor's safety. But there was
147    IV,     57|           advantages. Access to the emperor would be under his own control,
148    IV,     58|             expressions towards the emperor, and while the witness,
149    IV,     58|         penalty of treason; but the emperor, clinging all the more obstinately
150    IV,     70|            and with attempts on the emperor by poison and sorcery. Agrippina,
151    IV,     70|          These words wrung from the emperor one of the rare utterances
152    IV,     71|        disease yet on her, when the emperor came to see her, wept long
153    IV,     71|          and his children." But the emperor, who perceived the political
154    IV,     71|        Agrippina, the mother of the emperor Nero, who handed down to
155    IV,     72|           her destruction, that the emperor did not dare to attempt
156    IV,     75|       frequent deferment of it, the emperor retired into Campania to
157    IV,     77|      accident which occurred to the emperor strengthened vague rumours
158    IV,     77|       guests. Sejanus hung over the emperor, and with knee, face, and
159    IV,     77|          the tame spirit of the old emperor and the timidity of the
160    IV,     78|            the prospect of becoming emperor through the removal of an
161    IV,     82|       people began to say, "and the emperor's purpose of leaving Rome
162    IV,     82|           showed such honour to the emperor. ~ ~
163    IV,     84|         rich man and related to the emperor, was suddenly attacked by
164    IV,     84|             decided to wait for the emperor, this being the only means
165    IV,     87|          despatched a letter to the emperor, they informed him of the
166    IV,     88|                                 The emperor in his letter on the first
167    IV,     88|           foe to the State, and the emperor further added that he had
168    IV,     89|             some after Caius became emperor, some even while Tiberius
169    IV,     90|           aunt, then moved that the emperor should be requested to disclose
170    IV,     90|           to wait the result of the emperor's wavering mood, knowing,
171     V,      3|            and profligacy which the emperor imputed to his grandson.
172     V,      4|        having been appointed by the emperor to register its debates
173     V,      4|            words of blessing on the emperor, kept shouting that the
174     V,      5|          the Senate disregarded the emperor's trouble; that the people
175     V,      6|                       Upon this the emperor, after repeating his invectives
176     V,     10|          concealed in his robe. The emperor did not pursue him after
177     V,     13|          same age, whom some of the emperor's freedmen pretended to
178    VI,      1|             the consulship when the emperor, after crossing the channel
179    VI,      2|             ridicule. He begged the emperor to select a number of senators,
180    VI,      3|            who ought to receive the emperor's orders or his rewards
181    VI,      3|             rewards except from the emperor himself? He had really discovered
182    VI,      4|                                 The emperor in the same letter crushed
183    VI,      5|            meant to press it in the emperor's presence. Trio's answer
184    VI,      5|          Senate not to increase the emperor's anxieties by seeking further
185    VI,      6|            case, he appealed to the emperor. Soon afterwards, a letter
186    VI,      7|                The beginning of the emperor's letter seemed very striking.
187    VI,      9|             had communicated to the emperor by letter. Cestius undertook
188    VI,     11|      powerful recommendation to the emperor's friendship. Those, on
189    VI,     12|       murderous designs against the emperor be punished. As for friendship
190    VI,     13|             his brother Drusus, the emperor had admitted into his own
191    VI,     13|       Calvisius from the peril. The emperor postponed the cases of Pollio,
192    VI,     14|            It was the same with the emperor. Vescularius Atticus and
193    VI,     17|          carried by a division, the emperor sent a letter in which he
194    VI,     18|             of language towards the emperor. This provoked him to censure
195    VI,     18|         stringent proclamation. The emperor's silence was not, as he
196    VI,     20|         Galba and Lucius Sulla, the emperor, after having long considered
197    VI,     20|             him and to Vinicius the emperor married respectively Drusilla
198    VI,     21|             threw themselves on the emperor's indulgence. He yielded,
199    VI,     22|        reputation, till at last the emperor interposed his aid by distributing
200    VI,     24|              had been ruined by the emperor. Her father likewise, an
201    VI,     31|     compulsion, was a question. The emperor was asked whether he would
202    VI,     32|            people. Subsequently the emperor, as a rumour was gaining
203    VI,     35|             frailties of women. The emperor further observed that she
204    VI,     36|          Nerva, a man always at the emperor's side, a master of law
205    VI,     38|            Syria, a letter from the emperor was read, in which he complained
206    VI,     42|             for their despatch. The emperor, however, argued in a letter
207    VI,     44|            had ventured to send the emperor a letter, reminding him
208    VI,     44|        retain his province, and the emperor be master of all else. Strange
209    VI,     56|     imputations on Macro and on the emperor's principal freedmen, while
210    VI,     56|      freedmen, while he taunted the emperor himself with the mental
211    VI,     57|        written some lampoons on the emperor. Tiberius received the news,
212    VI,     60|             a harsh letter from the emperor forbade him to have a province
213    VI,     69|           itself. This calamity the emperor turned to his own glory
214    VI,     69|  commissioners, all husbands of the emperor's granddaughters - Cneius
215    VI,     69|          devised and decreed to the emperor such as each man's ingenuity
216    VI,     71|                            This the emperor knew, and he therefore hesitated
217    VI,     73|             irreverence towards the emperor. With her were involved
218    VI,     73|        there was no letter from the emperor against the defendants caused
219    VI,     77|           have the direction of the emperor's varying health, but to
220    VI,     77|            daunted, ordered the old emperor to be smothered under a
221    VI,     78|            from Rhodes he ruled the emperor's now heirless house for
222  Miss        |          afterwards the wife of the emperor Nero. Messalina contrived
223  Miss        |           the Vitellius, afterwards emperor, effected his ruin.]~ ~
224    XI,      2|          granted him. It was in the emperor's chamber, in the presence
225    XI,      3|           their joint homage to the emperor's mother, Antonia. He then
226    XI,      4|            signify the death of the emperor after the turn of autumn.
227    XI,      6|           laws and magistrates, the emperor had left exposed everything
228    XI,      8|        manifest, gathered round the emperor, and prayed forgiveness
229    XI,      9|        profession must perish." The emperor thought that these arguments,
230    XI,     13|        secret entreaty to the Roman emperor that Meherdates might be
231    XI,     14|      discussed in my history of the emperor Domitian; for he also exhibited
232    XI,     14|           them was Britannicus, the emperor's son, and Lucius Domitius,
233    XI,     15|           the very furniture of the emperor were to be seen in the possession
234    XI,     19|         that of his country. So the emperor made him a present of money,
235    XI,     22|      formidable subject for a timid emperor." Claudius accordingly forbade
236    XI,     23|          thoughts of peril from the emperor, of scorn from the barbarians,
237    XI,     23|            perils of the ocean. The emperor, though he had forbidden
238    XI,     24|             the armies, begging the emperor to give in advance triumphal
239    XI,     25|     praetorship, by the vote of the emperor Tiberius, who threw a veil
240    XI,     26|        paying their respects to the emperor. The man confessed his own
241    XI,     28|            it was argued before the emperor with vehement opposition. "
242    XI,     29|     arguments failed to impress the emperor. He at once addressed himself
243    XI,     31|                                 The emperor's speech was followed by
244    XI,     32|             About the same time the emperor enrolled in the ranks of
245    XI,     32|       Caesar by the Cassian and the emperor Augustus by the Saenian
246    XI,     33|   recognized by unusual titles. The emperor, however, himself stopped
247    XI,     34|             to have to wait for the emperor's old age. Harmless measures
248    XI,     36|         been a consul-elect and the emperor's wife; that, on an appointed
249    XI,     37|                                 The emperor's court indeed shuddered,
250    XI,     37|             very good nature of the emperor inspired confident hope
251    XI,     38|            opportunity, and, as the emperor lingered long at Ostia,
252    XI,     39|     interview, threw herself at the emperor's knees, crying out that
253    XI,     43|        There was equal alarm on the emperor's side. They put but little
254    XI,     43|         only hope of safety for the emperor lay in his transferring
255    XI,     43|        asked and took a seat in the emperor's carriage. ~ ~
256    XI,     44|          after times that while the emperor broke into contradictory
257    XI,     44|          and was insisting that the emperor should listen to the mother
258    XI,     44|          Narcissus replied that the emperor would hear her, and that
259    XI,     45|             was thrown open and the emperor conducted thither. First,
260    XI,     45|             infamy. Then he led the emperor, furious and bursting out
261    XI,     48|              Such, he said, was the emperor's bidding. Evodus, one of
262   XII,      1|           support of Narcissus. The emperor, who inclined now one way,
263   XII,      4|        Aenobarbus, and Octavia, the emperor's daughter. This could not
264   XII,      4|            without a crime, for the emperor had betrothed Octavia to
265   XII,      5|             brother and sister. The emperor listened, for his affection
266   XII,      6|           his own way. He asked the emperor whether he would yield to
267   XII,      6|           burdensome labours of the emperor in a world-wide administration,
268   XII,      7|            they all recommended the emperor's marriage, they ought to
269   XII,      7|            widow to be united to an emperor who has limited himself
270   XII,      7|          the taking of a wife by an emperor. But, it will be said, marriage
271   XII,      8| passionately protesting that if the emperor hesitated, they would use
272   XII,     10|        relationship, became now the emperor's affianced son-in-law,
273   XII,     11|           it might fall back on the emperor and the Senate, and receive
274   XII,     19|       prostrated himself before the emperor's image, to the great glory
275   XII,     22|          defeat. Why should not the emperor seize the offer and spare
276   XII,     24|             of Pontus. There in the emperor's presence he was said to
277   XII,     25|           competed with her for the emperor's hand, planned an accusation,
278   XII,     25|          ruined, simply because the emperor had praised her beauty in
279   XII,     26|       province, without seeking the emperor's approval, were to be allowed
280   XII,     27|            henceforth observed. The emperor likewise widened the sacred
281   XII,     30|             by these arguments, the emperor preferred Domitius to his
282   XII,     31|                        However, the emperor received formal thanks,
283   XII,     42|             no obscure one; and the emperor, while he exalted his own
284   XII,     43|          When he was set before the emperor's tribunal, he spoke as
285   XII,     44|                       Upon this the emperor granted pardon to Caractacus,
286   XII,     47|                                 The emperor on hearing of the death
287   XII,     49|             for political life. The emperor willingly complied with
288   XII,     50|       children. Accordingly, as the emperor's wife persistently affirmed
289   XII,     50|             instance of one who, an emperor's daughter, was sister,
290   XII,     50|          designs on the throne. The emperor would have lent a ready
291   XII,     57|            contrary orders from the emperor, envoys were sent to Pharasmanes,
292   XII,     61|           the astrologers about the emperor's death. His mother, Junia,
293   XII,     61|   insurrection in Dalmatia, and the emperor in again sparing a hostile
294   XII,     62|           but ineffectual. Next the emperor, in a speech, commended
295   XII,     63|              To Pallas, who, as the emperor declared, was the author
296   XII,     63|            to be numbered among the emperor's ministers. Claudius assured
297   XII,     66|           or to show respect to the emperor, crowded the banks, the
298   XII,     66|            resembled a theatre. The emperor, with Agrippina seated near
299   XII,     67|    Agrippina availed herself of the emperor's fright to charge Narcissus,
300   XII,     68|           age, married Octavia, the emperor's daughter. Anxious to distinguish
301   XII,     70|                  That same year the emperor was often heard to say that
302   XII,     71|                            Next the emperor proposed to grant immunity
303   XII,     73|           and were supported by the emperor, who argued to the Senate
304   XII,     74|            endure that he should be emperor, was fierce and full of
305   XII,     75|            had made attempts on the Emperor's consort by magical incantations,
306   XII,     75|      Britannicus or Nero were to be emperor, but that he was under such
307   XII,     75|            of the profligacy of the emperor's former wife. Even as it
308   XII,     78|         instant perceived, from the emperor's lethargic, or intoxicated
309   XII,     78|             pretence of helping the emperor's efforts to vomit, this
310   XII,     79|         consuls and priests for the emperor's recovery, though the lifeless
311   XII,     79|        repeatedly gave out that the emperor's health was better, so
312   XII,     80|          was unanimously greeted as emperor. The decrees of the Senate
313  XIII,      1|           first death under the new emperor, that of Junius Silanus,
314  XIII,      1|           who had the charge of the emperor's domains in Asia. They
315  XIII,      3|            These two men guided the emperor's youth with an unity of
316  XIII,      3|     Claudius, and voted to the late emperor a censor's funeral, which
317  XIII,      4|             that Nero was the first emperor who needed another man's
318  XIII,      6|           the point of mounting the emperor's tribunal and of presiding
319  XIII,      7|         experience, and, as for the emperor himself, how far was he
320  XIII,      7|             the sword and hand. The emperor would give a plain proof
321  XIII,     11|                                 The emperor in the same year asked the
322  XIII,     12|       published to the world by the emperor's mouth. ~ ~
323  XIII,     13|             s father was one of the emperor's freedmen. Without the
324  XIII,     14|       presents secretly sent by the emperor to the girl. Then Agrippina,
325  XIII,     15|      happened at this time that the emperor after inspecting the apparel
326  XIII,     16|          retinue of attendants, the emperor rather wittily remarked
327  XIII,     17|           was prepared close to the emperor's chamber.~ ~
328  XIII,     19|      dishonour, then of poison. The emperor apologised for the hasty
329  XIII,     20|             been put on them by the emperor, who, conscious as he was
330  XIII,     20|     military guard now kept for the emperor's mother, as it had formerly
331  XIII,     21|         marrying him and making him emperor, again seize the control
332  XIII,     22|          such times to heighten the emperor's enjoyments, but who now
333  XIII,     26|    direction of the games which the emperor was preparing, to Arruntius
334  XIII,     26|          was too serviceable to the emperor's profligacy to allow of
335  XIII,     28|             their self-control. The emperor, on the advice of the augurs,
336  XIII,     29|           it was notorious that the emperor was the assailant, and the
337  XIII,     30|          put the motion without the emperor's knowledge, though they
338  XIII,     32|             view prevailed, and the emperor replied to the Senate that,
339  XIII,     32|           by civil law, much to the emperor's disgrace, by whose direction
340  XIII,     34|        rigour against the poor. The emperor then transferred the charge
341  XIII,     37|            timber work on which the emperor piled the immense amphitheatre
342  XIII,     38|           as part of the price. The emperor by an edict forbade any
343  XIII,     40|           the province of Asia, the emperor could not acquit, and so
344  XIII,     41|       stipends assigned them by the emperor, though they had squandered
345  XIII,     46|           address a petition to the emperor, assuring him that he might
346  XIII,     52|             was unanimously saluted emperor, and by the Senate's decree
347  XIII,     54|           but had simply obeyed the emperor, till Nero stopped such
348  XIII,     56|           charges of extortion, the emperor interposed, as if implying
349  XIII,     59|          and accomplishments to the emperor, either from a lover's thoughtlessness
350  XIII,     59|          Often, as he rose from the emperor's table, was he heard repeatedly
351  XIII,     59|         Nero's person. Soon, as the emperor's love grew ardent, she
352  XIII,     60|            that he might not be the emperor's rival at Rome. There he
353  XIII,     61|     dissembler. Graptus, one of the emperor's freedmen, whose age and
354  XIII,     61|             had been planned on the emperor, should he go back by the
355  XIII,     66|                     Accordingly the emperor issued an edict that the
356  XIII,     67|     Silvanus, were acquitted by the emperor. Camerinus had against him
357  XIII,     69|             excite the fears of the emperor, an assertion by which meritorious
358  XIII,     70|            a new territory from the emperor, constrained Verritus and
359   XIV,      1|              she would reproach the emperor with incessant vituperation
360   XIV,      1|           the insults heaped on the emperor, rather than witness them,
361   XIV,      5|            the winds and waves? The emperor would add the honour of
362   XIV,      6|           seated at table above the emperor. Nero prolonged the banquet
363   XIV,      7|          and imploring help for the emperor's mother, was despatched
364   XIV,     10|          his mother had plotted the emperor's destruction and in the
365   XIV,     14|            replied that he would be emperor and kill his mother. "Let
366   XIV,     14|           she said, "provided he is emperor." ~ ~
367   XIV,     15|                             But the emperor, when the crime was at last
368   XIV,     16|          weapon to break through an emperor's guards and fleets? So
369   XIV,     17|        Minerva with a statue of the emperor by its side should be set
370   XIV,     21|         preserved. Last of all, the emperor himself came on the stage,
371   XIV,     21|        applause, and applied to the emperor's person and voice the epithets
372   XIV,     24|         children or of parents. The emperor entrusted the trial of the
373   XIV,     25|           by Claudius, and that the emperor must be consulted. Nero,
374   XIV,     27|            the encouragement of the emperor and Senate, who not only
375   XIV,     29|         publicly announced that the emperor was victorious. Greek dresses,
376   XIV,     35|           who had sent to the Roman emperor, imploring alliance, and
377   XIV,     38|  particularly keen competition, the emperor quieted matters by promoting
378   XIV,     38|         referred their cause to the emperor. Hitherto such an appeal
379   XIV,     40|            where Aulius Didius, the emperor's legate, had merely retained
380   XIV,     42|            prosperity, had made the emperor his heir along with his
381   XIV,     50|           remainder of the war. The emperor strengthened the forces
382   XIV,     51|           was softened down for the emperor's ears, and Suetonius was
383   XIV,     52|            the intercessions of the emperor.~ ~
384   XIV,     57|            and firebrands. Then the emperor reprimanded the people by
385   XIV,     57|    transported from Italy. This the emperor forbade, as he did not wish
386   XIV,     59|           be under the shadow of an emperor's grandeur, so much so,
387   XIV,     60|             libellous verses on the emperor, which he openly recited
388   XIV,     60|             at, as the glory of the emperor, whose veto as tribune might
389   XIV,     61|         unanimous resolution to the emperor. Hesitating for a while
390   XIV,     62|            of seeming to expose the emperor to odium; the majority felt
391   XIV,     63|        habitually trafficked in the emperor's favours and in the right
392   XIV,     64|         through the crime, when the emperor paid him a visit, recoiled
393   XIV,     64|    iniquities of the other. For the emperor had appointed two men to
394   XIV,     65|             he almost surpassed the emperor. They further alleged against
395   XIV,     66|      coupled with the fact that the emperor more and more shunned his
396   XIV,     67|           years since you have been emperor. In the interval, you have
397   XIV,     71|          quiet, if you forsake your emperor, but my avarice, the fear
398   XIV,     72|                  To these words the emperor added embraces and kisses;
399   XIV,     73|        liked if he could secure the emperor's complicity in guilt, dived
400   XIV,     77|              to whom he thought the emperor, if harassed by no anxiety,
401   XIV,     78|           to Rome. At its sight the emperor exclaimed (I give his very
402   XIV,     80|           burst of applause for the emperor, men hailing the recalled
403   XIV,     80|           been taken up against the emperor; a leader only is wanting,
404   XIV,     82|                                 The emperor accordingly sent for Anicetus,
405   XIV,     85|        granted that as often as the emperor directed banishments or
406    XV,      4|        indeed he had written to the emperor that a general was wanted
407    XV,      6|            send envoys to the Roman emperor for the possession of Armenia
408    XV,      8|           as I have related, to the emperor, returned without success,
409    XV,      9|           and wrote a letter to the emperor, as if the war was finished,
410    XV,     14|         have bestowed on him by the emperor's hand the special honour
411    XV,     16|             to a king chosen by the emperor. Peace, he reminded him,
412    XV,     20|          such instructions from the emperor; it was the peril of the
413    XV,     27|           the subject. Then, at the emperor's suggestion, they decreed
414    XV,     29|         colony of Antium, where the emperor himself was born. Already
415    XV,     30|                                 The emperor, too, was as excessive in
416    XV,     30|              an expression from the emperor, in which he boasted to
417    XV,     31|           He was ready to go to the emperor's image in the Roman headquarters,
418    XV,     33|        dreaded something worse, the emperor thought it enough to reproach
419    XV,     35|         fierce tribes he reigns. My emperor, on the other hand, has
420    XV,     38|           go to Rome, and bring the emperor a new glory, a suppliant
421    XV,     41|                  That same year the emperor put into possession of the
422    XV,     42|             such as followed in the emperor's train to pay him honour
423    XV,     43|      thought unlucky, though to the emperor it seemed due to the providence
424    XV,     45|      mischances by the sight of the emperor. Hence, as in private relationships
425    XV,     47|        bridal veil was put over the emperor; people saw the witnesses
426    XV,     48|      treacherously contrived by the emperor, is uncertain, as authors
427    XV,     49|             city was in flames, the emperor appeared on a private stage
428    XV,     52|        refused, and to fool away an emperor's resources. They had actually
429    XV,     54|             the lavish gifts of the emperor, and the propitiations of
430    XV,     61|             their friends about the emperor's crimes, the approaching
431    XV,     61|   shamelessness was superior in the emperor's regard. He harassed him
432    XV,     63|        began the history of all the emperor's crimes. "The Senate,"
433    XV,     64|           Piso's villa, whither the emperor, charmed by its loveliness,
434    XV,     64|           which would stain with an emperor's blood, however bad he
435    XV,     65|             or, by choosing another emperor, make the State his own
436    XV,     66|             honour of Ceres, as the emperor, who seldom went out, and
437    XV,     73|        mixed with Germans, whom the emperor trusted as being foreigners.
438    XV,     77|        Seneca, a special joy to the emperor, not because he had convicted
439    XV,     77|             and then made known the emperor's message to Seneca as he
440    XV,     78|         Poppaea and Tigellinus, the emperor's most confidential advisers
441    XV,     78|         having explained to him the emperor's orders, and asked whether
442    XV,     85|         convict him, he was, at the emperor's bidding, seized and bound
443    XV,     89|           through and despising the emperor's cowardice, while Nero
444    XV,     89|             being ignorant that the emperor was one of her paramours. ~ ~
445    XV,     92|         himself at the knees of the emperor, and weary his hand with
446    XV,     92|            he had accepted from the emperor by the folly of his end.
447    XV,     92|          not of actually hating the emperor, but of having the credit
448    XV,     97|           had taken his dagger. The emperor himself dedicated the weapon
449    XV,     97|          honours are not paid to an emperor till he has ceased to live
450   XVI,      1|          purchased admission to the emperor, he explained how he had
451   XVI,      2|       materials for eulogies on the emperor. "Not only," they said, "
452   XVI,      3|           wasted, as apparently the emperor had lighted on treasures
453   XVI,      4|          avert scandal, offered the emperor the "victory in song," and
454   XVI,      6|           than from belief, for the emperor was desirous of children,
455   XVI,      7|         demeanour of his youth. The emperor accordingly sent the Senate
456   XVI,      8|    accomplices. By an appeal to the emperor these men eluded an impending
457   XVI,      9|          Silanus. As to Lepida, the emperor was to decide. Cassius was
458   XVI,     10|              They were hated by the emperor because they seemed a living
459   XVI,     11|            tone of menace, till the emperor showed himself unmoved alike
460   XVI,     12|             advised him to name the emperor as his chief heir, and so
461   XVI,     14|         they seemed to forestal the emperor's cruelty by an ordinary
462   XVI,     15|          for informers and that the emperor was so partial to bloodshed,
463   XVI,     15|            Scapula, he wrote to the emperor that he would communicate
464   XVI,     16|            the house, disclosed the emperor's orders to Ostorius. That
465   XVI,     18|           the administration of the emperor's private business. He had
466   XVI,     19|         matters of taste, while the emperor thought nothing charming
467   XVI,     20|       happened at the time that the emperor was on his way Campania
468   XVI,     26|          hinder Acratus, one of the emperor's freedmen, from carrying
469   XVI,     27|           rushed out to welcome the emperor and see the king, Thrasea,
470   XVI,     27|            something to enhance the emperor's glory and to tarnish his
471   XVI,     31|            house. A speech from the emperor was read by his quaestor.
472   XVI,     36|       mention was made by me of the emperor, except as one of the divinities.
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