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  1     I,      3|            s treachery, Drusus too having long been dead, Nero remained
  2     I,      3|           of worthy qualities, and having only the brute courage of
  3     I,      5|         she reproached herself for having been the cause of her husband'
  4     I,      5|           to time, till, provision having been made for the demands
  5     I,      9|      wishing to have the credit of having been called and elected
  6     I,      9|           the State rather than of having crept into power through
  7     I,     15|          regard to the State, but, having thoroughly seen his arrogant
  8     I,     18|     suspicious temper, Haterius by having said - "How long, Caesar,
  9     I,     18|          It is known that Haterius having entered the palace to ask
 10     I,     20|         did the people complain of having the right taken from them,
 11     I,     22|     tameness for so many years, in having to endure thirty or forty
 12     I,     26|         tore up the standards, and having plundered the neighbouring
 13     I,     39|            and polluted camp, and, having purged themselves of their
 14     I,     40|         the Ubii, enjoying ease or having only light on hearing of
 15     I,     47|                       Accordingly, having weighed their plans one
 16     I,     49|   commotion increased, he fled and having been discovered, as his
 17     I,     50|         Germanicus's quarters, and having rushed together to the entrance,
 18     I,     56|            the glory and honour of having rescued the name of Rome
 19     I,     65|         enthusiasm of the men, and having bridged over the Rhine,
 20     I,     73|          and twice as many allies. Having established a fort on the
 21     I,     73|           missiles and arrows, and having in vain attempted for peace,
 22     I,     76|          of Varus were brought in, having been given as plunder to
 23     I,     77|     fearless in the remembrance of having been a faithful ally. His
 24     I,     79|           thoroughly excuse, their having seen between the Elbe and
 25     I,     81|            and the lot of mankind. Having sent on Caecina in advance
 26     I,     83|    occupied by the enemy. Arminius having bidden his men to concentrate
 27     I,     89|         safer for flight. Caecina, having ascertained that the alarm
 28     I,     90|                                    Having then assembled them at his
 29     I,     93|        route without interruption, having a dry shore, or the waves
 30     I,     94|           horses, gold. Germanicus having praised their zeal, took
 31     I,     97|        distinguished citizens; and having thus gained influence with
 32     I,     99|          gave a million sesterces, having ascertained that he had
 33     I,    102|          in favour of the praetors having authority to scourge actors.
 34     I,    104|    provided for human interests in having assigned to rivers their
 35    II,      2|            felt shame at Parthians having become degenerate, at their
 36    II,      2|        become degenerate, at their having sought a king from another
 37    II,      5|          would not endure his son. Having tried the government of
 38    II,      5|            a woman named Erato and having soon afterwards driven her
 39    II,     10|           had arrived, and Caesar, having sent on his supplies and
 40    II,     11|           for his loyalty, and for having lost an eye by a wound,
 41    II,     21|         made his way through them, having smeared his face with his
 42    II,     25|            close fighting was, and having withdrawn his legions to
 43    II,     27|                                    Having publicly praised his victorious
 44    II,     30|          returned, and Germanicus, having speedily repaired them,
 45    II,     31|    superior to all calamities; for having thrown away a fleet, having
 46    II,     31|        having thrown away a fleet, having lost their arms, after strewing
 47    II,     32|       rejoicing in their hearts at having been compensated for their
 48    II,     37|     adjournment till next day, and having gone home he charged his
 49    II,     43|        went forth from the palace, having ordered soldiers to follow
 50    II,     46|       descendants. For myself, not having been able in these altered
 51    II,     48|         Tiberius perceived it, and having paused a while, said that
 52    II,     49|          Agrippa, Clemens by name, having ascertained that Augustus
 53    II,     50|            a sufficient force, and having bound and gagged him, dragged
 54    II,     61|       strength by desertions, and, having fled to the Marcomanni,
 55    II,     65|         treason by an informer for having ridiculed the Divine Augustus,
 56    II,     65|         insulting remarks, and for having been convicted of adultery,
 57    II,     65|        speeches she was accused of having uttered against his mother,
 58    II,     68|          coast of Illyricum, after having seen his brother Drusus,
 59    II,     70|        honour of the Roman name in having treated with excessive courtesy,
 60    II,     72|         this time no king, Vonones having been expelled, but the nation'
 61    II,     77|         was still raging. Tiberius having gently expressed disapproval
 62    II,     78|     afterwards showed like valour, having received his name. Next
 63    II,     80|          with a strong force, and, having corruptly won over the nobles
 64    II,     81|            in the mercy of Caesar. Having crossed the Danube where
 65    II,     83|                            Tidings having also arrived of Artaxias
 66    II,     83|          was the more delighted at having established peace by wise
 67    II,     83|         themselves differed, Cotys having a gentle and kindly temper,
 68    II,     83|        timidly under Augustus, who having created both kingdoms would,
 69    II,     84|           to the hospitable board. Having possessed himself of all
 70    II,     96|            none, and, though after having cowed Germany by his many
 71    II,    100|            punishment, and by your having been deprived of the province,
 72    II,    102|     arrogance, and asserting that, having been driven away to make
 73    II,    104|                 Meanwhile Domitius having landed at Laodicea, a city
 74   III,     12|           he was himself assailed. Having therefore summoned a few
 75   III,     19|            late at night, his wife having left his chamber, he ordered
 76   III,     26|            be publicly thanked for having avenged Germanicus. He omitted
 77   III,     32|     released from the necessity of having to speak first to the question.
 78   III,     45|    precedents of our ancestors, as having censured in severe decrees
 79   III,     48|       proposing for the public, by having kept her in Italy, though
 80   III,     51|         children's tender age, his having a daughter to marry, and
 81   III,     53|          decree of the Senate, for having attacked the praetor, Magius
 82   III,     62|    advancing with two legions, and having sent forward some auxiliary
 83   III,     66|       destitute of renown as after having subdued the most savage
 84   III,     67|           honours of a triumph for having stormed some fortresses
 85   III,     68|         informer, and charged with having composed another during
 86   III,     79|                           Tiberius having gained credit for forbearance
 87   III,     80|   experience of eight years, after having quelled mutinies and settled
 88   III,     87|            they were commended for having endured the Parthian invasion
 89   III,     88|            antiquity, and spoke of having a Persian Diana, whose fane
 90   III,     98|            accused of treason, for having converted a statue of the
 91   III,    107|           Sulla's army, his father having been a praetor. He was prematurely
 92   III,    108|        with her vast wealth, after having honourably mentioned almost
 93    IV,      4|           her, he seduced her, and having won his first infamous triumph,
 94    IV,      4|         assured that a woman after having parted with her virtue will
 95    IV,     11|          The consuls went out, and having encouraged the young princes
 96    IV,     14|    exhausted. Sejanus, it is said, having seduced Livia into crime,
 97    IV,     17|     Carsidius Sacerdos, accused of having helped our enemy Tacfarinas
 98    IV,     21|         primitive form of marriage having been given up or being observed
 99    IV,     24|           both. As for Silius, his having commanded a great army for
100    IV,     31|      former wife, was charged with having caused her husband's insanity
101    IV,     33|           augmented his force, and having formed a camp, he besieged
102    IV,     35|          prisoners and the fame of having slain the enemy's leader
103    IV,     38|             upbraiding him for not having rewarded his special zeal
104    IV,     41|           whom he was convicted of having written libellous verses,
105    IV,     42|           Italy on a conviction of having received money for a judicial
106    IV,     43|            Firmius, a Senator, for having (it was alleged) assailed
107    IV,     51|          which reproached him with having yielded to vanity, delivered
108    IV,     52|            want of firmness in not having opposed a similar recent
109    IV,     58|     register of the Senate for not having sworn obedience to the legislation
110    IV,     60|           of Publius Rutilius, who having been legally banished from
111    IV,     70|          her with unchastity, with having Furnius for her paramour,
112    IV,     73|           sufficiently honoured by having a temple of Augustus in
113    IV,     74|         want of clothing, and this having been announced at Smyrna
114    IV,     75|          him away; he was weary of having her as his partner in power,
115    IV,     77|      children of Germanicus, after having suborned persons to assume
116    IV,     80|             of the freedman class, having undertaken to build an amphitheatre
117    IV,     82|      applauded by the populace for having assisted with his liberality,
118    IV,     85|         but they were charged with having had thoughts of acting on
119    IV,     86|         fidelity of Sabinus in not having, like others, forsaken after
120    IV,     86|     reproaches. That conversation, having united them, as it were,
121    IV,     87|       crevices. Latiaris meanwhile having met Sabinus in the streets,
122    IV,     87|        hastened to accuse him, and having despatched a letter to the
123    IV,     88|            whom he reproached with having corrupted some of his freedmen
124    IV,     88|           some of his freedmen and having attempted his life, and
125    IV,     88|       letter of thanks to them for having punished a bitter foe to
126    IV,     90|           forming his purpose, yet having once broken through his
127    IV,     91|           relief from Augusta, who having overthrown the prosperity
128    IV,     93|        heavy troops, and meanwhile having found a ford, he ordered
129    IV,     95|                 Tiberius meanwhile having himself in person bestowed
130     V,      2|            was to be decreed, this having been her own wish. In a
131     V,      4|           one Junius Rusticus, who having been appointed by the emperor
132     V,     11|       charged by his accusers with having offered the keys of the
133     V,     13|            the narrow Isthmus, and having arrived by the other sea
134     V,     14|     indirectly censured Regulus as having been half-hearted in crushing
135    VI,      3|         praetorian soldiers, after having served their campaigns,
136    VI,      7|     elevation or his solitude from having to confess the anguish of
137    VI,     13|          them once more however on having begged for pardon by letter
138    VI,     17|        decree on the subject. This having been carried by a division,
139    VI,     17|       youth. Gallus he scolded for having introduced the matter in
140    VI,     17|          opinion of the College or having the verses read and criticised,
141    VI,     18| magistrates and the Senate for not having used the authority of the
142    VI,     19|            loosened his chain, and having twisted it around him, broke
143    VI,     20|          Sulla, the emperor, after having long considered whom he
144    VI,     20|         his father and grandfather having been consuls, and his family,
145    VI,     27|        Servius Galba, then consul. Having sent for him and sounded
146    VI,     32|        Next Drusus perished, after having prolonged life for eight
147    VI,     35|          her with unchastity, with having had Asinius Gallus as a
148    VI,     38|           the fact of the province having been withheld gained him
149    VI,     41|      taking up a load of myrrh and having tried its strength by a
150    VI,     44|    transported to some islands for having taken money from Varius
151    VI,     46|         throne, most of the family having been murdered by Artabanus
152    VI,     47|  instrument of recovering Armenia, having reconciled him to his brother
153    VI,     48|         back, all other approaches having been closed by the enemy
154    VI,     50|                         Both sides having been drawn up in battle
155    VI,     52|           many flocked to him who, having been kept in subjection
156    VI,     55|                  A bridge of boats having been constructed and the
157    VI,     55|           constructed and the army having crossed, the first to enter
158    VI,     57|            strangled in prison for having there written some lampoons
159    VI,     63|            the other cities, which having been founded by Macedonians,
160    VI,     71|      people's favour, a reason for having his grandfather's hatred.
161    VI,     74|     preparing his defence, Marsus, having apparently resolved on starvation.
162    VI,     74|           Macro for his guide, who having been selected for his superior
163    VI,     75|            chose death. Albucilla, having stabbed herself with an
164    VI,     76|        ascribed to his mother who, having been repeatedly repulsed
165  Miss        |       mentioned in Book XIII., as "having surpassed in beauty all
166    XI,     10|            I have before spoken as having ruled Armenia, and having
167    XI,     10|          having ruled Armenia, and having been imprisoned by order
168    XI,     12|          Gotarzes, who repented of having relinquished his throne,
169    XI,     16|          for use some new letters, having discovered, as he said,
170    XI,     21|           which they were adapted. Having sunk the enemy's flotilla,
171    XI,     26|            no accomplices, perhaps having none to hide. ~ ~
172    XI,     39|           pardon for the past, for having concealed the scandal while
173    XI,     47|          former by his very vices, having amid that abominable throng
174   XII,      7|                         Vitellius, having first put forward these
175   XII,      9|         Silanus committed suicide, having up to that time prolonged
176   XII,     14|         been sought from Rome, and having encamped at Zeugma where
177   XII,     15|         the forces of Carenes, and having crossed the river Tigris
178   XII,     16|          result, till Carenes, who having beaten down all resistance
179   XII,     16|         foreigner and a Roman, and having cut off his ears, bade him
180   XII,     19|        their foe. And so Zorsines, having long considered whether
181   XII,     19|        kingdom of his fathers, and having at last preferred his country'
182   XII,     21|   suppliant, and commended him for having chosen the nation of the
183   XII,     25|           and detested Lollia, for having competed with her for the
184   XII,     25|            who was to tax her with having consulted astrologers and
185   XII,     36|     reverse, he won some credit by having fought with his own hand,
186   XII,     37|            attempted to break, and having assigned their positions
187   XII,     41|            of the troops. Ostorius having ascertained by a survey
188   XII,     54|     understand. And so Rhadamistus having attempted the fortified
189   XII,     56|     Mithridates were butchered for having shed tears over their parent'
190   XII,     57|           summoned a council, and, having informed them of what had
191   XII,     60|       unsheathed his scymitar, and having stabbed her, dragged her
192   XII,     65|     Antiochus, king of that coast, having broken the unity of the
193   XII,     67|           apparent, the tunnel not having been bored down so low as
194   XII,     68|           the people of Ilium, and having eloquently recounted how
195   XII,     72|              Envoys from Byzantium having received audience, in complaining
196   XII,     74|      tribune, a praetor and consul having died within a few months.
197   XII,     80|        conveyed into the camp, and having first spoken suitably to
198  XIII,      1|          truth was that Agrippina, having contrived the murder of
199  XIII,      5|            entered the Senate, and having first referred to the authority
200  XIII,      7|           driven Rhadamistus, who, having often possessed himself
201  XIII,      9|            added a real joy at his having appointed Domitius Corbulo
202  XIII,     14|          with a woman's fury about having a freedwoman for a rival,
203  XIII,     14|       imperial treasures, and from having been of late extreme in
204  XIII,     17|            by Agrippina's menaces, having no charge against his brother
205  XIII,     19|          and funeral, preparations having been already made for his
206  XIII,     20|           austere professions with having on such an occasion divided
207  XIII,     21|          husband's control. Silana having now a prospect of vengeance,
208  XIII,     23|                                    Having thus allayed the prince'
209  XIII,     24|       Iturius and Calvisius, after having wasted their whole fortunes,
210  XIII,     24|     forward who can charge me with having tampered with the praetorian
211  XIII,     24|       cohorts in the capital, with having sapped the loyalty of the
212  XIII,     24|     provinces, or, in a word, with having bribed slaves and freedmen
213  XIII,     27|         and Burrus were accused of having conspired to raise Cornelius
214  XIII,     36|        charge. Clodius Quirinalis, having, when in command of the
215  XIII,     41|    remembered by a few old men, as having been the colleague of the
216  XIII,     43|       their time in towns. Corbulo having discharged all who were
217  XIII,     44|            fairly established, and having stationed his auxiliary
218  XIII,     45|    frontier, as Pharasmanes, after having slain his son Rhadamistus
219  XIII,     48|          Capito, his camp-prefect. Having then surveyed the defences
220  XIII,     52|          that Caius Cassius, after having assented to the rest of
221  XIII,     54|           men charged Suilius with having driven Quintus Pomponius
222  XIII,     54|       extremity of civil war, with having forced Julia, Drusus's daughter,
223  XIII,     54|           Poppaea to suicide, with having treacherously ruined Valerius
224  XIII,     55|           of atrocious acts, when, having gained the rewards of wickedness,
225  XIII,     57|        wishes were against it, and having secured the prospect of
226  XIII,     57|            her with the steel, and having wounded and scared away
227  XIII,     59|           but of brief delay. Once having gained admission, Poppaea
228  XIII,     65|      checked by the senators, who, having first heartily praised the
229  XIII,     70|         the seats of the senators. Having asked who they were, when
230  XIII,     71|            their numbers, but from having the sympathy of the neighbouring
231  XIII,     72|       their allies in war. Avitus, having written to Curtilius Mancia,
232   XIV,      1|        others, and was so far from having empire that he had not even
233   XIV,      7|            not gone far, Agrippina having with her two of her intimate
234   XIV,      9|           of a slight wound, after having so far encountered the peril
235   XIV,     11|            house with a guard, and having burst open the gates, dragged
236   XIV,     15|           congratulated him on his having escaped an unforeseen danger
237   XIV,     15|           temples, and, an example having once been set, the neighbouring
238   XIV,     15|            in the consciousness of having planned the crime she had
239   XIV,     16|         who was in ill repute, for having written a confession in
240   XIV,     27|           older men of the day for having set up a fixed and permanent
241   XIV,     27|            that they might not, by having the chance of sitting down,
242   XIV,     32|                  Corbulo meanwhile having demolished Artaxata thought
243   XIV,     36|           abandon the idea of war. Having harried with fire and sword
244   XIV,     36|          king Archelaus, yet, from having long been a hostage at Rome,
245   XIV,     40|          successor Veranius, after having ravaged the Silures in some
246   XIV,     45|           at the rear by a forest, having first ascertained that there
247   XIV,     47|            close up the ranks, and having discharged your javelins,
248   XIV,     50|          corn, people of every age having gone to the war, while they
249   XIV,     50|            for a new governor who, having neither the anger of an
250   XIV,     51|         the state of Britain, Nero having great hopes that his influence
251   XIV,     53|           the same degradation for having indicted the defendants
252   XIV,     61|            that Antistius, without having been provoked by any wrong,
253   XIV,     62|            more to the same effect having been read out, clearly showing
254   XIV,     63|         undertaking the trial, and having convicted Veiento, he banished
255   XIV,     69|           myself into poverty, but having surrendered the splendours
256   XIV,     73|           he most dreaded, Plautus having been lately sent away to
257   XIV,     83|           afterwards, her brother, having been snatched from her by
258   XIV,     86|  Doryphorus, on the pretext of his having opposed the marriage with
259   XIV,     86|          in stealthy calumnies, of having been an accomplice of Caius
260    XV,      1|          foreign prince, Tigranes, having been set over Armenia, though
261    XV,      1|           tribes were indignant at having fallen into such contempt
262    XV,      2|         the same father as myself, having waived in my favour, on
263    XV,      2|       rather than by bloodshed, by having a good cause rather than
264    XV,      5|       hurried on too eagerly, and, having been surprised by a sudden
265    XV,     17|        worthy of the Arsacids, the having to determine the fate of
266    XV,     18|    fighting might arise. Vologeses having piled up the arms and bodies
267    XV,     24|            public advantage, after having stated his opinion that
268    XV,     29|            Augusta, the same title having also been given to Poppaea.
269    XV,     34|           the fifth legion, which, having been quartered in Pontus,
270    XV,     38|            Tiridates advanced, and having slain the customary victims,
271    XV,     44|          lavishing gifts, and with having no hope but in revolution.
272    XV,     45|             especially Egypt. Then having declared in a public proclamation
273    XV,     56|       Acratus and Secundus Carinas having been sent into those provinces.
274    XV,     63|           might pay the penalty of having destroyed the State. Only
275    XV,     71|          Annaeus Seneca, either as having been a messenger between
276    XV,     73|            meeting, or the fact of having entered a banquet or a public
277    XV,     75|           for him. Piso expired by having the veins in his arms severed.
278    XV,     78|        commander of the guard, and having explained to him the emperor'
279    XV,     80|                                    Having spoken these and like words,
280    XV,     82|                    Nero meanwhile, having no personal hatred against
281    XV,     87|      tribune trembled greatly, and having only just severed his head
282    XV,     89|           circumstance of Vestinus having married Statilia Messalina,
283    XV,     90|         were dismissed, when Nero, having pictured to himself and
284    XV,     92|         hating the emperor, but of having the credit of it. Novius
285    XV,     93|         the only proof they had of having been accused. Atilla, the
286    XV,     94|                           All this having been completed, Nero assembled
287    XV,     97|          the crime was planned, as having revealed by his power the
288   XVI,      1|             He sailed to Rome, and having purchased admission to the
289   XVI,      3|        soon released, his property having been taken from him as a
290   XVI,      5|           eyes in a doze, and that having with difficulty been screened
291   XVI,      6|   eulogized her beauty, her lot in having been the mother of a deified
292   XVI,     10|        Fortunatus, a freedman, who having embezzled his patron's property,
293   XVI,     13|           knight, was outlawed for having been intimate with Faenius
294   XVI,     15|          repeated satires on Nero, having heard that there was such
295   XVI,     15|           letter from Anteius, and having also stolen some notes about
296   XVI,     15|       Pammenes' secret papers, and having further discovered some
297   XVI,     16|          attack. So the centurion, having barred every exit from the
298   XVI,     19|            charging Petronius with having been the friend of Scaevinus,
299   XVI,     20|        with precipitate haste, but having made an incision in his
300   XVI,     21|           She was banished for not having, as was suspected, kept
301   XVI,     22|                         Nero after having butchered so many illustrious
302   XVI,     26|           diligence, as well as by having bestowed pains on opening
303   XVI,     35|          her husband Annius Pollio having lately been driven into
304   XVI,     41|      Demetrius into a chamber, and having laid bare the arteries of
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