Book,  Par.

  1     I,      1|                                  Rome at the beginning was ruled
  2     I,      8|                     Meanwhile at Rome people plunged into slavery -
  3     I,     10|       the people and populace of Rome," of one thousand to every
  4     I,     14|        and Varus, the murders at Rome of the Varros, Egnatii,
  5     I,     19|      consul elect and present at Rome. Twelve candidates were
  6     I,     21|          the state of affairs at Rome when a mutiny broke out
  7     I,     32|        which he was to convey to Rome. He began to speak of the
  8     I,     39|          was quiet, went back to Rome. ~ ~
  9     I,     40|  enlisted under a recent levy at Rome, habituated to laxity and
 10     I,     55|       own majesty, the empire of Rome that of our other armies.
 11     I,     56|       having rescued the name of Rome and quelled the tribes of
 12     I,     60|                               At Rome, meanwhile, when the result
 13     I,     60|       there should be slavery at Rome; he should now apply some
 14     I,     70|      soldiers were not sent from Rome, but by Lucius Asprenas,
 15     I,     75|           to hope for mercy from Rome, he brought his father's
 16     I,     95|         majesty of the people of Rome." Deeds only were liable
 17     I,    103|    provinces. When the people of Rome asked for a remission of
 18     I,    105|       not mean to allow to leave Rome.~ ~
 19    II,      1|         sought and received from Rome, though he was of the family
 20    II,      1|         armies and generals from Rome, Phraates had shown to Augustus
 21    II,      2|        civil wars, there came to Rome envoys from the chief men
 22    II,      2|      away among the provinces of Rome. "Where," they asked, "was
 23    II,      4|         the power of Parthia and Rome, without being trusted by
 24    II,     12|        spoke of the greatness of Rome, the resources of Caesar,
 25    II,     32|           since the vengeance of Rome had been satisfied, might
 26    II,     50|       Italy, and was believed at Rome, that Agrippa had been saved
 27    II,     54|          through it, hastened to Rome. There he was received by
 28    II,     60|          all their might against Rome, or to accept a bloodless
 29    II,     65|      than two hundred miles from Rome. Her paramour, Manlius,
 30    II,     66|           for they were still at Rome) supported Haterius Agrippa,
 31    II,     72|         strife with them, hating Rome and jealous of Parthia.
 32    II,     73|          of a gentler rule under Rome. Quintus Servaeus was appointed
 33    II,     76|          to the alliance between Rome and Parthia was dignified;
 34    II,     78|          Parthia or the power of Rome. ~ ~
 35    II,     81|      preferred the friendship of Rome. Caesar replied that he
 36    II,     87|         his desperate plight, to Rome. He was accused before the
 37    II,     93|      fortune. Show the people of Rome her who is the granddaughter
 38    II,     95|        not, when she returned to Rome, to enrage by political
 39    II,     98|          Sentius at once sent to Rome a woman infamous for poisonings
 40    II,    100|         advised speedy return to Rome. "As yet," he said, "you
 41    II,    103|        Piso that he was to go to Rome to defend himself. Piso
 42    II,    107|       ships and a safe return to Rome. ~ ~
 43    II,    111| Triumphal arches were erected at Rome, on the banks of the Rhine,
 44    II,    117|          arms that the people of Rome avenged themselves on their
 45    II,    118|           one too who had defied Rome, not in her early rise,
 46   III,      3|      Germanicus, and had been at Rome. Marcus Valerius and Caius
 47   III,      6|       leaving the corpse entered Rome with it. Round the funeral
 48   III,      8|           had been despatched to Rome by Cneius Sentius, had died
 49   III,      9|     meanwhile sent his son on to Rome with a message intended
 50   III,     10|        marching from Pannonia to Rome and was then to garrison
 51   III,     13| postponed the honour and entered Rome. Then the defendant sought
 52   III,     22|         this time he has been at Rome, while the other, Marcus
 53   III,     28|         Drusus meanwhile quitted Rome to resume his command and
 54   III,     32|                               At Rome meanwhile Lepida, who beside
 55   III,     35|         of whom he banished from Rome, and punished their paramours
 56   III,     36|      Silanus after this lived at Rome without attaining office.~ ~
 57   III,     40|        became too searching, and Rome and Italy and Roman citizens
 58   III,     49|         and more genial system. "Rome," he said, "is not now,
 59   III,     52|   Capitol or any other temple in Rome to use it as an auxiliary
 60   III,     53|          By moving in society at Rome, amid popular talk, his
 61   III,     57|        and the utter weakness of Rome's armies in all but their
 62   III,     58|          on his men to fight for Rome, to display, as he said,
 63   III,     61|                               At Rome meanwhile people said that
 64   III,     66|   proposing that he should enter Rome from Campania with an ovation.
 65   III,     66|          in the neighbourhood of Rome. ~ ~
 66   III,     69|           However, let him leave Rome, lose his property, and
 67   III,     75|       existence of the people of Rome is daily at the mercy of
 68   III,     85|     their charters and envoys to Rome. Some voluntarily relinquished
 69   III,     85|        who had flourished before Rome's ascendancy, and the forms
 70   III,     90|          to hasten his return to Rome, for hitherto there had
 71   III,     99|   Goddess had several shrines in Rome, there was none with this
 72   III,     99|    jurisdiction and authority of Rome. Accordingly the offering
 73   III,    100|     pontiff, who had detained at Rome the priest Aulus Postumius.
 74   III,    103|         conditions; far less, in Rome's most glorious height of
 75    IV,      2|      from heaven's wrath against Rome, to whose welfare his elevation
 76    IV,      5|        and thus show what forces Rome then had under arms, what
 77    IV,     13|        the Alban kings, Romulus, Rome's founder, then the Sabine
 78    IV,     17|        the causes of citizens at Rome and with petitions from
 79    IV,     25|     Varro were a real consul, or Rome a commonwealth. The accused
 80    IV,     28|        Senate that he would quit Rome because of the combinations
 81    IV,     32|       This year at last released Rome from her long contest with
 82    IV,     32|       himself. There were now in Rome three laurelled statues,
 83    IV,     33|       were rending the empire of Rome and that therefore her soldiers
 84    IV,     35|  Garamantes, a rare spectacle in Rome. The nation, in its terror
 85    IV,     36|        were brought prisoners to Rome where men already trembled
 86    IV,     38|      parricide's doom, fled from Rome. He was dragged back from
 87    IV,     44|         those who have described Rome in old days. They told of
 88    IV,     45|         after a revolution, when Rome is nothing but the realm
 89    IV,     45|        the armies of Carthage or Rome. But of many who endured
 90    IV,     52|       himself and to the city of Rome, I who respect as law all
 91    IV,     55|   writing, even though he was at Rome. This petition was to the
 92    IV,     57|          spot at a distance from Rome. In this he foresaw several
 93    IV,     60|       been legally banished from Rome, had been adopted as a citizen
 94    IV,     68|         strength and clemency of Rome, maintained that they must
 95    IV,     70|                               At Rome meanwhile, besides the shocks
 96    IV,     71|       and there were citizens in Rome who would not disdain to
 97    IV,     73| antiquity of race and loyalty to Rome throughout her wars with
 98    IV,     73|      that Troy was the cradle of Rome, was strong only in the
 99    IV,     74|      build a temple in honour of Rome, during the consulship of
100    IV,     74|        Marcus Porcius Cato, when Rome's power indeed was great,
101    IV,     75|          live at a distance from Rome. Although I have followed
102    IV,     76|        bodies when Tiberius left Rome were such as to forbid the
103    IV,     76|      That he would not return to Rome was not a mere random assertion;
104    IV,     76|     country or on the coast near Rome and often close to the very
105    IV,     80|        place because it was near Rome. And so the calamity was
106    IV,     81|          and physicians, so that Rome then, notwithstanding her
107    IV,     82|     emperor's purpose of leaving Rome must have been formed under
108    IV,     83|    Etruscan people to the aid of Rome and had the place given
109    IV,     85|        to believe, which even at Rome Sejanus used to foster,
110    IV,     87|      their own infamy. Never was Rome more distracted and terror-stricken.
111    IV,     94|      neither of them would visit Rome or even the neighbourhood
112    IV,     94|        even the neighbourhood of Rome; they thought it enough
113    IV,     94|          displayed servility. At Rome indeed hurrying crowds are
114    IV,     95|     marriage to be celebrated at Rome. In selecting Domitius he
115     V,      1|      united the noblest blood of Rome. Her first marriage, by
116     V,      1|        Perusian war, returned to Rome when peace had been concluded
117    VI,      1|          whether he should enter Rome, or, possibly, simulating
118    VI,      2|                               At Rome meanwhile, in the beginning
119    VI,      2|        in safety from Capreae to Rome. Tiberius however, who usually
120    VI,      3|           he was dragged back to Rome, and confined in the houses
121    VI,     16|      chief magistrates went from Rome, an official was temporarily
122    VI,     16|          charge of everything in Rome and Italy. When he rose
123    VI,     19|       despair of the fortunes of Rome, he meant to throw himself
124    VI,     20|        though plebeian house, at Rome. Though he was brought up
125    VI,     20|        as went near the walls of Rome, much less the State-council,
126    VI,     21|        indeed of old standing in Rome and a most frequent cause
127    VI,     38|      many sorrows which saddened Rome, one cause of grief was
128    VI,     42|                                  Rome meanwhile being a scene
129    VI,     44|      condemned and banished from Rome. Gaetulicus at this time
130    VI,     45|          Parthian nobles came to Rome without the knowledge of
131    VI,     46|    Phraates, should be sent from Rome. "Only a name," they said, "
132    VI,     47|         aware, had a bad name at Rome, and many a foul story was
133    VI,     52|      raised an alarm of war with Rome. Armenia was then abandoned,
134    VI,     55|       have displayed the arms of Rome, and he then bade Tiridates
135    VI,     57|        but in close proximity to Rome, so that on the same day,
136    VI,     69|                   That same year Rome suffered from a terrible
137    VI,     73|                               At Rome meanwhile were being sown
138    VI,     76|          after all banished from Rome for ten years, till her
139    XI,      1|       chains, and hurried him to Rome.~ ~
140    XI,     11|         the vigorous soldiers of Rome to storm the fortified heights,
141    XI,     14|          after the foundation of Rome and the sixty-fourth after
142    XI,     15|         of the young nobility of Rome, that she drove from his
143    XI,     16|     conveyed by an aqueduct into Rome the waters which flow from
144    XI,     19|          that the Cherusci asked Rome for a king. They had lost
145    XI,     19|   Italicus by name, who lived at Rome. On the father's side he
146    XI,     19|        he said, "had a native of Rome, no hostage but a citizen,
147    XI,     19|   freedom, and that the might of Rome was on the rise. "Is there
148    XI,     19|      Germans, he had promised to Rome. The name of liberty was
149    XI,     25|          presage, he returned to Rome, where, through the lavish
150    XI,     26|                               At Rome meanwhile, without any motive
151    XI,     27|          to attend to affairs at Rome. This number was again doubled,
152    XI,     28|      obtaining public offices at Rome. There was much talk of
153    XI,     28|      means dissatisfied with the Rome of the past. To this day
154    XI,     28| remembrance of those who fell in Rome's citadel and at her altar
155    XI,     29|         a citizen and a noble of Rome, encourage me to govern
156    XI,     31|          of becoming senators at Rome. This compliment was paid
157    XI,     39|         new husband is master of Rome." ~ ~
158    XI,     43|         while he was riding into Rome, he asked and took a seat
159    XI,     44|   afterwards, as he was entering Rome, his children by Messalina
160   XII,      8|           like Messalina, insult Rome by loose manners. It was
161   XII,     12|         speak of the grandeur of Rome and the submissive attitude
162   XII,     12|          the young foster-son of Rome, as one whose self-control
163   XII,     12|   frequent revolutions were bad. Rome, sated with her glory, had
164   XII,     14|        king had been sought from Rome, and having encamped at
165   XII,     16|       prefer to seek a king from Rome than to keep him. Meherdates,
166   XII,     17|          pointed to the power of Rome in contrast with the rebel
167   XII,     21|   friendship between emperors of Rome and sovereigns of powerful
168   XII,     24|          given up and brought to Rome by Junius Cilo, the procurator
169   XII,     27|         extend the boundaries of Rome. But Roman generals, even
170   XII,     28|      enlarged with the growth of Rome's fortunes. The boundaries
171   XII,     34|      sent envoys and hostages to Rome. To Pomponius was decreed
172   XII,     42|        defied our power. Even at Rome the name of Caractacus was
173   XII,     45|        generals to the people of Rome. Triumphal distinctions
174   XII,     47|        he had long been loyal to Rome and had been defended by
175   XII,     49|           prince of the youth of Rome." A donative was also given
176   XII,     51|          It was ascertained that Rome had provisions for no more
177   XII,     52| disturbances between Parthia and Rome. Vologeses was king of the
178   XII,     57|   infamous; for this was more to Rome's interest than for him
179   XII,     66|  neighbouring towns, others from Rome itself, eager to see the
180   XII,     68|         eloquently recounted how Rome was the offspring of Troy,
181   XII,     71|        under which they had laid Rome and joint victories with
182  XIII,      4|         no disaster had befallen Rome from the foreigner, were
183  XIII,      7|        relinquished hostilities. Rome with its love of talking
184  XIII,      9|         triumphal robe and enter Rome in ovation, lastly, that
185  XIII,     10|  ancestors towards the people of Rome. Vologeses, wishing to prepare
186  XIII,     26|          and finally detained at Rome. Silana was banished; Calvisius
187  XIII,     28|          of the augurs, purified Rome by a lustration, as the
188  XIII,     29|    wander through the streets of Rome, to brothels and taverns,
189  XIII,     40|         he had claimed for it at Rome. But he had to confront
190  XIII,     42|          war between Parthia and Rome about the possession of
191  XIII,     42|        it due to the grandeur of Rome that he should recover what
192  XIII,     45|         whom he thought loyal to Rome, while he eluded an action
193  XIII,     45|        pre-eminently attached to Rome, and they overran the wilds
194  XIII,     46|         than once by disaster to Rome." Corbulo in reply, when
195  XIII,     53|    hundred million sesterces? At Rome the wills of the childless
196  XIII,     54|         begin with his crimes at Rome, the witnesses of which
197  XIII,     58|          the State. There was at Rome one Sabina Poppaea; her
198  XIII,     60|        be the emperor's rival at Rome. There he lived up to the
199  XIII,     64|          was not in ignorance of Rome's actual condition that
200  XIII,     66|        year; that the praetor at Rome, the propraetor or proconsul
201  XIII,     70|         suppliants. They went to Rome, and while they waited for
202  XIII,     70|          and their friendship to Rome, they exclaimed that no
203  XIII,     71|       those nations and loyal to Rome, Boiocalus by name, who
204   XIV,     19|     doubting how he should enter Rome, whether he would find the
205   XIV,     20|        invited all the people of Rome, who extolled him in their
206   XIV,     24|         so there were brought to Rome a number of the people of
207   XIV,     26|        himself by his history of Rome and by the refinement of
208   XIV,     27|         years was established at Rome in imitation of the Greek
209   XIV,     27|     corruption was to be seen at Rome, and a degeneracy bred by
210   XIV,     28|   elaboration, and yet no one at Rome of good family had stooped
211   XIV,     30|     consider the tranquillity of Rome and withdraw himself from
212   XIV,     31|      Quintus Marcius conveyed to Rome, and it was thought that,
213   XIV,     36|    having long been a hostage at Rome, he had sunk into servile
214   XIV,     36|   preferred a king given them by Rome. He was supported too with
215   XIV,     40|    Armenia by the subjugation of Rome's enemies. He therefore
216   XIV,     42|          men of the Iceni, as if Rome had received the whole country
217   XIV,     50|          stated in a despatch to Rome that no cessation of fighting
218   XIV,     52|         crimes were committed at Rome, one by a senator, the other
219   XIV,     64|    question, "I indeed am well." Rome felt for him a deep and
220   XIV,     67|         many laborious duties at Rome; both received awards which
221   XIV,     68|  numbered among the chief men of Rome? Among nobles who can show
222   XIV,     72|    followers, seldom appeared in Rome, as though weak health or
223   XIV,     73|     secured against treachery in Rome by my presence. As for distant
224   XIV,     74|    danger. The head was taken to Rome, and Nero scoffed at its
225   XIV,     78|      murdered man was brought to Rome. At its sight the emperor
226   XIV,     80|        make her way in person to Rome. And, again, what is my
227   XIV,     80|    lawful heir? Do the people of Rome prefer that the offspring
228   XIV,     84|       head which was conveyed to Rome. ~ ~
229    XV,      1|    reflected on the greatness of Rome, and felt reverence for
230    XV,      1|          find that subjection to Rome is lighter for those who
231    XV,      6|          should shun the arms of Rome. Nor was the present going
232    XV,     21|                               At Rome meanwhile trophies for the
233    XV,     31|          not without disgrace to Rome. Only lately, he had besieged
234    XV,     31|    Tiridates refuse a journey to Rome to receive the crown, were
235    XV,     35|        have fallen to the lot of Rome, some to that of Parthia,
236    XV,     35|       people by an alliance with Rome than by mutual injuries.
237    XV,     38|       moderation. He would go to Rome, and bring the emperor a
238    XV,     40|      that he might be treated at Rome with as much respect as
239    XV,     42|   venture to make a beginning at Rome, he chose Neapolis, because
240    XV,     45| certainly known), he returned to Rome, there dwelling in his secret
241    XV,     45|      strongest, so the people of Rome had the most powerful claims
242    XV,     48|          which characterised old Rome. Added to this were the
243    XV,     49|    Antium, and did not return to Rome until the fire approached
244    XV,     50|          calling it by his name. Rome, indeed, is divided into
245    XV,     51|       Senones captured and fired Rome. Others have pushed a curious
246    XV,     53|                               Of Rome meanwhile, so much as was
247    XV,     54|         of the evil, but even in Rome, where all things hideous
248    XV,     56|      plunder; for the temples in Rome were despoiled and the gold
249    XV,     73|                             Even Rome itself he put, so to say,
250    XV,     77|     countryhouse four miles from Rome. Thither the tribune came
251    XV,     92|                                  Rome all this time was thronged
252    XV,     94|         he too will be a part of Rome's calamities.~ ~
253   XVI,      1|        expectation. He sailed to Rome, and having purchased admission
254   XVI,     14|          to the neighbourhood of Rome, where a terrible plague
255   XVI,     14|     amount for the distresses of Rome. ~ ~
256   XVI,     27|             Accordingly when all Rome rushed out to welcome the
257   XVI,     32|    offices of State, the city of Rome seem as nothing. Let him
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