Book,  Par.

  1     I,      1|           terror, and after their death were written under the irritation
  2     I,      5|        soon afterwards died, by a death some thought to be self-inflicted,
  3     I,      6|          nor was it credible that death was to be the sentence of
  4     I,     14|           sister, and paid by his death the penalty of a treacherous
  5     I,     19|    sympathy with his grief at the death of Augustus. The same request
  6     I,     21|    Blaesus, who on hearing of the death of Augustus and the accession
  7     I,     29|          the former demanding the death of a centurion, whom they
  8     I,     38|         ordered them to be put to death. The common account is that
  9     I,     40|           light on hearing of the death of Augustus, a rabble of
 10     I,     43|        Gaul, received news of the death of Augustus. He was married
 11     I,     50|          forced him by menaces of death to give up the standard.
 12     I,     56|          though he might allow my death to pass unpunished would
 13     I,     56|       unpunished would avenge the death of Varus and his three legions.
 14     I,     70|         her perish by a lingering death of destitution, with the
 15     I,     81|         hand he found for himself death. They pointed out too the
 16     I,     93|         opportunity of a glorious death, while here was destruction
 17    II,      2|                         After the death of Phraates and the succeeding
 18    II,      5|          and noble spirit. On the death of Ariobarzanes through
 19    II,     29|       restrained him from seeking death in the same sea. ~ ~
 20    II,     38|          called for a minister of death, grasped the hands of his
 21    II,     38|           now to him the gloom of death, he aimed two blows at a
 22    II,     54|           own act or by a natural death. His kingdom was reduced
 23    II,     66|         of Vipstanus Gallus, whom death had removed. Germanicus
 24    II,     83|         Rhoemetalces, after whose death Augustus assigned half to
 25    II,     86|           falsely represented his death as self-inflicted. Still
 26    II,     86|           for all adopted. On the death of Pandus, whom Rhescuporis
 27    II,     87|     attempting escape, was put to death. ~ ~
 28    II,     91|         return should Germanicus' death leave Syria open to him. ~ ~
 29    II,     93|           my youth by an untimely death from parents, children,
 30    II,     96|        age, and the manner of his death, the vicinity too of the
 31    II,     99|      bosom the mournful relics of death, with an uncertain hope
 32    II,    101|           ostentatiously over the death of Germanicus than those
 33    II,    109|          the news of Germanicus's death that even before the magistrate'
 34    II,    117|         the Senate, promising the death of Arminius, if poison were
 35   III,      3|          dissemble his joy at the death of Germanicus. ~ ~
 36   III,      9|       infuriated at his brother's death as kindly disposed towards
 37   III,      9| groundless, and that Germanicus's death need be the ruin of no one.
 38   III,     14|           and had rejoiced at his death or wickedly destroyed him,
 39   III,     14|            and has exulted in his death and in my affliction, I
 40   III,     15|   conducting the inquiry into his death in this house instead of
 41   III,     17|       been no treachery about the death of Germanicus. ~ ~
 42   III,     19|            to be his companion in death. But as soon as she had
 43   III,     21|        that the purpose of such a death was to bring odium on himself,
 44   III,     27|           the end of avenging the death of Germanicus, a subject
 45   III,     28|          Agrippa's children whose death was without violence. As
 46   III,     30|          tradition. He flogged to death every tenth man drawn by
 47   III,     35|     punished their paramours with death or exile. Calling, as he
 48   III,     67|   requested the Senate to let the death of Sulpicius Quirinus be
 49   III,     68|        popular poem bewailing the death of Germanicus, had received
 50   III,     68|         the event of the prince's death, might be published with
 51   III,     69|         mercy by a self-inflicted death. Lutorius's life is still
 52   III,     69|           to the State; if put to death, he will be no warning to
 53   III,     70|       prison and instantly put to death. Of this Tiberius complained
 54   III,     79|           power, and on Agrippa's death, Tiberius Nero, that there
 55    IV,      1|           he counted Germanicus's death a happy incident. Suddenly
 56    IV,      9|          still kept up, until the death of Drusus changed everything.
 57    IV,     10|          the interval between his death and funeral. Seeing the
 58    IV,     14|                   In relating the death of Drusus I have followed
 59    IV,     14|           bringing on himself the death which he had plotted against
 60    IV,     16|      Sejanus when he saw that the death of Drusus was not avenged
 61    IV,     20|        Drusus, equally too by the death of an intimate friend. This
 62    IV,     25|          doom by a self-inflicted death. ~ ~
 63    IV,     29|     heaped on him, but his timely death cut short the trial.~ ~
 64    IV,     34|     rushed on the darts, and by a death which was not unavenged,
 65    IV,     48|        speak freely of those whom death has withdrawn alike from
 66    IV,     62|        Yet honour was paid him in death, and his bones, by the Senate'
 67    IV,     64|         on freedom or resigned to death. As they spoke, they pointed
 68    IV,     67|           instead of an unavenged death, and these were all men
 69    IV,     68|        kept urging them to speedy death and to the instant breaking
 70    IV,     68|           some who chose the same death. Turesis and his band waited
 71    IV,     80|         Those who were crushed to death in the first moment of the
 72     V,      3|      publicly read soon after her death. It contained expressions
 73     V,      9|           with those who by noble death have fled from the miseries
 74     V,     10|          not pursue him after his death with either accusation or
 75    VI,     13|        sentenced to banishment or death, their previous offences
 76    VI,     14|        executed for bewailing the death of her son. Such were the
 77    VI,     15|           pontiff, died a natural death, a rare incident in so high
 78    VI,     23|    condemned and instantly put to death. His sister Sancia was outlawed,
 79    VI,     24|         Great, and that after his death Greek flattery had paid
 80    VI,     25|          fury, and he ordered the death of all who were lying in
 81    VI,     31|                That same year the death of Asinius Gallus became
 82    VI,     33|    bitterly reviled him after his death, taunting him with nameless
 83    VI,     35|          a fiction concocted of a death that might seem self-chosen.
 84    VI,     35|           and being driven by his death to loathe existence. But
 85    VI,     36|        life without any cause for death. Nerva turned away from
 86    VI,     36|          and alarm, an honourable death, while he was yet safe and
 87    VI,     37|         had openly exulted at the death of Germanicus, she had been
 88    VI,     38|           the end of the year the death of Aelius Lamia, who, after
 89    VI,     38|      esteem. Subsequently, on the death of Flaccus Pomponius, propraetor
 90    VI,     41|         of years is completed and death is near, the phoenix, it
 91    VI,     43|         him to die and shared his death. ~ ~
 92    VI,     45|       Armenia, over which, on the death of Artaxias, he placed Arsaces,
 93    VI,     59|        Lucius Aruseius was put to death did not strike men as anything
 94    VI,     60|           perished by a voluntary death; Galba, because a harsh
 95    VI,     70|          neglected, and after the death of Claudia, who had, as
 96    VI,     73|        come even after Tiberius's death. Acutia, formerly the wife
 97    VI,     75|           Arruntius rightly chose death. Albucilla, having stabbed
 98    VI,     76|       chose a sudden and shocking death, by throwing himself from
 99    VI,     76|          could find no escape but death. She was accordingly put
100    XI,      3|      should be free to choose his death. Claudius's reply was in
101    XI,      3|      urged on Asiaticus the quiet death of self-starvation, but
102    XI,      4|     interpreted it to signify the death of the emperor after the
103    XI,     10|         cruelties, had caused the death of his brother Artabanus,
104    XI,     16|           repayable on a father's death. He also conveyed by an
105    XI,     21|        home and emboldened by the death of Sanquinius, made, while
106    XI,     21|         it was said, had suffered death for working at the trenches
107    XI,     22|     violently roused by the man's death, and Corbulo was now sowing
108    XI,     38|  Narcissus, who had contrived the death of Appius, and Pallas, who
109    XI,     44|         should not be given up to death without a hearing. So Narcissus
110    XI,     45|        delay, but begged that his death might be hastened. A like
111    XI,     48|          Narcissus hurried on her death, ruin would have recoiled
112    XI,     48|          looked for was honour in death." But in that heart, utterly
113   XII,     21|            and pay the penalty of death. ~ ~
114   XII,     26|        Ituraea and Judaea, on the death of their kings, Sohaemus
115   XII,     47|         emperor on hearing of the death of his representative appointed
116   XII,     49|       punished with banishment or death all his son's best instructors,
117   XII,     60|          rescued by an honourable death from the shame of captivity.
118   XII,     61|   astrologers about the emperor's death. His mother, Junia, was
119   XII,     61|          was cut off by a natural death, or by poison, was matter
120   XII,     75|         was for this sentenced to death, notwithstanding the vehement
121   XII,     77|        derange his mind and delay death. A person skilled in such
122  XIII,      1|                         The first death under the new emperor, that
123  XIII,     17|           Then they promised that death should be as sudden as if
124  XIII,     18|         the crime betrayed by the death of both prince and attendant.
125  XIII,     19|           witnessed Britannicus's death and funeral, preparations
126  XIII,     19|          Britannicus; so that his death could no longer seem a premature
127  XIII,     19|           any grievously untimely death, and not to dwell on it
128  XIII,     21|          Agrippina's mourning the death of Britannicus or publishing
129  XIII,     22|           Burrus answered for her death, should she be convicted
130  XIII,     36|   resolution for a self-inflicted death, because of his infamous
131   XIV,      4|       recent circumstances of the death of Britannicus. Again, to
132   XIV,      8|    nautical. She pondered too the death of Acerronia; she looked
133   XIV,     10|          by her own choice sought death. ~ ~
134   XIV,     13|           on his mother after her death and praised her beauty,
135   XIV,     15|           tears over his mother's death. But as the aspects of places
136   XIV,     18|         indeed had died a natural death at Tarentum, whither she
137   XIV,     19|       name was hated and that her death had heightened his popularity. "
138   XIV,     36|            as being vacant by the death of its governor Ummidius,
139   XIV,     40|           raids, was prevented by death from extending the war.
140   XIV,     60|           tribune might save from death one whom the Senate had
141   XIV,     60|        praetorship, and be put to death in the ancient manner. The
142   XIV,     65|                               The death of Burrus was a blow to
143   XIV,     76|      obvious refuge of a coward's death, and in the pity felt for
144   XIV,     77|     Etruria, advised him to await death with firmness rather than
145   XIV,     82|      while he threatened him with death in case of refusal. Anicetus,
146   XIV,     82|       poverty, and died a natural death. ~ ~
147   XIV,     83| accusation more horrible than any death.~ ~
148   XIV,     84|          not reconcile herself to death. After an interval of a
149    XV,     60|         the fearlessness of their death. Lucanus Annaeus, too, and
150    XV,     74|     inflict on you an ignominious death. How much more gloriously
151    XV,     74|      robbed of life, justify your death to your ancestors and descendants." ~ ~
152    XV,     76|           brief choice of his own death. He was dragged off to a
153    XV,     78|           to announce sentence of death. Fabius Rusticus tells us
154    XV,     82|          his cruelty, forbade her death. At the soldiers' prompting,
155    XV,     82|          of sharing her husband's death, but that after a time,
156    XV,     83|         as the tedious process of death still lingered on, begged
157    XV,     91|           dying a similar kind of death, and he recited the very
158    XV,     96|         by those who after Nero's death returned to the capital.
159    XV,     96|           at his brother Seneca's death was pleading for his life.
160    XV,     97|  interpreted it as an omen of his death, seeing that divine honours
161   XVI,      3|         and danger by a voluntary death. Some have said that he
162   XVI,      5|           crowd, were trampled to death, and that others while keeping
163   XVI,      7|                            To the death of Poppaea, which, though
164   XVI,     10|    daughter Pollutia submitted to death. They were hated by the
165   XVI,     12|          but just on the verge of death. Fortune preserved the due
166   XVI,     14|          s cruelty by an ordinary death. That same year levies of
167   XVI,     15|         its slowness, he hastened death by severing his veins. ~ ~
168   XVI,     18|         to distinction. After the death of Lucanus, he rigorously
169   XVI,     18|      adopting the easiest mode of death then in fashion, opened
170   XVI,     18|      against the injustice of his death, that he died without any
171   XVI,     20|   indulged himself in sleep, that death, though forced on him, might
172   XVI,     21|           patron by an undeserved death. ~ ~
173   XVI,     22|  Antistius was being sentenced to death for libels on Nero, Thrasea
174   XVI,     28|       behold a man who could meet death. Let the Senate hear words,
175   XVI,     28|           memory of an honourable death and the cowardice of those
176   XVI,     38|        were allowed the choice of death. Helvidius and Paconius
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