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  1     I,      3|               Marcellus, his sister's son, while a mere stripling,
  2     I,      3|           centre. He was adopted as a son, as a colleague in empire
  3     I,      3|               although Tiberius had a son, now a young man, in his
  4     I,     19|               Caesar should be added "son of Julia." The emperor repeatedly
  5     I,     25|               by acclamation that the son of Blaesus, one of the tribunes,
  6     I,     25|           fact that their commander's son was pleading their common
  7     I,     30|                that he despatched his son Drusus with the leading
  8     I,     31|             meanwhile he had sent his son to concede unhesitatingly
  9     I,     35|             you besiege the emperor's son? What is to be the end of
 10     I,     43|             though he was himself the son of Drusus, brother of Tiberius,
 11     I,     52|               should he keep a little son and a pregnant wife among
 12     I,     53|             last embraced her and the son of their love with many
 13     I,     53|           fugitive wife with a little son in her bosom, her friends'
 14     I,     55|                      Neither wife nor son are dearer to me than my
 15     I,     55|               and arms your general's son, or citizens, when you have
 16     I,     56|     allegiance, to myself my wife and son, do you stand aloof from
 17     I,     57|        confinement and of winter. His son, he said, would come, and
 18     I,     75|           Segestes had associated his son, by name Segimundus, but
 19     I,     77|             the youth and error of my son I entreat forgiveness. As
 20     I,     79|                let him restore to his son his priestly office; one
 21     I,     92|         slight ambition to parade her son in a common soldier's uniform,
 22     I,     94|              chief, together with his son, to the canton of the Ubii.
 23     I,     94|                Segimerus readily, the son with some hesitation, because
 24     I,    101|              he deliberately gave his son the opportunity of displaying
 25    II,      2|          quest of Vonones, his eldest son. Caesar thought this a great
 26    II,      4|             finally murdered him. His son, Artaxias, our bitter foe
 27    II,      5|             they would not endure his son. Having tried the government
 28    II,     12|               Arminius's wife nor his son were treated as enemies;
 29    II,     54|            who without concealing her son's displeasure promised mercy
 30    II,     57|              favoured Drusus, as his. son and born of his own blood.
 31    II,     59|             obey a brother's youthful son. The armies were drawn up,
 32    II,     60|                since his wife and his son were still enduring slavery.
 33    II,     67|         deliverer of our city and his son Camillus, fame as a general
 34    II,     72|        likings inclined towards Zeno, son of Polemon, king of Pontus,
 35    II,     74|          Armenia under his own or his son's command, he had neglected
 36    II,     75|        entertainment was given to the son of a Roman emperor, not
 37    II,     83|              Rhescuporis, half to his son Cotys. In this division
 38    II,     87|               was divided between his son Rhoemetalces, who, it was
 39    II,    100|    deliberated what he was to do, his son, Marcus Piso, advised speedy
 40   III,      3|               the last honours to his son's memory. Accordingly tribunes
 41   III,      9|               Piso meanwhile sent his son on to Rome with a message
 42   III,     15|              my part, I sorrow for my son and shall always sorrow
 43   III,     22|               had yielded to my young son rather than he to his aged
 44   III,     22|        implore you to save my unhappy son." About Plancina he added
 45   III,     23|              war on the ground that a son could not have refused a
 46   III,     24|     confiscated, half given up to his son, Cneius Piso, who was to
 47   III,     41|            favour, Nero, Germanicus's son, who was just entering on
 48   III,     41|          greatly rejoiced at seeing a son of Germanicus now grown
 49   III,     41|              the father-in-law of the son of Claudius. The emperor
 50   III,     44|              the fact that father and son were colleagues. Two years
 51   III,     49|        Valerius Messalinus, Messala's son, in whom the father's eloquence
 52   III,     88|              Venus, the second by his son Amathus to Venus of Amathus,
 53   III,     90|        harmony between the mother and son, or a hatred well concealed.
 54   III,     94|        confiscation, and given to the son.~ ~
 55   III,    104|            another quarter, Blaesus's son led a separate force of
 56    IV,      2|                 Born at Vulsinii, the son of Seius Strabo, a Roman
 57    IV,      4|              with its many princes, a son in youthful manhood and
 58    IV,      5|               with warm praise of his son for sharing a father's affection
 59    IV,      9|        government while the emperor's son was alive. How near was
 60    IV,     14|               as he was dining at his son's house. Thus deceived,
 61    IV,     15|               thrust destruction on a son, without even hearing him,
 62    IV,     15|          tardy in the case of an only son hitherto unconvicted of
 63    IV,     16|         pronounced a panegyric on his son before the Rostra, during
 64    IV,     22|              women. Maluginensis, the son, was chosen successor to
 65    IV,     32|            rule of Ptolemaeus, Juba's son, had chosen war in preference
 66    IV,     34|           guards slain round him, his son a prisoner, and the Romans
 67    IV,     37|              A father as defendant, a son as prosecutor, (Vibius Serenus
 68    IV,     37|             stood in irons, while the son pleaded for his guilt. With
 69    IV,     37|           fearless spirit, looked his son in the face, shook his chains,
 70    IV,     37|       practices, and that, as for his son, punishment might sooner
 71    IV,     55|          testimonies of Tiberius, the son, had engendered the habit
 72    IV,     62|          adultery with Julia, and the son, when a mere youth, was
 73    IV,     74|               as either Tantalus, the son of Jupiter, or Theseus,
 74    IV,     75|               Augusta would taunt her son, and claim back what she
 75     V,      1|              the dissimulation of her son. Her funeral was simple,
 76     V,     13|               rumour that Drusus, the son of Germanicus, had been
 77     V,     13|              had said that he was the son of Marcus Silanus, and that,
 78    VI,     14|            bewailing the death of her son. Such were the proceedings
 79    VI,     30|             our own. In fact, how the son of this same Thrasyllus
 80    VI,     33|          daughter-in-law, a brother's son, and son's sons, and filled
 81    VI,     33| daughter-in-law, a brother's son, and son's sons, and filled his whole
 82    VI,     44|       alleging that he had fixed on a son of Sejanus for his son-in-law,
 83    VI,     45|            placed Arsaces, his eldest son. He further added insult,
 84    VI,     46|               demanded that Phraates, son of king Phraates, should
 85    VI,     48|             on hearing this, made his son Orodes the instrument of
 86    VI,     71|              grandsons. Of these, the son of Drusus was nearest in
 87    VI,     71|               childhood. Germanicus's son was in the vigour of youth
 88    VI,     76|               years, till her younger son would have passed the frail
 89  Miss        |          Caius Caesar (Caligula), the son of Germanicus by the elder
 90    XI,     10|          Artabanus, with his wife and son. Hence his people feared
 91    XI,     14|            Britannicus, the emperor's son, and Lucius Domitius, who
 92    XI,     19|              king without raising the son of the spy Flavus above
 93    XI,     19|             of Arminius. Had even the son of Arminius come to the
 94    XI,     25|               affirm to have been the son of a gladiator, I would
 95   XII,      4|        alliance between Domitius, her son by Cneius Aenobarbus, and
 96   XII,     10|           feared the vengeance of her son. ~ ~
 97   XII,     11|            Arsacids; indeed, even the son of Vonones, Phraates's grandson,
 98   XII,     16|              of Parthia passed to his son Vologeses. ~ ~
 99   XII,     30|         preferred Domitius to his own son, though he was but two years
100   XII,     37|               Ostorius, the general's son, won the reward for saving
101   XII,     49|           banishment or death all his son's best instructors, and
102   XII,     52|         powerful support. There was a son of Pharasmanes named Rhadamistus,
103   XII,     52|             was treated by him like a son, with excessive kindness,
104   XII,     53|              gave a large army to his son, who by a sudden invasion
105   XII,     57|              territory and remove his son. ~ ~
106   XII,     74|              hand, who could give her son empire but could not endure
107   XII,     77|            return to his love for his son. She decided on some rare
108   XII,     80|      preference of the stepson to the son might provoke a sense of
109  XIII,      1|               Silanus in fact was the son of a great-grandson of Augustus.
110  XIII,      3|             and a fatal adoption of a son. Nero's temper however was
111  XIII,      8|             rival to Vologeses in his son Vardanes, and the Parthians
112  XIII,     14|               would she wait till her son repented or wearied of his
113  XIII,     14|               in her restraint of her son, became now, on the other
114  XIII,     15|               remainder, and that her son was merely dividing with
115  XIII,     16|         father's sovereignty, which a son, by mere admission and adoption,
116  XIII,     24|              the infamy of plotting a son's murder, or that a Caesar
117  XIII,     24|               with guilt from which a son alone could absolve me." ~ ~
118  XIII,     25|              on an interview with her son. Then, instead of pleading
119  XIII,     45|                after having slain his son Rhadamistus as a traitor
120  XIII,     56|             of half his property, his son and granddaughter being
121  XIII,     56|             the accusers attacked his son Nerullinus on the strength
122  XIII,     58|             knight, by whom she had a son, she was attracted by the
123   XIV,      1|            one who wished evil to her son, let her be restored to
124   XIV,      2|              person believed that the son's hatred would steel his
125   XIV,      3|               to her half intoxicated son and offered him her person,
126   XIV,      7|        herself, spoke joyfully of her son's repentance and of the
127   XIV,      8|         freedman Agerinus to tell her son how by heaven's favour and
128   XIV,     11|               messenger came from her son, not even Agerinus, while
129   XIV,     11|              believe nothing about my son; he has not ordered his
130    XV,     11|               the plain. His wife and son he removed to a fortress
131    XV,     37|             that he commanded Paetus' son, who was a tribune, to take
132    XV,     95|                                   The son of a freedwoman, who had
133   XVI,      8|             incest with her brother's son, and of some ghastly religious
134   XVI,     18|              destroyed himself. Mela, son of the same parents as Gallio
135   XVI,     18|           business. He had too in his son Annaeus Lucanus a powerful
136   XVI,     18|          invented that the father and son shared between them a knowledge
137   XVI,     33|               though guiltless as his son, fell beneath the cruelty
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