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  1     I,      1|        Crassus soon yielded before Caesar; the arms of Lepidus and
  2     I,      2|            Julian faction had only Caesar left to lead it, then, dropping
  3     I,      3|           Agrippa died, and Lucius Caesar as he was on his way to
  4     I,      5|            Livia. All was known to Caesar, and when Maximus soon afterwards
  5     I,      8|       swear allegiance to Tiberius Caesar, and in their presence the
  6     I,     12|          vain, when the slaying of Caesar, the Dictator, seemed to
  7     I,     14|            by his own soldiers and Caesar's treacherous machinations -
  8     I,     17|           Gallus said, "I ask you, Caesar, what part of the State
  9     I,     18|           having said - "How long, Caesar, will you suffer the State
 10     I,     19|       proposed that to the name of Caesar should be added "son of
 11     I,     19|    distinction. But for Germanicus Caesar he asked pro-consular powers,
 12     I,     24|        ought to be communicated to Caesar, nor did our soldiers of
 13     I,     33|    praetorian soldier or friend of Caesar's who met them, they used
 14     I,     40|     confident hope that Germanicus Caesar would not be able to endure
 15     I,     42|   posterity by the murder of Caius Caesar, being then a youth of high
 16     I,     45|           was a pause during which Caesar's friends hurried him into
 17     I,     50|            burst the door, dragged Caesar from his bed, and forced
 18     I,     57|           them absolution. Nor did Caesar check them, seeing that
 19     I,     59|         retained their resentment. Caesar accordingly proposed to
 20     I,     65|       breasts to honourable scars. Caesar followed up the enthusiasm
 21     I,     67|                                    Caesar, to spread devastation widely,
 22     I,     68|        masses of the Germans, when Caesar rode up to the men of the
 23     I,     70|    Tiberius while Caius and Lucius Caesar were in their glory, and
 24     I,     72|           the consulship of Drusus Caesar and Caius Norbanus, Germanicus
 25     I,     78|                                    Caesar in a gracious reply promised
 26     I,     79|      against Segestes, war against Caesar." And he refrained not from
 27     I,     80|         the Romans. This increased Caesar's alarm. That the war might
 28     I,     82|         foe. In raising the barrow Caesar laid the first sod, rendering
 29     I,     83|         unacquainted with it, when Caesar led forth his legions in
 30     I,     92|          and wish him to be called Caesar Caligula. Agrippina had
 31     I,     93|          the river Visurgis, where Caesar had arrived with the fleet.
 32     I,     93|         their safety till they saw Caesar and the army returned.~ ~
 33     I,     98|          what order will you vote, Caesar? If first, I shall know
 34    II,      2|           Vonones, his eldest son. Caesar thought this a great honour
 35    II,      2|         who drove out Antonius, if Caesar's drudge, after an endurance
 36    II,      4|          the treachery of kinsmen, Caesar gave Tigranes to the Armenians,
 37    II,      5|       disaster to ourselves. Caius Caesar was then appointed to restore
 38    II,      9|                                    Caesar, however, while the vessels
 39    II,      9|           chief of the Chatti. And Caesar had no opportunity of fighting
 40    II,     10|         the fleet had arrived, and Caesar, having sent on his supplies
 41    II,     10|           some were drowned. While Caesar was measuring out his camp,
 42    II,     11|           chiefs. He asked whether Caesar had arrived, and on the
 43    II,     12|          of Rome, the resources of Caesar, the dreadful punishment
 44    II,     14|        other side of the Visurgis. Caesar, thinking that without bridges
 45    II,     15|                                    Caesar on crossing the Visurgis
 46    II,     20|       after them, four legions and Caesar himself with two praetorian
 47    II,     21|                                    Caesar, as soon as he saw the Cheruscan
 48    II,     25|              All this was known to Caesar. He was acquainted with
 49    II,     25|          they were driven from it. Caesar with some praetorian cohorts
 50    II,     27|     praised his victorious troops, Caesar raised a pile of arms with
 51    II,     27| inscription, "The army of Tiberius Caesar, after thoroughly conquering
 52    II,     28|  winter-quarters, but most of them Caesar put on board the fleet and
 53    II,     31|            hope for war, as it did Caesar to hold them down. He ordered
 54    II,     32|            They were helped too by Caesar's bounty, which made good
 55    II,     35|        with Tiberius than himself. Caesar, without disregarding the
 56    II,     44|         people, unless done before Caesar and under his very eyes,
 57    II,     46|     compassion. While you prosper, Caesar, they will attain such promotion
 58    II,     50|            replied, "As you became Caesar." He could not be forced
 59    II,     51|        Tiber, in the gardens which Caesar, the dictator, bequeathed
 60    II,     52|       Lucius Pomponius, Germanicus Caesar, on the 26th day of May,
 61    II,     54|      Augustus, because, when Caius Caesar was in his prime and had
 62    II,     54|       reduced into a province, and Caesar declared that, with its
 63    II,     57|         most energetic aid against Caesar the reviving faction in
 64    II,     59|            country, a satellite of Caesar, who deserved to be driven
 65    II,     65|           allied though she was to Caesar's house. Adultery, it was
 66    II,     75|            Piso was seldom seen at Caesar's tribunal, and if he ever
 67    II,     75|           weight were presented to Caesar and Agrippina and light
 68    II,     81|       resource but in the mercy of Caesar. Having crossed the Danube
 69    II,     81|            the friendship of Rome. Caesar replied that he should have
 70    II,    105|          protested that he, though Caesar's legate, was kept out of
 71    II,    105|          out of the province which Caesar had given him, not by the
 72   III,     22|           witness that towards you Caesar, I have lived loyally, and
 73   III,     23|            Veranius had bewailed a Caesar, while the emperor and Augusta
 74   III,     33|           to be the wife of Lucius Caesar and the daughter-in-law
 75   III,     40|           in his sixth consulship, Caesar Augustus, feeling his power
 76   III,     67|         appointed adviser to Caius Caesar in the government of Armenia,
 77   III,     67|     charged with encouraging Caius Caesar in his perverse and quarrelsome
 78   III,     87|           a decree of the dictator Caesar for their old services to
 79    IV,      2|           his early youth to Caius Caesar, grandson of the Divine
 80    IV,     47|            else was it answered by Caesar the dictator, than by a
 81    IV,     55|       worthy of an alliance with a Caesar. This was the first motive
 82    IV,     56|         has been the wife of Caius Caesar and afterwards of Drusus,
 83    IV,     57|            pass through his hands. Caesar too, who was already in
 84    IV,     59|           by the decision of Caius Caesar and Marcus Antonius. The
 85    IV,     61|          and afterwards to that of Caesar. His grandfather had fallen
 86    IV,     85|                                    Caesar, meanwhile, after dedicating
 87    IV,     94|          and statues round them to Caesar and Sejanus, both of whom
 88     V,      1|          the triumvirs. After this Caesar, enamoured of her beauty,
 89     V,      1|          her great-grandson, Caius Caesar, who afterwards succeeded
 90    VI,      4|  treacherous designs against Caius Caesar. When this fact was divulged,
 91    VI,      6|      spoken, it was said, of Caius Caesar, as if it were a question
 92    VI,     11|            it was your son-in-law, Caesar, your partner in the consulship,
 93    VI,     12|    principle must acquit both you, Caesar, and us."~ ~
 94    VI,     13|         written an attack on Caius Caesar as a profligate, or that
 95    VI,     21|        defiance of a law passed by Caesar the Dictator defining the
 96    VI,     26|              About this time Caius Caesar, who became his grandfather'
 97    VI,     46|          only, in fact, that, with Caesar's consent, a scion of the
 98    VI,     47|        then, through fear of Caius Caesar and intimacy with Claudius,
 99    VI,     55|    Phraates, and his foster-father Caesar, and all that was glorious
100    VI,     70|           ever the favour of Caius Caesar, which, indeed, he had never
101    VI,     72|           sun. Once too when Caius Caesar in a casual conversation
102    VI,     74|       perverted and changed, Caius Caesar, who had hardly completed
103    VI,     77|            have expired, and Caius Caesar was going forth with a numerous
104    VI,     77|          grief or ignorance, Caius Caesar, in silent stupor, passed
105    VI,     78|     subsequently, Caius and Lucius Caesar were in their glory. Again
106  Miss        |        included the reign of Caius Caesar (Caligula), the son of Germanicus
107  Miss        |           reign of Claudius. Caius Caesar's reign was three years
108  Miss        |           consul, once under Caius Caesar, a second time under Claudius
109    XI,      1|      ringleader in the murder of a Caesar, and then had not feared
110    XI,      2|           the terrors of a prison. Caesar meanwhile was so unconscious
111    XI,      3|      Tiberius or the fury of Caius Caesar than by the treachery of
112    XI,     10|       imprisoned by order of Caius Caesar, made his way back to his
113    XI,     32|       exhausted which the Dictator Caesar by the Cassian and the emperor
114    XI,     38|         the assassination of Caius Caesar, Narcissus, who had contrived
115    XI,     44|           the same moment, to draw Caesar's eyes away from her, he
116    XI,     47|                                    Caesar was touched by his appeal
117   XII,     21|            the same time envoys to Caesar with a letter to this effect,
118   XII,     25|           of her marriage to Caius Caesar he purposely said nothing),
119   XII,     35|         time, Vannius, whom Drusus Caesar had made king of the Suevi,
120   XII,     40|           driven back the dictator Caesar, by whose valour they were
121   XII,     70|          first who were able, with Caesar's support, to settle conditions
122  XIII,      1|      former despotisms, that Caius Caesar used to call him the golden
123  XIII,      4|            eloquence. The dictator Caesar rivalled the greatest orators,
124  XIII,      4|  intentionally obscure. Even Caius Caesar's disordered intellect did
125  XIII,      7|           when Cneius Pompeius and Caesar Octavianus, in their eighteenth
126  XIII,     24|            son's murder, or that a Caesar is to have the consciousness
127   XIV,     13|          near the country house of Caesar the Dictator, which from
128   XIV,     60|      Thrasea, after much eulogy of Caesar, and most bitter censure
129   XIV,     67|          It is fourteen years ago, Caesar, that I was first associated
130    XV,     38|        down his royal crown before Caesar's image, and resume it only
131    XV,     66|           the daughter of Claudius Caesar, with a view to evoke the
132    XV,     95|         was the offspring of Caius Caesar, for he happened to be of
133    XV,     95|            look, or possibly Caius Caesar, who liked even harlots,
134   XVI,     18|     betrayed a conspiracy to Caius Caesar. ~ ~
135   XVI,     24|            it talked once of Caius Caesar and Marcus Cato. Thrasea
136   XVI,     36|       prayers, but only that thou, Caesar, and you, senators, might
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