Book,  Par.

  1     I,      5|         afterwards died, by a death some thought to be self-inflicted, there
  2     I,     11|             these the most imposing were thought fitting. The procession
  3     I,     33|            Cneius Lentulus, because they thought that he above all others,
  4     I,     34|                  their sight, and it was thought she was buried in the gloom,
  5     I,     39|                 it without meaning, they thought, that, hostile to an impious
  6     I,     42|          consistency that one would have thought them to be under command. ~ ~
  7     I,     62|         vengeance against the mutineers, thought that he ought still to allow
  8     I,     63|                  sounded those whom they thought best for their purpose,
  9     I,     71|                  such amusements, and he thought it citizenlike to mingle
 10     I,     81|               moved to compassion by the thought of their kinsfolk and friends,
 11     I,     82|                Germanicus, or because he thought that the spectacle of the
 12     I,     86|                perfectly fearless. As he thought over future possibilities,
 13     I,     92|                Tiberius. "Such zeal," he thought, "could not be guileless;
 14    II,      2|                   his eldest son. Caesar thought this a great honour to himself,
 15    II,      9|               raise a new barrow was not thought necessary. All the country
 16    II,     29|                 vast and deep that it is thought to be the remotest shoreless
 17    II,     41|                 to suggest anything they thought for the State's advantage.
 18    II,     48|                 but that if the senators thought it right, he would bestow
 19    II,     50|                  credulity. Sometimes he thought that he must overlook nothing,
 20    II,     54|                Tiberius's friendship was thought to be dangerous. When, after
 21    II,     54|                 compulsion, should it be thought that he saw through it,
 22    II,     57|              them as far beneath him. He thought it a certainty that he had
 23    II,     58|                  the army. Tiberius also thought that it was better for the
 24    II,     65|                  house. Adultery, it was thought, was sufficiently guarded
 25    II,     65|              asked by the consul what he thought of the unfavourable speeches
 26    II,     87|                  though he hesitated and thought of his guilty deeds, to
 27    II,     96|                  there were who, as they thought of his beauty, his age,
 28    II,    112|                 grief to the people, who thought that the increase of Drusus'
 29    II,    113|                  not yet expired, it was thought sufficient to decide Vistilia'
 30   III,      4|           grandmother and uncle might be thought to follow the mother's example
 31   III,     32|              first to the question. Some thought this a gracious act, done
 32   III,     41|                Claudius. The emperor was thought to have polluted the nobility
 33   III,     47|               were against him, for they thought Lepidus gentle rather than
 34   III,     53|             father's dark policy, it was thought, was mitigated. Even voluptuousness
 35   III,     79|            succession. In this manner he thought to check the perverse ambition
 36    IV,      4|           considering every plan Sejanus thought his easiest revenge was
 37    IV,     10|                      Sejanus accordingly thought that he must be prompt,
 38    IV,     24|                terror among others. Many thought that he had provoked further
 39    IV,     31|              grandson a dagger. This was thought equivalent to a hint from
 40    IV,     32|               Former generals, when they thought that their successes were
 41    IV,     42|             State necessity. The act was thought cruel at the moment, but
 42    IV,     51|            contempt for honours, and now thought it right to reply to the
 43    IV,     55|                duties imposed on him; he thought it enough for his family
 44    IV,     73|            living rock. Pergamos, it was thought, had been sufficiently honoured
 45    IV,     75|            betrayed by his actions. Some thought that in his old age he was
 46    IV,     94|              neighbourhood of Rome; they thought it enough to quit the island
 47     V,      1|               was more gracious than was thought fitting in ladies of former
 48    VI,     12|            freedmen and hall-porters was thought something very grand. What
 49    VI,     45|            disdained the aged and, as he thought, unwarlike Tiberius, eagerly
 50    VI,     53|               Meantime the Parthians, he thought, indulgent as they are to
 51    VI,     55|                  to the crown. Vitellius thought it enough to have displayed
 52    VI,     65|          imploring a brief delay. It was thought best to wait for men of
 53    VI,     71|                hatred. Tiberius had even thought of Claudius, as he was of
 54    XI,      7|               the orators of old who had thought fame with posterity the
 55    XI,      9|                must perish." The emperor thought that these arguments, though
 56    XI,     22|                 liked, but of which many thought ill. "Why," men asked, "
 57    XI,     37|                thrill of alarm when they thought of the apathy of Claudius,
 58    XI,     40|                think of safety before he thought of vengeance. It is quite
 59    XI,     42|             peril took away all power of thought, promptly resolved to meet
 60    XI,     44|              wife, and now, returning in thought to the remembrance of his
 61   XII,      9|                  it the praetorship. She thought this would be universally
 62   XII,     14|                foolish young prince, who thought that the highest position
 63   XII,     18|                  abandoned, where it was thought expedient to leave a garrison,
 64   XII,     19|                  rest of the people, who thought safety impossible when they
 65   XII,     46|                the joy of the enemy, who thought that a campaign at least,
 66   XII,     49|                manhood, that he might be thought qualified for political
 67   XII,     50|              praetorian cohorts; for she thought that they cherished Messalina'
 68   XII,     56|                in turn. Such a treaty is thought to have a mysterious sanctity,
 69   XII,     57|               but that they might not be thought to have approved the crime
 70   XII,     64|                  governor of Judaea, and thought that he could do any evil
 71   XII,     74|            sister of her husband Cneius, thought herself of equally high
 72  XIII,     42|           foreign power, and Corbulo too thought it due to the grandeur of
 73  XIII,     45|                   plundering all whom he thought loyal to Rome, while he
 74  XIII,     51| lightning-flashes, and thus the city was thought to be given up to destruction,
 75  XIII,     53|                  his house. Was it to be thought a worse offence to obtain
 76  XIII,     63|               Why," it was asked, "if he thought that the public welfare
 77   XIV,      3|                   or perhaps because the thought of a strange passion seemed
 78   XIV,      6|               seemed to indicate serious thought, and then, after protracted
 79   XIV,      7|                  majority. The crew then thought it best to throw the vessel
 80   XIV,     14|              herself and had spurned the thought. For when she consulted
 81   XIV,     20|                   when Seneca and Burrus thought it best to concede one point
 82   XIV,     31|             conveyed to Rome, and it was thought that, by thus immersing
 83   XIV,     32|               having demolished Artaxata thought that he ought to avail himself
 84   XIV,     42|                 our generals, while they thought more of what was agreeable
 85   XIV,     47|               and destruction, without a thought of plunder. When once the
 86   XIV,     52|             contemptible, except that he thought poverty the greatest of
 87   XIV,     55|            precedent. At the same time I thought that any influence I possess
 88   XIV,     60|             treason was revived, and men thought that it was not so much
 89   XIV,     65|              admired but what Seneca was thought to have originated? Surely
 90   XIV,     73|           becoming more powerful and who thought that the wicked schemings
 91   XIV,     77|                 his children, to whom he thought the emperor, if harassed
 92   XIV,     78|                 he gave the most anxious thought to the safety of the State.
 93    XV,      2|                  possession of it. And I thought to myself that I had duly
 94    XV,      6|            notwithstanding his successes thought he must use his good fortune
 95    XV,     15|           fortune was adverse, had taken thought for safety." ~ ~
 96    XV,     26|                  and to report what they thought about each man's loyalty.
 97    XV,     33|             something worse, the emperor thought it enough to reproach him
 98    XV,     37|           barbarians, and they therefore thought his advice trustworthy.
 99    XV,     38|                  armies. "But now," they thought, "the calamity is reversed;
100    XV,     43|            incident occurred, which many thought unlucky, though to the emperor
101    XV,     46|                 with great terrors, they thought what happened the worst
102    XV,     53|                 new city. Some, however, thought that its old arrangement
103    XV,     61|               But their mainstay, it was thought, was Faenius Rufus, the
104    XV,     62|               she had never before had a thought of anything noble) began
105    XV,     62|               murder, and had not, as he thought, been promoted in proportion
106    XV,     65|                  victim of a crime. Many thought that Piso shunned also the
107    XV,     67|                and evidently in profound thought, though he affected gaiety
108    XV,     67|                 held over him a dreadful thought, that many had been present,
109    XV,     89|                also, the consul, whom he thought an impetuous and deeply
110   XVI,      4|                 applause. One would have thought they were rejoicing, and
111   XVI,      7|             those who recalling the past thought of her shamelessness and
112   XVI,     15|               many in close intimacy. He thought there must be a meaning
113   XVI,     17|                 horrors is that I be not thought to hate men who perished
114   XVI,     18|                 with ex-consuls. He also thought that there was a shorter
115   XVI,     18|               foes to the prince. It was thought that he had invented this
116   XVI,     19|                 taste, while the emperor thought nothing charming or elegant
117   XVI,     28|            advice was offered. Those who thought it best for him to enter
118   XVI,     29|                   on the other hand, who thought that he ought to wait at
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