Book,  Par.

  1     I,     13|         remedy for his distracted country was the rule of a single
  2     I,     19|             others "mother of the country," and a majority proposed
  3     I,     68|           slaughter into the open country. At the same moment the
  4     I,     74|      tribe, and ravaging the open country, Germanicus marched back
  5     I,     79|  standards which I hung up to our country's gods. Let Segestes dwell
  6     I,     80|         the Bructeri, and all the country between the rivers Amisia
  7     I,     93|           hither and thither. The country too was flooded; sea, shore,
  8     I,     95|           title of "father of his country," which the people had so
  9     I,    104|          streams and overflow the country. Nor did the people of Reate
 10     I,    104|     altars to the rivers of their country. Tiber himself would be
 11    II,      4|           in Armenia, then a free country, and exposed to the power
 12    II,      9|        thought necessary. All the country between the fort Aliso and
 13    II,     10|         were to be marched to the country on the right, and thus several
 14    II,     29|         trireme alone reached the country of the Chauci. Day and night,
 15    II,     31|         energy, advanced into the country, laying it waste, and utterly
 16    II,     41|         against the luxury of the country by Quintus Haterius, an
 17    II,     59|          treaty; a traitor to his country, a satellite of Caesar,
 18    II,     62|         rushing out into the open country, for there people were swallowed
 19    II,     70|      soldiers to roam through the country and take their pleasure.
 20    II,     72|          been of old an unsettled country from the character of its
 21    II,     77|        had specially reserved the country, from a fear that any one
 22    II,     78|      natives say, was born in the country and was the original hero,
 23    II,     78|     interpret the language of his country, related how once there
 24    II,     83|       king of Thrace. That entire country had been in the possession
 25    II,     93|           from parents, children, country. Now, cut off by the wickedness
 26    II,     96|           the vicinity too of the country where he died, likened his
 27    II,    116|           title of "father of the country" which once before too had
 28   III,      5|      spoke of as the glory of the country, the sole surviving off
 29   III,      7|         Romans had died for their country and that none had been honoured
 30   III,     13|           excitement of the whole country, which wondered how much
 31   III,     25|           who had made war on his country, and that of Julius Antonius
 32   III,     37|         of informers; and now the country suffered from its laws,
 33   III,     61|       saddened by anxiety for the country, but many in their loathing
 34   III,     64|       surrendered, to an adjacent country house. There by his own
 35   III,     73|            The vast dimensions of country houses? The number of slaves
 36   III,     75|    shrubberies, forsooth, and our country houses will have to support
 37   III,     83|          take the auspices on his country's soil. There is a war,
 38   III,     86|     belief. They had in their own country a river Cenchrius, a grove
 39   III,    104|         he had rendered the whole country embarrassing and perilous
 40    IV,      6|        within the entire tract of country stretching as far as the
 41    IV,      6|         from the situation of the country, were in the rear of the
 42    IV,     11|        and before heaven and your country I adjure you to receive
 43    IV,     36|           In the same part of the country too was Curtius Lupus, the
 44    IV,     60|   community, as being now his own country.~ ~
 45    IV,     63|       horse, and reached a wooded country, where he parted with his
 46    IV,     63|            in the language of his country, that it was in vain to
 47    IV,     64|        highlands of a mountainous country made them unusually fierce.
 48    IV,     65|         after the manner of their country were disporting themselves
 49    IV,     66|           for their own and their country's enslavement. ~ ~
 50    IV,     73|  multitude; Lydus remained in the country of his fathers; Tyrrhenus
 51    IV,     76|         to extreme old age in the country or on the coast near Rome
 52    IV,     77|    Sejanus. They were dining in a country house called "The Cave,"
 53    IV,     85|           changed the face of the country. Greeks, so tradition says,
 54    IV,     85|     filled the island with twelve country houses, each with a grand
 55     V,      9|          from the miseries of our country." ~ ~
 56    VI,     40|          most learned men of that country and of Greece with abundant
 57    VI,     45|          he meant to seize on the country possessed by Cyrus and afterwards
 58    VI,     47|         endure the customs of his country, was carried off by an illness.
 59    VI,     47|           held the throne of that country. He then intrusted the whole
 60    VI,     49|         they did a densely wooded country, were more inured to hardship
 61    VI,     52|       from their knowledge of the country fought at an advantage.
 62    VI,     53|        his flight into the remote country on the borders of Scythia,
 63    VI,     62|        means of the nature of the country against the king's unwarlike
 64    VI,     66|           way to the heart of the country and to its other tribes,
 65    XI,     19|           fashion and that of his country. So the emperor made him
 66    XI,     19|          said, "no native of this country to fill the place of king
 67    XI,     19|        ever waged war against his country and his home more savagely
 68    XI,     33|           title of "Father of the Country" had, he argued, been indiscriminately
 69   XII,     15|         Tigris they traversed the country of the Adiabeni, whose king
 70   XII,     19|      having at last preferred his country's interests, gave hostages
 71   XII,     22|         be undertaking a war in a country without roads, on a harbourless
 72   XII,     36|        throughout the surrounding country and rendered an engagement
 73   XII,     37|        with encampments the whole country to the Avon and Severn.
 74   XII,     38|         legions encamped in their country. That this might be the
 75   XII,     39|          the deceptiveness of the country, he at once shifted the
 76   XII,     47|        and they were scouring the country far and wide, till Didius
 77   XII,     53|           in terror from the open country and forced him into the
 78   XII,     57|       that any crime in a foreign country was to be welcomed with
 79   XII,     65|    Curtius Severus; for the rough country in the neighbourhood, suited
 80   XII,     73|       opposite to the blind men's country. This obscure hint pointed
 81  XIII,     42|          empires, though by their country's position, by resemblance
 82  XIII,     49|         attack the capital of the country, Artaxata. The legions however
 83  XIII,     61|          was ordered to leave his country, and confine himself within
 84  XIII,     70|         not retire into their old country or obtain a new territory
 85  XIII,     73|        earth seized everywhere on country houses, crops, and villages,
 86   XIV,      6|            This was the name of a country house, washed by a bay of
 87   XIV,     13|         road to Misenum, near the country house of Caesar the Dictator,
 88   XIV,     32|   Iberians on them, ravaged their country and punished the enemy's
 89   XIV,     33|          general crossed into the country of the Tauraunites, where
 90   XIV,     42|       Rome had received the whole country as a gift, were stript of
 91   XIV,     65|           the magnificence of his country houses he almost surpassed
 92   XIV,     69|       reserved for my gardens and country houses. You have yet before
 93   XIV,     70|          parks, investments, your country houses, are liable to accidents.
 94    XV,      4|          s approaches. And as the country was deficient in water,
 95    XV,      9|           and the ravaging of the country which Corbulo had left untouched.
 96    XV,     13|     supplies, marched through the country of Commagene, then through
 97    XV,     36| throughout the plain and the hill country, among the strong and among
 98    XV,     45|      account than his love of his country. "He had seen the sad countenances
 99    XV,     52|  meanwhile availed himself of his country's desolation, and erected
100    XV,     52|          marshes. The rest of the country is broken rock and perfectly
101    XV,     73|           through private houses, country fields, and the neighbouring
102   XVI,     24|        Capito further added, "The country in its eagerness for discord
103   XVI,     32|          A man who grieves at the country's prosperity, who treats
104   XVI,     32|         him sever his life from a country all love for which he has
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License