Book,  Par.

 1     I,      1|        empire under the title of "Prince." But the successes and
 2     I,     13| dictatorship, but under that of a prince. The ocean and remote rivers
 3     I,     30|       advise and direct the young prince, and to hold out punishment
 4     I,     47|          should be written in the prince's name, to the effect that
 5     I,     54|           a soldier, no sign of a prince's wife, none of the usual
 6     I,     97|        confidence of a vindictive prince, and soon imperilled all
 7    II,      9|          old altar of Drusus. The prince restored the altar, and
 8    II,     53|         resolved to get the young prince out of the way, under pretence
 9    II,     58|          was better for the young prince, who was being demoralised
10    II,     70|         the island of Rhodes. The prince was not ignorant of the
11    II,     77|     regulations of Augustus. That prince, among other secrets of
12    II,     89|          as savagely assailed the prince. Piso then resolved to quit
13    II,     92|             For a brief space the prince's hopes rose; then his frame
14   III,     14|      there had provoked the young prince by wilful opposition and
15   III,     36|          to the Senate and to the prince, in reliance on the influence
16   III,     45|      sharp contest gave the young prince the means of acquiring popularity.
17   III,     68|        which, in the event of the prince's death, might be published
18   III,     71|           suggested a fear that a prince who clung to oldfashioned
19   III,     73|          loftier is expected of a prince, and while everybody takes
20   III,     76|           the anxieties which the prince has to sustain, and the
21   III,     78|    respectful feeling towards the prince and a love of emulation
22   III,     80|        the character of the young prince. He had, he reminded them,
23   III,     94|         preliminary eulogy on the prince's clemency, Piso pronounced
24   III,     96|          It is not possible for a prince's knowledge to embrace everything,
25    IV,     10|      during the whole time of the prince's illness, either because
26    IV,     20|       grace of person worthy of a prince, the more charming because
27    IV,     77|         the timidity of the young prince." ~ ~
28    IV,     78|          smile. Whether the young prince spoke or held his tongue,
29    IV,     84|      nobles and the bounty of the prince brought relief to suffering,
30     V,      4|        and that it was not by the prince's will that ruin was being
31    VI,     11|         will deny. To explore the prince's secret thoughts, or any
32    VI,     13|   Vestilius was excluded from the prince's table. He then tried the
33    VI,     32|         he was to hurry the young prince out of the confinement in
34    VI,     34|           that a hitherto cunning prince, who had shrouded his wickedness
35    VI,     44|           be held innocent in the prince and be a source of ruin
36    VI,     45|          Germanicus had made that prince faithful to the Romans and
37    VI,     52|     Sinnaces, whose enmity to the prince I have already mentioned,
38    VI,     53|          as they are to an absent prince, though restless under his
39    VI,     68|           had lately been, to the prince whom now again they were
40    VI,     70|       Ennia to inveigle the young prince by a pretence of love, and
41   XII,     12|  commissioned to escort the young prince to the bank of the Euphrates.~ ~
42   XII,     14|         by whom the foolish young prince, who thought that the highest
43   XII,     17|           and that Cotys, a young prince without experience, was
44   XII,     29|   strengthen himself with a young prince who could share his cares
45   XII,     45|          or indeed of any captive prince by any of our generals to
46   XII,     49|        capital with the title of "prince of the youth of Rome." A
47   XII,     52|      accordingly seeing the young prince had power in his grasp and
48   XII,     59|           crime held by a foreign prince, raised an army and prepared
49   XII,     74|     Lepida tried to win the young prince's heart by flattery and
50   XII,     76|          heaven, now to the young prince, with entreaty that as he
51  XIII,      3|        confine the frailty of the prince's youth, should he loathe
52  XIII,      4|        the day of the funeral the prince pronounced Claudius's panegyric,
53  XIII,      6|       with alarm, motioned to the prince to go and meet his mother.
54  XIII,      7|        talking began to ask how a prince of scarce seventeen was
55  XIII,      9|           of the thanksgiving the prince should wear the triumphal
56  XIII,     13|   equivocal secrets, and even the prince's older friends did not
57  XIII,     14|     Serenus, had veiled the young prince's intrigue in its beginning
58  XIII,     16|          menaces, sparing not the prince's ears her solemn protest "
59  XIII,     17|        the character of the young prince, which a trifling circumstance
60  XIII,     18|     betrayed by the death of both prince and attendant. A cup as
61  XIII,     19|       Senate and people towards a prince who was the only survivor
62  XIII,     23|           Having thus allayed the prince's fears, they went at daybreak
63  XIII,     29|         happened to encounter the prince in the darkness, and because
64   XIV,     20|    amusements and rejoices when a prince draws them the same way.
65   XIV,     60|         him, under so excellent a prince, and by a Senate bound by
66   XIV,     64|        greater influence with the prince, and was the associate of
67   XIV,     65|            Openly inimical to the prince's amusements, he disparaged
68   XIV,     69|        you in giving as much as a prince can bestow on a friend,
69   XIV,     69|         friend can receive from a prince. All else only fosters envy,
70   XIV,     82|         come to the rescue of the prince's life against a plotting
71   XIV,     82|           before friends whom the prince had called in, as a sort
72    XV,      1|     achievements and of a foreign prince, Tigranes, having been set
73    XV,     38|         Roman commended the young prince for abandoning rash courses,
74    XV,     66|           to throw himself at the prince's knees in earnest entreaty,
75    XV,     85|       show gratitude to so good a prince. Faenius could not meet
76    XV,     96|       bitterness into what by the prince's clemency had been hushed
77    XV,     97|         by this proposal that the prince had transcended all mortal
78   XVI,     14|      Lugdunum was consoled by the prince for a ruinous disaster by
79   XVI,     15|          of themselves and of the prince. Some swift galleys were
80   XVI,     18|         though bitter foes to the prince. It was thought that he
81   XVI,     19|           And so he worked on the prince's cruelty, which dominated
82   XVI,     20|            he described fully the prince's shameful excesses, with
83   XVI,     23|   sacrifice for the safety of the prince or for his heavenly voice.
84   XVI,     24|         your accomplishments. The prince's prosperity he despises.
85   XVI,     26|            where he increased the prince's animosity by his uprightness
86   XVI,     32|           those who disparage the prince, come among us; let him
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