Book,  Par.

 1     I,     30|         the praetorians, Aelius Sejanus, who had been associated
 2     I,     92|      inflamed and aggravated by Sejanus, who, with his thorough
 3   III,     20|   deluded by vain promises from Sejanus. Nor did he perish, they
 4   III,     41|         heard with disgust that Sejanus was to be the father-in-law
 5   III,     41|       have yet further elevated Sejanus, whom they already suspected
 6   III,     51|       that Blaesus was uncle of Sejanus and so had very powerful
 7   III,     92|     senator by the influence of Sejanus, he shamed his origin, low
 8   III,    102|         time he highly extolled Sejanus on the ground that it was
 9   III,    102|      building. The Senate voted Sejanus a statue, which was to be
10   III,    102|         them as a compliment to Sejanus, whose uncle Blaesus was. ~ ~
11    IV,      1|     cause and origin was Aelius Sejanus, commander of the praetorian
12    IV,      2|        towards others, was with Sejanus alone careless and freespoken.
13    IV,      4|     dispute, raised his fist at Sejanus, and, when he defended himself,
14    IV,      4|       On considering every plan Sejanus thought his easiest revenge
15    IV,      4|     frequent secret interviews. Sejanus, to avert his mistress's
16    IV,      9|       system continued, because Sejanus, as yet only in the beginning
17    IV,     10|                                 Sejanus accordingly thought that
18    IV,     14|         not even yet exhausted. Sejanus, it is said, having seduced
19    IV,     14|         place of the poisoning, Sejanus, with the most consummate
20    IV,     15|     even with strangers. But as Sejanus had the credit of contriving
21    IV,     15|        was betrayed by Apicata, Sejanus's wife, and fully divulged,
22    IV,     16|          hastened its downfall. Sejanus when he saw that the death
23    IV,     16|         virtue of Agrippina. So Sejanus inveighed against Agrippina'
24    IV,     20|         the notorious enmity of Sejanus. ~ ~
25    IV,     23|       by premature honours. For Sejanus spoke vehemently, and charged
26    IV,     25|       humoured the malignity of Sejanus to his own disgrace. The
27    IV,     35|  Tiberius, out of compliment to Sejanus, the glory of whose uncle
28    IV,     46|    Pinarius Natta, creatures of Sejanus. This was enough to ruin
29    IV,     55|                                 Sejanus meanwhile, dazed by his
30    IV,     56|         the loyal sentiments of Sejanus and briefly enumerating
31    IV,     56| marriage? For you are mistaken, Sejanus, if you think that you will
32    IV,     57|                                 Sejanus, no longer thinking of his
33    IV,     72|                                 Sejanus meanwhile yet more deeply
34    IV,     75|       retirement to the arts of Sejanus, still, as he passed six
35    IV,     76|       one Roman knight, besides Sejanus, of the highest order, Curtius
36    IV,     77|      friendship and fidelity of Sejanus. They were dining in a country
37    IV,     77|   general flight of the guests. Sejanus hung over the emperor, and
38    IV,     77|         the armies desired, and Sejanus would not dare to oppose
39    IV,     78|   instantly break it off, while Sejanus's friends would stand their
40    IV,     78|    mother Livia and by Livia to Sejanus. Nero's brother Drusus Sejanus
41    IV,     78|  Sejanus. Nero's brother Drusus Sejanus actually drew into his scheme
42    IV,     78| Agrippina towards Nero. And yet Sejanus, while he favoured Drusus,
43    IV,     85|     believe, which even at Rome Sejanus used to foster, and which
44    IV,     86|         was access only through Sejanus, and the good will of Sejanus
45    IV,     86|   Sejanus, and the good will of Sejanus was to be gained only by
46    IV,     86|        daring invective against Sejanus, against his cruelty, pride
47    IV,     88|       were the victims slain to Sejanus." Wherever he turned his
48    IV,     90|      expose what he was hiding. Sejanus however pacified him, not
49    IV,     94|        round them to Caesar and Sejanus, both of whom they earnestly
50    IV,     94|   thither, anxiously looking to Sejanus, approach to whom was particularly
51    IV,     94|  forbidden them, and those whom Sejanus had not deigned to accost
52     V,      3|        the habit of a life, and Sejanus did not dare to set himself
53     V,      5| Fictitious speeches too against Sejanus were published under the
54     V,      5|       Consequently the wrath of Sejanus was the more furious, and
55     V,      7|        of the sixth, recounting Sejanus' marriage and fall and covering
56     V,      9|  fortune, and even he who chose Sejanus to be his colleague and
57     V,     11|         after the punishment of Sejanus, had fled to the gardens
58     V,     12|       the remaining children of Sejanus, though the fury of the
59     V,     14|      crushing the satellites of Sejanus. Regulus, who, unless he
60    VI,      2|     memory, and the property of Sejanus was to be taken from the
61    VI,      3|     foreseen. Or was not one of Sejanus's satellites rather seeking
62    VI,      4|        the chosen instrument of Sejanus in his treacherous designs
63    VI,      9|   discreetly, the friendship of Sejanus. Hence they were the more
64    VI,     11|    repudiated the friendship of Sejanus, dared, when impeached on
65    VI,     11|        that I was the friend of Sejanus, that I anxiously sought
66    VI,     11|     with honours; intimacy with Sejanus was in every case a powerful
67    VI,     11|        alone. It was really not Sejanus of Vulsinii, it was a member
68    VI,     11|         help or to injure. That Sejanus was such, no one will deny.
69    VI,     12|         Senators, think only of Sejanus's last day, but of his sixteen
70    VI,     14|    co-operation of Marinus that Sejanus had ruined Curtius Atticus.
71    VI,     19|      life, had been a friend of Sejanus, but with no serious result.
72    VI,     25|   accusation of complicity with Sejanus. There lay, singly or in
73    VI,     32|     instructed that, in case of Sejanus attempting an armed revolt,
74    VI,     35|        after the destruction of Sejanus, and, when she found no
75    VI,     35|        on the same day on which Sejanus had paid the penalty of
76    VI,     43|       through the friendship of Sejanus, but through what was no
77    VI,     44|        he had fixed on a son of Sejanus for his son-in-law, was
78    VI,     44|      him that his alliance with Sejanus had not originated in his
79    VI,     44|     alone of all connected with Sejanus lived in safety and in high
80    VI,     56|        since the destruction of Sejanus, neither time, intreaties,
81    VI,     56|    ignorant of the villanies of Sejanus, and now wished any remarks,
82    VI,     74|         fears, long detested by Sejanus, now by Macro, always, indeed,
83    VI,     74|   superior wickedness, to crush Sejanus had by yet more numerous
84    VI,     78|        while he loved or feared Sejanus. Finally, he plunged into
85  XIII,     58|    promotion, the friendship of Sejanus was his ruin. This Poppaea
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