Book,  Par.

 1     I,      4|         was his mother too with a woman caprice. They must, it seemed,
 2     I,     19|            and indeed regarding a woman's elevation as a slight
 3     I,     79|          has carried off one weak woman. Before me, three legions,
 4     I,     92|       have dared that base act. A woman of heroic spirit, she assumed
 5     I,     92|          nothing left them when a woman went among the companies,
 6     I,     92|        officers, than generals. A woman had quelled a mutiny which
 7    II,      5|         tried the government of a woman named Erato and having soon
 8    II,     63|           of Aemilia Musa, a rich woman who died intestate, on which
 9    II,     69|        Apollo. There, it is not a woman, as at Delphi, but a priest
10    II,     71|     within the proper limits of a woman, would be present at the
11    II,     93|       many wars has perished by a woman's treachery. You will have
12    II,     98|    Sentius at once sent to Rome a woman infamous for poisonings
13    II,     99|         by all. Here indeed was a woman of the highest nobility,
14    II,    113|           it was provided that no woman whose grandfather, father,
15   III,     48|           at their beck. Lately a woman had presided at the drill
16    IV,      4|           as a girl, she became a woman of surpassing beauty. Pretending
17    IV,      4|       triumph, and assured that a woman after having parted with
18    IV,     55|  prosperity and urged on too by a woman's passion, Livia now insisting
19    IV,     71|    marriage, which was a virtuous woman's only solace, and there
20    IV,     72|        sorrowing and unsuspecting woman by sending his agents, under
21     V,      2|         to win the affection of a woman; he was witty too, and accustomed
22    VI,     14|           a crime. Vitia, an aged woman, mother of Fufius Geminus,
23    VI,     76|         the greater weakness of a woman's mind under such an affliction
24    XI,      3|        than by the treachery of a woman and the shameless mouth
25    XI,     39|           Calpurnia (that was the woman's name), as soon as she
26   XII,      3|           family. He hoped that a woman who was the mother of many
27   XII,      8|        was under the control of a woman, who did not, like Messalina,
28   XII,     44|         to ancient manners, for a woman to sit in front of Roman
29   XII,     47|           under the dominion of a woman. The flower of their youth,
30   XII,     50|           popular reverence for a woman who up to this time was
31   XII,     60|         that she was no base-born woman, bound up her wound and
32   XII,     77|       tools of despotism. By this woman's art the poison was prepared,
33  XIII,      7|         on one who was ruled by a woman; or whether battles and
34  XIII,     14|  Agrippina, however, raved with a woman's fury about having a freedwoman
35  XIII,     14|          be in love with the same woman, and had lent his name as
36  XIII,     14|           beware of the arts of a woman, was always daring and was
37  XIII,     16|       abetted such arrogance in a woman, removed Pallas from the
38  XIII,     17|          who had in his custody a woman under sentence for poisoning,
39  XIII,     21|       spoke of her as an immodest woman in the decline of life,
40  XIII,     24|         as lightly as a shameless woman does her paramours. And
41  XIII,     57|       frenzy of Pontia, a married woman, bribed her by most costly
42  XIII,     57|        the father of the murdered woman, and was condemned by the
43  XIII,     59|         of possession of the same woman. Often, as he rose from
44  XIII,     59|      again that she was a married woman and could not give up her
45   XIV,      1|          grew more ardent. As the woman had no hope of marriage
46   XIV,      3|          a female's aid against a woman's fascinations, and hurried
47   XIV,      3|       comparatively credible in a woman, who in her girlish years
48   XIV,      4|     tamper with the servants of a woman who, from her familiarity
49   XIV,     16|           to swear obedience to a woman, to the disgrace of the
50   XIV,     16| accidental, or that a shipwrecked woman had sent one man with a
51   XIV,     18|            which meant nothing. A woman gave birth to a snake, and
52   XIV,     46|         she said, "it is not as a woman descended from noble ancestry,
53   XIV,     46|         conquer or die. This is a woman's resolve; as for men, they
54   XIV,     79|         then married Poppaea. The woman who had long been Nero's
55    XV,     47|       visible, which, even when a woman weds darkness hides.~ ~
56    XV,     62|           old acquaintance of the woman, or on the strength of a
57    XV,     72|     Proculus, and assuming that a woman's frame must be unequal
58    XV,     72|          that they might not be a woman's scorn, overcame her positive
59    XV,     75|          love of his wife, a base woman, with only a beautiful person
60    XV,     75|        man, the profligacy of the woman, blazoned Piso's infamy. ~ ~
61   XVI,     11|      pleading with the cries of a woman, now again forgetting her
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