Book,  Par.

 1     I,     57|           with drawn swords. Each accused man was on a raised platform
 2     I,     97|        proconsul of Bithynia, was accused of treason by his quaestor,
 3     I,     98|            he quietly allowed the accused to be acquitted of the charges
 4    II,     34|          family of Scribonii, was accused of revolutionary schemes.
 5    II,     35|         He at once pounced on the accused, went to the consuls, and
 6    II,     37| mysterious significance. When the accused denied this, it was decided
 7    II,     65|      grand-niece of Augustus, was accused of treason by an informer
 8    II,     65|     unfavourable speeches she was accused of having uttered against
 9    II,     86|          Pandus, whom Rhescuporis accused of being his personal enemy,
10    II,     87|           plight, to Rome. He was accused before the Senate by the
11    II,     89|    infernal deities. Piso too was accused of sending emissaries to
12    II,    103|           had fixed a day for the accused and his prosecutors. ~ ~
13   III,     11|        the inquiry. This even the accused did not refuse, fearing,
14   III,     12|           to the pleadings of the accused, and finally referred the
15   III,     13|           Germanicus, on what the accused rested his hopes, and how
16   III,     15|      still I would not hinder the accused from producing all the evidence
17   III,     32|          and Cneius Pompeius, was accused of pretending to be a mother
18   III,     32|           the imperial house. The accused was defended by her brother
19   III,     48|       mind that, whenever men are accused of extortion, most of the
20   III,     54|     meditated war against us. The accused was accordingly outlawed,
21   III,     68|        penalty was invoked on the accused. ~ ~
22   III,     92|           pro-consul of Asia, was accused by our allies of extortion;
23   III,     98|       Ennius, a Roman knight, was accused of treason, for having converted
24    IV,     17|       temper. Carsidius Sacerdos, accused of having helped our enemy
25    IV,     20|        the case was heard and the accused condemned. The cities of
26    IV,     25|          to his own disgrace. The accused begged a brief respite,
27    IV,     25|          Rome a commonwealth. The accused either said nothing, or,
28    IV,     29|                   Quintus Granius accused Piso of secret treasonable
29    IV,     31|        Augusta and Urgulania. The accused tried the steel in vain,
30    IV,     37|          destroy himself. But the accused with fearless spirit, looked
31    IV,     40|         rewards whenever a person accused of treason put an end to
32    IV,     46|       This was enough to ruin the accused; and then too the emperor
33    IV,     50|        the people of Cyzicus were accused of publicly neglecting the
34    IV,     58|           reproached in regard to accused persons, punished Aquilia
35     V,      9|          the most pitiable, to be accused for friendship's sake or
36    VI,      5|    Latinius Latiaris, accuser and accused, both alike objects of execration,
37    VI,     14|           Where they could not be accused of grasping at political
38    VI,     25|    richest man in Spain, was next accused of incest with his daughter,
39    VI,     31|           had proved fatal to the accused before he could be convicted
40    VI,     56|     Marcianus, a senator, who was accused of treason by Caius Gracchus,
41    VI,     73|       Publius Vitellius, had been accused of treason by Laelius Balbus.
42    XI,      2|          was heard. There Suilius accused him of corrupting the troops,
43    XI,      2|         was at this last that the accused broke silence, and burst
44    XI,      3|           old friendship with the accused, and of their joint homage
45    XI,     37|        and crushed before she was accused. The critical point was
46   XII,     25|     Claudius, without hearing the accused, first reminded the Senate
47  XIII,      5|     confining the accuser and the accused within the same walls, let
48  XIII,     11|           a senator, whom a slave accused, or of Julius Densus, a
49  XIII,     27|       Next Pallas and Burrus were accused of having conspired to raise
50  XIII,     27|           company. Burrus, though accused, gave his verdict as one
51  XIII,     32|            whenever freedmen were accused by their patrons, they were
52  XIII,     39|      Britain with an ovation, was accused of some foreign superstition
53  XIII,     40|            Cossutianus Capito was accused by the people of Cilicia;
54   XIV,     60|   consul-elect, proposed that the accused should be deprived of his
55   XIV,     86|    prolonged old age. Romanus had accused Seneca in stealthy calumnies,
56    XV,     24|       stated his opinion that the accused ought to be expelled from
57    XV,     68|           and bade him summon the accused. ~ ~
58    XV,     69|         dagger about which he was accused, had of old been regarded
59    XV,     93|           they had of having been accused. Atilla, the mother of Annaeus
60   XVI,     11|                          When the accused knew this and saw that he
61   XVI,     30|        futile, and useless to the accused, as it would be fatal to
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