Book,  Par.

 1     I,      3|         entitled "princes of the youth," and be consuls-elect.
 2     I,      6|          on the destruction of a youth whom they suspected and
 3     I,     42|       Caius Caesar, being then a youth of high spirit, cleared
 4     I,     75|         name Segimundus, but the youth hung back from a consciousness
 5     I,     77|        rather than ruin, For the youth and error of my son I entreat
 6    II,     46|    request of Marcus Hortalus, a youth of noble rank in conspicuous
 7    II,     52|   snatched from them while yet a youth, and how short-lived and
 8    II,     80|          Among the Gotones was a youth of noble birth, Catualda
 9    II,     93|       thus tearing me away in my youth by an untimely death from
10   III,      9|       impartiality, received the youth courteously, and enriched
11   III,      9|        simplicity and candour of youth, now had recourse to the
12   III,     20|       lived up to the time of my youth. ~ ~
13   III,     60|          tribe, with the noblest youth of Gaul, there devoting
14   III,     60|       also distributed among the youth arms which he had had secretly
15   III,     66|          so many triumphs in his youth, to covet now that he was
16   III,     83|          said, "that even a mere youth who has received so high
17    IV,      2|    attached himself in his early youth to Caius Caesar, grandson
18    IV,     14|          the eunuch, as from his youth and beauty he was his master'
19    IV,     20|        his voice they heard. The youth too had a modesty and a
20    IV,     23|        beyond endurance at their youth being honoured equally with
21    IV,     37|          and cheerful looks, the youth, at once accuser and witness,
22    IV,     62|         and the son, when a mere youth, was banished by Augustus,
23    IV,     71|          her with a husband; her youth still fitted her for marriage,
24    VI,     17|     ancient usage because of his youth. Gallus he scolded for having
25    VI,     47|    infamy effaced the virtues of youth. ~ ~
26    VI,     71|         son was in the vigour of youth and enjoyed the people's
27    VI,     74|        he to be secure under the youth of the coming sovereign?
28    VI,     76|       passed the frail period of youth.~ ~
29    XI,     12|        He was still in his first youth, and might have been one
30    XI,     19|         chief of the Chatti. The youth himself was of distinguished
31    XI,     27|     prevented a man in his early youth from becoming a consul or
32   XII,      3|        still in the freshness of youth, would not carry off the
33   XII,      6|       and wont from his earliest youth to obey the laws. ~ ~
34   XII,     47|       woman. The flower of their youth, picked out for war, invaded
35   XII,     49|          title of "prince of the youth of Rome." A donative was
36   XII,     74|    equally high rank. In beauty, youth, and wealth they differed
37  XIII,      3|         men guided the emperor's youth with an unity of purpose
38  XIII,      3|          frailty of the prince's youth, should he loathe virtue,
39  XIII,     14| concealment of indulgences which youth and the highest rank might
40  XIII,     21|       Sextius Africanus, a noble youth, had been deterred from
41  XIII,     58|         she was attracted by the youth and fashionable elegance
42  XIII,     70|        the Frisii moved up their youth to the forests and swamps,
43  XIII,     72|        now as foes, their entire youth were slain in a strange
44   XIV,      6|     conversation, passing from a youth's playful familiarity to
45   XIV,     27|         tastes was infecting the youth who devoted themselves to
46   XIV,     30|         where he might enjoy his youth safely and quietly." And
47   XIV,     43|         and women, leaving their youth alone to face the foe. Surprised,
48   XIV,     67|       the early training of your youth, an ample reward for the
49   XIV,     70|    earned them; for in these the youth of Augustus was spent. And
50   XIV,     70|         my boyhood, then over my youth, with wisdom, counsel, and
51   XIV,     71|     rather, if the frailty of my youth goes in any respect astray,
52    XV,     93|    encouraged the studies of our youth by his eloquence; Rufus
53   XVI,      7|       the quiet demeanour of his youth. The emperor accordingly
54   XVI,      7|       with him Lucius Silanus, a youth of noble birth and reckless
55   XVI,     30|        Arulenus, an enthusiastic youth, who, in his ardour for
56   XVI,     33|     Tiberius? As for Montanus, a youth without a blemish, author
57   XVI,     34|       and the thoughtlessness of youth, had consulted them, only
58   XVI,     37|         province; that, from her youth, she could not have been
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