Book,  Par.

 1     I,     14|        and Brundisium, and by his marriage with the sister, and paid
 2    II,      4|      fashion, they were united in marriage and in royal power.~ ~
 3    II,     99|   ill-starred fruitfulness of her marriage. Piso was at the island
 4   III,     41|       further increased by Nero's marriage to Julia, Drusus's daughter.
 5   III,     49|          s personal vigilance the marriage tie is scarcely preserved
 6    IV,      4|       lured her on to thoughts of marriage, of a share in sovereignty,
 7    IV,     21|   formerly, the primitive form of marriage having been given up or
 8    IV,     55|       insisting on his promise of marriage, addressed a memorial to
 9    IV,     56|          more fiercely if Livia's marriage rends, so to say, the house
10    IV,     56|   rendered more intense by such a marriage? For you are mistaken, Sejanus,
11    IV,     57|         no longer thinking of his marriage but filled with a deeper
12    IV,     71|        youth still fitted her for marriage, which was a virtuous woman'
13    IV,     95|     Cneius Domitius, directed the marriage to be celebrated at Rome.
14     V,      1|          blood of Rome. Her first marriage, by which she had children,
15     V,      1|     allied as she was through the marriage of Agrippina and Germanicus
16     V,      7|        sixth, recounting Sejanus' marriage and fall and covering a
17    VI,     38|        one cause of grief was the marriage of Julia, Drusus's daughter
18    VI,     53|            as he was connected by marriage alliances with the Hyrcanians
19    VI,     61|         Aemilia Lepida too, whose marriage with the younger Drusus
20    VI,     70|           him by an engagement of marriage, and the lad, provided he
21    VI,     78|        dangerous ground after his marriage with Julia, whether he tolerated
22    XI,     35| celebrated all the solemnities of marriage. ~ ~
23    XI,     36|         the purpose of legitimate marriage; that she should have listened
24    XI,     36|        night in the freedom which marriage permits. But this is no
25    XI,     37|          what is to follow such a marriage." Doubtless there was thrill
26    XI,     39|         wife and annul the act of marriage. "Do you know," he said "
27    XI,     39|          army, the Senate saw the marriage of Silius. Act at once,
28    XI,     44|           story of Silius and her marriage. At the same moment, to
29   XII,      1|           to her claims to such a marriage. But the keenest competition
30   XII,      2|            Narcissus dwelt on the marriage of years gone by, on the
31   XII,      4|       soon as she was sure of her marriage, she began to aim at greater
32   XII,      6|         and Quintus Veranius, the marriage arranged between Claudius
33   XII,      7|         recommended the emperor's marriage, they ought to select a
34   XII,      7|    emperor. But, it will be said, marriage with a brother's daughter
35   XII,      8|         person who desired such a marriage, Alledius Severus, a Roman
36   XII,      9|                 On the day of the marriage Silanus committed suicide,
37   XII,     25|        Apollo, about the imperial marriage. Upon this, Claudius, without
38   XII,     25|           her husband (for of her marriage to Caius Caesar he purposely
39   XII,     29|      first as the promoter of her marriage, then as her paramour, he
40   XII,     47|       arms while he was united in marriage to the queen Cartismandua.
41   XII,     55|     kindred, how he was united by marriage to his brother's daughter,
42   XII,     63|          who united themselves in marriage to slaves, and it was decided
43  XIII,      3|          himself by an incestuous marriage and a fatal adoption of
44  XIII,     16|     ill-starred house, of her own marriage, to begin with, and of her
45  XIII,     27|          son-in-law he was by his marriage with Antonia. The promoter
46  XIII,     57|       husband. He had offered her marriage and had won her consent.
47  XIII,     58|          intrigue was followed by marriage. ~ ~
48   XIV,      1|          the woman had no hope of marriage for herself or of Octavia'
49   XIV,      1|         Why," she asked, "was her marriage put off? Was it, forsooth,
50   XIV,      3|           for every infamy by her marriage with her uncle. ~ ~
51   XIV,     37|   accustomed to tie themselves by marriage and rear children, they
52   XIV,     78|          prepared to hurry on his marriage with Poppaea, hitherto deferred
53   XIV,     80|           of a rival fighting for marriage, though that was dearer
54   XIV,     84|      whose life she had endured a marriage, which was miserable enough
55   XIV,     86|         of his having opposed the marriage with Poppaea, Pallas for
56    XV,     66|        pledged himself to another marriage, but for the fact that the
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