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Alphabetical [« »] hurrying 5 hurt 3 hurtful 3 husband 56 husbands 5 hush 1 hushed 1 | Frequency [« »] 56 do 56 end 56 fell 56 husband 56 kept 56 marriage 56 raised | Publius (Gaius) Cornelius Tacitus Annals Concordances husband |
Book, Par.
1 I, 5| having been the cause of her husband's destruction. Whatever 2 I, 43| her purity and love of her husband gave a right direction to 3 I, 70| disobedience and hatred towards her husband; and a letter which Julia 4 I, 76| exhibited the spirit of her husband rather than of her father, 5 II, 95| her by the memory of her husband and by their common offspring 6 II, 96| temperate in his pleasures, the husband of one wife, with only legitimate 7 II, 113| grandfather, father, or husband had been a Roman knight 8 II, 113| Titidius Labeo, Vistilia's husband, was judicially called on 9 II, 115| lived with one and the same husband, while Agrippa had impaired 10 III, 19| gradually withdrew from her husband and separated her defence 11 III, 49| other names; for it is the husband's fault if the wife transgresses 12 III, 49| of others. Even with the husband's personal vigilance the 13 III, 50| his own experience as a husband. "Princes," he said, "must 14 III, 107| Drusus and the intended husband of the emperor's granddaughter. 15 IV, 4| sovereignty, and of her husband's destruction. And she, 16 IV, 21| wife, as passing into the husband's control. So the Senate, 17 IV, 22| functions, was to be under the husband's control, but in other 18 IV, 31| charged with having caused her husband's insanity by magical incantations 19 IV, 55| of Roman knights, so if a husband were sought for Livia, he 20 IV, 61| himself been chosen to be the husband of the younger Antonia, 21 IV, 71| loneliness and provide her with a husband; her youth still fitted 22 V, 1| took her away from her husband, whether against her wish 23 V, 1| for the diplomacy of her husband and the dissimulation of 24 VI, 24| sentenced to banishment. Her husband Argolicus and her father-in-law 25 VI, 42| wife, Paxaea, emulated her husband. What made such deaths eagerly 26 VI, 61| though she had pursued her husband with ceaseless accusations, 27 XI, 2| afterwards he asked her husband Scipio, who was dining with 28 XI, 5| between the affection of the husband and the necessities of the 29 XI, 35| because the lady loved her husband, but from a fear that Silius, 30 XI, 39| Act at once, or the new husband is master of Rome." ~ ~ 31 XI, 42| resolved to meet and face her husband, a course in which she had 32 XII, 25| Memmius Regulus formerly her husband (for of her marriage to 33 XII, 49| Agrippina reported this to her husband, with bitter complaint, 34 XII, 60| the enemy and love of her husband, the first part of the flight, 35 XII, 74| Agrippina, and sister of her husband Cneius, thought herself 36 XIII, 21| Messalina had driven from her husband, Caius Silius, as I have 37 XIII, 21| and wealthy widow out of a husband's control. Silana having 38 XIII, 39| superstition and handed over to her husband's judicial decision. Following 39 XIII, 57| then into abandoning her husband. He had offered her marriage 40 XIII, 57| the prospect of a richer husband, she repudiated her promises. 41 XIII, 58| no distinction between a husband and a paramour, while she 42 XIII, 59| and could not give up her husband attached as she was to Otho 43 XIV, 18| by a thunderbolt in her husband's embrace. Then the sun 44 XIV, 79| a paramour, then as her husband, instigated one of Octavia' 45 XIV, 80| they will soon find her a husband."~ ~ 46 XV, 75| had taken away from her husband, one of his friends. Her 47 XV, 75| Galla; that of her former husband, Domitius Silus. The tame 48 XV, 80| virtuously spent, to endure a husband's loss with honourable consolations. 49 XV, 82| the glory of sharing her husband's death, but that after 50 XV, 82| worthy remembrance of her husband, and with a countenance 51 XV, 93| had once been Poppaea's husband. It was the splendour of 52 XVI, 6| outburst of rage in her husband, who felled her with a kick 53 XVI, 11| seen the murderers of her husband Plautus. She had clasped 54 XVI, 35| widowed and forlorn, her husband Annius Pollio having lately 55 XVI, 37| the charges against her husband. "Treat separately," he 56 XVI, 39| who aspired to follow her husband's end and the example of