Book,  Par.

 1     I,      3|     secret intrigues, but at her open suggestion. For she had
 2     I,     27|        rushed to the spot, broke open the guardhouse, unbound
 3     I,     68|         great slaughter into the open country. At the same moment
 4     I,     74|          tribe, and ravaging the open country, Germanicus marched
 5     I,     87|         evening, struggled on to open and firm ground. ~ ~
 6    II,      3|       approach; his courtesy was open to all, and he had thus
 7    II,     21|       the wood, rushing into the open, those who had been drawn
 8    II,     28|      hither and thither into the open ocean, or on islands with
 9    II,     31|           to hem in his rear and open the ground. Fortune favoured
10    II,     47|           and, as it were, break open the exchequer, which, if
11    II,     62|          by rushing out into the open country, for there people
12    II,     75|        apologies. They parted in open enmity. After this Piso
13    II,     91|    Germanicus' death leave Syria open to him. ~ ~
14    II,    102|          on to Syria through the open sea away from the islands.
15    II,    104|        he believed, particularly open to revolutionary schemes,
16    II,    110|       through the city and broke open the doors of the temples.
17   III,     29|       men to offer battle in the open plain, he drew up his line
18   III,     60|        increased, not yet by any open combination of the neighbouring
19   III,     62|      Sacrovir and his army in an open plain. His men in armour
20    IV,     48|   however, always been perfectly open to us without any one to
21    IV,     65|        to show themselves on the open hills; these the Roman general
22    IV,     81|        calamity the nobles threw open houses and supplied indiscriminately
23    IV,     85|         western breezes, and the open sea round it renders it
24    IV,     88|       new magistrates should not open the dungeons as well as
25    IV,     91|        secret machinations, made open display of her compassion
26    XI,     24|          difficult enough in the open air. Worn out by the labour,
27    XI,     45|      paramour's house was thrown open and the emperor conducted
28    XI,     48|       till the gates were forced open by the rush of the new comers,
29   XII,     20|         traitor, then become his open enemy. No Roman was on the
30   XII,     52|   driving out the Parthians. But open violence, he said, must
31   XII,     53|   Mithridates in terror from the open country and forced him into
32   XII,     80|      palace were suddenly thrown open, and Nero, accompanied by
33  XIII,      5|        be nothing venal, nothing open to intrigue; his private
34  XIII,     31| different orders, thrown freedom open to all. Again, two kinds
35  XIII,     45|          raids as before, but in open war, plundering all whom
36  XIII,     45|   friendship renewed which might open up a way to further acts
37  XIII,     71|      plain," he would say, "lies open into which the flocks and
38   XIV,     11|          guard, and having burst open the gates, dragged off the
39   XIV,     34|         that the city walls were open, and the inhabitants awaiting
40   XIV,     38|        appeal had been perfectly open, and free from penalty. ~ ~
41   XIV,     45|    except in his front, where an open plain extended without any
42   XIV,     56|        the night-guard, could he open the doors of the chamber,
43    XV,      8|           and the Parthians made open war. Nor did Paetus decline
44    XV,     22|   everything, in short, easy and open to them, without a care
45    XV,     48|      perished, though escape was open to them. And no one dared
46    XV,     49|  homeless as they were, he threw open to them the Campus Martius
47    XV,     50|       met by clear ground and an open sky. But before people had
48    XV,     52|   wilderness, and, on the other, open spaces and extensive views.
49    XV,     53|       the height of houses, with open spaces, and the further
50    XV,     53|    expense, and to hand over the open spaces, when cleared of
51    XV,     53|      everyone was to have in the open court the means of stopping
52    XV,     53|        sun's heat, while now the open space, unsheltered by any
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