Book,  Par.

 1     I,      3|           stepsons, he honoured with imperial tides, although his own
 2     I,      4|            infancy been reared in an imperial house; consulships and triumphs
 3     I,      7|      Tiberius weaken the strength of imperial power by referring everything
 4     I,     50|             they began to demand the imperial standard kept in Germanicus'
 5     I,     60|              and confronted with his imperial majesty those who would
 6     I,     61|               and not compromise the imperial dignity, which inspired
 7    II,     33|              win only in Germany the imperial title and the triumphal
 8    II,     34|           been wife of Augustus, his imperial cousins, his house crowded
 9    II,     45|            to explore the secrets of imperial policy. Tiberius, however,
10    II,     63|              intestate, on which the imperial treasury had a claim, he
11    II,     77|               among other secrets of imperial policy, had forbidden senators
12   III,      7|           princely personages and an imperial people. Tears and the solace
13   III,     32|           astrologers concerning the imperial house. The accused was defended
14   III,     43|              the chief depository of imperial secrets, and accessory to
15   III,     84|             himself the substance of imperial power, allowed the Senate
16   III,     96|             ought we to fall back on imperial authority, when we can have
17    IV,      4|     obstacles to his ambition in the imperial house with its many princes,
18    IV,     20|           slaves and property of the imperial establishments; that if
19    IV,     26|           him, and the claims of the imperial exchequer were computed
20    IV,     70|             already sustained by the imperial house, came the first step
21     V,      6|             trick of one senator the imperial dignity had been publicly
22    VI,      2|     exchequer and transferred to the imperial treasury; as if there was
23    VI,     22|               being locked up in the imperial treasury or the public exchequer.
24    VI,     28|            by cleverly revealing his imperial destiny and future career,
25    XI,     32|          with hearty gladness by the imperial censor. Anxiously considering
26    XI,     37|              thrust himself into the imperial chamber, it certainly brought
27    XI,     39|              the other belongings of imperial rank. These Silius might
28   XII,      1|   destruction of Messalina shook the imperial house; for a strife arose
29   XII,      3|             was thoroughly worthy of imperial rank, the scion of a noble
30   XII,      6|            relief for the mind of an imperial censor than the taking of
31   XII,     25|            Clarian Apollo, about the imperial marriage. Upon this, Claudius,
32   XII,     70|             the commissioners of the imperial treasury ought to have the
33   XII,     75|            were convulsing the whole imperial house, with far greater
34  XIII,     10|        laurel was to be added to the imperial "fasces." I have closely
35  XIII,     12|           were swearing obedience to imperial legislation, he forbade
36  XIII,     14|          which nearly approached the imperial treasures, and from having
37  XIII,     15|             wives and mothers of the imperial house had been seen to glitter,
38  XIII,     18|             It was customary for the imperial princes to sit during their
39  XIII,     20|            had formerly been for the imperial consort, along with some
40  XIII,     53|          pollute the chambers of the imperial ladies? By what kind of
41  XIII,     61|       thoroughly acquainted with the imperial household from the time
42   XIV,      4|            to be administered at the imperial table, the result could
43   XIV,     51|               Accordingly one of the imperial freedmen, Polyclitus, was
44   XIV,     80|              should be raised to the imperial throne? In a word, if it
45    XV,     34|          with grand allusions to the imperial auspices, and to his own
46    XV,     43| conspicuously infamous sights in the imperial court, bred, as he had been,
47   XVI,      8|             arranging the details of imperial business, and setting freedmen
48   XVI,     26|          that Nero might display his imperial grandeur by the murder of
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