Book,  Par.

 1     I,     92|    guileless; it was not against a foreign foe that she was thus courting
 2    II,      4|           reigned long, though, in foreign fashion, they were united
 3    II,     95|          the neighbouring peoples. Foreign nations and kings grieved
 4   III,      6|            burnt in any fashion in foreign lands, still all the more
 5   III,     36|     brother's return from his long foreign tour, and that this was
 6   III,     48|           among our allies or into foreign countries. A train of women
 7   III,     57|            armies in all but their foreign element."~ ~
 8   III,     78|     populace, by our allies and by foreign princes, and every one who
 9    IV,      6|           a protection against any foreign power. Thrace was held by
10    IV,     49|      genius fosters its influence; foreign tyrants, and all who have
11    VI,     47|          his purpose of regulating foreign affairs by a crafty policy
12    VI,     66|            feeble creature bred in foreign effeminacy, while the actual
13    XI,     18|      learning and to the growth of foreign superstitions. At present
14    XI,     19|           citizen, gone to mount a foreign throne." At first his arrival
15    XI,     19|         slavery, by luxury, by all foreign habits. But if Italicus
16    XI,     29|            we prospered in all our foreign relations, in the days when
17   XII,     12|       height that, she wished even foreign nations to enjoy repose."
18   XII,     22|       Claudius, though merciful to foreign princes, was yet in doubt
19   XII,     57|        saying "that any crime in a foreign country was to be welcomed
20   XII,     59|          monstrous crime held by a foreign prince, raised an army and
21   XII,     68|        their services to us in our foreign wars, or their seditious
22  XIII,     39|       ovation, was accused of some foreign superstition and handed
23  XIII,     42|           hold it as a gift from a foreign power, and Corbulo too thought
24  XIII,     70|         observed some persons in a foreign dress on the seats of the
25   XIV,     16| Senate-house and giving answers to foreign nations! He glanced too
26   XIV,     27|           and a degeneracy bred by foreign tastes was infecting the
27   XIV,     56|         customs to our own, with a foreign worship or none at all,
28   XIV,     67|         was nearly equivalent to a foreign retreat in the capital itself.
29    XV,      1|            s achievements and of a foreign prince, Tigranes, having
30    XV,     21|            his anxious fears about foreign affairs, Nero threw the
31    XV,     40|           Accustomed, forsooth, to foreign arrogance, he had no knowledge
32   XVI,      6|            but after the custom of foreign princes was filled with
33   XVI,     17|            Even if I had to relate foreign wars and deaths encountered
34   XVI,     26|   partially veiled amid rumours on foreign affairs, or that Nero might
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