Book,  Par.

 1   III,     19|             paper and handed it to a freedman. Then he bestowed the usual
 2   III,     52|             of the emperor. The very freedman or slave was often an actual
 3    IV,     80|           ended. One Atilius, of the freedman class, having undertaken
 4    VI,     28|             of the confidence of one freedman, quite illiterate and of
 5    VI,     33|            centurion, and Didymus, a freedman, openly exhibited the names
 6    XI,     45|             Everything was under the freedman's control. By his order,
 7    XI,     48|              sternly silent, and the freedman, overwhelming her with the
 8   XII,     30|           the representations of his freedman. It was noted by learned
 9   XII,     63|             primitive frugality on a freedman, the possessor of three
10  XIII,      1|          Roman knight, and Helius, a freedman, men who had the charge
11  XIII,      2| precipitation, Narcissus, Claudius's freedman, whose quarrels with Agrippina
12  XIII,      3|             arrogance quite beyond a freedman, had provoked disgust. Still
13  XIII,     21|              divulged to Atimetus, a freedman of Domitia, Nero's aunt.
14  XIII,     21|               who was himself also a freedman of Domitia, to go at once
15  XIII,     30|            temporarily banishing the freedman a hundred miles off to the
16  XIII,     32|             his aunt Domitia had her freedman Paris taken from her, avowedly
17  XIII,     57|             Octavius attended by one freedman entered with a dagger concealed
18  XIII,     57|              some time with her. The freedman, however, declared the deed
19   XIV,      5|           was offered by Anicetus, a freedman, commander of the fleet
20   XIV,      8|         ignore it. Then she sent her freedman Agerinus to tell her son
21   XIV,     10|          gave him empire, and that a freedman was the author of this mighty
22    XV,     56|           provinces. The first was a freedman ready for any wickedness;
23    XV,     56|            Nero's command by his own freedman, whose name was Cleonicus.
24    XV,     56|           Seneca avoided through the freedman's disclosure, or his own
25    XV,     67|              task he assigned to his freedman Milichus. At the same time
26    XV,     69|             stolen by a trick of his freedman. He had often, he said,
27   XVI,      5|           was insulted by Phoebus, a freedman, for closing his eyes in
28   XVI,     10|           furnished by Fortunatus, a freedman, who having embezzled his
29   XVI,     11|              and saw that he and his freedman were pitted against each
30   XVI,     11|               and not surrender to a freedman one who had once been his
31   XVI,     13|        acquainted with Vetus. To the freedman who was the accuser, was
32   XVI,     21|             of Tigellinus, because a freedman of Thermus had brought criminal
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