Book,  Par.

 1     I,      4|           They must, it seemed, be subject to a female and to two striplings
 2     I,     14|             when a young man and a subject, raised an army, tampered
 3     I,     16|         under arms, of the fleets, subject kingdoms, provinces, taxes,
 4     I,    102|           This disturbance was the subject of a debate in the Senate,
 5    II,     44|          and Asinius Gallus on the subject. Piso, although the emperor
 6    II,     65|          he did not wish to be the subject of judicial inquiry. When
 7   III,     27|         the death of Germanicus, a subject of conflicting rumours not
 8   III,     38|         laws even kings were to be subject. ~ ~
 9   III,     49|            no proper motion on the subject, and that Caecina was no
10   III,     49|          magistrates, are not many subject to various passions? Still,
11   III,     51|          Africa. Both spoke on the subject, and Lepidus begged earnestly
12   III,     52|     exposed an abuse, hitherto the subject of many a whispered complaint.
13   III,     82|         books of ceremonies on the subject. Pontiffs had often performed
14    IV,     21|           the emperor spoke on the subject of electing a priest of
15    IV,     45|           wearisome monotony in my subject matter. Then, again, an
16     V,      8|    speeches were delivered on this subject, a few of which were prompted
17    VI,     17|      prophetess by a decree on the subject. This having been carried
18    VI,     20|          addressed a letter on the subject to the Senate, with a slightly
19    VI,     30|            digress too far from my subject. ~ ~
20    VI,     43|    information was grounded on the subject of a tragedy written by
21    VI,     62|           time the Clitae, a tribe subject to the Cappadocian Archelaus,
22    XI,     18|      brought before the Senate the subject of the college of "haruspices,"
23    XI,     22|            peace, and a formidable subject for a timid emperor." Claudius
24    XI,     28|          talk of every kind on the subject, and it was argued before
25    XI,     40|         whether Silius was still a subject. ~ ~
26   XIV,     65|           be beyond the scale of a subject, and was drawing to himself
27    XV,     16|           under Roman dominion, or subject to a king chosen by the
28    XV,     27|            no formal motion on the subject. Then, at the emperor's
29    XV,     71| conversation was, and what was its subject. Then a suspicion arose
30   XVI,      2|           else at the time was the subject of the credulous gossip
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License