Book,  Par.

 1     I,     14|  marriage with the sister, and paid by his death the penalty
 2     I,     19|      be a limit to the honours paid to women, and that he would
 3     I,     22|  compensation in money must be paid us. Do the praetorian cohorts,
 4     I,     47|     they had asked, were to be paid and doubled.~ ~
 5     I,     48|   himself and his friends, and paid in full. The first and twentieth
 6     I,     99|        emperor helped him, and paid him the value of his house,
 7     I,    104|  sources. Regard, too, must be paid to the different religions
 8    II,     62|        for five years all they paid to the exchequer or to the
 9    II,     72|        diadem on his head. All paid him homage and saluted him
10    II,    116|        a price for grain to be paid by the purchaser, promising
11   III,      6|        to have been afterwards paid him, because at first chance
12   III,     67|      Armenia, and had likewise paid court to Tiberius, who was
13    IV,     52|      provinces, and the homage paid to Augustus will disappear
14    IV,     62|        student. Yet honour was paid him in death, and his bones,
15    VI,     24|       death Greek flattery had paid him divine honours. ~ ~
16    VI,     35|       day on which Sejanus had paid the penalty of his crime
17    VI,     65| Tiridates with all the honours paid to princes of old and all
18    XI,      2|     told in reply that she had paid the debt of nature. ~ ~
19    XI,      6|        the first rank, who had paid four hundred thousand sesterces
20    XI,     31|      Rome. This compliment was paid to their ancient alliance,
21   XII,      4|       of her relationship, she paid frequent visits to her uncle,
22   XII,     31|    more elaborate flattery was paid to Domitius. A law was passed,
23  XIII,     37|       given, and forty million paid into the exchequer to maintain
24  XIII,     43| quitted his colours, instantly paid the penalty with his life.
25  XIII,     66|      and that no tax should be paid on them. ~ ~
26   XIV,     15|      planned the crime she had paid its penalty. ~ ~
27   XIV,     64|        crime, when the emperor paid him a visit, recoiled with
28    XV,     97|    that divine honours are not paid to an emperor till he has
29   XVI,      5|       moment, but subsequently paid off, towards men of distinction.
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