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 1     I,     80| nineteenth legion which had been lost with Varus. The troops were
 2     I,     88|   earthworks, while the army had lost to a great extent their
 3    II,     11|          loyalty, and for having lost an eye by a wound, a few
 4    II,     31|      thrown away a fleet, having lost their arms, after strewing
 5    II,     51|        recovery of the standards lost with Varus, under the leadership
 6    II,     99|    mourning she had worn for her lost sister. ~ ~
 7    II,    111|      though Germanicus was again lost to them. New honours were
 8   III,     34|       interval the Calpurnii had lost Piso and the Aemilii Lepida)
 9   III,     40|      himself been the author, he lost by arms what by arms he
10   III,     89|         rest relied on an origin lost in the obscurity of antiquity.
11    IV,     11|        Senators, when these boys lost their father, I committed
12    IV,     11|         posterity. Drusus is now lost to us, and I turn my prayers
13     V,      7|          nearly three years, are lost. Newer editions of Tacitus
14    VI,     16|      obtain the office, which he lost within a few days, as not
15  Miss        |  beginning of Book XI, which are lost, contained the history of
16    XI,     18|    Italian sciences might not be lost through negligence. It had
17    XI,     19|        Rome for a king. They had lost all their nobles in their
18   XII,     17|     Bosporus, meanwhile, who had lost his power and was a mere
19  XIII,     18|         his entire frame that he lost alike voice and breath.
20  XIII,     19|         said, that as he had now lost a brother's help, his remaining
21  XIII,     57|          name, he protested, was lost, his means exhausted, and
22   XIV,     46|        people that I am avenging lost freedom, my scourged body,
23   XIV,     51|           but as he subsequently lost a few vessels on the shore
24    XV,     20|     neither of them was anything lost, and urged that they should
25    XV,     48|       fields, while some who had lost their all, even their very
26    XV,     51|          the temples, which were lost. Those with the oldest ceremonial,
27    XV,     57|         the shores of Cumae, and lost, in all directions, a number
28   XVI,     14|      sesterces, so that what was lost to the city might be replaced.
29   XVI,     32|       love for which he has long lost and the very sight of which
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