Book,  Par.

 1     I,     33|      any praetorian soldier or friend of Caesar's who met them,
 2    II,     34|         a senator, an intimate friend of Libo's, prompted the
 3   III,     14|    father's representative and friend, and was appointed by myself,
 4   III,     22|     father, as one who is your friend and will never hereafter
 5   III,     93|        torture. And that not a friend might help him in his danger,
 6    IV,      4|    confidence Eudemus, Livia's friend and physician, whose profession
 7    IV,     20|       the death of an intimate friend. This was Lucilius Longus,
 8    IV,     35|      titles of king, ally, and friend. ~ ~
 9    IV,     55|  Tiberius would bear in mind a friend who would find his reward
10    IV,     56|      on myself. All this, as a friend, I have stated without reserve,
11    IV,     69| foreseen, failure to recognise friend or enemy, echoes, seemingly
12    IV,     86|   prison because he had been a friend of Germanicus. He had indeed
13    IV,     86|       of which he had been the friend in its prosperity. He also
14    IV,     86|  griefs, as to a most faithful friend. ~ ~
15    IV,     87|      conversations, the ear of friend and stranger were alike
16     V,      9|    sake or to have to accuse a friend, I cannot decide. I will
17    VI,     11|     shall admit that I was the friend of Sejanus, that I anxiously
18    VI,     19|     luxurious life, had been a friend of Sejanus, but with no
19    VI,     77|        honour to his departing friend. Charicles, however, assured
20   XII,     43|      entered this city as your friend rather than as your captive;
21   XIV,     69|       a prince can bestow on a friend, and I in receiving as much
22   XIV,     69|      in receiving as much as a friend can receive from a prince.
23   XIV,     71|       bringing disgrace on his friend." ~ ~
24    XV,     89|  feared the high spirit of his friend, who often bantered him
25    XV,     92|       brother, a kinsman, or a friend, would return thanks to
26    XV,     92|    Novius Priscus, as Seneca's friend, Glitius Gallus, and Annius
27   XVI,     15|    seize opportunities, made a friend of a man in like condition
28   XVI,     19| Petronius with having been the friend of Scaevinus, bribing a
29   XVI,     37|      and now hired to ruin his friend, he professed the dignified
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