Book,  Par.

 1     I,    102| Meanwhile the unruly tone of the theatre which first showed itself
 2     I,    102|   exhibit themselves only in the theatre, and that the praetors should
 3    II,     41|       one class in places in the theatre, in rank and in honour,
 4    II,    111|          called the seats in the theatre known as "the juniors,"
 5   III,     33|      trial, Lepida went into the theatre with some ladies of rank,
 6   III,     90|         Divine Augustus near the theatre of Marcellus had inscribed
 7   III,    102|                       Pompeius's theatre, which had been destroyed
 8   III,    102|          be placed in Pompeius's theatre. And soon afterwards the
 9    IV,     22|     whenever Augusta entered the theatre, she was to have a place
10    VI,      3|         the fourteen rows of the theatre, received a savage censure.
11    VI,     18|    clamorous demands made in the theatre with an unusual freedom
12    VI,     69|        and the stage of Pompey's theatre, and when these were completed,
13    XI,     16| lawlessness of the people in the theatre, when they insulted Caius
14   XII,     66|           which thus resembled a theatre. The emperor, with Agrippina
15  XIII,     28|          with the licence of the theatre, and that it might be proved
16  XIII,     29|      more of the soldiery in the theatre. ~ ~
17  XIII,     70|      were admitted into Pompey's theatre, where they might behold
18   XIV,     27|         up a fixed and permanent theatre. "Formerly," they said, "
19   XIV,     28|        edifice was erected for a theatre, in preference to a structure
20   XIV,     43|        their Senate-house; their theatre resounded with wailings,
21    XV,     41|          to fourteen rows in the theatre. The same year witnessed
22    XV,     42|          of soldiers, filled the theatre at Neapolis. ~ ~
23    XV,     43|         present, had quitted the theatre, and the empty building
24   XVI,      4|     their words), he entered the theatre, and conformed to all the
25   XVI,     13|       his service, a seat in the theatre among the tribune's officers.
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