Book,  Par.

 1     I,      5|    and that Tiberius Nero was master of the State. ~ ~
 2    II,     37| inquiry in a case affecting a master's life, Tiberius, with his
 3    II,     49|  figure he was not unlike his master. Then through suitable emissaries
 4   III,     33|    Lepida had attempted their master's life by poison. ~ ~
 5   III,     52|       terror to his patron or master whom he would menace by
 6   III,     60|      cohorts had made himself master of Augustodunum, the capital
 7    IV,     14|   youth and beauty he was his master's favourite, and one of
 8    IV,     61| during the civil war had been master of the sea, till he united
 9    VI,     26|       better slave or a worse master." ~ ~
10    VI,     36|      at the emperor's side, a master of law both divine and human,
11    VI,     44|  province, and the emperor be master of all else. Strange as
12    XI,     39|   once, or the new husband is master of Rome." ~ ~
13   XII,     63|      knowledge of the slave's master, should be reduced to slavery;
14  XIII,     24|      any other were to become master of the State so as to sit
15  XIII,     31|       bonds of slavery. Every master should carefully consider
16  XIII,     39|   punishment and safety. If a master were murdered by his slaves,
17   XIV,     54|  which he could not brook his master's rivalry. Ancient custom
18   XIV,     55|      actually decide that the master was justly slain. ~ ~
19   XIV,     56|    took courage to murder his master without letting fall a threatening
20    XV,     20|  Armenians too left without a master.~ ~
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