Book,  Par.

 1     I,      2|     tribune's authority for the protection of the people, Augustus
 2     I,      2|        the officials, while the protection of the laws was unavailing,
 3     I,     55|         he will surely have the protection of his own majesty, the
 4     I,     77|      and, as I found but little protection in the laws, I urged him
 5    II,     81|         leave it under the same protection under which he had come.
 6    IV,      6|        whom our greatness was a protection against any foreign power.
 7    IV,     50|    public hatred was actually a protection. Indeed any conspicuously
 8    IV,     85|        by a mountain which is a protection against cutting winds. In
 9    IV,     85|      Augustus and appeal to the protection of the people and Senate.
10    VI,      2|       him in which he asked the protection of one of the consuls, so
11   XII,     32|    crossed the Rhine, under our protection. ~ ~
12   XII,     42|         Caractacus, seeking the protection of Cartismandua, queen of
13  XIII,     42|     allegiance sought the armed protection of both empires, though
14   XIV,     43| military force. Trusting to the protection of the temple, hindered
15    XV,      1|       and repeatedly asked what protection he was to seek and from
16    XV,      5|       where they distrusted the protection of the stream. There were
17    XV,     25|         may lose nothing of our protection, while public opinion may
18    XV,     53|    addition of colonnades, as a protection to the frontage of the blocks
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