Book,  Par.

 1     I,     57|        the cruelty and all the odium of the deed. ~ ~
 2    II,     46|       dictators. Not to excite odium do I recall such facts,
 3    II,     47|     property, thereby bringing odium on the Senate and on emperors
 4    II,     85|      transfer from himself the odium of the charge. ~ ~
 5   III,     21|      such a death was to bring odium on himself, and he asked
 6   III,     22|  conspiracy of my foes and the odium excited by a lying charge,
 7   III,     73|      one alone has to bear the odium of every person's failures.
 8    IV,     30|      he drew on himself, fresh odium and revived the old; stripped
 9    IV,     39|     the emperor, to soften the odium of the affair, interposed
10    IV,     57|     and the gathering storm of odium. That he might not impair
11    IV,     88| Tiberius has not incurred such odium blindly; this is a studied
12    VI,     42| screened his guilt by bringing odium on another, and had groundlessly
13  XIII,      5|       which had kindled recent odium. "He would not," he said, "
14  XIII,     65|     new oppressions bring into odium what for so many years had
15   XIV,     62|       to expose the emperor to odium; the majority felt safe
16    XV,     64|     Piso refused, alleging the odium of an act which would stain
17    XV,     82|        wishing to heighten the odium of his cruelty, forbade
18   XVI,      7|        added fresh and greater odium by forbidding Caius Cassius
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