Book,  Par.

 1     I,     42|      unanimous in their fury and equally unanimous in their composure,
 2     I,     46|          soldiery, the State was equally in jeopardy.~ ~
 3    II,     26|                 The Germans were equally brave, but they were beaten
 4   III,     19|                     Plancina was equally detested, but had stronger
 5    IV,     20|         the twin sons of Drusus, equally too by the death of an intimate
 6    IV,     23|       their youth being honoured equally with his declining years.
 7    IV,     27|     perils. Messalinus Cotta, of equally illustrious ancestry as
 8    IV,     73|           of which they were all equally ambitious, though they differed
 9    VI,     10| wearisome and saddening would be equally fatiguing to their readers.
10    XI,     47|      night by Messalina, who was equally capricious in her passions
11   XII,     19|          however fortune was not equally favourable; some of their
12   XII,     64|                              Not equally moderate was his brother,
13   XII,     74|       Cneius, thought herself of equally high rank. In beauty, youth,
14  XIII,     58|                     A profligacy equally notorious in that same year
15    XV,     15|         empire, were, it seemed, equally formidable, and even the
16    XV,     16|      Peace, he reminded him, was equally for the interest of both,
17    XV,     53|  elevation of the roofs were not equally penetrated by the sun's
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