Book,  Par.

 1    II,     27|                           Having publicly praised his victorious troops,
 2    II,     49|          letting himself be seen publicly or remaining long in the
 3   III,     26| Agrippina and Drusus ought to be publicly thanked for having avenged
 4    IV,     36|          towns, then by placards publicly exhibited, he incited the
 5    IV,     50|          Cyzicus were accused of publicly neglecting the established
 6    IV,     59|         the arbitration had been publicly entrusted, and, finally,
 7     V,      3|       back by Augusta, as it was publicly read soon after her death.
 8     V,      6|        imperial dignity had been publicly flouted, and he insisted
 9    VI,     56|      heirs had suppressed, to be publicly read, thus showing his tolerance
10   XII,     63|         decree of the Senate was publicly inscribed on a bronze tablet,
11   XII,     80|      Livia. But his will was not publicly read, as the preference
12  XIII,     15|     present. Agrippina, however, publicly declared that so far from
13   XIV,     29|        for eloquence, but it was publicly announced that the emperor
14   XIV,     53|     punishment as if he had been publicly convicted of false accusation.~ ~
15   XIV,     65|          an end of nothing being publicly admired but what Seneca
16   XVI,     13|          proposer of the motion, publicly declaring that the month
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