Book,  Par.

 1     I,     21|        in short, of craving for luxury and idleness and loathing
 2    II,     41|       much was said against the luxury of the country by Quintus
 3    II,     58|        being demoralised by the luxury of the capital, to serve
 4    II,     75|      with a long speech against luxury, which, though it angered
 5    II,    102| Tiberius accusing Germanicus of luxury and arrogance, and asserting
 6   III,     48|         involves delays through luxury in peace and through panic
 7   III,     63|       they abound in wealth and luxury, the more unwarlike are
 8   III,     71|         apprehended against the luxury which had reached boundless
 9   III,     73|  senators charged with shameful luxury, I too myself might observe
10   III,     73|         sexes, or that peculiar luxury of women which, for the
11   III,     74|     contempt, and this has made luxury bolder than ever. The truth
12   III,     77|        anxious a task, and that luxury of the table which from
13    XI,     19|      dependence, by slavery, by luxury, by all foreign habits.
14   XII,      6|   children, unused as he was to luxury and pleasure, and wont from
15   XVI,     19| substance, but a man of refined luxury. And indeed his talk and
16   XVI,     19|  nothing charming or elegant in luxury unless Petronius had expressed
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