Book,  Par.

 1     I,     18| entreaties to Augusta, and was saved by her very earnest intercessions.~ ~
 2     I,     50|      eagle-bearer, Calpurnius, saved him from the worst violence,
 3    II,     50|    Rome, that Agrippa had been saved by the blessing of Heaven.
 4   III,     25|   remained. Marcus Piso too he saved from degradation, and gave
 5    IV,     69|  severe winter of Mount Haemus saved the rest of the population
 6    IV,     93|        a fierce encounter, and saved our cohorts and cavalry,
 7    VI,      7|     Assuredly Tiberius was not saved by his elevation or his
 8    VI,     13|        one of the prosecutors, saved Appius and Calvisius from
 9    VI,     37|       Germanicus, she had been saved, when Piso fell, by the
10    XI,     47|       remitted. The latter was saved by the distinguished services
11   XII,     64|       the province, but it was saved by Quadratus, governor of
12   XII,     78|        and this seemed to have saved him. Agrippina was thoroughly
13  XIII,     51|   property to the Romans. This saved their lives; the city was
14   XIV,     43| cavalry into the camp, and was saved by its fortifications. Alarmed
15   XIV,     52|   Cornelian law. Marcellus was saved from punishment rather than
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