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1 I, 65| Rhine, he sent across it 12,000 from the legions, with six-and-twenty 2 XI, 33| which gave a total of 5,984,072 citizens. Then too ended 3 VI, 21| from exacting more than 10 per cent., when, previously, 4 XV, 11| enhanced. Yet he ordered 1000 men from each of his three 5 V, 7| than at the end of section 11; but references are regularly 6 I, 65| Rhine, he sent across it 12,000 from the legions, with 7 I | BOOK I~ ~A.D. 14, 15~ ~ 8 I | BOOK I~ ~A.D. 14, 15~ ~ 9 VI, 77| generals and armies. On the 15th of March, his breath failing, 10 II | BOOK II~ ~A.D. 16-19~ ~ 11 II | BOOK II~ ~A.D. 16-19~ ~ 12 XV, 51| conflagration was on the 19th of July, the day on which 13 III | BOOK III~ ~A.D. 20-22~ ~ 14 XIV, 28| theatrical profession during the 200 years following the triumph 15 III | BOOK III~ ~A.D. 20-22~ ~ 16 IV | BOOK IV~ ~A.D. 23-28~ ~ 17 II, 52| Germanicus Caesar, on the 26th day of May, celebrated his 18 IV | BOOK IV~ ~A.D. 23-28~ ~ 19 V | BOOK V~ ~A.D. 29-31~ ~ 20 XV, 11| vain confidence, posted 3000 chosen infantry on the adjacent 21 V | BOOK V~ ~A.D. 29-31~ ~ 22 VI | BOOK VI~ ~A.D. 32-37~ ~ 23 XI, 10| achievements, Vardanes traversed 375 miles in two days, and drove 24 Miss | fifty, and reigned from A.D. 41 to A.D. 54.~ ~The Eleventh 25 Miss | time under Claudius in A.D. 46. He was rich as well as 26 XV, 8| but with two legions, the 4th and 12th, the first of which 27 XI, 33| for which gave a total of 5,984,072 citizens. Then too 28 XIII | BOOK XIII~ ~A.D. 54-58~ ~ 29 XIV | BOOK XIV~ ~A.D. 59-62~ ~ 30 XV, 11| danger, was keeping the 5th legion at a distance in 31 V, 7| The beginning of section 6 is obviously fragmentary.] ~ ~ 32 XVI | BOOK XVI~ ~A.D. 65, 66~ ~ 33 XV, 11| of his three legions with 800 cavalry, and an equal number 34 XIII, 74| tree in the Comitium, which 840 years before had sheltered 35 XI, 33| which gave a total of 5,984,072 citizens. Then too ended 36 XV, 96| had most cause to mourn, abased himself in flattery, Salienus 37 III, 91| disgusted at the abject abasement of his creatures.~ ~ 38 VI, 35| and, when she found no abatement of horrors, had voluntarily 39 XIII, 16| furious with those who abetted such arrogance in a woman, 40 IV, 1| cruel tyrant, as well as an abettor of cruelty in others. Of 41 I, 22| were others ready to be abettors of a mutiny, he asked, in 42 IV, 53| these my most glorious and abiding monuments. Those built of 43 I, 73| captured or slaughtered. Their able-bodied men had swum across the 44 XIV, 60| said, "we have long ago abolished; still, there are punishments 45 XIII, 65| follow a demand for the abolition of the direct taxes. Many 46 XV, 47| had not omitted a single abomination which could heighten his 47 XI, 17| Demaratus of Corinth, and the Aborigines from the Arcadian Evander. 48 XIV, 83| profligacies, she had procured abortion, a fact he had himself ascertained. 49 I, 57| bloodshed as though it gave them absolution. Nor did Caesar check them, 50 XIII, 24| which a son alone could absolve me." ~ ~ 51 III, 53| from every pleasure, and absorbed in a gloomy vigilance and 52 II, 60| Nor did Maroboduus abstain from vaunts about himself 53 VI, 36| expostulations and persisted in his abstinence from all food. Those who 54 XIV, 75| to the new cause. These absurdities, like all popular gossip, 55 XIV, 81| slave-girls exposed its absurdity. Consequently it was decided 56 VI, 44| dropping a prosecution. Abudius Ruso too, who had been an 57 I, 45| they showed themselves abundantly willing. Thereupon, as though 58 XIII, 63| he pursue such trifling abuses? Why should he not speak 59 XIII, 16| admission and adoption, was abusing in outrages on his mother. 60 XIV, 24| townsfolk, they began with abusive language of each other; 61 IV, 16| put on the expression and accents of sorrow, while they inwardly 62 XIV, 6| and to secure Agrippina's acceptance through the feminine credulity, 63 III, 54| Thrace were conveniently accessible. ~ ~ 64 I, 21| death of Augustus and the accession of Tiberius, had allowed 65 III, 43| of imperial secrets, and accessory to the murder of Postumus 66 I, 18| because Tiberius fell forward, accidentally or from being entangled 67 I, 25| It was carried by acclamation that the son of Blaesus, 68 IV, 21| of a law, as Augustus had accommodated certain relics of a rude 69 XV, 13| Beside the other usual accompaniments of war, his army was followed 70 VI, 20| tribunes and centurions, might accompany him whenever he entered 71 IV, 94| Sejanus had not deigned to accost or to look on, returned 72 XIII, 27| sentenced to exile, and the account-books in which he was reviving 73 XIII, 51| advantage or glory would accrue from its capture. Then too 74 XII, 8| pretext that riches were being accumulated as a prop to the throne. ~ ~ 75 VI, 70| Tiberius's last consuls, Cneius Acerronius and Caius Pontius, entered 76 XII, 20| descendant of the great Achaemenes, the only glory of which 77 XIII, 10| of what his prudence had achieved, while Corbulo on the other 78 VI, 11| less to my advantage to acknowledge than to deny the charge. 79 XVI, 17| ask from those who will acquaint themselves with these horrors 80 XVI, 18| was a shorter road to the acquisition of wealth through offices 81 II, 102| auxiliaries, the young Piso actively assisting in all the business 82 II, 45| exercise of the candidate's activity and the seeking or securing 83 I, 105| think that though he had an acute intellect, his judgment 84 V, 4| courage) or a misdirected acuteness which made him tremble at 85 VI, 73| after Tiberius's death. Acutia, formerly the wife of Publius 86 XII, 20| by his alliance with us. Adapting his dress and expression 87 XII, 7| became frequent. Custom adapts itself to expediency, and 88 II, 117| period that a letter from Adgandestrius, chief of the Chatti, was 89 III, 62| situated on the border, adjoin the Aedui, and were associated 90 XV, 48| part of the circus which adjoins the Palatine and Caelian 91 II, 44| The business, however, was adjourned.~ ~ 92 V, 11| sureties. Soon, after several adjournments, Vitellius, weary alike 93 XIV, 25| been sent by Claudius to adjudicate on some lands which were 94 XIV, 25| Consequently, when the adjudication was against them, there 95 IV, 11| heaven and your country I adjure you to receive into your 96 VI, 16| was temporarily chosen to administer justice and provide for 97 XII, 51| complaints; while Claudius was administering justice, the populace crowded 98 I, 105| same armies and in the same administrations. Various motives have been 99 II, 118| to Greek historians, who admire only their own achievements, 100 III, 93| he had often even to make admissions, that the questions might 101 XV, 22| become rife, of fictitious adoptions of children, on the eve 102 XV, 97| grandeur and deserved the adoration of mankind. Some however 103 III, 101| their superfluous wealth to adorn the capital and to win the 104 XVI, 29| the Senate which you have adorned to the last the infamy of 105 XI, 1| which Asiaticus was now adorning with singular magnificence, 106 I, 73| had swum across the river Adrana, and were trying to keep 107 II, 68| stormy voyage through the Adriatic and afterwards the Ionian 108 XIV, 3| it was frustrated by the adroitness of that same freed-girl. 109 XI, 25| unfrequented arcade in the town of Adrumetum, when he saw a female figure 110 XIII, 48| and captured, and all the adult inhabitants massacred, without 111 VI, 51| there would be alternate advances and retreats, then, again, 112 XII, 73| and saw before others the advantageous position, chose the worse. 113 XII, 60| they knew her name and her adventure, they conveyed her to the 114 XI, 6| ascertaining his collusion with the adversary. Upon this, following the 115 XIII, 10| messages to king Vologeses, advising him to choose peace rather 116 XII, 68| reputation of an orator, he advocated the cause of the people 117 I, 3| the pontificate and curule aedileship Claudius Marcellus, his 118 VI, 49| subsequently to the empty palace of Aeetes, and the vacant kingdom 119 II, 62| of Temnus, Philadelpheia, Aegae, Apollonis, the Mostenians, 120 V, 13| Euboea, an island of the Aegaean, to Piraeus, on the coast 121 XIII, 9| accomplished his march, and at Aegeae, a city of Cilicia, met 122 XV, 93| say, had islands in the Aegean Sea assigned to them. Caedicia, 123 IV, 17| the cities of Cibyra and Aegium in Asia and Achaia, which 124 XII, 1| first, Pallas the second. Aelia Paetina however, of the 125 XIV, 53| was fatal also to Pompeius Aelianus, a young ex-quaestor, suspected 126 XII, 4| Domitius, her son by Cneius Aenobarbus, and Octavia, the emperor' 127 XI, 30| then that the Volsci and Aequi never stood in array against 128 III, 53| Considius Aequus too and Coelius Cursor, 129 III, 88| set up by their founder Aerias to the Paphian Venus, the 130 XII, 10| became now the emperor's affianced son-in-law, and an equal 131 II, 37| Senators, to which marks were affixed of dreadful or mysterious 132 VI, 13| Senate, not however without affixing some ominous marks to the 133 XIII, 18| which Britannicus had been afflicted from his earliest infancy, 134 III, 40| some light temporary relief afforded.~ ~ 135 VI, 47| that he is regarded by an after-generation as the type of the most 136 XIII, 17| be prepared through the agency of Julius Pollio, tribune 137 II, 36| not to seem to soften or aggravate the accusations. ~ ~ 138 XV, 48| their delay in the other, aggravating the confusion. Often, while 139 XV, 89| There was too a recent aggravation in the circumstance of Vestinus 140 VI, 28| he gazed, the more was he agitated by amazement and terror, 141 XIII, 25| even tried to soothe her agitation, but she insisted on an 142 III, 39| Saturnini, those popular agitators, and Drusus too, as flagrant 143 XI, 10| secured. Gotarzes meanwhile, aided by the resources of the 144 XV, 77| been sent to Seneca when ailing, to see him and remonstrate 145 XV, 56| though he had a nervous ailment, would not quit his chamber. 146 XI, 9| families, to assume grand airs. We have examples at hand. 147 XII, 68| with other old traditions akin to myths, he gained for 148 IV, 13| the Julian house, all the Alban kings, Romulus, Rome's founder, 149 XI, 28| besieged the divine Julius at Alesia. These are recent memories. 150 II, 62| to relieve them. Marcus Aletus, one of the expraetors, 151 XIV, 79| one by name Eucaerus, an Alexandrine by birth, skilled in singing 152 II, 9| country between the fort Aliso and the Rhine was thoroughly 153 XV, 74| this in any new scheme is all-powerful. Against it Nero has taken 154 XIII, 20| rage no lavish bounty could allay. She would clasp Octavia 155 XII, 8| desired such a marriage, Alledius Severus, a Roman knight, 156 IV, 84| its victims, without one alleviating circumstance. Quintilius 157 VI, 53| was connected by marriage alliances with the Hyrcanians and 158 I, 70| instructions to his wife Alliaria, and then offered his neck 159 XIV, 40| in popular favour, which allows no one to be without a rival, 160 XVI, 2| gold of the mine with its alloy, but the earth now teemed 161 Miss | of the Poppaeus Sabinus alluded to in Book VI., and the 162 VI, 67| indeed by which he might allure the wavering and confirm 163 III, 39| bribing of our allies by alluring promises and the cheating 164 I, 90| in the camp, without any allusion to disaster. Next he handed 165 III, 39| Dictator, by the repeal or alteration of past legislation and 166 VI, 51| cavalry-action, there would be alternate advances and retreats, then, 167 XI, 48| letters of entreaty, as she alternated between hope arid fury. 168 XV, 46| what happened the worst alternative. ~ ~ 169 XV, 93| Petronius Priscus, Julius Altinus, mere rank and file, so 170 II, 111| the Rhine, and on mount Amanus in Syria, with an inscription 171 VI, 41| the reigns of Sesostris, Amasis, and Ptolemy, the third 172 XIII, 53| four years of royal favour amassed three hundred million sesterces? 173 II, 80| commerce, next by the desire of amassing wealth, finally by forgetfulness 174 IV, 41| Hence it seemed the more amazing that one who knew better 175 I, 55| sacred character of the ambassador, and the law of nations 176 I, 51| arrival. On the rights of ambassadors, on the dreadful and undeserved 177 XI, 44| pressing him to clear up his ambiguities and let the truth be known, 178 III, 70| the Senate with his usual ambiguity, extolling their loyalty 179 III, 76| hearts. Let us be led to amendment, the poor by constraint, 180 II, 47| of occasionally proposing amendments or of suggesting, in our 181 XV, 2| irresolution, my valour shall make amends for it. Assuredly your strength 182 XIV, 35| Vologeses as a pledge of amity. When these envoys were 183 | amongst 184 VI, 64| popular government almost amounts to freedom, while the rule 185 IV, 18| relied on a decree of the Amphictyonic Council, which had the supreme 186 XIII, 72| did not concern them, the Ampsivarian tribe in its isolation retreated 187 IV, 77| Cave," between the gulf of Amuclae and the hills of Fundi, 188 XIII, 4| the time. Elderly men who amuse their leisure with comparing 189 XI, 25| seems to me to be his own ancestor." Afterwards, throughout 190 II, 91| without further delay weighed anchor, slackening his course that 191 II, 28| could not hold to their anchors or bale out the water which 192 VI, 29| among the wisest of the ancients and among their disciples 193 III, 10| and leaving his ships at Ancona, went through Picenum and 194 III, 38| were made by Tullus and Ancus. But Servius Tullius was 195 III, 58| in actual revolt were the Andecavi and Turoni. Of these the 196 XII, 65| They besieged the city Anemurium, and routed some troopers 197 II, 75| luxury, which, though it angered Germanicus, he still bore 198 XI, 17| and that by the figures of animals. These records, the most 199 XIV, 50| with Suetonius, let private animosities interfere with the public 200 XII, 26| Sohaemus and Agrippa, were annexed to the province of Syria. ~ ~ 201 III, 52| threshold of the Senate House, Annia Rufilla, whom he had convicted 202 VI, 44| successor he should accept as an announcement of his doom. A compact, 203 XV, 39| which was new to him, the announcements, for example, by a centurion 204 XII, 18| greater height as a means of annoying the besieged with brands 205 XI, 27| of gladiators should be annually exhibited at the cost of 206 III, 40| feeling his power secure, annulled the decrees of his triumvirate, 207 XVI, 24| contemns religious rites; he annuls laws. The daily records 208 V, 5| more recklessly because anonymously, the caprice of their imaginations. 209 II, 69| utters a response in verse answering to the thoughts conceived 210 XVI, 19| to dwell a little on his antecedents. His days he passed in sleep, 211 XVI, 22| instituted by the Trojan Antenor. On the day, too, on which 212 VI, 63| submission of Nicephorium, Anthemusias and the other cities, which 213 VI, 67| pushed on in haste, thus anticipating the plots of enemies and 214 XIV, 4| constitution by the use of antidotes. How again the dagger and 215 IV, 59| according to fact, and king Antigonus, as also the general Mummius, 216 IV, 27| princes for some men and their antipathy to others depend, like other 217 II, 77| out for Egypt to study its antiquities. His ostensible motive however 218 XIV, 30| Plautus retired with his wife Antistia and a few intimate friends. ~ ~ 219 II, 7| Publius Vitellius and Caius Antius to collect the taxes of 220 XV, 70| reminded by his wife that Antonious Natalis had had a long secret 221 XI, 9| of the conflict between Antony and Augustus, it was easy 222 | anyone 223 XII, 68| seditious misdeeds at home. Apamea, too, which had been shaken 224 IV, 87| They applied their ears to apertures and crevices. Latiaris meanwhile 225 IV, 2| he had sold his person to Apicius, a rich debauchee. Soon 226 IV, 58| law. He next struck off Apidius Merula from the register 227 XIV, 25| were bequeathed by king Apion, their former possessor, 228 II, 62| Temnus, Philadelpheia, Aegae, Apollonis, the Mostenians, and Hyrcanian 229 II, 75| Piso replied with haughty apologies. They parted in open enmity. 230 XIII, 19| then of poison. The emperor apologised for the hasty funeral by 231 I, 87| watchful. A ghastly dream appalled the general. He seemed to 232 XIV, 84| this was added the yet more appalling horror of Poppaea beholding 233 II, 77| with sandalled feet, and apparelled after the Greek fashion, 234 XII, 53| king of the Albanians and appealing to the Romans for aid, his 235 XV, 21| they were not given up, appearances being consulted, in disregard 236 XV, 94| whose origin, as he now appears for the first time, I will 237 II, 37| to be able to cover the Appian road as far as Brundisium 238 II, 63| Varro, Marius Nepos, Appius Appianus, Cornelius Sulla, and Quintus 239 XIII, 33| release of some disorderly applauders of certain actors, whom 240 II, 69| number and the names of the applicants. Then descending into a 241 XIII, 72| who could not fight, were apportioned as booty. ~ ~ 242 XVI, 8| in truth, was intensely apprehensive, and had been frightened 243 IV, 66| and of wine. So the enemy, apprised of their heedlessness, prepared 244 III, 66| thanksgivings and other appropriate ceremonies. Cornelius Dolabella 245 VI, 65| Surena, in the presence of an approving throng, crowned Tiridates, 246 IV, 31| reasons, threw his wife Apronia out of a window. When summoned 247 XV, 78| safety, and he had no natural aptitude for flattery. No one knew 248 I, 8| Sextus Pompeius and Sextus Apuleius, the consuls, were the first 249 IV, 58| accused persons, punished Aquilia with exile for the crime 250 VI, 41| not from the regions of Arabia, and with none of the instincts 251 XV, 61| Cervarius Proculus, Vulcatius Araricus, Julius Augurinus, Munatius 252 XII, 60| dragged her to the bank of the Araxes and committed her to the 253 IV, 59| Philip had not decided arbitrarily, but according to fact, 254 XIII, 38| corruption the guilty deeds of arbitrary caprice. ~ ~ 255 IV, 59| the Milesians to whom the arbitration had been publicly entrusted, 256 XI, 25| midday in some unfrequented arcade in the town of Adrumetum, 257 XII, 63| descendant from the kings of Arcadia, than of the welfare of 258 II, 51| year was consecrated an arch near the temple of Saturn 259 XV, 72| in a sort of noose to the arched back of the chair, put her 260 III, 53| that way, spend his days in architecture, his nights in banquets, 261 III, 59| forest passes known as the Arduenna, when they were stopped 262 XV, 74| trial which cowards think arduous. It is vain to expect secrecy 263 II, 70| one Theophilus whom the Areopagus had condemned for forgery. 264 XII, 71| on their antiquity. "The Argives or Coeus, the father of 265 VI, 24| banishment. Her husband Argolicus and her father-in-law Laco, 266 XI, 17| Thebes, or Palamedes of Argos in Trojan times who invented 267 XV, 17| reality of power. After much arguing on both sides, Monobazus 268 XI, 12| between the Dahae and the Arians. There his successes terminated. 269 XI, 48| alternated between hope arid fury. In her extremity, 270 VI, 28| then, if any suspicion had arisen of imposture or of trickery, 271 VI, 41| from which an offspring arises, whose first care, when 272 XVI, 41| bare the arteries of each arm, he let the blood flow freely, 273 IV, 74| they had helped with naval armaments, not only in wars abroad, 274 XIV, 9| eager for vengeance, either arming the slaves or stirring up 275 I, 104| and made to flow into the Arnus, as that would bring ruin 276 III, 76| credit for so doing they arouse resentments and leave them 277 II, 9| the wife and daughter of Arpus, the chief of the Chatti. 278 III, 104| elude pursuit, and still arrange ambuscades with a multitude 279 XV, 69| Scaevinus on being arrested by the soldiers began his 280 XIII, 10| on knowing this, ordered Arrius Varus, commander of a cohort, 281 XII, 52| neighbours. He boasted so arrogantly and persistently that his 282 XV, 11| removed to a fortress named Arsamosata, with a cohort for their 283 VI, 63| Parthian towns Halus and Artemita. There was a rivalry of 284 IV, 41| himself, though usually artificial in manner, and though his 285 XV, 92| respectively by their wives, Artoria Flaccilla and Egnatia Maximilla. 286 XVI, 30| deliberation was Rusticus Arulenus, an enthusiastic youth, 287 III, 85| flourished before Rome's ascendancy, and the forms of worship 288 IV, 50| Drusus, as city-prefect, had ascended his tribunal for the inauguration 289 XIII, 3| the passions of an evil ascendency had Pallas on her side, 290 XI, 6| the advocate's house, on ascertaining his collusion with the adversary. 291 II, 69| generally from Miletus, who ascertains simply the number and the 292 XVI, 38| noble pattern in Cassius Asclepiodotus, whose vast wealth made 293 XIII, 11| decorations might be conferred on Asconius Labeo, who had been his 294 III, 65| adding to the truth, but ascribing the success to the loyalty 295 XII, 73| quit the windings of the Asiatic shore and take refuge in 296 XIV, 15| mother's death. But as the aspects of places change not, as 297 VI, 75| eloquence and his eagerness to assail the innocent.~ ~ 298 XII, 41| the inaccessible and the assailable points of the position, 299 XIII, 29| that the emperor was the assailant, and the insults on men 300 XIV, 15| detected with the dagger of an assassin, and that in the consciousness 301 II, 107| sounded, the rampart to be assaulted, the scaling ladders to 302 XII, 54| blockade, and, finding that his assaults were despised, tried to 303 IV, 36| of the remote forests to assert their freedom. By divine 304 VI, 69| Blandus - were appointed to assess the damage in each case, 305 XIII, 66| merchant ships should not be assessed with their owner's property, 306 II, 41| distinction had been made in the assessments of Senators and knights, 307 XVI, 23| Though formerly he had been assiduous and unwearied in showing 308 II, 70| the strict tribunes and assigning their places to creatures 309 XV, 22| the elections or of the assignment of the provinces, by a number 310 II, 102| the young Piso actively assisting in all the business of war, 311 II, 76| friendship and alliance, with an assurance that he wished for a renewal 312 XII, 15| most ancient capital of Assyria, and a fortress, historically 313 XIV, 71| youth goes in any respect astray, call me back and guide 314 XIII, 18| was dining, and as what he ate and drank was always tested 315 XII, 35| instructions to Publius Atellius Hister, governor of Pannonia, 316 XIV, 27| who devoted themselves to athletic sports, to idle loungings 317 IV, 59| entrusted, and, finally, of Atidius Geminus, the praetor of 318 XVI, 14| such derangement of the atmosphere as to be visibly apparent. 319 XVI, 21| such that the man had to atone for them himself by the 320 I, 65| against the enemy, as an atonement for their frenzy, and it 321 XII, 9| ordinances of King Tullius, and atonements were to be offered by the 322 XV, 75| his friends. Her name was Atria Galla; that of her former 323 XIV, 82| promptness inspired by previous atrocities, invented even more than 324 XIV, 67| retirement, and to which a glory attaches itself, because I thus seem 325 II, 52| and ill-starred were the attachments of the Roman people.~ ~ 326 IV, 2| hypocritically assumed for the attainment of sovereignty. ~ ~ 327 XV, 85| strength of limb was in attendance. ~ ~ 328 IV, 22| priests with more zeal in attending to the ceremonial, a gift 329 XV, 81| Seneca, as his aged frame, attenuated by frugal diet, allowed 330 V, 13| Piraeus, on the coast of Attica, thence to the shores of 331 XIV, 3| presented herself attractively attired to her half intoxicated 332 VI, 33| credible. But letters of Attius, a centurion, and Didymus, 333 XIV, 3| feasting, she presented herself attractively attired to her half intoxicated 334 XIII, 9| the mere display of showy attributes. ~ ~ 335 IV, 73| said, "the sons of King Atys, divided the nation between 336 I, 44| confused murmurs became audible. Some men, seizing his hand 337 I, 26| Their chief rage was against Aufidienus Rufus, the camp-prefect, 338 I, 82| general invested with the augurate and its very ancient ceremonies 339 XV, 61| Vulcatius Araricus, Julius Augurinus, Munatius Gratus, Antonius 340 XIV, 21| enrolled under the title of Augustani, men in their prime and 341 XIV, 40| sustained in Britain, where Aulius Didius, the emperor's legate, 342 XV, 43| due to the providence of auspicious deities. The people who 343 XII, 58| assisted at the ceremony, authorizing and abetting. When the disgraceful 344 I, 95| publication of verses of uncertain authorship, pointed at his cruelty, 345 XI, 4| emperor after the turn of autumn. It is, however, beyond 346 IV, 34| half-demolished fortress, by name Auzea, to which they had themselves 347 XVI, 20| might not be subsequently available for imperilling others. ~ ~ 348 XIII, 49| should they cross the river Avaxes which washes the city's 349 I, 105| this. Some say that, out of aversion to any fresh anxiety, he 350 XIII, 72| as the rest too were for averting perils which did not concern 351 XIII, 36| honourably acquired, and his wise avoidance of the malignity of so many 352 XII, 37| the whole country to the Avon and Severn. The Iceni, a 353 VI, 11| cling to it by the following avowal to the Senate: "In my position 354 XIV, 77| Etruria, advised him to await death with firmness rather 355 IV, 59| judgment. Such too had been the award of the Milesians to whom 356 XIV, 67| duties at Rome; both received awards which were indeed splendid, 357 I, 61| which inspired the greatest awe at a distance. There was 358 XII, 40| were free from the Roman axe and tribute, and still preserved 359 I, 79| the Rhine the Roman rods, axes, and toga. Other nations 360 XI, 41| with skins were dancing, as Bacchanals dance in their worship or 361 XV, 40| might not have to endure any badge of slavery, or have to deliver 362 II, 6| supplying horses; a long baggage-train presented facilities for 363 XIII, 34| limit fixed to the amount of bail or penalty which curule 364 XIII, 4| thoroughly understood the art of balancing words, and was sometimes 365 XI, 29| empire. Are we sorry that the Balbi came to us from Spain, and 366 XIII, 26| province of Egypt to Caius Balbillus. Syria was to be assigned 367 IV, 75| slender and stooping figure, a bald head, a face full of eruptions, 368 II, 28| hold to their anchors or bale out the water which rushed 369 XIII, 56| Suilius was banished to the Balearic isles. Neither in the crisis 370 XII, 77| recruit his strength with its balmy climate and salubrious waters. 371 XV, 69| hardly approve. As to the bandages for wounds, none had been 372 XIV, 85| as the emperor directed banishments or executions, so often 373 II, 47| satisfied, and the State will be bankrupt. Certainly our ancestors 374 XV, 89| of his friend, who often bantered him with that rough humour 375 XV, 11| the taurus, in order to bar the king's passage. He also 376 VI, 64| which had never lapsed into barbarism, but had clung loyally to 377 XIV, 54| for which he had made a bargain, or in the jealousy of a 378 XIV, 55| his wrongs because he had bargained about money from his father 379 XVI, 9| in a town of Apulia named Barium. There, as he was wisely 380 XIV, 83| forgetfulness of his late charge of barrenness against Octavia, that, conscious 381 I, 66| intrenchments, his flanks by timber barricades. He then penetrated some 382 XVI, 1| great weight lay there, with bars standing near them in another 383 XIV, 44| selling them, or on any of the barter of war, that the enemy was 384 XII, 60| appearance that she was no base-born woman, bound up her wound 385 XII, 21| powerful peoples was primarily based on a similarity of fortune, 386 V, 9| they encouraged by shameful baseness, they now wickedly revile. 387 XV, 67| adopted a womanly and yet baser suggestion; for she even 388 III, 101| at his own expense, the basilica of Paulus, that monument 389 XII, 66| exhibited such a spectacle, in a basin he had made this side the 390 II, 84| pretext of a war against the Bastarnian and Scythian tribes, he 391 XI, 3| his usual exercise, then bathed and dined cheerfully, and 392 I, 71| extravagant passion for Bathyllus, nor did he himself dislike 393 II, 18| once again exposing limbs battered by waves and storms to a 394 III, 64| their armour as if they were battering a wall. Some beat down the 395 XIV, 6| embrace, and conducted her to Bauli. This was the name of a 396 V, 13| false, he hurried by the bays of Torone and Thermae, then 397 XIV, 11| it, hurried down to the beach. Some climbed projecting 398 VI, 41| from all other birds in its beak and in the tints of its 399 II, 49| places till his hair and beard were long. In age and figure 400 VI, 41| carries its father's body, bears it to the altar of the Sun, 401 II, 30| of forms half-human, half beast-like, things they had really 402 IV, 93| battle array, they were beating back our auxiliary horse 403 XV, 51| many victories, various beauties of Greek art, then again 404 I, 66| even then were stretched on beds or at their tables, without 405 XII, 74| by lightning. A swarm of bees settled on the summit of 406 XIII, 4| his reign no disaster had befallen Rome from the foreigner, 407 III, 7| and communities, did not befit princely personages and 408 I, 60| irresolution with which he was befooling the senate and the people, 409 IV, 67| and the whole place was befouled with rotting carcases and 410 VI, 8| distinction. Of noble birth, but beggared by extravagance and infamous 411 I, 97| example in following which beggars became wealthy, the insignificant, 412 I, 45| service, and repose without beggary. Some even claimed the legacy 413 XI, 24| the name of the armies, begging the emperor to give in advance 414 XII, 58| in private life, used to beguile the dullness of his leisure 415 III, 96| hearsay. Many a man has behaved in a province quite otherwise 416 IV, 33| positions, and at the same time beheaded some chiefs of the Musulamii, 417 XI, 4| He had, it was alleged, beheld Claudius crowned with a 418 XIV, 84| appalling horror of Poppaea beholding the severed head which was 419 I, 91| welcome to barbarians, was for beleaguering the entrenchment in armed 420 I, 44| neighbouring Sequani and all the Belgic states swear obedience to 421 XIII, 69| Gracilis, the governor of Belgica, discouraged the work by 422 XIV, 6| credulity, which easily believes what joy. As she approached, 423 III, 103| assuming the character of a belligerent. "Even Spartacus when he 424 II, 63| whose family she appeared to belong; and the estate of Patuleius, 425 XII, 26| received a privilege. Senators belonging to the province, without 426 XI, 39| the slaves, and the other belongings of imperial rank. These 427 XVI, 4| nostrils. Last of all, on bended knee he saluted the assembly 428 IV, 12| these words, and then many a benediction. Had the emperor set bounds 429 IV, 24| such an obligation. For benefits received are a delight to 430 XV, 43| Hadria, he rested awhile at Beneventum, where a crowded gladiatorial 431 I, 10| private citizen, except a bequest of forty-three million five 432 XV, 22| solicitude or of the sorrows of bereavement could rise in a moment to 433 I, 35| threats. "How long will you besiege the emperor's son? What 434 VI, 66| man would have yielded. By besieging a fortress into which Artabanus 435 XIII, 46| said, "Vologeses had not bestirred himself, simply because 436 XII, 10| speech, praying Claudius to betroth Octavia to Domitius. The 437 XIII, 72| submit to the rule of their betters; that the gods to whom they 438 II, 97| prepossessed with suspicion or were biased by partiality towards Piso, 439 IV, 3| readily yielding, and being so biassed that not only in private 440 IV, 47| the poems which we read of Bibaculus and Catullus are crammed 441 III, 71| fact, when the aedile Caius Bibulus broached the topic, all 442 IV, 45| succession the merciless biddings of a tyrant, incessant prosecutions, 443 XII, 15| Hercules, who at a stated time bids the priests in a dream equip 444 III, 39| just as they chose. And now bills were passed, not only for 445 I, 58| his name, his rank, his birthplace, the number of his campaigns, 446 II, 78| the Cappadocians, from the Bithynian to the Lycian sea. There 447 XV, 6| appearing, had devoured every blade of grass and every leaf. 448 IV, 61| great wealth, which had been blamelessly acquired and was modestly 449 XII, 79| body was being wrapped in blankets with warm applications, 450 II, 28| rolling clouds, a strong blast, all the more frightful 451 III, 5| were crowded; torches were blazing throughout the Campus Martius. 452 XV, 75| profligacy of the woman, blazoned Piso's infamy. ~ ~ 453 XVI, 33| Montanus, a youth without a blemish, author of no libellous 454 III, 32| effectually did he interchange and blend the outward signs of resentment 455 I, 4| few spoke in vain of the blessings of freedom, but most people 456 II, 30| tide ebbed and the wind blew favourably, the shattered 457 IV, 88| not incurred such odium blindly; this is a studied device 458 XV, 93| Quietus, Julius Agrippa, Blitius Catulinus, Petronius Priscus, 459 XVI, 11| and still kept by her the blood-stained apparel, clinging in her 460 I, 33| the first to scorn such blots on military discipline. 461 XII, 46| the Silures ought to be blotted out. Accordingly they cut 462 II, 10| the stream, and it was a blunder that he did not have it 463 I, 22| tottering throne? We have blundered enough by our tameness for 464 IV, 9| any graciousness, but in a blunt fashion which often alarmed, 465 XV, 67| complaining that it was blunted from long disuse, he ordered 466 VI, 31| him to be buried, and he blushed not to grant the favour, 467 XI, 14| specially assisted. It is in no boastful spirit that I mention this, 468 II, 112| he did not refrain from boasting before the senators that 469 IV, 24| presumption and his extravagant boasts that his troops had been 470 XII, 51| crowded round him with a boisterous clamour and drove him to 471 XV, 4| Verulanus Severus and Vettius Bolanus to the support of Tigranes, 472 III, 74| and this has made luxury bolder than ever. The truth is, 473 XII, 68| procured for the colony of Bononia, which had been ruined by 474 II, 83| lands, the towns, and what bordered on Greek territories, fell 475 VI, 22| and allowing freedom to borrow without interest for three 476 VI, 22| three years, provided the borrower gave security to the State 477 XII, 67| bored down so low as the bottom, or middle of the lake. 478 II, 24| too were surrounded by a bottomless morass, only on one side 479 XIII, 73| produced salt in plenty, and bounded their territories. They 480 XIII, 52| were to be thanked for the bountiful favours of fortune, even 481 I, 44| others showed him their limbs bowed with age. He ordered the 482 II, 11| distance and required that the bowmen ranged on our bank should 483 VI, 51| Sarmatae, throwing aside their bows, which at a shorter range 484 XIV, 27| themselves naked, put on the boxing-glove, and practise such battles 485 IV, 11| said: "Senators, when these boys lost their father, I committed 486 III, 7| grief; but now they must brace their hearts to endurance, 487 III, 19| urgent request of his sons braced his courage and once more 488 IV, 93| pieces in a wood called Braduhenna's, after prolonging the 489 XI, 17| be seen on the tablets of brass set up in the squares and 490 XII, 41| they were of the defence of breast-plates or helmets. When they faced 491 XIV, 64| the passage he ceased to breathe. Many positively asserted 492 I, 5| he found Augustus still breathing or quite lifeless. For Livia 493 IV, 85| summer it catches the western breezes, and the open sea round 494 XI, 36| listened to the words of the bridegroom's friends, should have sacrificed 495 I, 65| enthusiasm of the men, and having bridged over the Rhine, he sent 496 I, 69| inmost heart. He bestowed a briefer praise on Drusus, and on 497 III, 103| people as by a deserter and brigand assuming the character of 498 II, 114| of Sardinia, to quell the brigandage of the place, a cheap sacrifice 499 IV, 47| he nowhere describes as brigands and traitors, terms now 500 I, 34| with joy or sorrow, as she brightened or grew dark. When clouds 501 IV, 16| inwardly rejoiced at the brightening future of the family of 502 I, 34| prosperously should her brightness and splendour be restored


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