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Publius (Gaius) Cornelius Tacitus Annals Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
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2503 XI, 39| whether she knew it. Cleopatra nodding assent, she begged that 2504 IV, 65| terrible as the foe, with the noise of their war songs and the 2505 IV, 68| by heeding embarrassing noises or being deceived by quiet, 2506 II, 38| with soldiers; they crowded noisily even about the entrance, 2507 VI, 22| importunate entreaties; then noisy applications to the praetor' 2508 I, 58| afterwards sent into Raetia, nominally to defend the province against 2509 IV, 21| said, "the old custom to nominate together three patricians, 2510 II, 45| praetorselect, the emperor nominating twelve candidates every 2511 VI, 69| added to their number on the nomination of the consuls. Various 2512 IV, 67| multitude of soldiers and non-combatants. Their cattle too, penned 2513 XIII, 70| forests and swamps, and their non-fighting population, over the lakes, 2514 XI, 26| subsequently ascertained, Cneius Nonius, a Roman knight, was found 2515 XIII, 48| but very few wounded. The nonmilitary population were sold by 2516 XII, 80| At last, at noon on the 13th of October, 2517 XV, 72| her bosom, in a sort of noose to the arched back of the 2518 II, 81| flows by the province of Noricum, he wrote to Tiberius, not 2519 XVI, 4| seen to spit or clear his nostrils. Last of all, on bended 2520 I, 66| Peace it certainly was not-merely the languid and heedless 2521 XIII, 54| ascertained from his father's notebooks that he had never compelled 2522 I, 40| the other soldiers with notions that the time had come when 2523 III, 8| widely rumoured that the notorius poisoner Martina, who, as 2524 I, 24| soldiers of old ever ask so novel a boon of ancient commanders, 2525 XV, 92| having the credit of it. Novius Priscus, as Seneca's friend, 2526 XV, 15| examples of Candium and Numantia. "Neither the Samnites, 2527 IV, 31| opened. Shortly afterwards Numantina, his former wife, was charged 2528 XV, 11| then was discovered the numerical feebleness of the source 2529 XV, 47| dower, the couch and the nuptial torches; everything in a 2530 XII, 6| yet dare to celebrate the nuptials in due form, for there was 2531 XIV, 67| munificence, than a culture nursed, so to speak, in the shade 2532 I, 57| recall his wife, to let the nursling of the legions return and 2533 XV, 22| rights and the anxieties of nurture against fraudulent evasions 2534 XV, 94| consul's decorations to Nymphidius, on whose origin, as he 2535 IV, 83| Querquetulanus, because it grew oak timber in abundance and 2536 II, 111| Salii; chairs of state with oaken garlands over them were 2537 IV, 69| and boughs lopped from oaks; now filling up the fosses 2538 XIV, 11| trireme, Herculeius, and Obaritus, a centurion of marines. " 2539 XV, 48| plunder more freely, or obeying orders. ~ ~ 2540 III, 49| the majority clamorously objected that there was no proper 2541 IV, 21| avoided; and there was the objection that the man who obtained 2542 XV, 26| while we are trying to oblige than while we are giving 2543 XV, 47| seen naked prostitutes with obscene gestures and movements. 2544 IV, 25| defend himself, hinted, not obscurely, at the person whose resentment 2545 VI, 56| the truth, which flattery obscures. About the same time Granius 2546 III, 107| of wider fame, Capito's obsequiousness was more acceptable to those 2547 XV, 69| will without heeding the observance of particular days, and 2548 IV, 4| There were however obstacles to his ambition in the imperial 2549 I, 73| had accomplished, without obstruction, rapid march, and he feared 2550 XI, 36| world could have been so obtuse in a city which knows everything 2551 XIII, 34| personal quarrel he had with Obultronius Sabinus, one of the officials 2552 XIV, 76| Antistius. "He was to avoid the obvious refuge of a coward's death, 2553 V, 7| beginning of section 6 is obviously fragmentary.] ~ ~ 2554 VI, 5| anxieties by seeking further occasions of bitterness, as he was 2555 II, 115| Vestal virgin in the room of Occia, who for fifty-seven years 2556 XIII, 49| others by the consent of the occupants, capitulated. This inspired 2557 III, 8| and men went back to their occupations. Drusus was sent to the 2558 VI, 29| I hear of these and like occurrences, I suspend my judgment on 2559 XII, 48| These transactions, though occurring under two propraetors, and 2560 XIV, 68| investments? Only one apology occurs to me, that it would not 2561 XIII, 7| Cneius Pompeius and Caesar Octavianus, in their eighteenth and 2562 IV, 62| to the sepulchre of the Octavii. ~ ~ 2563 XV, 43| Thereupon Nero in an elaborate ode thanked the gods, celebrating 2564 III, 55| unpunished. The Coelaletae, Odrusae and Dii, powerful tribes, 2565 XI, 19| temperance which can never offend, but oftener those excesses 2566 XIII, 30| them. But, as for notorious offenders, they deserved to be dragged 2567 VI, 56| punishing doubtful or forgotten offenses as most flagrant and recent 2568 IV, 58| speeches, often true and offensive, were flung in his very 2569 XIII, 21| Calvisius, not with the old and often-repeated charges about Agrippina' 2570 XIV, 59| established a gymnasium, where oil was furnished to knights 2571 III, 33| Quirinus, "to whose childless old-age and miserably obscure family, 2572 III, 78| manners was Vespasian, himself old-fashioned both in his dress and diet. 2573 II, 39| order to bring to light this old-standing evil in the State. ~ ~ 2574 III, 71| that a prince who clung to oldfashioned frugality would be too stern 2575 III, 86| the pangs of labour on an olive still standing, gave birth 2576 VI, 13| however without affixing some ominous marks to the name of Scaurus.~ ~ 2577 II, 105| were unsuccessful, did not omit the safest precautions under 2578 II, 54| the future, he fixed at one-half per cent.~ ~ 2579 III, 10| retinue of women, moved onward with joy in their countenances. 2580 Miss | Eleventh Book of the Annals opens with the seventh year of 2581 XII, 70| binding on the State. Caius Oppius and Cornelius Balbus were 2582 XVI, 23| himself a supporter or an opponent even of the most ordinary 2583 IV, 67| of the works which he had opportunely began to construct; then 2584 IV, 45| condemning, as they do, their opposites by too close a contrast. 2585 XIII, 38| subjects had been as much oppressed by such bribery as by actual 2586 III, 57| perpetual tributes, the oppressive usury, the cruelty and arrogance 2587 III, 5| they might outlive their oppressors. ~ ~ 2588 XII, 35| attracted by the fame of the opulent realm which Vannius had 2589 II, 69| Germanicus, in dark hints, as oracles usually do, an early doom. ~ ~ 2590 IV, 47| dictator, than by a written oration in reply, as if he was pleading 2591 I, 6| directions from his father ordering the tribune in charge of 2592 XII, 39| into the territory of the Ordovices, where, joined by all who 2593 XIV, 16| donative and largess, and organised perilous prosecutions against 2594 XV, 43| deformed person and vulgar wit, originally introduced as a butt. After 2595 VI, 20| the ill-will against him originating in his state policy, and 2596 IV, 36| fortunate accident. The originator of the movement was Titus 2597 VI, 55| first to enter the camp was Ornospades, with several thousand cavalry. 2598 III, 86| river Cenchrius, a grove Ortygia, where Latona, as she leaned 2599 IV, 19| private families, and the old Oscan farce, once a wretched amusement 2600 II, 17| leather or steel, but is of osiers woven together or of thin 2601 I, 10| he hated, simply out of ostentation and to win credit with posterity. 2602 | ours 2603 XII, 17| his power and was a mere outcast, on learning that the Roman 2604 III, 66| alone, in endeavouring to outdo the other Senators, went 2605 XII, 67| was prepared close to the outflow of the lake, and it was 2606 XII, 50| sentence the accuser to outlawry. This was all that Vitellius 2607 XII, 67| the sight was over, the outlet of the water was opened. 2608 III, 5| children and that they might outlive their oppressors. ~ ~ 2609 V, 11| fortune with resignation, and outlived Tiberius. ~ ~ 2610 XIV, 61| by any wrong, had uttered outrageous insults against the sovereign; 2611 XIV, 84| too slowly, she was killed outright by the steam of an intensely 2612 VI, 22| s decree, rigour at the outset, as usual with such matters, 2613 III, 108| But Cassius and Brutus outshone them all, from the very 2614 II, 19| occupied the plain and the outskirts of the wood. The Cherusci 2615 XIV, 79| This led to incessant and outspoken remonstrances among the 2616 IV, 80| it fell inwards or spread outwards, precipitating and burying 2617 VI, 16| one of the exconsuls to overawe the slaves and that part 2618 I, 37| when they have once been overawed, they can be safely despised. " 2619 I, 49| insulting." At the same moment, overawing all resistance, he seized 2620 II, 28| burden, baggage, were thrown overboard, in order to lighten the 2621 XI, 41| being trodden; the vats were overflowing; women girt with skins were 2622 II, 28| the legions were sent back overland into winter-quarters, but 2623 II, 50| he thought that he must overlook nothing, sometimes that 2624 XII, 54| last, as Pollio pleaded the overpowering numbers of the enemy and 2625 XIII, 45| attached to Rome, and they overran the wilds of Armenia. Thus 2626 XV, 9| vigilance. While he was overrunning in tedious expeditions districts 2627 III, 14| Certainly if a subordinate oversteps the bounds of duty and of 2628 IV, 37| punishment might sooner or later overtake him. He protested too that 2629 XIV, 5| the sea, and should she be overtaken by shipwreck, who would 2630 I, 89| in fright at the uproar, overthrew some men against whom it 2631 VI, 76| repeatedly repulsed in her overtures, had at last by her arts 2632 XVI, 25| make a show of freedom, to overturn the empire; should they 2633 II, 38| as they shrank back, they overturned the lamp on the table at 2634 III, 41| they already suspected of overweening ambition. ~ ~ 2635 XIV, 70| possessions; those which you owe to me, your parks, investments, 2636 I, 77| by Arminius or that she owes her being to me."~ ~ 2637 VI, 77| in a country-house once owned by Lucius Lucullus. There 2638 III, 40| parent, might possess their ownerless properties. But this espionage 2639 XV, 20| long marches, might keep pace with the enemy's untiring 2640 XIV, 68| his garden terraces, who paces grandly through these suburban 2641 I, 85| parties, which they harassed, pacing round them and continually 2642 II, 104| anticipated by its commander Pacuvius. Of this Sentius informed 2643 XIV, 85| calamities of that period in my pages or those of other authors, 2644 III, 29| Roman cohort near the river Pagyda. The position was commanded 2645 III, 73| The marvels in bronze and painting? The apparel worn indiscriminately 2646 XI, 17| Athens or Linus of Thebes, or Palamedes of Argos in Trojan times 2647 XV, 82| frame white to a degree of pallor which denoted a loss of 2648 II, 103| coasted along Lycia and Pamphylia, and on meeting the fleet 2649 XII, 18| after crossing the river Panda besieged the city of Uspe, 2650 XIV, 83| confined her in the island of Pandataria. No exile ever filled the 2651 I, 70| Augustus in the island of Pandateria, and then in the town of 2652 III, 86| Latona, as she leaned in the pangs of labour on an olive still 2653 XV, 11| He also stationed some Pannonian troopers, the flower of 2654 XII, 15| night with empty quivers, panting violently. Again the god 2655 I, 102| should enter the house of a pantomime player, that Roman knights 2656 XIV, 29| slightly kindled, for the pantomimic actors, though permitted 2657 III, 88| their founder Aerias to the Paphian Venus, the second by his 2658 II, 39| motion of Gallus Asinius, Papius Mutilus, and Lucius Apronius. 2659 I, 3| the tribunitian power, and paraded through all the armies, 2660 III, 93| apprehension which is enough to paralyse even the most practised 2661 XVI, 17| home fatigue the mind and paralyze it with grief. The only 2662 XV, 81| own words, I forbear to paraphrase. ~ ~ 2663 IV, 52| Senate. But though it may be pardonable to have allowed this once, 2664 XII, 16| yielded to promises from Parrhaces, one of his father's adherents, 2665 II, 41| there was neither excess nor parsimony except in relation to the 2666 III, 49| should be cut off from their partners in prosperity and adversity. 2667 XVI, 7| the inscription "to the Party-Leader." In fact, he had thereby 2668 XV, 48| with those narrow winding passages and irregular streets, which 2669 VI, 26| clever remark from the orator Passienus, that "there never was a 2670 XIV, 64| because too of the merely passive virtue of one of his successors 2671 XVI, 22| in a tragedian's dress at Patavium, his birth-place, in some 2672 XV, 22| forthwith dismissed from paternal control the sons whom they 2673 IV, 63| eluded pursuit amid rocky and pathless wilds. But he was soon discovered. 2674 XIV, 33| alleviated only by the general's patient endurance. He bore indeed 2675 IV, 94| day and night alike the patronising smiles and the supercilious 2676 II, 63| belong; and the estate of Patuleius, a wealthy Roman knight, 2677 XIII, 31| be a separate class, the paucity of the freeborn would be 2678 XIV, 20| themselves because they were paupers. As they have ended their 2679 III, 1| Without pausing in her winter voyage Agrippina 2680 VI, 42| ebb from him. His wife, Paxaea, emulated her husband. What 2681 IV, 63| committed in Nearer Spain by a peasant of the Termestine tribe. 2682 XII, 67| the work, with avarice and peculation. He too was not silent, 2683 XIV, 38| were to incur the same pecuniary risk as those who referred 2684 XIII, 16| with disfigured hand, and a pedant's tongue, the government 2685 XIV, 25| Pedius Blaesus was also expelled 2686 I, 80| was led by its commander Pedo by the territories of the 2687 XIV, 77| slew him in the presence of Pelago, an eunuch, whom Nero had 2688 IV, 59| ancient division of the Peloponnesus among the descendants of 2689 IV, 73| afterwards took its name from Pelops." They spoke too of letters 2690 IV, 61| an army across the Elbe, penetrating further into Germany than 2691 I, 42| temper of soldiers with some penetration, the strongest symptom of 2692 V, 11| hope and fear, asked for a penknife, avowedly, for his literary 2693 IV, 67| non-combatants. Their cattle too, penned up close to them, after 2694 II, 88| then Remmius, an enrolled pensioner, who had previously been 2695 XIV, 37| little for those thinly peopled places; for most scattered 2696 IV, 70| heavenly blood, and she perceives her danger, and assumes 2697 VI, 53| their own homes, who had no perception of honour, or any scruple 2698 XVI, 29| numbers more, daring enough, perchance, to raise the hand of violence 2699 XII, 51| year. Birds of evil omen perched on the Capitol; houses were 2700 II, 16| a glorious vengeance the perfidious violators of peace. Meanwhile 2701 XVI, 36| ornaments to raise money for the performance of magical rites, she at 2702 III, 89| had ascertained that at Pergamus there was a sanctuary of 2703 II, 69| visited the Thracian cities, Perinthus and Byzantium; next, the 2704 XIII, 18| common occurrence, from a periodical epilepsy, with which Britannicus 2705 VI, 7| feel myself to be daily perishing, if I know at know at this 2706 I, 96| that he had violated by perjury the divinity of Augustus. 2707 XI, 36| the freedom which marriage permits. But this is no story to 2708 III, 88| quoted too the names of Perperna, Isauricus, and many other 2709 XV, 73| middle of the trial and perpetrate the fatal deed, Rufus refused, 2710 XIV, 81| Fittest for this seemed the perpetrator of the mother's murder, 2711 IV, 70| the Divine Augustus and to persecute his posterity. The celestial 2712 IV, 49| generation. On the contrary, the persecution of genius fosters its influence; 2713 II, 93| and brother, torn by what persecutions, entangled by what plots, 2714 IV, 73| throughout her wars with Perseus, Aristonicus, and other 2715 XII, 23| suppliant as they showed persistence against a foe. As for triumphs, 2716 XVI, 4| tired, nor wiping off the perspiration with anything but the garment 2717 VI, 48| Mithridates was the first to persuade Pharasmanes to aid his enterprise 2718 VI, 52| were overthrown, Vitellius persuading his subjects to forsake 2719 V, 1| who, an exile during the Perusian war, returned to Rome when 2720 VI, 6| then requested that words perversely misrepresented and the freedom 2721 XIV, 50| that general's disasters to perverseness and his successes to good 2722 XV, 96| senators deterred him from perverting public miseries into an 2723 I, 21| listening to the talk of every pestilent fellow, in short, of craving 2724 II, 114| should they die from the pestilential climate. The rest were to 2725 III, 89| certain limits, and the petitioners were directed to set up 2726 XV, 32| mockery of the barbarians in petitioning for what they had wrested 2727 IV, 17| citizens at Rome and with petitions from allies. Decrees of 2728 IV, 86| Latiaris, Porcius Cato, Petitius Rufus, and Marcus Opsius, 2729 XI, 4| who bore the surname of Petra. The real cause of their 2730 I, 14| had been deluded by the phantom of peace, and Lepidus by 2731 IV, 61| fallen in the battle of Pharsalia, fighting for the aristocracy. 2732 XIV, 15| himself, with an opposite phase of hypocrisy, seemed sad, 2733 VI, 1| the place and the endless phases of sensuality. Slaves too 2734 VI, 40| discussion of the marvellous phenomenon. It is my wish to make known 2735 II, 62| help. The people of Temnus, Philadelpheia, Aegae, Apollonis, the Mostenians, 2736 III, 55| the king in the city of Philippopolis, founded by the Macedonian 2737 III, 101| had not hindered Taurus, Philippus, or Balbus from applying 2738 II, 55| deaths of Antiochus and Philopator, kings respectively of the 2739 XVI, 20| soul or on the theories of philosophers, but light poetry and playful 2740 XIV, 72| as though weak health or philosophical studies detained him at 2741 XVI, 5| Vespasian was insulted by Phoebus, a freedman, for closing 2742 XI, 17| the alphabet, which the Phoenicians, they say, by means of their 2743 III, 79| power for Drusus. This was a phrase which Augustus devised as 2744 II, 41| assent, under these specious phrases, by a confession of failings 2745 IV, 81| indiscriminately medicines and physicians, so that Rome then, notwithstanding 2746 III, 10| at Ancona, went through Picenum and along the Flaminian 2747 III, 64| snatching up hatchets and pickaxes, hacked at their bodies 2748 I, 66| the Marsi, and threw their pickets round the enemy, who even 2749 XV, 90| dismissed, when Nero, having pictured to himself and laughed over 2750 XVI, 26| carrying off statues and pictures. But the crime imputed to 2751 XIV, 65| the citizens, while in the picturesqueness of his gardens and the magnificence 2752 XIV, 79| Senate and seeing that every piece of his wickedness was regarded 2753 XIV, 11| Some climbed projecting piers; some the nearest vessels; 2754 XVI, 37| of an exaggerated filial piety, and as for myself, let 2755 XII, 74| man, half beast, and of a pig with a hawk's talons, were 2756 XV, 54| our procurators, Pontius Pilatus, and a most mischievous 2757 I, 46| be daring enough for the pillage of Gaul. The alarm was heightened 2758 III, 56| same moment successful; the pillagers were cut to pieces; dissensions 2759 II, 78| the place because Canopus, pilot of one of their ships, had 2760 IV, 46| were Satrius Secundus and Pinarius Natta, creatures of Sejanus. 2761 XIII, 43| veterans who had never been on piquet duty or on night guard, 2762 V, 13| island of the Aegaean, to Piraeus, on the coast of Attica, 2763 XII, 72| had given Antonius in the pirate-war, of their offers to Sulla, 2764 XV, 33| eve of his war against the Pirates. When Paetus returned and 2765 XI, 21| light vessels, had made piratical descents specially on the 2766 XV, 87| tribune. At his direction, a pit was dug in a neighbouring 2767 I, 66| been begun by Tiberius, and pitched his camp on this barrier, 2768 III, 33| and as she appealed with piteous wailings to her ancestors 2769 VI, 76| affliction and other sad and pitiful pleas of the same painful 2770 I, 81| gibbets for the captives, the pits for the living, and how 2771 XVI, 11| he and his freedman were pitted against each other on an 2772 II, 40| of their number, Lucius Pituanius, was hurled from the Rock. 2773 I, 99| justice, ruined freedom. Pius Aurelius, for example, a 2774 IV, 36| neighbouring towns, then by placards publicly exhibited, he incited 2775 XV, 58| And in the district of Placentia, close to the road, a calf 2776 II, 6| which knew him well, and placing him over new provinces where 2777 XVI, 14| of Rome, where a terrible plague was sweeping away all classes 2778 XVI, 14| everywhere countryhouses, plantations and crops, and carried its 2779 I, 87| the storm of missiles, nor planted in the miry soil. Caecina, 2780 IV, 75| covered here and there with plasters. In the seclusion of Rhodes 2781 III, 64| an obstacle, as the iron plates did not yield to javelins 2782 I, 57| accused man was on a raised platform and was pointed out by a 2783 I, 106| their influence or merit. A plausible profession this in words, 2784 XIV, 21| Noble ladies too actually played disgusting parts, and in 2785 XIII, 17| amid other pastimes of his playmates, at a game of lot drawing 2786 VI, 76| and other sad and pitiful pleas of the same painful kind, 2787 XIII, 60| uprightly and virtuously, a pleasure-loving man when idle, and self-restrained 2788 XV, 66| So it is related by Caius Pliny. Handed down from whatever 2789 II, 84| that he had forestalled the plotter. Meanwhile, under pretext 2790 XII, 28| that animal is yoked to the plough, a furrow was drawn to mark 2791 I, 45| than cast off his loyalty, plucked his sword from his side, 2792 VI, 41| and in the tints of its plumage, is held unanimously by 2793 XI, 29| days when Italy beyond the Po was admitted to share our 2794 XIV, 49| end to her life by poison. Poenius Postumus too, camp-prefect 2795 III, 26| Claudius. Thereupon he was pointedly asked by Lucius Asprenas 2796 II, 89| belief that he had been poisoned by Piso. And certainly there 2797 XIV, 64| throat was smeared with some poisonous drug under the pretence 2798 XIV, 36| subjection of Pharasmanes, Polemo, Aristobulus, and Antiochus. 2799 II, 72| inclined towards Zeno, son of Polemon, king of Pontus, who from 2800 VI, 77| evident as it was, by a forced politeness. After frequent changes 2801 XIII, 53| litigant's consent, than to pollute the chambers of the imperial 2802 XVI, 10| Sextia, and his daughter Pollutia submitted to death. They 2803 II, 5| letting him retain his royal pomp and title. How Vonones meditated 2804 IV, 47| that Augustus called him Pompeianus, and yet this was no obstacle 2805 II, 76| Vonones was removed to Pompeiopolis, a city on the coast of 2806 XV, 52| supply water, except the Pomptine marshes. The rest of the 2807 XVI, 1| but in the shapeless and ponderous masses of ancient days. 2808 XI, 21| nothing as he dug, but his poniard. These extreme and possibly 2809 III, 100| recently deferred, and read the pontifical decree, prescribing that 2810 XII, 67| exhibited, with floating pontoons for an infantry engagement. 2811 XV, 83| poison. At last he entered a pool of heated water, from which 2812 III, 47| whom he condemned as a poor-spirited and needy man, who was a 2813 XV, 28| large part of Pompeii, a populous town in Campania. And one 2814 XI, 29| Coruncanii from Camerium, the Porcii from Tusculum, and not to 2815 XVI, 26| bestowed pains on opening the port of Ephesus and passed over 2816 XIV, 3| wanton kisses and caresses, portending infamy, it was Seneca who 2817 XIV, 30| in popular opinion always portends revolution to kingdoms. 2818 XIV, 15| accomplished, realised its portentous guilt. The rest of the night, 2819 XIV, 18| too a thick succession of portents, which meant nothing. A 2820 XV, 50| temples of the gods, and the porticoes which were devoted to enjoyment, 2821 XIV, 32| himself of the recent panic by possessing himself of Tigranocerta, 2822 I, 86| As he thought over future possibilities, he could devise no plan 2823 VI, 5| safety of Regulus and the postponement of Trio's ruin. Haterius 2824 IV, 31| magical incantations and potions, but she was acquitted.~ ~ 2825 XI, 27| so created were Valerius Potitus and Aemilius Mamercus sixty-three 2826 II, 35| evil notoriety. He at once pounced on the accused, went to 2827 XV, 57| gladiators in the town of Praeneste, who attempted to break 2828 XV, 94| ex-consul, to Cocceius Nerva, praetor-elect, and to Tigellinus, commander 2829 II, 45| service should at once become praetorselect, the emperor nominating 2830 XIV, 42| revolt of the province. Prasutagus, king of the Iceni, famed 2831 XII, 10| promises to deliver a speech, praying Claudius to betroth Octavia 2832 III, 106| at the same time, without pre-eminence above their fellows. Augustus 2833 III, 3| their shoulders. They were preceded by the standards unadorned 2834 XIII, 66| provinces, should give judicial precedence to all cases against the 2835 VI, 22| destruction of private wealth precipitated the fall of rank and reputation, 2836 IV, 80| inwards or spread outwards, precipitating and burying an immense multitude 2837 XIII, 2| With no less precipitation, Narcissus, Claudius's freedman, 2838 XIV, 55| protected by his rank, when the prefecture of the capital has been 2839 III, 82| appointment without any prejudice to religion, with what comparative 2840 XIV, 64| soldiers, and this, he found, prejudiced him with Nero. ~ ~ 2841 XIV, 56| ignorance? There are many preliminaries to guilt; if these are divulged 2842 III, 94| his opinion. After a long preliminary eulogy on the prince's clemency, 2843 III, 92| had been the keeping of a preparatory school. Subsequently, becoming 2844 II, 17| of service, this battle prepares the way to it. The Elbe 2845 II, 97| pitied Germanicus and were prepossessed with suspicion or were biased 2846 XV, 58| talked much about prodigies, presaging impending evils. Never were 2847 III, 100| read the pontifical decree, prescribing that whenever illness attacked 2848 III, 49| censor on so grave an issue. Presently Valerius Messalinus, Messala' 2849 VI, 17| criticised, as was usual, by its presidents, though their authenticity 2850 XIII, 6| emperor's tribunal and of presiding with him; but Seneca, when 2851 XI, 41| vintage in her new home. The presses were being trodden; the 2852 XIV, 55| as some do not blush to pretend, avenging his wrongs because 2853 XI, 44| but still he could not prevail upon him to utter anything 2854 IV, 7| me to review the hitherto prevailing methods of administration 2855 V, 13| Achaia were alarmed by a prevalent but short-lived rumour that 2856 XV, 48| them, it outstripped all preventive measures; so rapid was the 2857 II, 34| thoughtless and an easy prey to delusions, to resort 2858 IV, 90| none on which Tiberius so prided himself as his ability to 2859 VI, 60| as for the Blaesi, the priesthoods intended for them during 2860 I, 79| him restore to his son his priestly office; one thing there 2861 VI, 29| wandering stars, but on primary elements, and on a combination 2862 XIV, 52| associated with them Antonius Primus and Asinius Marcellus. Antonius 2863 III, 7| communities, did not befit princely personages and an imperial 2864 XVI, 12| the others according to priority of age. They were prosecuted 2865 III, 62| vying in zeal, and even the privates loudly protesting against 2866 XI, 9| Messala, enriched with the prizes of the conflict between 2867 XIV, 51| between the governor and the pro-curator, but also to pacify the 2868 II, 15| shout of the many. He must probe their inmost thoughts, when 2869 IV, 84| Senate however stopped the proceeding, and decided to wait for 2870 III, 8| by an insolent and artful procrastination. It was indeed widely rumoured 2871 IV, 56| alliance, he talked of Caius Proculeius and certain persons of singularly 2872 XV, 44| ordered to charge him with prodigality in lavishing gifts, and 2873 XV, 8| javelins gleamed with light, a prodigy the more significant because 2874 III, 15| hinder the accused from producing all the evidence which can 2875 XII, 73| has a fruitful soil and productive seas, as immense shoals 2876 I, 55| dared, what have you not profaned during these days? What 2877 II, 113| unchaste women to have to profess their shame. Titidius Labeo, 2878 XVI, 39| attention to Demetrius, a professor of the Cynic philosophy. 2879 I, 56| the Belgae, though they proffer their aid, to have the glory 2880 XIII, 53| familiar as he was only with profitless studies, and with the ignorance 2881 XI, 9| not before calculated the profits. It was easy for Asinius 2882 XVI, 33| Senate gave way to a new and profounder panic, as they saw the soldiers' 2883 XI, 2| defence. Claudius he moved profoundly, and he even drew tears 2884 III, 61| whole time, either from the profoundness of his reserve; or was it 2885 II, 46| Behold the offspring and progeny of a succession of consuls 2886 VI, 27| I must not pass over a prognostication of Tiberius respecting Servius 2887 VI, 54| trust might be placed in prognostics given in the earth or in 2888 XIV, 51| crossed the ocean, to make his progresses a terror even to our soldiers. 2889 XV, 26| check to rapacity, so, by prohibiting the vote of thanks, will 2890 III, 74| when people once transgress prohibitions with impunity, there is 2891 I, 81| horses, and also human heads, prominently nailed to trunks of trees. 2892 II, 29| night, on those rocks and promontories he would incessantly exclaim 2893 XVI, 2| crews specially selected to promote speed. Nothing else at the 2894 XVI, 16| There was a motive for promptitude arising out of the fact 2895 XIV, 82| insensibility of his nature and a promptness inspired by previous atrocities, 2896 V, 6| proceeded, not indeed to pronounce the final sentence (for 2897 XII, 8| were being accumulated as a prop to the throne. ~ ~ 2898 III, 40| possess their ownerless properties. But this espionage became 2899 I, 99| cast off all others. To Propertius Celer, an ex-praetor, who 2900 XI, 41| dropped by chance became a prophecy. ~ ~ 2901 VI, 75| While he thus spoke like a prophet, he opened his veins. What 2902 VI, 17| other volumes of the same prophetess by a decree on the subject. 2903 XIV, 20| singer that that great and prophetic deity was seen in Roman 2904 XV, 54| thing was to seek means of propitiating the gods, and recourse was 2905 II, 69| the narrow strait of the Propontis and the entrance of the 2906 III, 78| conspicuously grand, gained too proportionate lustre by his name and his 2907 XVI, 13| Cornelius Orfitus, the proposer of the motion, publicly 2908 XIV, 25| seized by the neighbouring proprietors, who trusted to a long continued 2909 I, 2| fallen in battle, or in the proscription, while the remaining nobles, 2910 III, 11| asked the consul's leave to prosecute Piso. It was contended against 2911 XV, 54| to Vulcanus, Ceres, and Proserpina. Juno, too, was entreated 2912 I, 34| their attempts would end prosperously should her brightness and 2913 XV, 95| of a freedwoman, who had prostituted a handsome person among 2914 XV, 47| opposite bank were seen naked prostitutes with obscene gestures and 2915 II, 113| knight should get money by prostitution. Vistilia, born of a praetorian 2916 XII, 19| interests, gave hostages and prostrated himself before the emperor' 2917 I, 50| the eagle, he sought to protect himself under their sanctity. 2918 XVI, 30| it would be fatal to the protester. "My days," he said, "are 2919 XIV, 55| be destroyed by incessant protests, wishing that it might remain 2920 XII, 35| fortified positions, and protract the war. ~ ~ 2921 XV, 11| Parthian foe baffled, by protracting the war, had Paetus stood 2922 XII, 24| said to have spoken too proudly for his position, and words 2923 III, 15| implore you not to take as proven charges alleged, merely 2924 XIV, 18| happened quite without any providential design; so much so, that 2925 I, 5| from time to time, till, provision having been made for the 2926 I, 101| displaying his ferocity and provoking the people's disgust, though 2927 XIV, 36| according to their respective proximities, were put under the subjection 2928 VI, 4| daring, mischievous man, who pryed into every person's secrets, 2929 XVI, 15| grasping at empire and prying into the destinies of themselves 2930 XII, 72| for him the name of the Pseudo Philip, they reminded us 2931 III, 101| of the Aemilian family. Public-spirited munificence was still in 2932 I, 95| been exasperated by the publication of verses of uncertain authorship, 2933 II, 49| either withdraw himself from publicity or else forestall it. ~ ~ 2934 II, 64| built by Lucius and Marcus Publicius, aediles, and a temple to 2935 III, 93| Gellius Publicola and Marcus Paconius, respectively 2936 VI, 77| homage, and touched his pulse. Tiberius noticed it. Whether 2937 XII, 56| let it escape by a slight puncture and suck it in turn. Such 2938 XVI, 25| associated with him the pungent eloquence of Marcellus Eprius. ~ ~ 2939 IV, 74| highest point, inasmuch as the Punic capital was still standing 2940 VI, 56| Tiberius, or kept him from punishing doubtful or forgotten offenses 2941 II, 116| grain to be paid by the purchaser, promising himself to add 2942 XIII, 38| seller was ordered to pay it, purchasers found that it was added 2943 XIII, 27| become notorious by frequent purchases of property confiscated 2944 XI, 47| admitted. A young man of pure life, yet of singular beauty, 2945 XIV, 79| that Octavia's person was purer than his mouth. Octavia, 2946 I, 39| polluted camp, and, having purged themselves of their guilt, 2947 XIII, 28| the advice of the augurs, purified Rome by a lustration, as 2948 III, 72| Senate to the following purport:-~ ~ 2949 III, 76| such as are unmeaning and purposeless and will be of use neither 2950 I, 48| money was made up out of the purses of Germanicus himself and 2951 I, 86| the twentieth to repel pursuers. ~ ~ 2952 XV, 71| disclosure of Natalis, with like pusillanimity, or under the impression 2953 II, 79| sound of a human voice; the pyramids, rising up like mountains 2954 II, 88| swift steed to the river Pyramus, the bridges over which 2955 XI, 3| had inspected his funeral pyre, and directed its removal 2956 XV, 47| that filthy herd, by name Pythagoras, with all the forms of regular 2957 XII, 73| When they consulted the Pythian Apollo as to where they 2958 II, 82| Vannius, of the nation of the Quadi. ~ ~ 2959 XIII, 6| for pleading a cause; the quaestors-elect were not to be under the 2960 I, 84| Domitius; on every side were quagmires of thick clinging mud, or 2961 I, 21| demoralization among the troops, of quarreling, of listening to the talk 2962 III, 67| Caesar in his perverse and quarrelsome behaviour. But people generally 2963 IV, 30| himself, by his persistent quarrelsomeness, a decision of the Senate, 2964 II, 114| the island of Sardinia, to quell the brigandage of the place, 2965 XII, 47| might win the more glory by quelling the movement or have a fairer 2966 XIII, 73| were the more likely to quench, the more they had been 2967 III, 74| pollution to others, can be quenched only by remedies as strong 2968 IV, 83| anciently known by the name of Querquetulanus, because it grew oak timber 2969 VI, 40| agree with several things, questionable enough indeed, but not too 2970 VI, 28| had deeply impressed his questioner by cleverly revealing his 2971 XIII, 61| from the time of Tiberius, quickened these apprehensions by the 2972 I, 93| nor could the treacherous quicksands be distinguished from solid 2973 V, 14| unless he was provoked, loved quietness, not only repulsed his colleague' 2974 XV, 93| philosophy. Cluvidienus Quietus, Julius Agrippa, Blitius 2975 III, 108| with the names of Manlius, Quinctius, and others of equal rank. 2976 IV, 82| formerly happened to Claudia Quinta; her statue, which had twice 2977 VI, 17| forward in the Senate by Quintilianus, a tribune of the people, 2978 XIII, 36| dropping the charge. Clodius Quirinalis, having, when in command 2979 XIV, 70| obtained more. I am ashamed to quote the names of freedmen who 2980 III, 90| of the sacred guilds, and quoting precedents. Never, he argued, 2981 I, 34| in a clear sky the moon's radiance seemed to die away. This 2982 II, 21| when the cohorts of the Raeti, Vendelici, and Gauls faced 2983 I, 58| soon afterwards sent into Raetia, nominally to defend the 2984 XII, 66| circumference of the lake with rafts, that there might be no 2985 II, 77| with Carthage was still raging. Tiberius having gently 2986 XII, 33| cavalry, to anticipate the raid, and suddenly to fall upon 2987 XVI, 19| raised him to fame, as energy raises others, and he was reckoned 2988 III, 27| to ruin his eloquence by rancour. This was the end of avenging 2989 XV, 7| sufficiently honoured by ranking second to him, disparaged 2990 II, 30| restored to us several had ransomed from the inland tribes. 2991 II, 67| robbery, for plunder and for rapine. After a while, he marshalled 2992 III, 43| happened to Maecenas, so rarely is it the destiny of power 2993 VI, 41| its father. This is not rashly done, but taking up a load 2994 IV, 66| These had permission to ravage, burn, and plunder, provided 2995 XV, 35| kingdom yet unhurt by the ravages of war, and Vologeses will 2996 XIII, 14| Agrippina, however, raved with a woman's fury about 2997 XVI, 18| to Mela, whose wealth he ravenously desired. Mela meanwhile, 2998 XIV, 43| prophesied impending destruction; ravings in a strange tongue, it 2999 I, 77| your army, Arminius, the ravisher of my daughter, the violater 3000 XV, 75| troop of soldiers arrived, raw recruits, or men recently 3001 II, 79| when struck by the sun's rays, gives out the sound of 3002 II, 83| bands of freebooters and razed the fortresses, as a provocation