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3003 III, 28| command and soon afterwards re-entered the city with an ovation. 3004 I, 2| the remaining nobles, the readier they were to be slaves, 3005 XIV, 10| and take with you the men readiest to execute your orders." 3006 XIV, 15| was at last accomplished, realised its portentous guilt. The 3007 XIV, 33| lands under cultivation, and reaped the crops, and of two fortresses 3008 VI, 21| through strange artifices, reappeared. On this occasion, however, 3009 III, 37| And yet, marriages and the rearing of children did not become 3010 XV, 37| compliment to him, and to reassure him against treachery by 3011 I, 104| country. Nor did the people of Reate remain silent. They remonstrated 3012 XI, 12| victorious though they were, rebelled against distant service. 3013 XIV, 51| but also to pacify the rebellious spirit of the barbarians. 3014 XIII, 36| doom by poison. Caninius Rebilus, one of the first men in 3015 III, 102| the emperor promised to rebuild, simply because no member 3016 XV, 79| the sterner language of rebuke. "Where," he asked again 3017 XI, 16| published edicts severely rebuking the lawlessness of the people 3018 IV, 78| he had no opportunity of rebutting. Then again alarms under 3019 XVI, 7| was a delight to those who recalling the past thought of her 3020 XII, 72| of their heavy burdens, recapitulated their whole history. Beginning 3021 II, 19| varying as the river banks recede or the spurs of the hills 3022 I, 22| under the name of lands, he receives soaking swamps or mountainous 3023 II, 79| out of the earth to be a receptacle for the Nile's overflow; 3024 II, 59| sheltered himself in the recesses of the Hercynian forest 3025 XIV, 5| hatred of Agrippina which she reciprocated. He explained that a vessel 3026 XVI, 23| he was not present at the recital of the public prayers, though 3027 XIII, 18| on Nero, who, as he still reclined in seeming unconsciousness, 3028 VI, 14| all the more joy at the recoil of these precedents on their 3029 XV, 75| only a beautiful person to recommend her, whom he had taken away 3030 XII, 6| whether he would yield to the recommendations of the people and to the 3031 XIII, 30| blows, at the same time recommending them not to punish. "What 3032 XIV, 84| of doom, still could not reconcile herself to death. After 3033 VI, 47| recovering Armenia, having reconciled him to his brother Pharasmanes, 3034 II, 41| mental repose and bodily recreation, unless indeed men in the 3035 XIV, 28| pursuits or on legitimate recreations. It was to mirth rather 3036 XIII, 17| Nero saw the reproach and redoubled his hate. Pressed by Agrippina' 3037 III, 104| troops. By establishing redoubts and fortified lines in commanding 3038 XIV, 69| behaviour. It will likewise redound to your honour that you 3039 IV, 42| moment, but subsequently it redounded to his honour when Suillius 3040 XV, 51| curious inquiry so far as to reduce the interval between these 3041 XII, 13| quiet period, and peace reduces the enterprising and indolent 3042 IV, 82| capital to an unusual extent, reducing Mount Caelius to ashes. " 3043 II, 55| their burdens, implored a reduction of tribute. ~ ~ 3044 I, 32| Drusus pleaded in answer reference to the Senate and to his 3045 V, 7| the end of section 11; but references are regularly made to the 3046 II, 70| bitter speech, with indirect reflections on Germanicus, who, he said, 3047 XI, 18| what should be retained or reformed with respect to the "haruspices."~ ~ 3048 III, 71| would be too stern in his reforms. In fact, when the aedile 3049 IV, 45| great generals, enchain and refresh a reader's mind. I have 3050 XIV, 21| erected places for meeting and refreshment, and every incentive to 3051 IV, 26| property, though not to refund their money to the provincials, 3052 XIII, 22| and folly, was enough to refute." ~ ~ 3053 II, 59| to each band, boasted of regained freedom, of slaughtered 3054 I, 70| then in the town of the Regini on the shores of the straits 3055 II, 30| returned from some far-distant region, told of wonders, of violent 3056 III, 70| their decrees should not be registered in the treasury till nine 3057 XV, 97| vengeance. I find in the registers of the Senate that Cerialis 3058 VI, 74| enough of life, and all he regretted was that he had endured 3059 XV, 53| by the Gauls, without any regularity or in any fashion, but with 3060 VI, 47| clung to his purpose of regulating foreign affairs by a crafty 3061 III, 100| twice in the same year. This regulation of the emperor Augustus 3062 XV, 44| accounts, titles all and rehearsals of supreme power. Then the 3063 XII, 79| was summoned, and prayers rehearsed by the consuls and priests 3064 XII, 75| have no claim on the then reigning sovereign. Meanwhile, a 3065 V, 3| say, they threw off the reins and let loose their fury. 3066 XIV, 20| craves for amusements and rejoices when a prince draws them 3067 XIV, 70| elaborate speech with an instant rejoinder is, I consider, primarily 3068 IV, 57| filled with a deeper alarm, rejoined by deprecating the whispers 3069 XIV, 3| Cluvius relates that Agrippina in her eagerness 3070 IV, 14| In relating the death of Drusus I have 3071 II, 41| nor parsimony except in relation to the fortune of the possessor. 3072 XV, 45| emperor. Hence, as in private relationships the closest ties were the 3073 XIV, 32| quarter, but still without relaxing his vigilance, knowing, 3074 XV, 82| long as she dreaded Nero's relentlessness, she sought the glory of 3075 I, 104| be paid to the different religions of the allies, who had dedicated 3076 VI, 47| Still, Tiberius did not relinquish his purpose. He chose Tiridates, 3077 XIII, 46| and without bloodshed by relinquishing a prospect in the remote 3078 II, 85| in his conduct, he could rely on his innocence, but neither 3079 XIII, 16| the emperor rather wittily remarked that Pallas was going to 3080 IV, 49| can actually efface the remembrances of the next generation. 3081 XIV, 20| at dinner. This he would remind people was a royal custom, 3082 II, 88| officer of cavalry; and then Remmius, an enrolled pensioner, 3083 I, 81| that it was a shattered remnant of the army which had there 3084 XI, 28| distinctions will be left for the remnants of our noble houses, or 3085 VI, 6| as a funeral banquet. In remonstrating too against the influence 3086 II, 69| He then penetrated to the remoter parts of the province of 3087 XIII, 74| the infancy of Romulus and Remus, was impaired by the decay 3088 I, 4| would burden, and some day rend asunder the State." ~ ~ 3089 I, 82| Caesar laid the first sod, rendering thus a most welcome honour 3090 IV, 85| and the open sea round it renders it most delightful. It commanded 3091 II, 8| Batavi was the appointed rendezvous, because of its easy landing-places, 3092 IV, 56| fiercely if Livia's marriage rends, so to say, the house of 3093 I, 75| altar of the Ubii, and had rent the sacred garlands, and 3094 IV, 24| is far exceeded, they are repaid with hatred instead of gratitude. ~ ~ 3095 II, 30| Germanicus, having speedily repaired them, sent them to search 3096 I, 94| Spain, and Italy vied in repairing the losses of the army, 3097 III, 14| is for you to give just reparation both to the children of 3098 XI, 49| the cup and finished his repast as usual. During the days 3099 II, 16| acknowledged that they ought to repay him with their gratitude 3100 XI, 16| to lend at interest sums repayable on a father's death. He 3101 II, 89| various cities had been repealed or reversed. This led to 3102 III, 40| terrible than the evils and repealing the legislation of which 3103 I, 44| the ground, and seemingly repentant. As soon as he entered the 3104 I, 98| Tiberius was deeply moved, and repenting of the outburst, all the 3105 IV, 5| dress of manhood, with a repetition of the honours decreed by 3106 I, 84| doubt how he could possibly replace bridges which were ruinous 3107 II, 47| favouritism, will have to be replenished by crimes. Money was given 3108 III, 69| and ephemeral as they are replete with folly. Nothing serious 3109 XIV, 7| Agrippina's feet as she reposed herself, spoke joyfully 3110 III, 15| whether he attempted to repossess himself of the province 3111 IV, 16| urged both these women to represent to the emperor that her 3112 XI, 41| celebrating in mid-autumn a representation of the vintage in her new 3113 III, 75| everything else! No one represents to the Senate that Italy 3114 III, 72| be repressed, whether the repression of them would not be still 3115 XVI, 15| could but obtain a brief reprieve of his exile. Anteius and 3116 XIV, 57| firebrands. Then the emperor reprimanded the people by edict, and 3117 V, 6| his daughter-in-law and reprimanding the populace in an edict 3118 XV, 76| resolute silence, and not reproaching the tribune with complicity 3119 III, 91| uncommemorated, and to hold out the reprobation of posterity as a terror 3120 III, 49| the father's eloquence was reproduced, replied that much of the 3121 III, 79| wrote a letter to the Senate requesting the tribunitian power for 3122 VI, 21| accounts conformably to the requirements of the law. ~ ~ 3123 IV, 79| finish of style. While the research and labours of other authors 3124 XV, 52| with woods on one side to resemble a wilderness, and, on the 3125 IV, 47| soon forgotten; when you resent a thing, you seem to recognise 3126 XII, 61| accusation, as one who still resented the misfortune of exile 3127 III, 61| He changed neither his residence nor his look, but kept up 3128 XII, 5| connection; Silanus was forced to resign his office, and the one 3129 I, 13| in a few instances had he resorted to force, simply to secure 3130 III, 14| personal quarrel without resorting to my power as emperor. 3131 I, 12| fresh, and freedom had been resought in vain, when the slaying 3132 I, 80| Arminius, who had long been respected by the Romans. This increased 3133 II, 69| and of poetry, utters a response in verse answering to the 3134 I, 11| instead of in his appointed resting-place in the Campus Martius. ~ ~ 3135 I, 91| There was as much restlessness in the German host with 3136 IV, 60| Segesta petitioned for the restoration of the temple of Venus at 3137 I, 28| most unhappy men, but who restores to my brother his life, 3138 III, 38| without punishment and restraints. Rewards were not needed 3139 IV, 48| aimed at chastising, he retaliated on satire by satire. It 3140 IV, 88| places were forsaken. A few retraced their steps and again showed 3141 XIII, 31| so as to leave room for retracting the boon, or for a fresh 3142 III, 31| pursued a desultory warfare, retreating when he was pressed, and 3143 IV, 20| Asia, gratified by this retribution and the punishment inflicted 3144 VI, 28| his questioner by cleverly revealing his imperial destiny and 3145 XII, 15| in a vision of the night reveals to them the track along 3146 XVI, 7| busts he had specially revered that of Caius Cassius, which 3147 I, 44| reluctantly. Then beginning with a reverent mention of Augustus, he 3148 XIII, 6| opposed by Agrippina, as a reversal of the legislation of Claudius, 3149 V, 9| baseness, they now wickedly revile. Which is the most pitiable, 3150 I, 58| guilt. Then the general revised the list of centurions. 3151 XI, 27| still ruled, and this the revival by Brutus of the lex curiata 3152 XIII, 30| should have the right of revoking freedom. There were several 3153 III, 96| should follow. Let us not revolutionise a wisely devised and ever 3154 II, 78| how with such an army king Rhamses conquered Libya, Ethiopia, 3155 XII, 68| ten million sesterces. The Rhodians also had their freedom restored 3156 XIII, 68| and then conveyed on the Rhone and Arar might sail by this 3157 XIII, 57| secured the prospect of a richer husband, she repudiated 3158 VI, 25| Sextus Marius, the richest man in Spain, was next accused 3159 XIV, 82| winning no less gratitude by ridding him of a malignant wife. 3160 I, 87| marsh, they shook off their riders, driving hither and thither 3161 XII, 34| The column which took the right-hand and the shorter route, inflicted 3162 XIII, 53| reign he had endured a most righteously deserved exile. "The man," 3163 VI, 75| be a proof that Arruntius rightly chose death. Albucilla, 3164 XV, 69| life luxurious, such as rigid censors would hardly approve. 3165 XVI, 4| of actors, made the place ring with measured strains of 3166 XIV, 76| would follow which would ripen into war. Finally, by this 3167 I, 15| temple with a religious ritual was decreed him. ~ ~ 3168 XIII, 4| eloquence. The dictator Caesar rivalled the greatest orators, and 3169 XV, 73| troops the coast and the river-banks. Incessantly were there 3170 VI, 54| as a propitiation to the river-god, they were informed by the 3171 XIII, 73| the fall of rain, or by river-water, or by any other moisture, 3172 XII, 35| itself, encamped on the riverbank, as a support to the conquered 3173 II, 6| in good condition, by the rivermouths and channels, at the heart 3174 III, 2| the funeral urn, with eyes riveted to the earth, there was 3175 II, 70| towns, and the soldiers to roam through the country and 3176 XI, 44| Britannicus, when the accuser roared out at her the story of 3177 XVI, 39| preserve her life, and not rob the daughter of their love 3178 III, 103| height of power, should a robber like Tacfarinas be bought 3179 XII, 64| letting loose bands of robbers, forming ambuscades, and 3180 II, 67| roving band familiar with robbery, for plunder and for rapine. 3181 XVI, 19| slave to become informer, robbing him of the means of defence, 3182 III, 3| the knights in their state robes, burnt vestments and perfumes 3183 XIII, 31| with the freedom-giving rod, were still held, as it 3184 I, 79| and the Rhine the Roman rods, axes, and toga. Other nations 3185 XII, 5| of Vitellius, though the roll of Senators had been recently 3186 II, 28| clouds, while the waves rolled hither and thither under 3187 II, 28| came with a huge line of rolling clouds, a strong blast, 3188 VI, 48| The south wind in winter rolls back the waves, and when 3189 IV, 15| not been perverted into romance. ~ ~ 3190 VI, 16| It is said that Denter Romulius was appointed by Romulus, 3191 V, 12| the executioner, with the rope on her neck. Then they were 3192 XV, 41| promiscuous throng, as the Roscian law extended only to fourteen 3193 IV, 48| Philippi, and am I with them rousing the people by harangues 3194 IV, 65| sudden sortie put them to the rout, and they fell back on the 3195 III, 81| temples, arches and the usual routine, except that Marcus Silanus 3196 XII, 37| they forced the barrier, routing the enemy who were entangled 3197 II, 67| first gathered round him a roving band familiar with robbery, 3198 II, 30| shattered vessels with but few rowers, or clothing spread as sails, 3199 II, 7| several, furnished with a rudder at each end, so that by 3200 XIII, 4| which showed that he had the rudiments of learning.~ ~ 3201 II, 31| laying it waste, and utterly ruining a foe who dared not encounter 3202 VI, 52| was a tyrant in peace, and ruinously unsuccessful in war. And 3203 II, 78| Next he visited the vast ruins of ancient Thebes. There 3204 XII, 43| illustrious ancestors and ruling many nations. My present 3205 II, 7| of the oars they might be run into shore either way. Many 3206 XIV, 11| arms, while the whole shore rung with wailings, with prayers 3207 VI, 44| dropping a prosecution. Abudius Ruso too, who had been an aedile, 3208 IV, 13| Rome's founder, then the Sabine nobility, Attus Clausus, 3209 I, 71| retain the rites of the Sabines, had instituted the Titian 3210 XII, 41| they were again met by the sabres and spears of the auxiliaries. 3211 XV, 84| There was a rumour that Sabrius Flavus had held a secret 3212 XV, 92| funerals, the Capitol with sacrificial victims. One after another, 3213 VI, 10| themselves found wearisome and saddening would be equally fatiguing 3214 XI, 32| emperor Augustus by the Saenian law had chosen into their 3215 XIV, 8| wound, and saw that her only safeguard against treachery was to 3216 XIV, 27| had listened with critical sagacity to effeminate strains of 3217 XIII, 57| About the same time Octavius Sagitta, a tribune of the people, 3218 II, 28| sea, by embarrassing the sailors or giving them clumsy aid, 3219 III, 88| and the last to Jupiter of Salamis, by Teucer when he fled 3220 I, 103| one per cent. tax on all saleable commodities, Tiberius declared 3221 XV, 96| abased himself in flattery, Salienus Clemens denounced Junius 3222 II, 111| celebrated in the song of the Salii; chairs of state with oaken 3223 XV, 12| keeping guard. He had often sallied out, and cut to pieces such 3224 XIII, 61| home by a different way to Sallust's gardens. Sulla, he said, 3225 III, 107| that year. One was Asinius Saloninus, distinguished as the grandson 3226 XII, 77| with its balmy climate and salubrious waters. Thereupon, Agrippina, 3227 I, 49| camp-prefect, more as a salutary warning than as a legal 3228 XII, 61| consulship of Faustus Sulla and Salvius Otho, Furius Scribonianus 3229 XII, 64| was governed by Cumanus, Samaria by Felix. The two peoples 3230 XII, 15| divinities on a mountain called Sambulos, with special worship of 3231 IV, 18| Juno and Aesculapius. The Samians relied on a decree of the 3232 XI, 6| Thus it happened that one Samius, a Roman knight of the first 3233 II, 69| sacred mysteries of the Samothracians, but north winds which he 3234 VI, 23| put to death. His sister Sancia was outlawed, on the accusation 3235 III, 84| impunity in establishing sanctuaries were on the increase. Temples 3236 II, 77| about without soldiers, with sandalled feet, and apparelled after 3237 IV, 64| difficult, dangerous and sanguinary war. ~ ~ 3238 VI, 10| Africanus was from the Santones, one of the states of Gaul; 3239 XIII, 24| the capital, with having sapped the loyalty of the provinces, 3240 IV, 47| but urged with powerful sarcasm; the poems which we read 3241 XII, 35| was from the Iazyges of Sarmatia; an army which was no match 3242 III, 23| and her children, and thus sate this exemplary grandmother 3243 II, 59| traitor to his country, a satellite of Caesar, who deserved 3244 III, 76| constraint, the rich by satiety. Or if any of our officials 3245 XV, 60| effeminate vice, had been satirised by Nero in a lampoon, and 3246 VI, 75| and, indeed, with intense satisfaction, as Balbus was noted for 3247 III, 39| ends. Hence the Gracchi and Saturnini, those popular agitators, 3248 XIII, 54| Valerius Asiaticus, Lusius Saturninus and Cornelius Lupus, in 3249 I, 21| a common soldier, had a saucy tongue, and had learnt from 3250 XI, 45| with Pompeius Urbicus and Saufellus Trogus from among her accomplices, 3251 XV, 92| Greek equivalent the name of Saviour. Of the tribunes, Gavius 3252 XIII, 22| festivity and everything savouring of recklessness and folly, 3253 XIII, 48| overthrown, the fortifications scaled and captured, and all the 3254 III, 49| without remembering the scandals of the capital." ~ ~ 3255 XIV, 81| at Misenum, who got but scant gratitude after that atrocious 3256 IV, 22| Cornelia, chosen in the room of Scantia; and, whenever Augusta entered 3257 II, 11| brother whence came the scar which disfigured his face, 3258 XIII, 73| began to sink, tried to scare them away, like so many 3259 II, 25| a volley of missiles and scatter the enemy. Spears were hurled 3260 IV, 35| present him with an ivory sceptre and an embroidered robe, 3261 II, 49| restless and revolutionary schemers. He himself went to the 3262 III, 49| abandoned themselves to scheming and rapacity. Well; even 3263 XVI, 23| clients. This was political schism, and, should many dare to 3264 III, 92| keeping of a preparatory school. Subsequently, becoming 3265 XI, 18| the oldest of Italian sciences might not be lost through 3266 II, 41| quite another with the Scipios. The State was the standard 3267 XIV, 74| taken to Rome, and Nero scoffed at its premature grey hairs 3268 VI, 17| of his youth. Gallus he scolded for having introduced the 3269 XV, 53| unsheltered by any shade, was scorched by a fiercer glow. ~ ~ 3270 XIV, 58| There was a rivalry, on the score of rank, between Volusius 3271 II, 59| reason that the aged uncle scorned to obey a brother's youthful 3272 IV, 64| had its origin in their scornful refusal to endure levies 3273 XI, 11| while his Iberian cavalry scoured the plain. The Armenians 3274 VI, 7| the body is lacerated by scourging, so is the spirit by brutality, 3275 IV, 80| hearing in the night their screams and groans. Soon all the 3276 XV, 72| freedwoman at such a crisis in screening strangers and those whom 3277 II, 34| great-grandfather Pompeius, his aunt Scribonia, who had formerly been wife 3278 II, 39| Cneius Lentulus, that no Scribonius should assume the surname 3279 VI, 53| perception of honour, or any scruple about a base act, mere hireling 3280 XII, 6| calamity to the State. These scruples ceased not till Vitellius 3281 III, 4| fearing that, if all eyes scrutinised their faces, their hypocrisy 3282 XVI, 5| made it their business to scrutinize names and faces, and to 3283 VI, 17| now also submitted to the scrutiny of the College of the Fifteen. ~ ~ 3284 XII, 60| deeds, he unsheathed his scymitar, and having stabbed her, 3285 II, 84| against the Bastarnian and Scythian tribes, he was strengthening 3286 VI, 63| as he had been among the Scythians, for his cruelty, and hoped 3287 XII, 66| the usual operations of a seafight. On the raft stood companies 3288 XI, 17| means of their superior seamanship, introduced into Greece, 3289 XIII, 51| shrouded in a black cloud, seamed with lightning-flashes, 3290 III, 40| this espionage became too searching, and Rome and Italy and 3291 III, 78| as there are changes of seasons. Nor was everything better 3292 XV, 81| him not; he summoned his secretaries, and dictated much to them 3293 XVI, 25| adviser taken from them. That sect of his gave birth to the 3294 VI, 71| of Claudius, as he was of sedate age and had a taste for 3295 VI, 76| at last by her arts and seductions driven him to an extremity 3296 IV, 60| Next the people of Segesta petitioned for the restoration 3297 I, 75| associated his son, by name Segimundus, but the youth hung back 3298 XV, 6| going smoothly with him. The seige was a failure; Tigranes 3299 I, 79| driven to frenzy by the seizure of his wife and the foredooming 3300 IV, 45| constitution, formed by selection out of these elements, it 3301 VI, 64| clung loyally to its founder Seleucus, assumed the most marked 3302 VI, 35| a death that might seem self-chosen. Tiberius, it is certain, 3303 IV, 77| him to display vigour and self-confidence. "This," they said, "was 3304 XIV, 73| Romans, and assumes the self-consciousness of the Stoics along with 3305 IV, 54| this to modesty; many to self-distrust; a few to a mean spirit. " 3306 XII, 14| highest position merely meant self-indulgence, was detained for several 3307 XIII, 53| rather than make an old and self-learned position of honour to bow 3308 XIII, 60| pleasure-loving man when idle, and self-restrained when in power.~ ~ 3309 XI, 3| Asiaticus the quiet death of self-starvation, but he declined it with 3310 XIII, 38| a real boon, for as the seller was ordered to pay it, purchasers 3311 II, 59| took up arms, but even the Semnones and Langobardi from the 3312 II, 37| of the same sort, quite senseless and idle; if leniently regarded, 3313 XIII, 18| and that his sight and senses would gradually return. 3314 XV, 26| And nations were timidly sensitive to the opinion of individuals. 3315 II, 39| Concord, and the 13th day of September, on which Libo had killed 3316 I, 42| into the river Rhine. One Septimius, who fled to the tribunal 3317 VI, 2| usually combined jesting and seriousness, thanked the senators for 3318 III, 103| under the tremendous wars of Sertorius and Mithridates, had not 3319 II, 49| discord and civil war. A servant of Postumus Agrippa, Clemens 3320 XIII, 26| punished, while Paris was too serviceable to the emperor's profligacy 3321 XV, 68| daybreak Milichus went to the Servilian gardens, and, finding the 3322 I, 79| Segestes to ignominious servitude." ~ ~ 3323 VI, 41| successively in the reigns of Sesostris, Amasis, and Ptolemy, the 3324 XIV, 42| most intense. For these new settlers in the colony of Camulodunum 3325 XIII, 7| ask how a prince of scarce seventeen was to encounter and avert 3326 VI, 35| was decreed that on the seventeenth of October, the day on which 3327 Miss | the Annals opens with the seventh year of Claudius's reign. 3328 III, 82| illness or by public duty. For seventy-five years after the suicide 3329 XVI, 15| slowness, he hastened death by severing his veins. ~ ~ 3330 XVI, 5| company. Hence came cruel severities, immediately exercised on 3331 XII, 37| country to the Avon and Severn. The Iceni, a powerful tribe, 3332 III, 73| indiscriminately by both sexes, or that peculiar luxury 3333 III, 92| influence of Sejanus, he shamed his origin, low as it was, 3334 XIV, 73| surpassing audacity; he shams apathy, while he is seeking 3335 XI, 17| Trojan times who invented the shapes of sixteen letters, and 3336 XV, 67| disuse, he ordered it to be sharpened on a stone to a keen and 3337 I, 45| sword, saying that it was sharper than his own. Even in their 3338 XV, 67| will, and, drawing from its sheath the dagger of which I have 3339 XVI, 14| they had been sitting and shedding tears. Knights and senators 3340 XIII, 1| used to call him the golden sheep. The truth was that Agrippina, 3341 III, 49| expediency. It is idle to shelter our own weakness under other 3342 XII, 60| edge, was perceived by some shepherds, who inferring from her 3343 I, 80| himself put four legions on shipboard and conveyed them through 3344 XII, 65| even to the merchants and shipowners. They besieged the city 3345 XIV, 16| was accidental, or that a shipwrecked woman had sent one man with 3346 I, 54| because he often wore the shoe so called, to win the men' 3347 XV, 43| bred, as he had been, in a shoemaker's shop, of a deformed person 3348 XV, 47| resounded with song, and shone brilliantly with lights. 3349 XIII, 74| renew its life with fresh shoots.~ ~ 3350 XV, 43| had been, in a shoemaker's shop, of a deformed person and 3351 XV, 48| Caelian hills, where, amid the shops containing inflammable wares, 3352 II, 29| thought to be the remotest shoreless sea. Some of the vessels 3353 II, 70| sailing rapidly and by the shortest route through the Cyclades, 3354 II, 22| brought up and they were shot for sport. Others were dashed 3355 XIV, 7| received a wound in her shoulder. She swam, then met with 3356 XIV, 80| Palace in crowds, with loud shoutings, when some companies of 3357 XV, 5| successful siege. His thin showers of arrows do not alarm men 3358 XIII, 9| also by the mere display of showy attributes. ~ ~ 3359 I, 70| man of noble family, of shrewd understanding, and a perverse 3360 III, 75| provinces as their mainstay, our shrubberies, forsooth, and our country 3361 XI, 37| The emperor's court indeed shuddered, its powerful personages 3362 IV, 88| again showed themselves, shuddering at the mere fact that they 3363 II, 74| concealing his fears, Germanicus shunning the semblance of menace. 3364 I, 4| age, he was worn out by a sickly frame, and the end was near 3365 IV, 69| them with a storm of long siege-javelins and heaps of stones. Success 3366 III, 31| cowed and had a horror of siege-operations, pursued a desultory warfare, 3367 XIV, 35| succumbed at last only to our siege-works and to the swords of furious 3368 III, 89| the consuls, who were to sift each title and see if it 3369 I, 72| then have an opportunity of sifting accusations and distinguishing 3370 XV, 69| He had often, he said, signed his will without heeding 3371 XVI, 20| Nero. Then he broke his signet-ring, that it might not be subsequently 3372 II, 37| of dreadful or mysterious significance. When the accused denied 3373 XV, 8| light, a prodigy the more significant because the Parthian foe 3374 XIII, 27| replied that at home he signified his wishes only by a nod 3375 XI, 4| that he interpreted it to signify the death of the emperor 3376 XIII, 16| the infernal shades of the Silani, and to those many fruitless 3377 XV, 63| with the informer easily silenced him, unsupported as he was 3378 XVI, 21| revels became notorious, Silia came into his mind, who, 3379 II, 41| disgrace themselves with silken clothing from the East. 3380 XV, 75| former husband, Domitius Silus. The tame spirit of the 3381 XI, 16| which flow from the hills of Simbrua. And he likewise invented 3382 XIV, 30| named Sublaqueum on the Simbruine lake, the table with the 3383 XII, 21| was primarily based on a similarity of fortune, and that between 3384 XI, 45| Virgilianus, a senator, were similarly punished.~ ~ 3385 XI, 17| letters, and others, chiefly Simonides, added the rest. In Italy 3386 VI, 72| his sufferings he would simulate health, and was wont to 3387 I, 30| faces which, though they simulated grief, rather expressed 3388 VI, 1| enter Rome, or, possibly, simulating the intention of going thither, 3389 XIV, 80| And, again, what is my sin? What offense have I caused 3390 XI, 12| tribes as far as the river Sindes, which is the boundary between 3391 XV, 84| him." For as Nero used to sing to the harp, so did Piso 3392 XIV, 20| it was in the dress of a singer that that great and prophetic 3393 XV, 84| over to Seneca, as a man singled out for his splendid virtues 3394 XV, 54| gods, did not banish the sinister belief that the conflagration 3395 III, 89| and to restrain them from sinking into selfish aims under 3396 XIV, 69| like all things human, sinks powerless beneath your greatness, 3397 XII, 77| of illness, and went to Sinuessa to recruit his strength 3398 II, 62| purse. Magnesia, under Mount Sipylus, was considered to come 3399 I, 29| centurion, whom they nicknamed Sirpicus, while the men of the fifteenth 3400 II, 1| In the consulship of Sisenna Statilius Taurus and Lucius 3401 I, 73| established a fort on the site of his father's entrenchments 3402 IV, 6| Dalmatia, which, from the situation of the country, were in 3403 I, 65| 000 from the legions, with six-and-twenty allied cohorts, and eight 3404 III, 61| Aedui who had revolted, but sixty-four states of Gaul with the 3405 VI, 41| of fourteen hundred and sixty-one years, and that the former 3406 XIII, 5| desire of vengeance." He then sketched the plan of his future government, 3407 IV, 47| which he lauded Cato to the skies, how else was it answered 3408 V, 13| ascertained that the man, when skilfully questioned, had said that 3409 II, 16| covered with a wild beast's skin, he visited the camp streets, 3410 III, 56| arrived. A battle or even a skirmish it did not deserve to be 3411 XII, 46| decline. Now began a series of skirmishes, for the most part like 3412 II, 91| further delay weighed anchor, slackening his course that he might 3413 XIII, 70| necessity for them, capturing or slaughtering those who obstinately resisted.~ ~ 3414 IV, 36| at the vast scale of the slave-establishments, in which there was an immense 3415 IV, 36| incited the rural and savage slave-population of the remote forests to 3416 I, 12| resought in vain, when the slaying of Caesar, the Dictator, 3417 XIII, 43| helmets or breastplates, sleek money-making traders, who 3418 IV, 78| had its anxieties, for his sleepless hours, his dreams and sighs 3419 XV, 60| accordingly, was one of sleepy languor. Quintianus, infamous 3420 IV, 75| indeed a tall, singularly slender and stooping figure, a bald 3421 III, 70| sharply avenging the very slightest insults to the sovereign, 3422 I, 85| streams which rose from the slopes of the surrounding hills 3423 XII, 11| Gotarzes' victims, while, slothful at home and unsuccessful 3424 XVI, 1| wrested a vision seen in the slumber of night into a confident 3425 VI, 5| more. Wan with untimely slumbers and nights of riot, and 3426 III, 81| honour the princes by a slur on the consulate, and proposed 3427 XIV, 12| person, she exclaimed, "Smite my womb," and with many 3428 XI, 3| to another spot, lest the smoke should hurt the thick foliage 3429 XV, 80| I have shown you ways of smoothing life; you prefer the glory 3430 XV, 6| Nor was the present going smoothly with him. The seige was 3431 XIV, 41| bore the standards onwards, smote down all resistance, and 3432 XI, 14| was commonly reported that snakes had been seen by his cradle, 3433 V, 2| part of the same letter he sneered at female friendships, with 3434 XII, 15| plains, wearied with the snows and mountains, they were 3435 I, 22| name of lands, he receives soaking swamps or mountainous wastes. 3436 XIII, 17| boy who knew nothing of sober, much less of riotous society, 3437 I, 82| barrow Caesar laid the first sod, rendering thus a most welcome 3438 XIV, 64| without profit to himself; and Sofonius Tigellinus, whose inveterate 3439 IV, 85| sentries. Its air in winter is soft, as it is screened by a 3440 XV, 80| embraced his wife; then softening awhile from the stern resolution 3441 IV, 86| Sabinus, with the natural softness of the human heart under 3442 IV, 8| endeavoured to counteract barren soils and stormy seas with every 3443 II, 45| candidate's rejection was solaced by the near prospect of 3444 III, 38| subsequently, those which Solan drew up for the Athenians 3445 I, 45| asked what had become of soldierly obedience, of the glory 3446 XIV, 33| were to stave off hunger solely by the flesh of cattle. 3447 XI, 35| then celebrated all the solemnities of marriage. ~ ~ 3448 XII, 80| and his funeral rites were solemnized on the same scale as those 3449 IV, 53| highest place; of this I solemnly assure you, and would have 3450 XII, 11| sent, as I have stated, to solicit the return of Meherdates, 3451 II, 57| promotion till, he was actually solicited to accept a consulship offered 3452 XV, 53| certain height, were to be solidly constructed, without wooden 3453 XIV, 6| It was well known that somebody had been found to betray 3454 | somehow 3455 XIII, 8| intrusted to Aristobulus, Sophene to Sohaemus, each with the 3456 III, 16| destroyed Germanicus himself by sorceries and poison, and hence came 3457 IV, 70| the emperor by poison and sorcery. Agrippina, always impetuous, 3458 I, 42| the earth and beat them sorely, sixty to one, so as to 3459 IV, 85| point of the promontory of Sorrentum. The solitude of the place 3460 II, 109| emblems of the mourner, they sorrowed yet the more deeply in their 3461 IV, 72| more deeply alarmed the sorrowing and unsuspecting woman by 3462 II, 89| which in popular belief souls are devoted so the infernal 3463 XVI, 24| manners and his looks, a sour and gloomy set, bent on 3464 I, 104| limits, as well as their sources. Regard, too, must be paid 3465 XV, 57| were dashed by a violent south-west wind on the shores of Cumae, 3466 I, 92| the character of Tiberius, sowed for a distant future hatreds 3467 XII, 18| defeated, and they reached Soza, a town in Dandarica, which 3468 XV, 50| time, and especially in the spacious districts of the city. Consequently, 3469 VI, 27| He thus hinted at a brief span of power late in life, on 3470 I, 103| A request from the Spaniards that they might erect a 3471 XIII, 8| Euphrates too was to be spanned by bridges; Lesser Armenia 3472 XI, 30| What was the ruin of Sparta and Athens, but this, that 3473 III, 30| with a neck-chain and a spear. To these the emperor added 3474 XII, 28| recognized, as they are specified in the public records.~ ~ 3475 III, 39| Tables drawn up, the last specimen of equitable legislation. 3476 III, 78| age too has produced many specimens of excellence and culture 3477 II, 41| ready assent, under these specious phrases, by a confession 3478 IV, 16| first attempt had succeeded, speculated on the possibility of destroying 3479 XVI, 39| raised their voices, he was speculating on the nature of the soul 3480 XV, 78| carry them out, for a fatal spell of cowardice was on them 3481 II, 89| bodies, incantations and spells, and the name of Germanicus 3482 II, 80| While Germanicus was spending the summer in visits to 3483 XVI, 19| reckoned not a debauchee and spendthrift, like most of those who 3484 II, 63| suffered voluntarily to retire spendthrifts whose vices had brought 3485 XVI, 6| was filled with fragrant spices and embalmed, and then consigned 3486 XIII, 7| Claudius in his feeble and spiritless old age, when he would certainly 3487 XVI, 4| letting himself be seen to spit or clear his nostrils. Last 3488 III, 48| when it has liberty, it is spiteful, intriguing and greedy of 3489 XIV, 69| but having surrendered the splendours which dazzle me, I will 3490 XIV, 44| offered most wealth to the spoiler, and was unsafe for defence. 3491 I, 11| that he had proposed it spontaneously, and that in whatever concerned 3492 IV, 93| The soldiers of the fifth sprang forward, drove back the 3493 XIII, 47| of infantry, partly, of a spreading plain where troops of cavalry 3494 II, 17| trees and brushwood that springs from the ground, be so well 3495 XV, 54| whence water was procured to sprinkle the fane and image of the 3496 VI, 16| by Tullus Hostilius, and Spurius Lucretius by Tarquinius 3497 II, 16| acquainted with the Roman tongue, spurred his horse up to the entrenchments, 3498 II, 19| river banks recede or the spurs of the hills project on 3499 XI, 19| without raising the son of the spy Flavus above all his fellows? 3500 XIV, 21| the profligate gloried in squandering. Hence a rank growth of 3501 I, 37| Roman knight on Drusus's staff, with Justus Catonius, a 3502 XV, 74| perils; far less will that stageplayer, with Tigellinus forsooth


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