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3503 III, 18| statues to the Gemonian stairs, and were breaking them 3504 IV, 36| The emperor at once sent Staius, a tribune, with a strong 3505 IV, 69| as the hand could grasp, stakes with points hardened by 3506 I, 58| tear themselves from a camp stamped with the horror of a dreadful 3507 XV, 82| freedmen bound up her arms, and stanched the bleeding, whether with 3508 XV, 67| wounds and the means of stanching blood to be prepared by 3509 I, 62| confidentially to the eagle and standardbearers, and to all in the camp 3510 XIII, 71| their cattle, while men are starving; only let them not prefer 3511 VI, 20| walls of Rome, much less the State-council, for he would often go round 3512 III, 6| missed the grandeur of a state-funeral, and contrasted the splendid 3513 XIII, 5| ancient powers; Italy and the State-provinces should plead their causes 3514 I, 106| venture on any positive statement about the consular elections, 3515 III, 20| executioner. Neither of these statements would I positively affirm; 3516 XV, 89| Vestinus having married Statilia Messalina, without being 3517 IV, 56| desire to keep within your station; but those magistrates and 3518 XIII, 39| involving, as it did, her legal status and character, and he reported 3519 II, 37| by torture. As an ancient statute of the Senate forbade such 3520 XIV, 33| compelled as they were to stave off hunger solely by the 3521 XV, 51| the temple of Jupiter the Stayer, which was vowed by Romulus, 3522 IV, 24| that his troops had been steadfastly loyal, while other armies 3523 XV, 26| more equitably and more steadily. For as the dread of a charge 3524 IV, 4| chose, on the whole, the stealthier way and to begin with Drusus, 3525 VI, 51| the Parthians from their steeds, and embarrassed their enemy 3526 XII, 56| daughter, and his heart was steeled to any wickedness. Still 3527 II, 28| sight impossible, and the steering difficult, while our soldiers, 3528 XIII, 26| preparing, to Arruntius Stella, and the province of Egypt 3529 IV, 67| with rotting carcases and stench and infection. To their 3530 IV, 91| overthrown the prosperity of her step-children by secret machinations, 3531 I, 3| by destiny, or by their step-mother Livia's treachery, Drusus 3532 XII, 2| of a mother towards her stepchildren.~ ~ 3533 II, 11| permission was then given, and he stepped forth and was saluted by 3534 XI, 48| at her side the tribune, sternly silent, and the freedman, 3535 XIII, 43| bundle of wood, so that sticking to their burden they dropped 3536 XIII, 41| Haterius Antonius had yearly stipends assigned them by the emperor, 3537 XV, 17| day to be a witness to the stipulations into which they had entered. 3538 XIV, 80| though she is far away, stirs up tumult, quit Campania, 3539 VI, 47| chose Tiridates, of the same stock as Artabanus, to be his 3540 IV, 67| then he drew a fosse and stockade enclosing an extent of four 3541 XVI, 37| dignified character of a Stoic, and had trained himself 3542 XIV, 73| self-consciousness of the Stoics along with a philosophy, 3543 II, 49| hazardous enterprise, he stole the ashes of the deceased, 3544 XIII, 62| which had gone as far as stoning and threats of fire, might 3545 XV, 53| open court the means of stopping a fire. Every building, 3546 XII, 55| on but a fortress without stores; so he must not hesitate 3547 II, 29| As the ocean is stormier than all other seas, and 3548 XIII, 29| injured persons resisted stoutly, they rushed in with their 3549 III, 56| which merely half-armed stragglers were slaughtered without 3550 IV, 70| peril of her kinswoman, went straight to Tiberius and found him, 3551 XIV, 57| mercy had not relaxed, to be strained with cruel rigour. ~ ~ 3552 XV, 72| her neck in it, and then straining with the whole weight of 3553 III, 89| dedicate a temple to Venus Stratonicis; and the islanders of Tenos, 3554 XIII, 35| not last long, as the lot strayed away to unfit persons. Claudius 3555 IV, 57| the bustling crowds and streaming multitudes, while he praised 3556 IV, 83| forum, and that the Tuscan street was named after these strangers. ~ ~ 3557 III, 45| and other kinsmen of Sulla strenuously exerted themselves. There 3558 II, 31| having lost their arms, after strewing the shores with the carcases 3559 I, 81| or stood their ground, strewn everywhere or piled in heaps. 3560 IV, 66| camp. This at first they strictly observed. Soon they resigned 3561 XIV, 22| They used to sit with him, stringing together verses prepared 3562 XI, 46| looking at the scars of his stripes and remembering his words 3563 VI, 57| house to house, and the strokes of the executioner.~ ~ 3564 XVI, 32| It is," he said, "the stubbornness of inferiors which lessens 3565 IV, 62| be masked under that of student. Yet honour was paid him 3566 IV, 37| pleaded for his guilt. With studious elegance of dress and cheerful 3567 VI, 32| of food, even chewing the stuffing, his bed. According to some 3568 XII, 70| be supposed that he had stumbled inadvertently into this 3569 XIII, 43| from his arms, now mere stumps. The general, lightly clad, 3570 XII, 47| enraged the enemy, who were stung with shame at the prospect 3571 XIV, 16| shipwreck; but who could be so stupid as to believe that it was 3572 IV, 49| inclined to laugh at the stupidity of men who suppose that 3573 XIV, 15| the night, now silent and stupified, now and still oftener starting 3574 VI, 77| Caius Caesar, in silent stupor, passed from the highest 3575 III, 107| while Labeo was a man of sturdy independence and consequently 3576 I, 19| Augusta. Some would have her styled "parent"; others "mother 3577 XV, 73| on his accomplices. When Subius Flavus at his side asked 3578 I, 1| wearied by civil strife, subjected it to empire under the title 3579 XIII, 71| was adding the merit of subjecting his tribe to our dominion. " 3580 IV, 6| eight legions. Spain, lately subjugated, was held by three. Mauretania 3581 XIV, 40| recovery of Armenia by the subjugation of Rome's enemies. He therefore 3582 XIV, 30| dinner in his house named Sublaqueum on the Simbruine lake, the 3583 XIII, 71| empty soil; rather let them submerge it beneath the sea against 3584 I, 85| completed portion of our works submerged, the soldiers' labour was 3585 XI, 15| planning an accusation and suborning informers by a new and almost 3586 IV, 28| impulse of his displeasure had subsided.~ ~ 3587 I, 100| portions of the city. Its subsidence was followed by a destruction 3588 XIV, 70| Nero's reply was substantially this:- "My being able to 3589 XVI, 3| been taken from him as a substitute for the royal treasure. ~ ~ 3590 VI, 54| Some explained it with more subtlety, of a successful commencement 3591 XIV, 68| paces grandly through these suburban parks, and revels in the 3592 XII, 68| been ruined by a fire, a subvention of ten million sesterces. 3593 IV, 40| Better," he said, "to subvert the constitution than to 3594 XIV, 27| been forgotten, was utterly subverted by the introduction of a 3595 II, 2| death of Phraates and the succeeding kings in the bloodshed of 3596 VI, 41| the city called Heliopolis successively in the reigns of Sesostris, 3597 XIV, 64| passive virtue of one of his successors and the very flagrant iniquities 3598 XII, 45| Silures, and had not speedy succour arrived from towns and fortresses 3599 XIV, 35| their fortifications and succumbed at last only to our siege-works 3600 II, 93| Were I succumbing to nature, I should have 3601 XII, 56| by a slight puncture and suck it in turn. Such a treaty 3602 I, 93| swept away by the waves or sucked under by eddies; beasts 3603 IV, 66| auxiliaries were dismayed by the suddenness of the onset, for though 3604 IV, 28| defiance of Augusta's power, to sue Urgulania and summon her 3605 XI, 28| our native-born citizens sufficed for peoples of our own kin, 3606 XV, 83| the steam of which he was suffocated, and he was burnt without 3607 IV, 65| back on the support of a Sugambrian cohort, drawn up at no great 3608 XII, 49| perversity of such malignant suggestions were not checked, it would 3609 XII, 80| and having first spoken suitably to the occasion and promised 3610 II, 75| sat by him, it was with a sullen frown and a marked display 3611 IV, 25| rebellion, a rapacity which sullied his victory, and his wife 3612 III, 67| patrician family of the Sulpicii this Quirinus, who was born 3613 VI, 56| sequence the events of two summer-campaigns, as a relief to the reader' 3614 XIII, 67| accusers, who demanded time for summoning their witnesses, while the 3615 III, 71| had pointed out that the sumptuary laws were disregarded, that 3616 XV, 67| down to a more than usually sumptuous banquet, and gave his favourite 3617 III, 43| and refinement, and in the sumptuousness of his wealth he was almost 3618 XIII, 51| buildings, was bright with sunlight, the enclosure within the 3619 XVI, 1| might be demoralised by a superabundance of money, or that the Numidian 3620 VI, 16| Lucretius by Tarquinius Superbus. Afterwards, the consuls 3621 VI, 73| the Senate that Macro had superintended the examination of the witnesses 3622 XIII, 26| The superintendence of the corn supply was given 3623 III, 92| outstrip his equals, then his superiors, and at last even his own 3624 XIV, 38| matters by promoting the three supernumerary candidates to legionary 3625 XIV, 50| expected, unless Suetonius were superseded, attributing that general' 3626 IV, 80| foundation to frame the wooden superstructure with beams of sufficient 3627 XIII, 43| struggle against in the supineness of his soldiers than in 3628 III, 90| However the Senate now decreed supplications to the gods and the celebration 3629 II, 6| Gaul had been exhausted by supplying horses; a long baggage-train 3630 XVI, 23| unwearied in showing himself a supporter or an opponent even of the 3631 VI, 68| whom now again they were supporting. Abdageses, however, advised 3632 III, 32| had seemingly wished to suppress. He also handed over to 3633 XIII, 9| which in a new enterprise is supremely powerful, speedily accomplished 3634 VI, 65| coming from day to day, the Surena, in the presence of an approving 3635 V, 11| brothers who became their sureties. Soon, after several adjournments, 3636 III, 90| below her own, and it was surmised that the emperor, regarding 3637 XIV, 70| affections, you do not as yet surpass all in fortune. ~ ~ 3638 III, 104| but better in a war of surprises, he would attack, would 3639 II, 107| remain in the fortress on surrendering his arms, while the emperor 3640 II, 12| ready mercy for him who surrenders, and the fact that neither 3641 VI, 1| which divides Capreae from Surrentum, sailed along Campania, 3642 IV, 85| attraction, for a harbourless sea surrounds it and even for a small 3643 XIII, 48| camp-prefect. Having then surveyed the defences and provided 3644 IV, 45| Tiberius, the descendants yet survive; or even though the families 3645 XV, 19| had died away; pity alone survived, the more strongly in the 3646 XI, 44| anything that was not vague and susceptible of any meaning which might 3647 IV, 85| retained that rash proneness to suspect and to believe, which even 3648 VI, 29| and like occurrences, I suspend my judgment on the question 3649 II, 14| Chariovalda, after long sustaining the enemy's fury, cheered 3650 I, 83| were being pushed into a swamp, well known to the victorious 3651 XII, 74| a blaze by lightning. A swarm of bees settled on the summit 3652 XIII, 12| when the magistrates were swearing obedience to imperial legislation, 3653 IV, 4| As it would be unsafe to sweep off such a number at once 3654 XVI, 14| where a terrible plague was sweeping away all classes of human 3655 XIV, 27| effeminate strains of music and sweet voices? Night too was given 3656 I, 2| corn, and all men with the sweets of repose, and so grew greater 3657 I, 104| the rivers and lakes which swell its waters should be diverted 3658 XIV, 64| fact that from the gradual swelling of his throat inwardly and 3659 I, 93| equinoctial season, when the sea swells to its highest, his army 3660 XII, 60| means of escape but in the swiftness of the horses which bore 3661 II, 10| displaying their skill in swimming, fell into disorder, and 3662 VI, 54| Roman custom, offering a swine, a ram and a bull; the other, 3663 XV, 73| putting his hand to his sword-hilt.~ ~ 3664 II, 26| their hands grasping their sword-hilts, struck at the huge limbs 3665 XI, 19| a skilful horseman and swordsman both after our fashion and 3666 I, 73| Their able-bodied men had swum across the river Adrana, 3667 II, 79| came to Elephantine and Syene, formerly the limits of 3668 XIV, 56| word or uttering a rash syllable? Granted that he concealed 3669 XI, 17| the Egyptians who first symbolized ideas, and that by the figures 3670 IV, 20| carried with him the joyful sympathies of his audience, who, with 3671 II, 99| seen amid an admiring and sympathizing throng, now bearing in her 3672 II, 41| with which his audience symphathised. And Tiberius too had added 3673 XII, 45| said, as the display of Syphax by Scipio, or of Perses 3674 XIII, 63| reform to provide that the Syracusans should not give shows on 3675 XIII, 63| which allowed the city of Syracuse to exceed the prescribed 3676 II, 78| countries inhabited by the Syrians, Armenians, and their neighbours, 3677 VI, 21| fury on the class which systematically increased its wealth by 3678 XII, 63| publicly inscribed on a bronze tablet, heaping the praises of 3679 V, 7| lost. Newer editions of Tacitus mark the division between 3680 XIII, 5| he said, "had not had the taint of civil wars or domestic 3681 XIV, 63| the title of "Codicils." Talius Geminus, the prosecutor, 3682 XII, 74| and of a pig with a hawk's talons, were reported. It was accounted 3683 XVI, 17| hate men who perished so tamely. Such was the wrath of heaven 3684 XIV, 43| and in the estuary of the Tamesa had been seen the appearance 3685 I, 67| profane, the temple too of Tamfana, as they called it, the 3686 XIV, 4| of Britannicus. Again, to tamper with the servants of a woman 3687 XII, 19| days' march of the river Tanais. In their return however 3688 IV, 74| such founders as either Tantalus, the son of Jupiter, or 3689 VI, 56| laid hands on himself. Tarius Gratianus too, an ex-praetor, 3690 XVI, 27| the emperor's glory and to tarnish his own honour. When it 3691 VI, 25| thrown headlong from the Tarpeian rock. To remove any doubt 3692 III, 39| After Tarquin's expulsion, the people, 3693 XI, 27| after the expulsion of the Tarquins, and they were to be attached 3694 III, 3| wailings. Drusus went as far as Tarracina with Claudius, brother of 3695 I, 103| Augustus in the colony of Tarraco was granted, and a precedent 3696 I, 45| of the severity of their tasks, with special mention of 3697 XIII, 18| extremely hot and already tasted, was handed to Britannicus; 3698 IV, 75| With this Augusta would taunt her son, and claim back 3699 XIV, 33| into the country of the Tauraunites, where he escaped an unforeseen 3700 XII, 19| driven on the shores of the Tauri and cut off by the barbarians, 3701 XIII, 29| of Rome, to brothels and taverns, with comrades, who seized 3702 XII, 71| proposed to grant immunity from taxation to the people of Cos, and 3703 I, 15| the excesses of Quintus Tedius and Vedius Pollio; last 3704 XVI, 2| alloy, but the earth now teemed with a new abundance, and 3705 III, 88| the wrath of his father Telamon. ~ ~ 3706 IV, 85| Capreae was inhabited by the Teleboi. Tiberius had by this time 3707 XVI, 15| Caius Suetonius and Lucius Telesinus, Antistius Sosianus, who, 3708 II, 62| need of help. The people of Temnus, Philadelpheia, Aegae, Apollonis, 3709 XI, 19| sometimes the courtesy and temperance which can never offend, 3710 II, 96| gracious to his friends, temperate in his pleasures, the husband 3711 II, 28| hither and thither under tempestuous gales from every quarter, 3712 VI, 74| friends advised delay and temporising, replied that "the same 3713 III, 25| often related, against the temptation of money, and now for very 3714 I, 3| stepsons, and in him everything tended to centre. He was adopted 3715 I, 71| Very different was the tendency of Tiberius's character. 3716 XIII, 19| State, and all the more tenderness ought to be shown by the 3717 XIV, 81| Her various arguments, tending both to frighten and to 3718 III, 89| Stratonicis; and the islanders of Tenos, an utterance from the same 3719 IV, 63| Spain by a peasant of the Termestine tribe. Suddenly attacking 3720 IV, 63| treacherously murdered by the Termestini. Some public money had been 3721 I, 22| from the sixteenth year terminating our service. We must be 3722 XIV, 68| is building up his garden terraces, who paces grandly through 3723 II, 28| difficult, while our soldiers, terrorstricken and without any experience 3724 III, 3| built altars to the dead, testifying their grief by tears and 3725 IV, 34| barbarians, whose horses were tethered or roaming over distant 3726 XV, 33| orders were sent to the tetrarchs, the tributaries, kings, 3727 III, 88| to Jupiter of Salamis, by Teucer when he fled from the wrath 3728 I, 80| not far from the forest of Teutoburgium where the remains of Varus 3729 III, 30| attacking a fortress named Thala. In this engagement Rufus 3730 III, 82| result of private feuds. Now, thank heaven, the supreme pontiff 3731 XIII, 24| Domitia's enmity, I should be thankful for it, were she to vie 3732 | thee 3733 XI, 30| than that with the Gauls. Thenceforth they have preserved an unbroken 3734 VI, 24| their great-grandfather Theophanes of Mitylene had been one 3735 II, 70| at his intercession one Theophilus whom the Areopagus had condemned 3736 V, 13| by the bays of Torone and Thermae, then passed on to Euboea, 3737 IV, 74| the son of Jupiter, or Theseus, also of divine origin, 3738 VI, 49| been descended from the Thessalians, at the period when Jason, 3739 XV, 11| that, when the dangers thickened, the glory of the rescue 3740 II, 14| himself, plunging into the thickest of the battle, fell amid 3741 II, 17| armour. Shower your blows thickly; strike at the face with 3742 IV, 92| scrutinized the size or thickness till Olennius, a first-rank 3743 | thine 3744 I, 48| Upper Army, and the second, thirteenth, and sixteenth legions, 3745 XV, 53| measurement, with broad thoroughfares, with a restriction on the 3746 XIV, 7| sea. Acerronia, however, thoughtlessly exclaiming that she was 3747 XIV, 46| and the shout of so many thousands, much less our charge and 3748 IV, 66| former entrenchments the Thracians who, as I have mentioned, 3749 I, 23| and most of them to their threadbare garments and naked limbs. 3750 XIV, 55| the Senate's decree, which threatens the entire slave-establishment 3751 XIV, 71| yourself inferior to Vitellius, thrice a consul, and me to Claudius. 3752 IV, 33| he besieged the town of Thubuscum. Dolabella meanwhile collecting 3753 XII, 56| hands and bind together the thumbs in a tight knot; then, when 3754 XIV, 21| and night they kept up a thunder of applause, and applied 3755 XIV, 18| another was killed by a thunderbolt in her husband's embrace. 3756 XIV, 28| Etruscans and horse-races from Thurii. When we had possessed ourselves 3757 XI, 41| with flowing hair shook the thyrsus, and Silius at her side, 3758 III, 6| rigour of winter as far as Ticinum, and never leaving the corpse 3759 I, 3| he honoured with imperial tides, although his own family 3760 XII, 56| together the thumbs in a tight knot; then, when the blood 3761 XV, 24| prosecution of Claudius Timarchus of Crete, on such charges 3762 IV, 77| the old emperor and the timidity of the young prince." ~ ~ 3763 VI, 41| birds in its beak and in the tints of its plumage, is held 3764 I, 71| Sabines, had instituted the Titian brotherhood. Twenty-one 3765 II, 113| to profess their shame. Titidius Labeo, Vistilia's husband, 3766 II, 62| Hierocaesarea, Myrina, Cyme, and Tmolus, were; it was decided, to 3767 XIV, 55| State ever need my counsels. To-day this has come to pass, since 3768 I, 79| the Roman rods, axes, and toga. Other nations in their 3769 XIV, 11| then sudden bustle and tokens of the worst catastrophe. 3770 IV, 92| nation, and it was the less tolerable to the Germans, whose forests 3771 VI, 56| publicly read, thus showing his tolerance of free speech in others 3772 VI, 74| but as a man who could not tolerate gross iniquities. Granted 3773 I, 39| which they were perpetually tom by hurricane and rain. And 3774 IV, 53| stone are despised as mere tombs, if the judgment of posterity 3775 XII, 77| been retained as one of the tools of despotism. By this woman' 3776 I, 44| that he might touch their toothless gums; others showed him 3777 VI, 28| he would make use of the top of the house and of the 3778 XV, 39| trumpet, and the lighting by a torch from beneath of an altar 3779 XV, 72| back on a chair to the same torments (for with her limbs all 3780 V, 13| he hurried by the bays of Torone and Thermae, then passed 3781 III, 97| was also the request of Torquata, Silanus's sister, a vestal 3782 XVI, 13| the execution of the two Torquati for their crimes had now 3783 IV, 15| slave who handed the poison, tortured, have sought to discover 3784 I, 93| his army was driven and tossed hither and thither. The 3785 XIV, 18| owed her fall, began to totter, or her wrath was at last 3786 I, 22| or arms to a new and yet tottering throne? We have blundered 3787 II, 30| clothing spread as sails, some towed by the more powerful, returned, 3788 XV, 12| Crescens, dared to defend a tower in which he was keeping 3789 XV, 47| motion by other vessels towing it. These vessels glittered 3790 XIII, 62| persons, restored peace to the townspeople. ~ ~ 3791 XV, 52| and there still remain the traces of his disappointed hope. ~ ~ 3792 IV, 74| envoys from Smyrna, after tracing their city's antiquity back 3793 IV, 6| Syria, all within the entire tract of country stretching as 3794 IV, 17| Africa and Sicily by petty trade. But he did not escape the 3795 XIII, 66| immunities except when they traded for profit, with other very 3796 XIV, 44| number of merchants and trading vessels. Uncertain whether 3797 XIII, 63| against it and furnished his traducers with a ground for censuring 3798 XIV, 63| stated that he had habitually trafficked in the emperor's favours 3799 VI, 43| grounded on the subject of a tragedy written by Scaurus, from 3800 XV, 84| harp-player were removed and a tragic actor succeeded him." For 3801 XIV, 72| visitors at a distance, avoided trains of followers, seldom appeared 3802 IV, 73| But the people of Hypaepa, Tralles, Laodicaea, and Magnesia 3803 I, 87| thither all in their way, and trampling on the fallen. The struggle 3804 I, 34| an explosion of crime was tranquillised by a mere accident. Suddenly 3805 II, 44| ought the business to be transacted, that the State might have 3806 III, 26| of human plans in every transaction. Clearly, the very last 3807 XII, 48| holding back the enemy. These transactions, though occurring under 3808 II, 29| extent did this disaster transcend every other, for all around 3809 XV, 97| proposal that the prince had transcended all mortal grandeur and 3810 XIV, 49| the very beasts of burden, transfixed by the missiles, swelled 3811 III, 74| forbidden; but when people once transgress prohibitions with impunity, 3812 III, 49| husband's fault if the wife transgresses propriety. Besides, it is 3813 XV, 29| commemoration of the Julii. Transient distinctions all of them, 3814 XIII, 21| the most precarious and transitory is a reputation for power 3815 XIII, 66| illegal exactions. In our transmarine provinces the conveyance 3816 VI, 75| sentenced, respectively, to transportation to an island and to loss 3817 II, 99| with no moderation in his transports; while Plancina's insolence 3818 XIII, 48| of Pontus and the town of Trapezus, hastily withdrew. He could 3819 XI, 47| compulsion." Even the defence of Traulus Montanus, a Roman knight, 3820 XIV, 69| exhausted by warfare or travel, so in this journey of life, 3821 IV, 63| Lucius Piso, as he was travelling in all the carelessness 3822 XIV, 71| as for myself, I am but treading the threshold of empire. 3823 IV, 29| Granius accused Piso of secret treasonable conversation, and added 3824 XVI, 32| country's prosperity, who treats our public places, theatres 3825 XI, 21| death for working at the trenches without his sword, another 3826 III, 80| adopted as a partner in trials already familiar to him. ~ ~ 3827 XV, 92| were then deprived of the tribuneship, on the ground, not of actually 3828 XV, 33| sent to the tetrarchs, the tributaries, kings, prefects and procurators, 3829 XV, 34| and the auxiliaries of the tributary princes, which had been 3830 XII, 5| censor to screen a slave's trickeries, and looked forward to new 3831 XIII, 36| health by letting the blood trickle from his veins, though men 3832 I, 32| the legions, and the same tricks were now revived by Drusus. 3833 IV, 91| banished her to the island of Trimerus, not far from the shores 3834 XIV, 42| and stirred to revolt the Trinobantes and others who, not yet 3835 III, 105| then further divided his triple army into several detachments 3836 I, 2| then, dropping the title of triumvir, and giving out that he 3837 III, 40| annulled the decrees of his triumvirate, and gave us a constitution 3838 V, 1| Sextus Pompeius and the triumvirs. After this Caesar, enamoured 3839 XI, 45| Pompeius Urbicus and Saufellus Trogus from among her accomplices, 3840 XV, 21| At Rome meanwhile trophies for the Parthian war, and 3841 II, 23| piled in the style of a trophy, with the names of the conquered 3842 III, 15| ties of blood or your own true-heartedness have made his advocates, 3843 IV, 75| whether it is not to be more truly ascribed to himself, and 3844 IV, 47| famous for eloquence and truthfulness, extolled Cneius Pompeius 3845 XVI, 8| religious ceremonial. Volcatius Tullinus, and Marcellus Cornelius, 3846 XIV, 21| himself came on the stage, tuning his lute with elaborate 3847 XII, 67| the work was apparent, the tunnel not having been bored down 3848 IV, 83| the forum, and that the Tuscan street was named after these 3849 XIII, 22| note was written to Caecina Tuscus, intrusting to him the charge 3850 XV, 51| sanctuary of Vesta, with the tutelary deities of the Roman people, 3851 XII, 27| public safety, which for twenty-five years had been neglected, 3852 VI, 58| honours of a triumph. During twenty-four years he had the charge 3853 I, 9| the nobles. For he would twist a word or a look into a 3854 XIII, 66| of the two per cent. and two-and-a-half per cent. taxes remains 3855 VI, 22| every creditor should have two-thirds his capital secured on estates 3856 XVI, 1| inference, after fleeing from Tyre and founding Carthage, had 3857 IV, 6| most part in Etruria and Umbria, or ancient Latium and the 3858 VI, 15| the more galling to men unaccustomed to obey it. ~ ~ 3859 I, 83| assailants, perilous to men unacquainted with it, when Caesar led 3860 III, 3| preceded by the standards unadorned and the faces reversed. 3861 II, 57| united, and were wholly unaffected by the rivalries of their 3862 II, 67| Camillus, because of his unambitious life, enjoyed without harm. ~ ~ 3863 XV, 27| opinion was hailed with great unanimity, but the Senate's resolution 3864 I, 43| was indeed a young man of unaspiring temper, and of wonderful 3865 IV, 16| their guardians and the unassailable virtue of Agrippina. So 3866 VI, 36| while he was yet safe and unassailed on. ~ ~ 3867 XV, 61| running hither and thither, unattended, in the darkness. In the 3868 I, 59| committed by their hands. Unawed by the punishment of their 3869 IV, 85| he was now for thoroughly unbending himself in secret profligacy 3870 III, 14| to determine with minds unbiassed. Certainly if a subordinate 3871 III, 92| origin, low as it was, by his unblushing effronteries. Brutidius 3872 I, 79| to slavery of his wife's unborn child. He flew hither and 3873 I, 27| broke open the guardhouse, unbound the prisoners, and were 3874 VI, 44| singular affection, as a man of unbounded kindliness, moderate in 3875 VI, 29| question whether it is fate and unchangeable necessity or chance which 3876 II, 113| sufficient punishment on unchaste women to have to profess 3877 XII, 8| future marriages between uncles and brothers' daughters 3878 III, 91| let no worthy action be uncommemorated, and to hold out the reprobation 3879 III, 61| studiously assumed an air of unconcern. He changed neither his 3880 XV, 40| Ecbatana, who was by no means unconcerned for his brother. In fact, 3881 III, 67| town of Lanuvium, was quite unconnected. An indefatigable soldier, 3882 IV, 15| of an only son hitherto unconvicted of any crime, as he was 3883 XIII, 48| close up to the rampart, to undermine it, while others were ordered 3884 III, 37| for every household was undermined by the insinuations of informers; 3885 IV, 24| the emperor regarded as undermining his own power, which seemed 3886 IV, 92| while their home cattle are undersized. First it was their herds, 3887 XIV, 28| contests, when once the State undertakes the expenditure. The victories 3888 XIII, 69| assertion by which meritorious undertakings are often hindered. ~ ~ 3889 XV, 88| infamous career. He then underwent the prescribed penalty. 3890 XIII, 30| that, as a check on the undeserving, patrons should have the 3891 I, 3| his own family was as yet undiminished. For he had admitted the 3892 XVI, 29| you are yet stainless and undisgraced, seek to close life with 3893 II, 87| persuasion, and by a more undisguised captivity the further he 3894 I, 27| the gods, and left nothing undone by which they might excite 3895 XIV, 57| or sex, as well as the undoubted innocence of the great majority. 3896 II, 84| Nothing made Tiberius so uneasy as an apprehension of the 3897 XIV, 49| which they discharged with unerring aim on the closely approaching 3898 V, 1| and her will long remained unexecuted. Her panegyric was pronounced 3899 I, 66| which was more difficult unexplored, and consequently unguarded 3900 II, 57| discord in the court, with unexpressed partialities towards either 3901 XIV, 5| shipwreck, who would be so unfair as to impute to crime an 3902 III, 15| convict Germanicus of any unfairness, if such there was. And 3903 I, 82| approve, either interpreting unfavourably every act of Germanicus, 3904 IV, 9| So would Drusus talk, not unfrequently, or only in the hearing 3905 II, 35| to his table, showing no unfriendliness in his looks or anger in 3906 IV, 5| disposed or at least not unfriendly towards the lads. And now 3907 IV, 28| to this at the time not ungraciously, but the remembrance of 3908 XI, 33| craved passionately for an unhallowed union. ~ ~ 3909 XVI, 36| senators, might preserve unharmed this best of fathers. My 3910 II, 101| ashes of Germanicus, that, unheard and undefended, you may 3911 I, 31| sent his son to concede unhesitatingly what could be immediately 3912 III, 61| himself that the events were unimportant and much more insignificant 3913 III, 49| requires that men should be unincumbered, but when they return what 3914 I, 16| on one man, as many, by uniting their efforts would more 3915 IV, 86| them, as it were, in an unlawful secret, led to a semblance 3916 | unlike 3917 XI, 2| Poppaea, and finally of unmanly vice. It was at this last 3918 III, 49| their wives. Are then all unmarried men blameless? The Oppian 3919 XVI, 10| the first opportunity of unmasking his savage wrath was furnished 3920 V, 3| was the beginning of an unmitigated and grinding despotism. 3921 V, 3| longing for revolution, but unnatural passions and profligacy 3922 VI, 25| singly or in heaps, the unnumbered dead, of every age and sex, 3923 II, 60| treacherously surprised three unofficered legions and a general who 3924 XIV, 46| age or virginity, are left unpolluted. But heaven is on the side 3925 II, 101| against the first burst of unpopularity. But if Piso possesses himself 3926 XVI, 5| fatigue, which wearied their unpractised hands, while they disturbed 3927 II, 18| unopposed, their flight unpursued. But when once they have 3928 IV, 25| were alleged against him. Unquestionably, they could not extricate 3929 II, 63| discovered in an earlier and unquestioned will. In both these cases 3930 XII, 37| should rally, and so an unquiet and treacherous peace might 3931 II, 47| importunity, as utterly unreasonable as it is unforeseen, for 3932 XIII, 29| s disguise, so as to be unrecognized, would wander through the 3933 VI, 1| which he had plunged so unrestrainedly that in the fashion of a 3934 XV, 72| knights, and senators, yet unscathed by torture, betrayed, every 3935 III, 92| From unseemly flatteries they passed by 3936 II, 72| This had been of old an unsettled country from the character 3937 XV, 53| while now the open space, unsheltered by any shade, was scorched 3938 I, 30| military decorations, but in unsightly squalor, and faces which, 3939 III, 38| while men's minds were unsophisticated. The most famous of them 3940 XIII, 15| to his mother, with the unsparing liberality of one who was 3941 I, 91| prisoners and the booty unspoilt. So at daybreak they trampled 3942 XII, 10| Domitius. The match was not unsuitable to the age of either, and 3943 XV, 63| informer easily silenced him, unsupported as he was by a single witness. 3944 XV, 35| internal discord, and over what untamably fierce tribes he reigns. 3945 II, 60| Tiberius, and had preserved untarnished the glory of the Germans, 3946 XV, 20| keep pace with the enemy's untiring cavalry, certain to outstrip 3947 II, 15| mess, among themselves, and unwatched. ~ ~ 3948 II, 17| For the huge shields and unwieldly lances of the barbarians 3949 III, 64| wall. Some beat down the unwieldy mass with pikes and forked 3950 I, 98| that I may differ from you unwillingly." Tiberius was deeply moved, 3951 XV, 12| Every foot soldier still unwounded fled to remote wilds, and 3952 IV, 38| sent the emperor a letter, upbraiding him for not having rewarded 3953 I, 23| emperor. Either living I will uphold the loyalty of the legions, 3954 XIV, 79| most of them persisted in upholding the virtue of their mistress. 3955 IV, 9| wished to be known as an upright counsellor, and there was 3956 XIII, 60| his disgraceful past, but uprightly and virtuously, a pleasure-loving 3957 XVI, 26| prince's animosity by his uprightness and diligence, as well as 3958 XIII, 53| honour to bow before an upstart prosperity."~ ~ 3959 XI, 45| together with Pompeius Urbicus and Saufellus Trogus from 3960 III, 2| children, clasping the funeral urn, with eyes riveted to the 3961 XIII, 48| Corbulo, that war might not be uselessly protracted, and also to 3962 IV, 33| Tacfarinas had proved the uselessness of following up the enemy' 3963 I, 67| Bructeri, Tubantes, and Usipetes, were roused by this slaughter, 3964 XIII, 33| Tribunes were also forbidden to usurp the authority of praetors 3965 XV, 53| which were liked for their utility, also added beauty to the 3966 XV, 37| was not implacable to the uttermost, and he even asked a truce 3967 II, 69| of letters and of poetry, utters a response in verse answering 3968 V | BOOK V~ ~A.D. 29-31~ ~ 3969 XIII, 48| to strip of his home this vagabond foe who was preparing neither 3970 XII, 55| Pharasmanes, to his face, replied vaguely and often in a conciliatory 3971 II, 49| falsehood by precipitancy and vagueness, he would either withdraw 3972 II, 8| by an altered name, the Vahal, by the inhabitants of its 3973 VI, 42| and their wills remained valid, a recompense this for their 3974 XV, 69| pressing him, he distrusted the validity of his will. Certainly his 3975 XIV, 20| enclosed in the Vatican valley where he might manage his 3976 XV, 37| against treachery by so valuable a pledge. Each then took 3977 VI, 69| own glory by paying the values of the houses and blocks 3978 XII, 33| in command, directed the Vangiones and Nemetes, with the allied 3979 VI, 54| rivers exhibited omens which vanished the same moment. ~ ~ 3980 IV, 73| in resources. With little variation they dwelt on antiquity 3981 XIII, 7| known to be men of very varied experience, and, as for 3982 XVI, 21| doubt how the ingenious varieties of his nightly revels became 3983 II, 65| gaining strength. Appuleia Varilia, grand-niece of Augustus, 3984 I, 14| the murders at Rome of the Varros, Egnatii, and Juli." ~ ~ 3985 XII, 42| procession of the royal vassals, and the ornaments and neck-chains 3986 XIV, 45| confidently exulting, a vaster host than ever had assembled, 3987 XIV, 20| space was enclosed in the Vatican valley where he might manage 3988 XV, 43| show was being exhibited by Vatinius. The man was one of the 3989 XI, 41| were being trodden; the vats were overflowing; women 3990 XV, 87| severed his head at two blows, vaunted his brutality to Nero, saying 3991 II, 60| Maroboduus abstain from vaunts about himself or from revilings 3992 XII, 70| mention after them the Matii, Vedii, and other too influential 3993 I, 15| excesses of Quintus Tedius and Vedius Pollio; last of all, there 3994 II, 64| had been erected in the vegetable market by Caius Duilius, 3995 IV, 79| is he succeeded more by vehemence than by finish of style. 3996 XV, 87| Flavus was intrusted to Veianius Niger, a tribune. At his 3997 I, 104| against the closing up of the Veline lake, where it empties itself 3998 III, 56| this was known to Publius Vellaeus who commanded the nearest 3999 II, 21| the cohorts of the Raeti, Vendelici, and Gauls faced his attack. 4000 XIV, 19| experience in his person men's veneration for him." They insisted 4001 XI, 28| Is it a small thing that Veneti and Insubres have already 4002 XV, 61| centurions, Maximus Scaurus and Venetus Paulus. But their mainstay,


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