Book, Chapter
1 1 | their country, to be more readily admired than imitated, or
2 1, VI | her ruin accomplished more readily. Thus, on the other hand,
3 1, XII | depended on these. For they readily believed that that God who
4 1, XII | observe the truth of this more readily through experience, should
5 1, XIII| of Religion wanted more readily to obey the Consul than
6 1, XV | Gods that they would go readily wherever the Emperor should
7 1, XVI | being known by them, return readily under a yoke, which often
8 1, XL | wonder that he should have so readily taken on a new nature and
9 1, XL | have been overthrown so readily. But he did everything to
10 1, XLI | and to do this so very readily, that without any excuse
11 2, IV | one, and which they can readily distribute among themselves:
12 2, X | you to be plundered more readily. Nor can that common opinion
13 2, XVII| have found it so much more readily against this [artillery],
14 2, XXI | this, men will so much more readily throw themselves into your
15 2, XXII| men who want favors more readily for themselves than for
16 3, VI | his conscience blemished, readily believes that [everyone]
17 3, VI | this will happen much more readily, when there are many who
18 3, XIV | their weakness will not be readily discovered; as did C. Sulpicius
19 3, XXI | followed and obeyed [more readily] than he who makes himself
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