Book, Par.
1 I, 4 | less restraint, because the Emperor was new to power, and absent
2 I, 5 | and that the favour of an emperor created by the legions must
3 I, 6 | were ruining the weak old Emperor, who had to bear the odium
4 I, 8 | had himself wished to be emperor, but all agreed that the
5 I, 8 | his friendship with the Emperor. That he was not sent back,
6 I, 10| he was afterwards like an emperor. He was a compound of dissipation
7 I, 11| disposed to be content with any emperor, after having experienced
8 I, 12| and were demanding another emperor, but conceded the power
9 I, 13| profligacy. For this reason the Emperor had entrusted to him, as
10 I, 13| most conspicuous of the Emperor's followers, he was led
11 I, 14| council for the election of an emperor. To this he summoned, besides
12 I, 16| youth no greater than a good emperor. Under Tuberous, Chairs,
13 I, 16| before no precedent of an emperor condemned by his own people.
14 I, 16| would not like under another emperor. It is not here, as it is
15 I, 16| as if he were creating an emperor; the others addressed him
16 I, 16| addressed him as if he were an emperor already.~ ~
17 I, 17| him. His language to the Emperor, his father, was reverential;
18 I, 19| selection to Galba, the Emperor shewed a disgraceful want
19 I, 21| have embarrassed even an emperor, by a poverty that a subject
20 I, 21| injured me with the aged Emperor, and will injure me yet
21 I, 26| with the blood of their Emperor; it was a fear lest in the
22 I, 27| body-guard saluted him as Emperor, and, while he trembled
23 I, 29| even when he was but the Emperor's friend. Shall he earn
24 I, 29| men should not create an Emperor. We have occasionally heard
25 I, 32| Capitol, while our noble Emperor with his brave friends barricades
26 I, 35| commending sometimes the Emperor to his soldiers, sometimes
27 I, 35| sometimes the soldiers to their Emperor. Otho did not fail to play
28 I, 36| question, whether it is the Emperor of the Roman people, or
29 I, 36| lawlessness had he been Emperor himself; as it is, he has
30 I, 38| now some advised that the Emperor should return to the palace,
31 I, 39| their aged and defenceless Emperor. In all the terror of their
32 I, 48| empire, had he never been emperor.~ ~
33 I, 55| the hour, and to offer an Emperor to their choice. Vitellius
34 I, 55| and harmony, to create an Emperor, and who were to suggest,
35 I, 56| them saluted Vitellius as Emperor. All the legions belonging
36 I, 61| between the army and the Emperor. The army was all eagerness;
37 I, 61| general as well as if the Emperor had been present to stimulate
38 I, 68| from Helvetia found the Emperor or his army less merciful. "
39 I, 71| on some acts without the Emperor's knowledge, and ended by
40 I, 72| artifices on the part of the Emperor, who incurred much obloquy
41 I, 80| act of treachery in the Emperor, and whether to remain and
42 I, 82| burst into the tent of their Emperor?~ ~
43 I, 86| infantry and cavalry. The Emperor, however, placed most confidence
44 I, 87| the brother either of an Emperor, or of an enemy. This roused
45 I, 89| Dictator like Caesar, or an Emperor like Augustus, they vied
46 II, 1 | journey the homage due to the Emperor, and his age, which now
47 II, 1 | childless condition of the Emperor furnished matter for such
48 II, 33| would be better for the Emperor to be present in person,
49 II, 33| would not seem to put the Emperor in the way of peril, and
50 II, 37| the Senate to choose an Emperor; and that, for this reason,
51 II, 37| for a worthy and blameless Emperor in the room of men utterly
52 II, 37| could have endured any Emperor who was not himself stained
53 II, 39| soldiers demanding that the Emperor should be present at the
54 II, 40| from Otho, in which the Emperor, sick of delay and impatient
55 II, 46| soldiers did not wait for the Emperor to speak. They bade him
56 II, 46| who were near clasped the Emperor's knees, and Plotius Firmus
57 II, 54| Vitellius, the brother of the Emperor, was present at their deliberations,
58 II, 63| clemency by imperilling the Emperor. Sabinus was naturally of
59 II, 64| exemplary virtue of Galeria, the Emperor's wife, who took no part
60 II, 65| accusations. Hilarius, the Emperor's freedman, had indeed brought
61 II, 65| passports with the name of any Emperor. Some extracts from the
62 II, 65| Cluvius was attached to the Emperor's retinue; Spain however
63 II, 65| was then accompanying the Emperor, was sent to succeed him.~ ~
64 II, 68| follow the character of the Emperor, and either imitate his
65 II, 71| capital. The nearer the Emperor approached to Rome, the
66 II, 71| Costa was passed over. The Emperor disliked him because he
67 II, 73| himself. But now, both the Emperor and the army, as if they
68 II, 76| one whom he fears. That an Emperor can be created by the army,
69 II, 76| and deservedly regretted Emperor, and all the while he is
70 II, 77| should adopt, were I myself Emperor. Between us, however, there
71 II, 80| suddenly saluted him as Emperor. Then all the rest hurried
72 II, 83| than as a servant of the Emperor, moved on with some light-armed
73 II, 89| army was worthy of a better Emperor than Vitellius. Thus he
74 II, 92| from the compassion of the Emperor. By an edict which gratified
75 II, 92| way into the palace of the Emperor, and thus became more powerful
76 II, 95| priesthood dedicated by the Emperor Tiberius to the Julian family,
77 II, 95| Bedriacum, Asiaticus, the Emperor's freedman, was rivalling
78 II, 95| extravagance, and riot. The Emperor himself, thinking it enough
79 II, 99| favour and power with the new Emperor. ~ ~
80 III, 12| interference of Hormus, one of the Emperor's freedmen, for he too ranked
81 III, 13| Caecina, after robbing the Emperor of palaces, gardens, and
82 III, 13| rob the soldiers of their Emperor. But we, who have seen nothing
83 III, 37| the State, a general his Emperor, a man loaded with wealth
84 III, 38| days in merriment while the Emperor was sick. As soon as it
85 III, 38| clasping to his bosom the Emperor's son, fell at his knees.
86 III, 53| should be addressed to an Emperor, and not without implied
87 III, 53| sword, have I served my Emperor. I would not seek to hinder
88 III, 54| courage, prevailed on the Emperor to send him in person to
89 III, 54| in secret, but avowed the emperor's instructions and his own
90 III, 54| Vitellius, and when the Emperor denied the truth of the
91 III, 55| Vitellius, brother of the Emperor, for the defence of the
92 III, 56| friends of Vitellius; for the Emperor's ears were so formed, that
93 III, 58| during the absence of the Emperor, but before long with a
94 III, 63| remembered he had been an Emperor, he would have himself forgotten
95 III, 68| spectacle. There was the Roman Emperor, lord but a few days before
96 III, 70| forbid. He was no longer Emperor, he was merely the cause
97 III, 75| to be the brother of the Emperor, while the other thought
98 III, 78| the consulship and of the Emperor's daughter in marriage with
99 III, 85| answered, "Yet I was your Emperor." Then he fell under a shower
100 IV, 2 | the establishment of the Emperor, as if they were the spoils
101 IV, 3 | of opposition to the new Emperor. The sight of the soldiery
102 IV, 3 | expressed himself as an Emperor, speaking modestly about
103 IV, 3 | part of the Senate. On the Emperor and his son Titus the consulship
104 IV, 4 | State and an insult to the Emperor to boast that he had the
105 IV, 4 | respect indeed to a worthy Emperor, and yet wholly free from
106 IV, 6 | should be sent to the new Emperor. Hence arose a sharp altercation
107 IV, 7 | blameless, and who may fill the Emperor's ear with honourable counsels.
108 IV, 7 | the part of the Senate the Emperor will, so to speak, be advised
109 IV, 8 | why the honour due to the Emperor should be turned into an
110 IV, 9 | reserving the matter for the Emperor. Helvidius gave it as his
111 IV, 9 | matter in the absence of the Emperor. Helvidius had moved that
112 IV, 11| at large no laws and no Emperor, Mucianus entered the capital,
113 IV, 18| out of Germany. And the Emperor who was challenged by that
114 IV, 22| enemies. Vitellius is our Emperor; to him we will retain our
115 IV, 26| and were not told to their Emperor, though the sudden outburst
116 IV, 41| matter of such importance the Emperor must be consulted.~ ~
117 IV, 43| and moderation of the new Emperor reassure us. But the influence
118 IV, 43| the downfall of a wicked Emperor is the best of opportunities." ~ ~
119 IV, 47| Mucianus, now the absent Emperor, and, as a last resource,
120 IV, 47| and servants of the same Emperor," stopped the groundless
121 IV, 50| head of Piso, as if he were Emperor, and bade the bystanders,
122 IV, 60| at any rate from a Roman Emperor that you received it. If
123 IV, 70| followers salute him as Emperor, and hastened at the head
124 IV, 75| remembered neither by the Emperor nor by himself. They were
125 IV, 83| influences acted on the Emperor; on the one hand were the
126 IV, 83| his friendship with the Emperor to all appearance remained
127 IV, 84| blindness, threw himself at the Emperor's knees, and implored him
128 IV, 84| pleasure of the Gods, and the Emperor might be chosen to be the
129 IV, 88| inferior generals. Let the Emperor display from the near neighbourhood
130 V, 10| for the approbation of the Emperor, usurped the title of king.
131 V, 10| of war. The death of the Emperor put an end to the disturbance.
132 V, 18| of the 6th had made Galba Emperor; the men of the 2nd were
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