Book, Par.
1 I, 1 | should be centered in one man, these great intellects
2 I, 6 | Petronius Turpilianus, a man of consular rank, were put
3 I, 6 | decided bias towards any one man, but ready to a daring hand. ~ ~
4 I, 8 | Cluvius Rufus, an eloquent man, who had all the accomplishments
5 I, 10| of Licinius Mucianus, a man whose good and bad fortune
6 I, 10| many fascinations. He was a man who would find it easier
7 I, 14| was in look and manner a man of the old type. Rightly
8 I, 14| judged, he seemed a stern man, morose to those who estimated
9 I, 15| effect: "If I were a private man, and were now adopting you
10 I, 15| patriotism to offer to you, a man of peace, that power, for
11 I, 16| unanimous opinion points out the man. Let Nero be ever before
12 I, 18| of the parsimonious old man. He was ruined by his old-fashioned
13 I, 21| always suspect and hate the man who has been named for the
14 I, 21| me yet more with a young man whose temper, naturally
15 I, 21| innocent and the guilty, the man of spirit will at least
16 I, 33| the camp, as being a young man of noble name, whose popularity
17 I, 34| most arrant coward, the man, who, as the event proved,
18 I, 36| we should die, like the man, who, though no one demanded
19 I, 37| fetches out of exile the man in whose ill-humour and
20 I, 37| centurion encouraged them, every man acted on his own impulse
21 I, 45| holiday was purchased. The man with the fullest purse was
22 I, 45| company a poor and spiritless man. One after another was ruined
23 I, 51| pronounced Vitellius to be a man of low tastes, those who
24 I, 52| the indolent temper of the man, yet roused him rather to
25 I, 52| his dignified mien. This man had, when quaestor in Baetica,
26 I, 57| was given up to them; this man had actually imbued his
27 I, 58| Julius Civilis, a man of commanding influence
28 I, 59| Maximus was governor, a man whose sordid avarice made
29 I, 68| the Helvetian envoys, a man of well-known eloquence,
30 I, 70| sparing a distinguished man opposed to his own party.
31 I, 70| Otho did not treat him as a man to be pardoned, and, unwilling
32 I, 71| Sophonius Tigellinus, a man of obscure birth, steeped
33 I, 72| strength of her alliance with a man of consular rank, and lived
34 I, 85| greater than the form of man, that the statue of the
35 I, 86| Gallus, in fact, on each man's special excellence, a
36 I, 88| brought honour to but one man. Under Tiberius and Caius
37 II, 5 | have been united in one man. Mucianus was governor of
38 II, 5 | mischievous feud. He was indeed a man formed both by nature and
39 II, 9 | boarded and taken, and the man, whoever he was, killed.
40 II, 10| the utmost to destroy the man who had informed against
41 II, 10| odious and guilty as the man might be, he yet ought to
42 II, 23| Cremona. Martius, who was a man of energy, conveyed his
43 II, 25| signal to engage. He was a man naturally tardy in action,
44 II, 30| ridiculed his colleague as a man of foul and infamous character;
45 II, 38| has been ever innate in man increased and broke out
46 II, 46| zealous of them all. This man, who was prefect of the
47 II, 48| sparingly, and not like a man who was soon to die. Then
48 II, 48| brother's son, a very young man, who was anxious and sorrowful,
49 II, 49| Hearing a groan from the dying man, his freedmen and slaves,
50 II, 53| Caecina, who was an unknown man, and had lately been made
51 II, 54| deliberation, but every man consulted his own safety,
52 II, 55| with the blood of the dying man. In the Senate all the customary
53 II, 59| of Gallia Lugdunensis, a man of noble birth, whose munificence
54 II, 66| the part of his host. Each man's comrades gathered round
55 II, 68| clamoured for the death of a man of consular rank, formerly
56 II, 68| outbreaks than Verginius; the man still was admired, still
57 II, 71| offence, but because he was a man of gentle temper, and could
58 II, 72| had suddenly sprung up a man, who gave out that he was
59 II, 75| with which as a military man he was well acquainted,
60 II, 76| surpassed Vitellius. The man who is afraid sees distinction
61 II, 76| premature despair, this man has made into a great and
62 II, 77| Empire in favour of the man whose son I should adopt,
63 II, 80| great difficulty, the first man to speak, while hope, fear,
64 II, 84| only to the extent of a man's fortune. Informations
65 II, 86| of Primus Antonius. This man, though an offender against
66 II, 86| was Cornelius Fuscus, a man in the prime of life and
67 III, 3 | extolled him as the one man, the one general in the
68 III, 9 | tribune Vipstanus Messalla, a man of illustrious family, himself
69 III, 9 | distinguished, the only man who had brought into that
70 III, 16| over the country that every man should leave plundering,
71 III, 19| were spurned away; that no man's voice might be heard,
72 III, 25| recognized. Clasping the expiring man in his arms, in piteous
73 III, 37| a general his Emperor, a man loaded with wealth so vast
74 III, 37| the name of Vespasian. A man was found, who, while all
75 III, 39| character, Blaesus was a man of resolute loyalty. In
76 III, 39| solicitations. A righteous man and a lover of peace, who
77 III, 50| of Pompeius Silvanus, a man of consular rank; the real
78 III, 52| now becoming too great a man, and their hopes from Mucianus
79 III, 55| Vitellius, who seemed like a man roused from slumber ordered
80 III, 57| daring of even a single man, was drawn into revolt by
81 III, 57| Claudius Apollinaris, a man neither firm in his loyalty,
82 III, 62| Equestrian family; he was a man of loose character, but
83 III, 65| that the mild temper of the man shrank from bloodshed and
84 III, 66| You certainly are an old man, and have had enough both
85 III, 68| There could hardly be a man so careless of human interests
86 III, 70| the slaughter of one old man and one stripling? You should
87 III, 71| without any leader, every man acting on his own impulse.
88 III, 75| Such was the end of a man in no wise contemptible.
89 III, 78| however, easily fix upon one man the blame which belongs
90 III, 80| the private worth of the man. His companions were dispersed,
91 III, 81| One Musonius Rufus, a man of equestrian rank, strongly
92 III, 84| conquerors, and fell to a man, with their wounds in front
93 III, 85| the mob reviled the dead man with the same heartlessness
94 III, 86| attached themselves to any man who sought to gain them
95 III, 86| qualities indeed which turn to a man's ruin, unless tempered
96 IV, 1 | foes. Whenever they saw a man tall and young they cut
97 IV, 4 | does he speak like a public man? In a few days' time he
98 IV, 5 | again happened to mention a man of whom I shall often have
99 IV, 8 | turned into an insult to any man. All Senators are competent
100 IV, 8 | counsels on Vespasian, an old man, who has won the honours
101 IV, 16| was a certain Brinno, a man of a certain stolid bravery
102 IV, 18| the peculiar excellence of man, and the Gods help the braver
103 IV, 25| are directed by one old man's sick caprice. How much
104 IV, 26| authority than because any one man was in fault. The army was
105 IV, 26| tribunal, and ordered the man, who had been seized by
106 IV, 33| perceiving that Montanus was a man of singularly high spirit
107 IV, 33| Having thus fired the man's ambition, Civilis dismissed
108 IV, 39| and was far from being a man of turbulent disposition.
109 IV, 40| Scribonianus, who was a man not easily to be tempted
110 IV, 40| filled the vain heart of the man with hope and ambition,
111 IV, 43| his teeth in the murdered man's head. "Certainly," he
112 IV, 43| had never pleaded in any man's defence, steeped your
113 IV, 43| Country the spoils of a man of consular rank, had been
114 IV, 43| Conscript Fathers, preserve a man of such ready counsels,
115 IV, 43| flourish and be strong? And the man, whom we dare not offend
116 IV, 50| Valerius Festus, a young man of extravagant habits and
117 IV, 50| Vitellius. Whether this man in their frequent interviews
118 IV, 50| murdering him, he ordered the man to be executed, moved, not
119 IV, 51| pique, but he called the man an accomplice of Piso. Some
120 IV, 53| destroy, their affection. A man's own race can never be
121 IV, 54| him to Lucius Vestinius, a man of the Equestrian order,
122 IV, 58| bribing his gaolers. This man undertook, if a force were
123 IV, 71| exasperating expressions. The man was a turbulent fomenter
124 IV, 76| pretexts; but never did any man seek to enslave his fellows
125 IV, 83| the proud spirit of the man, who could not endure an
126 IV, 83| ill-affected and conceited man, nor did they forget the
127 IV, 85| at that very instant the man had been eighty miles distant.
128 V, 1 | attachment to him. The young man himself, anxious to be thought
129 V, 4 | for any relief from God or man, forsaken as they were of
130 V, 4 | heaven-sent leader that man who should first help them
131 V, 27| so necessary to that one man, so fatal to us, was begun.
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