Book, Par.
1 I, 12| the power of choice to the Senate and people of Rome, in the
2 I, 17| front of the Rostra, in the Senate, or in the camp. It was
3 I, 19| followed Galba's speech in the Senate, which was as plain and
4 I, 19| supported by the feeling of the Senate. Many who wished him well,
5 I, 19| unfavourable character, the Senate came to a resolution to
6 I, 19| them the authority of the Senate, he the majesty of the Caesar.
7 I, 19| changing the deputies, the Senate having entrusted the selection
8 I, 29| lot of my father, of the Senate, of the Empire itself, that
9 I, 29| gave it to me. Were the Senate, the Country, the People,
10 I, 37| and the feeling of the Senate, of the people of Rome,
11 I, 39| crowd and trampling on the Senate. Neither the sight of the
12 I, 44| have thought it a different Senate, a different people. All
13 I, 46| of the city summoned the Senate; the rest of the Magistrates
14 I, 49| complaint, not only of the Senate and the Knights, who had
15 I, 54| now obsolete names of the Senate and people of Rome. Not
16 I, 55| sworn allegiance to the Senate and people of Rome. Such
17 I, 56| abandoned the specious names the Senate and people of Rome, and
18 I, 73| others, nominally from the Senate, to both the armies of Germany,
19 I, 75| and the prestige of the Senate, and also because the claims
20 I, 77| and by a decree of the Senate restored the statues of
21 I, 80| Terrified no less by the Senate's critical position than
22 I, 81| at one moment, the whole Senate at another. Their minds
23 I, 82| and by the perils of the Senate. Finally, he addressed the
24 I, 83| those cries against the Senate. To clamour for the destruction
25 I, 83| of an army. We have the Senate. The country is with us;
26 I, 83| rest on the security of the Senate. This order which was instituted
27 I, 83| state its Senators, and the Senate gives it its Princes."~ ~
28 I, 84| delighted by success. When the Senate was summoned to the Chamber,
29 I, 87| The leading men of the Senate either suffered from the
30 I, 89| State to the care of the Senate, he presented to those who
31 I, 89| and the unanimity of the Senate and people in his favour.
32 II, 10| brought to trial before the Senate. The Senators indeed had
33 II, 10| upon a great part of the Senate to demand that he should
34 II, 32| capital of the Empire, the Senate, and the people, names that
35 II, 37| consult together, or allow the Senate to choose an Emperor; and
36 II, 52| considerable number of the Senate, who had accompanied Otho
37 II, 52| report; and judging the Senate to be hostile to Otho, watched
38 II, 52| were aggravated when the Senate of Mutina made them an offer
39 II, 55| of the dying man. In the Senate all the customary honours,
40 II, 60| matter of accusation in the Senate against Caecilius Simplex,
41 II, 69| audience to the envoys from the Senate whom he had ordered to wait
42 II, 89| Mulvian bridge, driving the Senate and people before him; but
43 II, 90| if he were addressing the Senate and people of another State,
44 II, 91| habitually appeared in the Senate even when unimportant matters
45 III, 37| He then addressed the Senate in a speech of studied grandiloquence,
46 III, 60| bloodshed the safety of the Senate and of the people of Rome."
47 III, 69| the leading men of the Senate, many of the Equestrian
48 III, 70| civilian and a member of the Senate, while the rivalry of Vitellius
49 III, 80| defend the capital. Then the Senate was called together, and
50 III, 82| neither the people nor the Senate, nor even the shrines and
51 III, 84| has been restored to the Senate and people of Rome, and
52 III, 86| drawing to a close, and the Senate could not be convened, owing
53 IV, 3 | seen him wear. At Rome the Senate, delighted and full of confident
54 IV, 3 | deference on the part of the Senate. On the Emperor and his
55 IV, 4 | had also forwarded to the Senate certain letters which furnished
56 IV, 4 | by the sympathies of the Senate. To Priscus indeed this
57 IV, 6 | was just, had divided the Senate into two parties; for, if
58 IV, 6 | the day, however, that the Senate was voting about the Imperial
59 IV, 7 | and the judgment of the Senate were devised to reach the
60 IV, 7 | be met by those whom the Senate counts to be peculiarly
61 IV, 7 | selection on the part of the Senate the Emperor will, so to
62 IV, 8 | through the judgment of the Senate that Thrasea fell. The savage
63 IV, 8 | courage; I am but one of the Senate which bows to the same yoke.
64 IV, 8 | the neutral section in the Senate exerted themselves to retain
65 IV, 9 | at the discretion of the Senate. When the Consuls came to
66 IV, 11| there was division in the Senate, resentment among the conquered,
67 IV, 40| January, at a meeting of the Senate, convoked for the purpose
68 IV, 40| praises upon him in the Senate, and loaded him with promises
69 IV, 41| his taking his seat in the Senate, made a brief and measured
70 IV, 41| the memory of Piso. The Senate passed both motions, but
71 IV, 41| asked Caesar to give the Senate access to the Imperial registers,
72 IV, 42| The Senate, led by its principal members,
73 IV, 42| consciousness of guilt. The Senate appreciated the scruple,
74 IV, 43| children were ready, should the Senate take cognizance of the cause,
75 IV, 43| declared that the whole Senate might be destroyed by one
76 IV, 43| Fathers; we are no longer that Senate, which, when Nero had fallen,
77 IV, 44| approval on the part of the Senate, that Helvidius conceived
78 IV, 44| Priscus, and leave you your Senate; act the king, though Caesar
79 IV, 44| back, however, into the Senate by the hasty interference
80 IV, 45| the next meeting of the Senate Caesar began by recommending
81 IV, 45| that the opinion of the Senate was disregarded, or that
82 IV, 45| a solemn decision of the Senate, and, though others were
83 IV, 46| trial, conducted in the Senate according to ancient precedents,
84 IV, 46| levelled against the whole Senate. The persons accused were
85 IV, 46| guilty. A resolution of the Senate was also passed, recommending
86 IV, 48| a proposition passed the Senate to the effect that a loan
87 IV, 52| send ambassadors to the Senate, and to learn for himself
88 IV, 67| their instructions to the Senate of the Agrippinenses. These
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