Book, Par.
1 I, 4 | all the legions and their generals; for now had been divulged
2 I, 6 | latter as one of Nero's generals. Both had perished without
3 I, 29| mutinying against their generals, but your loyalty, your
4 I, 60| that there should be two generals and two lines of march for
5 I, 70| appointed him to be one of his generals. By some fatality, as it
6 I, 78| aggrandised the State by his generals and his armies. ~ ~
7 I, 86| once advise and watch the generals. The command of the expedition
8 I, 88| they fought under other generals there was all the material
9 II, 5 | avarice, he was equal to the generals of old. Mucianus, on the
10 II, 7 | was not unknown to their generals; but it was judged advisable
11 II, 7 | be the victor. Even great generals grow insolent in prosperity;
12 II, 12| he had entrusted to three generals, Suedius Clemens, Antonius
13 II, 23| on all the acts of their generals. Vying with each other in
14 II, 24| betrayed to the Othonianist generals, and Paullinus assumed the
15 II, 29| have more license than the generals.~ ~
16 II, 30| jealousy between the two generals. Caecina ridiculed his colleague
17 II, 30| Otho, while the Othonianist generals, though they had the most
18 II, 33| the men suspected their generals, and Otho, who alone had
19 II, 33| none but them, had left the generals' authority on a doubtful
20 II, 36| delighted by this change of generals, while the generals were
21 II, 36| change of generals, while the generals were led by these continual
22 II, 37| for this reason, Otho's generals recommended a certain measure
23 II, 37| or that lieutenants and generals, who were for the most part
24 II, 40| rebuked the inactivity of the generals, and commanded that matters
25 II, 41| brushwood. In Otho's army the generals were full of fear, and the
26 II, 43| a superior force. Otho's generals had long since fled and
27 II, 45| milestone from Bedriacum. The generals did not venture an assault
28 II, 45| envoys were sent, nor did the generals of Vitellius hesitate to
29 II, 59| compliments. At Lugdunum the generals of the two parties, the
30 II, 71| having been one of Otho's generals. Valerius Maximus, who had
31 II, 87| While Vespasian and the generals of his party were thus occupied
32 II, 94| as Vitellius indulged his generals, his soldiers enjoyed yet
33 III, 9 | Vespasian, while their own generals had used contemptuous language,
34 III, 12| from the treachery of the generals. Lucilius Bassus, prefect
35 III, 12| he too ranked among the generals. ~ ~
36 III, 15| in strength, before the generals could recover their authority,
37 III, 19| city that is stormed, the generals of one which capitulates."
38 III, 20| between the army and its generals. Eagerness for battle becomes
39 III, 20| becomes the soldiers, but generals serve the cause by forethought,
40 III, 26| army hesitated, while the generals doubted what orders they
41 III, 28| had shewn itself, when the generals, seeing that the weary troops
42 III, 32| by the entreaties of the generals. Antonius summoned them
43 III, 32| greater wealth. The other generals were unnoticed; Antonius
44 III, 46| from the supineness of our generals and the mutinous conduct
45 III, 49| under the control of the generals, but the generals were themselves
46 III, 49| of the generals, but the generals were themselves constrained
47 III, 50| Dalmatians. The army and generals halted at the Temple of
48 III, 50| occupied with troops. The generals, finding themselves in a
49 III, 51| claimed a reward from the generals. The common law of humanity
50 III, 52| Antonius and the other generals of the party judged it expedient
51 III, 52| Some there were among the generals who were contriving delays,
52 III, 53| instigations roused the generals in Moesia; my courageous
53 III, 54| exaggerating the calamity. The generals of the enemy failed not
54 III, 59| counsels, helped the Flavianist generals. Here they fell in with
55 III, 59| admitted to rank among the generals. It has been said by many
56 III, 60| The Flavianist generals on their arrival at Carsulae
57 III, 69| route a messenger to the generals of the Flavianist party,
58 III, 76| resemble gladiators rather than generals. They kept no watch; they
59 III, 78| policy agreed upon by all the generals was to threaten rather than
60 III, 78| open to blame; the other generals, by imagining that the war
61 IV, 2 | spoils of Cremona. The other generals, whose moderation or insignificance
62 IV, 20| to the treachery of the generals.~ ~
63 IV, 23| into the camp. These the generals allowed to be plundered;
64 IV, 26| soldiers sooner than by the generals. He then ordered one of
65 IV, 27| called Gelduba. Here the generals sought to give steadiness
66 IV, 35| The two generals were equally blameworthy;
67 IV, 57| with the blood of their generals. Still the policy of mercy
68 IV, 71| Mucianus with the fear that the generals, though distinguished men (
69 IV, 73| had incurred. Even their generals did not act in concert.
70 IV, 73| the approach of the Roman generals at the head of their army,
71 IV, 75| armies and the blood of our generals. Let the plunder be brought
72 IV, 75| discords of soldiers and generals or through the treachery
73 IV, 76| me to have spoken. Roman generals and Emperors entered your
74 IV, 88| handed over to inferior generals. Let the Emperor display
75 V, 14| consequence. There were three generals, and as many armies. Simon
76 V, 16| victory. Neither of the generals loved delay. But a wide
77 V, 17| this battle roused both generals, though from different motives,
78 V, 18| The exhortations of the generals were not addressed as formal
79 V, 28| was cut down, and the two generals advanced to the broken extremities.
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