Book, Par.
1 I, 1 | writer's adulation, we lend a ready ear to detraction and spite,
2 I, 6 | towards any one man, but ready to a daring hand. ~ ~
3 I, 11 | kind of slavery, and were ready to become the prize of victory.
4 I, 15 | but others will be more ready to address us as emperors
5 I, 19 | frequency, while the country was ready to receive and to credit
6 I, 24 | who wanted money and were ready to plunge into revolution,
7 I, 28 | wished it done, and all were ready to acquiesce. ~ ~
8 I, 33 | belief in hatred is but too ready. Piso had hardly gone forth
9 I, 51 | themselves eager for power were ready to represent his very vices
10 I, 61 | and the indolent by fear. Ready to march and eager for action,
11 I, 78 | The Romans had everything ready for battle, the Sarmatians
12 I, 79 | plunder, the mass was as usual ready for any new movement, and
13 I, 80 | And, as it happened, so ready were all to suspect, Otho
14 II, 6 | in impious strife, were ready to make a spoil of the Empire,
15 II, 14 | moored to the land and ready for action, drawn up in
16 II, 17 | servitude, had made them ready to submit to the first comer
17 II, 23 | letters to Otho; and he, ever ready to believe the meanest of
18 II, 27 | upon his soldiers, more ready, as he said, for mutiny
19 II, 30 | which he was thought more ready to display, but even from
20 II, 32 | their rear, since Gaul is ready to rise, and to abandon
21 II, 32 | such hostile tribes are ready to burst in, would not answer
22 II, 40 | enemy, who, being himself ready for action and having marched
23 II, 52 | apprehension; no one was ready with any advice of his own,
24 II, 56 | lawful or unlawful, they were ready to seize or to sell, sparing
25 II, 75 | which the enemy would be ready to reward a prompt act of
26 II, 86 | He was brave in battle, ready of speech, dexterous in
27 II, 88 | each soldier provisions ready dressed on the same abundant
28 II, 91 | The country, ready to find a meaning in every
29 II, 97 | equal in authority, and ready, while Vitellius was prosperous,
30 II, 99 | enduring toil, were more ready for mutiny. All this was
31 II, 101| in the cause of Otho, was ready to change its allegiance. ~ ~
32 III, 12 | usual love of change, were ready to join Vespasian. Then
33 III, 13 | they should yield up hands ready bound and arms resigned
34 III, 17 | hope, there he was with his ready skill, his bold hand, his
35 III, 19 | their weapons together, ready to break through all discipline,
36 III, 22 | Flavianist troops, who stood ready, and in order of battle.
37 III, 50 | unobtrusive energy, was ready for everything that had
38 III, 64 | soon be the same flatteries ready for Vespasian. Vitellius
39 III, 72 | foreign enemy, with Heaven ready to be propitious, had our
40 III, 81 | thought it tiresome; some were ready to throw him down and trample
41 III, 83 | cruelly sacked, till one was ready to believe the Country to
42 IV, 2 | country, terror-stricken and ready to acquiesce in servitude,
43 IV, 43 | and her four children were ready, should the Senate take
44 IV, 43 | preserve a man of such ready counsels, that every age
45 IV, 50 | was hesitating and Germany ready to revolt, that his own
46 IV, 69 | Accept our alliance. I am ready to join your ranks, whether
47 IV, 72 | obtained, and that friends were ready to intercede for them, should
48 IV, 74 | Eager for battle, and more ready to despise than to be on
49 IV, 74 | despised, they were more ready to obey. Civilis and Classicus,
50 V, 1 | reconnoitring every spot, and always ready to give battle. At last
51 V, 4 | water, and they had sunk ready to perish in all directions
52 V, 6 | inflexibly honest and ever ready to shew compassion, though
53 V, 8 | into a kind of dust. I am ready to allow, on the one hand,
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