Book, Par.
1 I, 45 | alive, had embraced the cause of Otho. With him was associated
2 I, 50 | fail to espouse the same cause, and to the bitterest hostility
3 I, 56 | himself able to assist the cause by his own exertions, by
4 I, 71 | though from a less worthy cause, when the destruction of
5 I, 79 | Meanwhile, from a trifling cause, whence nothing was apprehended,
6 I, 86 | strong and loyal to his cause, for he had enrolled in
7 II, 5 | were brought over to the cause by appeals to their energy
8 II, 15 | fleet of the other might cause, the Vitellianists retreated
9 II, 17 | careless about the better cause. The wealthiest district
10 II, 21 | capacious. Whatever the cause of the accident, it was
11 II, 31 | delay would serve their own cause. ~ ~
12 II, 35 | the Othonianists curse the cause and author of the disaster. ~ ~
13 II, 47 | Vitellius; he was the first cause of our contending in arms
14 II, 53 | being questioned as to the cause of his departure, replied
15 II, 67 | Vitellius found his next cause of apprehension in the Praetorian
16 II, 68 | recognition removed the cause of alarm. Meanwhile a slave
17 II, 76 | kings most faithful to your cause, and an experience in which
18 II, 77 | at war, we have a better cause than we can have in peace,
19 II, 81 | her presents, promoted his cause with equal zeal. All the
20 II, 86 | Subsequently embracing the cause of Vespasian, he lent the
21 II, 101| recently it had served in the cause of Otho, was ready to change
22 III, 1 | and provinces loyal to his cause, in which he may collect
23 III, 3 | committed himself to the cause, and he had therefore greater
24 III, 5 | were brought over to the cause. Their loyalty to the Roman
25 III, 7 | supposed, reflect honour on the cause, if it were thought that
26 III, 8 | valuable aid; they served the cause by the example of their
27 III, 9 | the sword in a vanquished cause. At the same time he extolled
28 III, 9 | of confidence in their cause, of security as to their
29 III, 20 | but generals serve the cause by forethought, by counsel,
30 III, 26 | sudden sortie they might cause confusion among them while
31 III, 31 | imploring him to plead their cause. When he haughtily rejected
32 III, 32 | they had supported the cause of Vitellius. Afterwards,
33 III, 38 | the night. Inquiring the cause, he was told that Caecina
34 III, 38 | Vitellius enquiring the cause of his emotion: "It is not,"
35 III, 43 | their best to promote the cause. When these preparations,
36 III, 44 | attached that province to his cause, though not without some
37 III, 48 | the supplies of corn to cause famine and dissension among
38 III, 70 | Emperor, he was merely the cause of war. ~ ~
39 III, 77 | State as well as to the cause of Vespasian. Had the army
40 IV, 26 | zealously supported the cause of Rome. Soon indeed as
41 IV, 27 | the stream; the self-same cause thus bringing about a smaller
42 IV, 33 | addressed to a partisan of the cause and to be unfriendly to
43 IV, 38 | army dissociating their cause from that of their comrades.
44 IV, 40 | Mucianus found his principal cause of apprehension in Primus
45 IV, 41 | then determined that the cause of Musonius Rufus against
46 IV, 41 | philosophy, who pleaded the cause of a notorious criminal
47 IV, 43 | Senate take cognizance of the cause, to demand vengeance. Accordingly,
48 IV, 47 | deserted, or doomed in a common cause to suffer a different lot.
49 IV, 55 | compact not to fall the cause of freedom, should the power
50 IV, 57 | would readily join their cause. ~ ~
51 IV, 70 | Fortune favoured the better cause, and the Lingones were defeated.
52 IV, 77 | love and respect to the cause of peace, and to that capital
53 V, 23 | whose loyalty to the Roman cause and enmity to his uncle
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