Book, Par.
1 I, 21| Piso. He even pretended to fear to make himself keener in
2 I, 26| their Emperor; it was a fear lest in the darkness of
3 I, 34| as they laid aside their fear, burst open the doors of
4 I, 41| is not known whether the fear of instant death choked
5 I, 61| hope and the indolent by fear. Ready to march and eager
6 I, 63| What the Aedui did from fear, the people of Lugdunum
7 I, 74| reign was perhaps due to fear; Vitellius was victorious,
8 I, 75| other under the pressure of fear or necessity. It was this
9 I, 75| It was this influence of fear that drew over to Vitellius
10 I, 82| to any shrinking from, or fear of danger. It was your excessive
11 I, 84| family was hardly exempt from fear. It was however in public
12 I, 89| wishes. They acted not from fear or affection, but from the
13 II, 2 | him waver between hope and fear; but hope triumphed. Some
14 II, 23| and discord. Frenzied with fear and guilt, they sought to
15 II, 27| so much to drive them to fear as to draw them to obedience.
16 II, 41| the generals were full of fear, and the soldiers hated
17 II, 44| legion, in the blindness of fear, fell in the way of the
18 II, 44| them to fury rather than to fear. ~ ~
19 II, 48| affection while he rebuked his fear. "Do you think," he said, "
20 II, 49| not moved by remorse or by fear, but by the desire to emulate
21 II, 54| Valens which removed their fear. Besides, the very glory
22 II, 63| but under the pressure of fear was easily swayed; here,
23 II, 73| if they had no rival to fear, indulging in cruelty, lust,
24 II, 80| man to speak, while hope, fear, the chances of success
25 II, 85| attitude. Then they began to fear; fear suggested a new thought,
26 II, 85| Then they began to fear; fear suggested a new thought,
27 II, 87| the capital, some moved by fear, many by a spirit of adulation,
28 II, 96| them, and that there was no fear of a civil war. The name
29 III, 6 | to constrain the rest by fear to transfer their allegiance.
30 III, 10| afresh these furious men, for fear so excessive seemed to argue
31 III, 12| by shame, or perhaps by fear, awaited the issue in his
32 III, 25| extended, as the courage or fear of individual soldiers might
33 III, 38| and tears. It is idle to fear Vespasian, when there are
34 III, 46| from Moesia, had nothing to fear. They quietly watched the
35 III, 55| by ambition and more by fear, he entered the camp, undecided
36 III, 58| loyalty, dictated at first by fear, passed into enthusiasm,
37 III, 82| reason for delay was the fear that the soldiers, once
38 III, 84| following the instincts of fear, which, dreading everything,
39 IV, 49| restless temper and by his fear of Marcus Silanus, who then
40 IV, 60| this indeed is an unworthy fear. Still you have an entrenched
41 IV, 61| that varied between hope, fear, and shame. Vocula then
42 IV, 71| disturbed Mucianus with the fear that the generals, though
43 IV, 72| of danger and appeals to fear. The result was, that, while
44 IV, 79| affection; once let their fear cease, and they will resume
45 V, 3 | king Cepheus were driven by fear and hatred of their neighbours
46 V, 23| been given to that effect. Fear kept them away, and their
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