Book, Par.
1 I, 2 | worse horrors. Nobility, wealth, the refusal or the acceptance
2 I, 47| was made void by his vast wealth; that of Piso owed its validity
3 I, 48| an ancient nobility, his wealth was great. His character
4 I, 50| states in proportion to their wealth, and they revelled in imagination
5 I, 56| his own exertions, by his wealth, or by his talents. Nor
6 I, 73| Vitellius, with offers of wealth and favour and any retreat
7 II, 5 | his magnificence, for his wealth, and for a greatness that
8 II, 10| excitement. Vibius Crispus, whose wealth, power, and ability, made
9 II, 12| fields were full of rural wealth, the houses stood with open
10 II, 32| be eclipsed. We have the wealth of the State and of private
11 II, 38| men had leisure to covet wealth which they might enjoy in
12 II, 59| munificence was equal to his wealth, furnished him with suitable
13 II, 69| foundation in valour than in wealth. ~ ~
14 II, 81| possessed vast ancestral wealth, and was the richest of
15 II, 84| without scruple from the wealth of the State. The rest followed
16 II, 92| and gardens and all the wealth of the Empire, while a sad
17 III, 8 | their zeal and by their wealth, and the army thus occupied
18 III, 19| clemency and praise, but the wealth of Cremona will go into
19 III, 32| appearance of still greater wealth. The other generals were
20 III, 33| eye, searched for hidden wealth, and dug up buried treasures,
21 III, 37| Emperor, a man loaded with wealth so vast and honours so numerous
22 III, 45| Claudius Caesar. Then followed wealth and the self-indulgence
23 III, 63| safety, the enjoyment of wealth, and a quiet retreat in
24 III, 65| Vespasian in influence and in wealth. He was believed indeed
25 III, 66| indeed they promise you wealth, and a large establishment,
26 III, 72| magnificent, that the vast wealth afterwards acquired by the
27 IV, 5 | ever the same, despising wealth, steadily tenacious of right,
28 IV, 7 | the magistrates? He has wealth and eloquence, which might
29 IV, 42| affection and for their wealth. Africanus dared not confess
30 IV, 45| of the informers, their wealth, and the power which they
31 IV, 56| his countrymen in rank and wealth; he was of a royal house,
32 IV, 66| disliked the place for its wealth and increasing power, and
33 IV, 72| alliances, another of its wealth and military strength, or
34 IV, 77| peril, for you have gold and wealth, and these are the chief
35 V, 6 | presents. This augmented the wealth of the Jews, as also did
36 V, 9 | stood a temple of immense wealth. First came the city with
37 V, 13| himself had Rome with all its wealth and pleasures before his
|