Book, Par.
1 I, 2 | universal hatred and terror. Slaves were bribed to turn against
2 I, 3 | sons in law; there were slaves whose fidelity defied even
3 I, 4 | the most worthless of the slaves, and those who having wasted
4 I, 7 | everything for sale; the slaves caught with greedy hands
5 I, 16| while all the rest are slaves. You have to reign over
6 I, 22| confidential freedmen and slaves, who enjoyed a license unknown
7 I, 31| The whole populace and the slaves with them were now crowding
8 I, 31| within the palace, array the slaves against the foe, secure
9 I, 32| admirable resource in the slaves, if the unanimous feeling
10 I, 42| compassion of one of the public slaves, who concealed him in his
11 I, 48| who had been one of his slaves, gave it a humble burial
12 II, 8 | most able bodied of the slaves. The centurion Sisenna,
13 II, 49| dying man, his freedmen and slaves, and Plotius Firmus, prefect
14 II, 72| Geta, he was executed as slaves usually are. ~ ~
15 II, 78| augmenting the number of your slaves, there is given you a vast
16 II, 87| camp-followers; and of all slaves, the slaves of soldiers
17 II, 87| and of all slaves, the slaves of soldiers are the most
18 II, 88| the frolicsome humour of slaves robbed the careless soldiers
19 II, 94| proportion to the number of their slaves. Vitellius himself, thinking
20 III, 13| armed men, like a herd of slaves for sale, might be given
21 III, 34| loathing the purchase of such slaves. A massacre then began;
22 III, 58| furnish a prescribed number of slaves and a certain weight of
23 III, 64| and there are also our own slaves, there is the prestige of
24 III, 73| chances, some disguised as slaves, others concealed by the
25 III, 79| that the populace and the slaves were arming themselves for
26 III, 84| whence even the meanest slaves had fled, or where they
27 IV, 1 | the most worthless of the slaves did not fail to come forward
28 IV, 2 | who carried off money and slaves from the establishment of
29 IV, 15| there was; we are treated as slaves. When does even a legate
30 IV, 24| wavering fidelity of the slaves, and on the chances of war. ~ ~
31 IV, 61| life, when his freedmen and slaves prevented him from anticipating
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