Book, Par.
1 I, 62| courteous hospitality, a sudden panic mastered them. In
2 I, 68| multitudes, were liable to sudden impulses, and were now as
3 I, 82| could not be retained by a sudden assumption of the moderation
4 I, 85| the future, arose from a sudden inundation of the Tiber.
5 II, 15| concluded to provide against any sudden panic that the cavalry of
6 II, 16| Their feelings underwent a sudden change; they did not, however,
7 II, 17| Crossing the stream by a sudden movement, they advanced
8 II, 25| front, and the cavalry, by a sudden movement, had surrounded
9 II, 49| attention was distracted by a sudden tumult and he was told of
10 II, 54| their flatteries, when of a sudden Coenus, a freedman of Nero,
11 II, 68| till the legionaries made a sudden and murderous attack on
12 II, 68| were seen at a distance. A sudden cry was raised that the
13 II, 92| was ever varying between sudden irritation and unseasonable
14 III, 9 | Then Antonius by a sudden movement fell upon the outposts
15 III, 26| would be dangerous, as by a sudden sortie they might cause
16 III, 34| Padus, or against any other sudden invader from the Alps. From
17 III, 39| of peace, who coveted no sudden elevation, much less the
18 III, 47| were equally restless. A sudden outbreak had been excited
19 III, 47| means contemptible, made a sudden attack on the old and famous
20 III, 68| Dictator, had fallen by sudden violence, Caligula by secret
21 III, 69| watching. Besides this, the sudden fall of a winter storm baffled
22 IV, 26| their Emperor, though the sudden outburst of treason might
23 IV, 31| in their confusion by a sudden and successful sally. All
24 IV, 50| were astonished by this sudden and strange proceeding,
25 IV, 73| bridge over the river Nava. A sudden attack, however, was made
26 IV, 81| interposition of heaven, that by a sudden change of temper the conquerors
27 V, 15| temple illuminated by a sudden radiance from the clouds.
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