Book, Par.
1 I, 29| deplore, if we have either to fall this day, or to do what
2 I, 32| not honourable. If we must fall, let us go to meet the danger.
3 II, 5 | between them, but on Nero's fall they had dropped their animosities
4 II, 19| sight and night began to fall they judged it expedient
5 II, 26| would have no reserves to fall back upon. A few approved
6 II, 33| seriously injured by the fall of his horse, was reported
7 II, 44| battlefield that we shall fall with most honour." Amid
8 II, 63| accused, he precipitated his fall. ~ ~
9 III, 14| Liburnian ships, who happened to fall in their way, but who were
10 III, 29| it drew after it in its fall the battlements and upper
11 III, 33| or youth of marked beauty fall in their way, they were
12 III, 49| Primus Antonius, after the fall of Cremona, was by no means
13 III, 69| Besides this, the sudden fall of a winter storm baffled
14 IV, 2 | been dragged down by his fall.~ ~
15 IV, 6 | off even by the wise. The fall of his father-in-law drove
16 IV, 8 | of long standing should fall into disuse, or why the
17 IV, 8 | jealousy, should the choice fall on themselves. ~ ~
18 IV, 18| free to act and vigorous, fall on a distracted and exhausted
19 IV, 35| thrown to the ground by the fall of his horse. A report that
20 IV, 43| brother Aquilius Regulus. The fall of the families of the Crassi
21 IV, 52| was now informed of the fall of Vitellius by many persons
22 IV, 55| themselves by a compact not to fall the cause of freedom, should
23 IV, 60| not satisfy you; you may fall back on other legates or
24 IV, 65| Mogontiacum. Chancing to fall in with Longinus, the murderer
25 IV, 84| ridicule of failure would fall on the sufferers." And so
26 V, 13| his eyes. Jerusalem must fall at once, or it would delay
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