Book, Par.
1 I, 1 | the former period, the 820 years dating from the founding
2 I, 5 | been accustomed by fourteen years' service under Nero to love
3 I, 14| words about his advanced years, he ordered Piso Licinianus
4 I, 47| He was himself for many years an exile, for four days
5 I, 48| who in his seventy-three years had lived prosperously through
6 I, 48| moderation, and when advanced in years shewed the same integrity
7 I, 65| vast sum. Poor for many years and suddenly growing rich,
8 I, 71| all the crimes of maturer years. He perverted Nero to every
9 I, 87| credit had been shaken in the years of peace regained their
10 II, 1 | be adopted. The advanced years and childless condition
11 II, 17| preferred Vitellius: long years of peace had subdued them
12 II, 74| expose himself with his sixty years upon him, and the two young
13 II, 77| Empire, and in the earliest years of his military career won
14 II, 86| both rich and advanced in years. The Imperial procurator,
15 III, 4 | temperament and advanced years, excited in the soldiers
16 III, 34| the end of Cremona, 286 years after its foundation. It
17 III, 55| appointed consuls for several years. With a profuse liberality,
18 III, 72| after an interval of 415 years, it was burnt to the ground
19 III, 75| accused him in the seven years during which he had governed
20 IV, 18| had endured for so many years, while they falsely gave
21 IV, 33| struggled for five-and-twenty years in the camps of Rome. "It
22 IV, 60| eight hundred and twenty years we have paid the honours
23 IV, 70| prolong his life for nine years, the firm fidelity of his
24 IV, 77| and order of eight hundred years has this fabric of empire
25 IV, 87| ambassadors. And so three years passed away, while Ptolemy
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