Book, Par.
1 I, 2 | peace full of horrors. Four emperors perished by the sword. There
2 I, 4 | secret of the empire, that emperors could be made elsewhere
3 I, 5 | love the vices of their emperors, as much as they had once
4 I, 7 | the vulgar, to value their emperors by the beauty and grace
5 I, 15| more ready to address us as emperors than as men. For to urge
6 I, 45| was afterwards under good emperors established as a permanent
7 I, 48| through the reigns of five Emperors, and had been more fortunate
8 I, 83| from the Kings down to the Emperors, we will bequeath to our
9 II, 6 | disastrous end, and the Emperors had been oftener heard of
10 II, 37| the disgust felt for both Emperors, whose wickedness and infamy
11 II, 55| the long reigns of other Emperors, were forthwith decreed.
12 II, 62| or in the arena. Former Emperors had encouraged the practice
13 II, 94| from the freedmen of former Emperors in proportion to the number
14 III, 72| destroyed by the madness of our Emperors. Once before indeed during
15 III, 72| the vast erections of the Emperors, down to the days of Vitellius.
16 IV, 3 | customarily bestowed on the Emperors. And indeed the civil war,
17 IV, 8 | and, while I pray for good Emperors, I can endure whomsoever
18 IV, 8 | manhood. For as the worst Emperors love an unlimited despotism,
19 IV, 65| disgrace. The images of the Emperors were torn down; the standards
20 IV, 76| spoken. Roman generals and Emperors entered your territory,
21 IV, 77| no exclusion. From worthy Emperors you derive equal advantage,
22 V, 6 | nor this honour to our Emperors. From the fact, however,
23 V, 27| honourably bear with the Emperors of Rome, than with the women
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