Book, Par.
1 I, 31| with equal zeal a wholly different cry. It was their traditional
2 I, 44| would have thought it a different Senate, a different people.
3 I, 44| it a different Senate, a different people. All rushed to the
4 I, 65| and the magistrates of the different states, and used such menaces,
5 I, 84| learn the feelings of the different parties. Hence everything
6 II, 4 | though their renown was of a different kind, had a celebrated name. ~ ~
7 II, 5 | vices, according to their different dispositions. ~ ~
8 II, 7 | And so, good and bad, from different motives, but with equal
9 II, 21| both were appealed to by different arguments; on the one side
10 II, 44| Licinius Proculus, taking different roads, avoided the camp.
11 II, 52| beginning a massacre, while a different anxiety also weighed upon
12 II, 53| Bononia they posted men on the different roads to make enquiries
13 II, 68| witness the contest took different sides, till the legionaries
14 II, 95| Mucianus and Marcellus, and different men rather than a different
15 II, 95| different men rather than a different morality. ~ ~
16 II, 99| delayed by weakness. Far different was the appearance of the
17 III, 55| under the direction of a different general, would have been
18 IV, 44| enraged, but their looks were different; Marcellus cast furious
19 IV, 47| common cause to suffer a different lot. They invoked now Mucianus,
20 IV, 71| to set out, but in a very different mood; Domitian in all the
21 IV, 84| discussed the matter from different points of view. "In the
22 V, 6 | about the lower world. Quite different is their faith about things
23 V, 17| both generals, though from different motives, to hasten on the
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