Book, Par.
1 I, 18| return to their duty. To this speech he added no word of flattery,
2 I, 19| Then followed Galba's speech in the Senate, which was
3 I, 19| as plain and brief as his speech to the soldiery. Piso delivered
4 I, 34| most voluble and fierce of speech. No one knew anything, yet
5 I, 84| This speech, which was meant to touch
6 I, 84| once, drowning their own speech in a tumult of words.~ ~
7 I, 89| due to the writer of the speech, who, fearing for himself,
8 II, 5 | of a subject; readier of speech than the other, he thoroughly
9 II, 48| still his look was calm, his speech collected, as he checked
10 II, 78| After this speech from Mucianus, the other
11 II, 82| troops Mucianus in his first speech had held out only moderate
12 II, 86| brave in battle, ready of speech, dexterous in bringing odium
13 III, 37| addressed the Senate in a speech of studied grandiloquence,
14 III, 39| heard to utter a most brutal speech, in which (I will relate
15 III, 85| Flavius Sabinus had lain. One speech was heard from him shewing
16 IV, 8 | have. It was not through my speech any more than it was through
17 IV, 21| camp-followers, cowardly, but bold of speech before the moment of danger,
18 IV, 41| made a brief and measured speech in reference to the absence
19 IV, 41| neither spirit nor power of speech left. The signal for vengeance
20 IV, 43| Montanus met him with a fierce speech, in which he went to the
21 IV, 61| They received his speech with feelings that varied
22 IV, 71| of the war, who in a set speech poured forth all the charges
|