Book, Par.
1 I, 12| patriotism, many had foolish hopes for themselves, and spread
2 I, 13| passionately every day those hopes of adoption which he had
3 I, 19| as their fears or their hopes prompted. ~ ~
4 I, 78| invade Moesia with great hopes of success. They had 9000
5 I, 86| the rest he had held out hopes of a more honourable service
6 I, 87| were inflated with idle hopes. Many whose credit had been
7 II, 20| conference in which he held out hopes of reward, and he was himself
8 II, 37| especially entertaining hopes for himself, on the ground
9 II, 45| brothers or of kinsmen. Their hopes, their rewards, were all
10 II, 78| and pondering his secret hopes, Basilides the priest, after
11 II, 82| had held out only moderate hopes, and even Vespasian offered
12 III, 9 | hostility to Vitellius, while hopes were held out to the tribunes
13 III, 24| encouragement, and all with hopes and promises. "Why," he
14 III, 48| was prosperous beyond his hopes, tidings of the victory
15 III, 52| too great a man, and their hopes from Mucianus were more
16 III, 52| valued according to his hopes. ~ ~
17 III, 63| Finding all their hopes cut off, the troops of Vitellius,
18 III, 72| a scale which suited the hopes of future greatness rather
19 IV, 14| deep offence; hence arose hopes built on our disasters.
20 IV, 23| entrenchment raised the hopes of the besiegers. Constructed
21 IV, 60| may claim. But Classicus hopes to wage with your strength
22 V, 1 | and from Italy by private hopes of securing the yet unengaged
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