Book, Par.
1 I, 16| Nero be ever before your eyes, swollen with the pride
2 I, 17| or afterwards when all eyes were turned upon him. His
3 I, 32| and under Galba's very eyes makes his way to the Capitol,
4 I, 36| victory, when, before the eyes of the capital he gave orders
5 II, 9 | The body, in which the eyes, the hair, and the savage
6 II, 20| to scrutinize with keen eyes the recent elevation of
7 II, 21| with envious and jealous eyes, because there was not in
8 II, 50| noble, he earned in the eyes of posterity about an equal
9 II, 70| Vitellius did not turn away his eyes, did not shudder to behold
10 II, 75| was continually before his eyes. He reflected that his own
11 III, 3 | With flashing eyes, and in the fierce tones
12 III, 31| standards. Then followed, with eyes bent on the ground, a dismal
13 III, 36| keep himself before the eyes of the people. Buried in
14 III, 39| that he had feasted his eyes on the spectacle of his
15 IV, 19| recent honours before the eyes of his own men, and to terrify
16 IV, 65| Claudius Sanctus; one of his eyes had been destroyed; he was
17 IV, 72| Lingones were injured in the eyes of the Gallic nations by
18 IV, 75| consciousness of guilt, their eyes fixed on the earth. No friendly
19 IV, 76| yourselves to be dearer in the eyes of Civilis and the Batavi
20 V, 13| and pleasures before his eyes. Jerusalem must fall at
21 V, 19| said, "the Roman turns his eyes, captivity, disaster, and
22 V, 19| will be infamous in the eyes of posterity." These words
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