Book, Par.
1 I, 1 | inviolable truthfulness must speak of all without partiality
2 I, 8 | Such, as far as one can speak of so vast a multitude,
3 I, 15| of individuals. You and I speak together to-day with perfect
4 I, 16| Claudius, we were, so to speak, the inheritance of a single
5 I, 24| Tigellinus, added, so to speak, fuel to the flames. In
6 I, 78| of this people is, so to speak, external to themselves.
7 II, 20| in which he was wont to speak to their toga-clad citizens.
8 II, 28| sight, are withdrawn, so to speak, from the very field of
9 II, 46| wait for the Emperor to speak. They bade him be of good
10 II, 80| difficulty, the first man to speak, while hope, fear, the chances
11 II, 80| addressed them. He could speak Greek with considerable
12 III, 22| I would not venture to speak positively. Some, however,
13 III, 23| an enemy who were, so to speak, concealed while they aimed.~ ~
14 III, 46| long, I shall hereafter speak. The Dacians also were in
15 III, 68| assembly. At last, unable to speak for weeping, he unfastened
16 III, 73| a spiritless and, so to speak, infatuated commander, who
17 IV, 4 | private citizen, does he speak like a public man? In a
18 IV, 5 | whom I shall often have to speak, the subject seems to demand
19 IV, 7 | the Emperor will, so to speak, be advised whom he should
20 IV, 12| in Germany. Men began to speak of slaughtered armies, of
21 V, 21| having been thus, so to speak, diverted, the narrowness
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