Book, Par.
1 I, 38| those who had at first been eager to display their fidelity
2 I, 42| direction and specially eager to slay him, Sulpicius Florus,
3 I, 51| Besides this, men themselves eager for power were ready to
4 I, 61| fear. Ready to march and eager for action, they loudly
5 I, 66| soldiers in custody. Caecina, eager for war, hastened to punish
6 II, 1 | office. But the vulgar, ever eager to invent, had spread the
7 II, 7 | with equal zeal, were all eager for war. ~ ~
8 II, 8 | at the well-known name, eager for change, and detesting
9 II, 12| military discipline as he was eager to fight. One would not
10 II, 43| but was high-spirited, and eager to gain its first triumph.
11 II, 79| Vespasian in person with such eager alacrity that they would
12 II, 80| once administered to the eager soldiers the oath of allegiance
13 III, 16| to be done, Arrius Varus, eager to do his best, charged
14 III, 16| those who had been most eager in the pursuit found themselves
15 III, 48| disorder and dispersed in the eager pursuit of plunder, he attacked
16 III, 60| disgrace. Let us not be eager to capture rather than to
17 III, 61| change sides, each more eager than the other to hand over
18 IV, 6 | some who thought him too eager for fame, and indeed the
19 IV, 50| careless of the truth, and only eager to flatter. Piso, acting
20 IV, 74| were raised by his arrival. Eager for battle, and more ready
21 IV, 75| Treveri. The soldiers were eager to destroy the city. "This,"
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