Book, Par.
1 I, 29| Country, the People, but empty names, yet, comrades, it is your
2 I, 49| Mutina, and all the familiar names of great public disasters. "
3 I, 54| oath with the now obsolete names of the Senate and people
4 I, 56| Germany abandoned the specious names the Senate and people of
5 I, 76| resolved by a change of names to make, what had really
6 II, 20| specious but meaningless names of peace and concord had
7 II, 21| others retorted with the names of foreigner and barbarian.
8 II, 32| Senate, and the people, names that never lose their splendour,
9 II, 89| distinguished according to the names or various equipments of
10 II, 95| and all the old hateful names. No one sought promotion
11 II, 97| youth promptly gave in their names. Vitellius had ruled that
12 III, 23| instantly slain, and their names have consequently been lost;
13 III, 25| record the incident with the names, on the authority of Vipstanus
14 III, 58| those who gave in their names administered the oath of
15 III, 69| is not easy to give the names of these persons, since
16 IV, 15| to tremble at the empty names of legions. For we have
17 IV, 54| Soldiers, who bore auspicious names, entered the precincts with
18 IV, 76| indeed, and the like specious names are their pretexts; but
19 IV, 78| mere empty and powerless names. If Cerialis wishes for
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