Book, Par.
1 I, 16| your adoption I shall no longer be thought old, and this
2 I, 18| sternness which we are no longer able to endure. ~ ~
3 I, 49| common people. It was no longer to the late horrors of a
4 I, 85| When men's minds were no longer occupied by their fears,
5 II, 17| troops of Vitellius would no longer be restrained by the boundaries
6 II, 31| the Vitellianists had no longer any reason to delay giving
7 II, 33| Paullinus and Celsus no longer opposed, for they would
8 II, 47| have held the throne for a longer time, but no one can have
9 II, 47| But live, and let us no longer delay, lest I interfere
10 II, 79| With purposes no longer doubtful they parted, Mucianus
11 III, 28| Wounds or bloodshed no longer kept the men back from undermining
12 III, 31| fallen quarter could no longer be expected, and that all
13 III, 54| decisive proof, and I can no longer serve you in any other way
14 III, 70| or to forbid. He was no longer Emperor, he was merely the
15 IV, 36| they would not endure any longer the hardships of famine
16 IV, 43| Conscript Fathers; we are no longer that Senate, which, when
17 IV, 84| and that nothing was any longer past belief, with a joyful
18 IV, 87| warning him to thwart no longer the purposes of the God.
19 V, 27| arose debates. "We can no longer," they said, "postpone our
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