Book, Par.
1 I, 33| of others, the report was easily believed. Many thought the
2 I, 38| massacre once begun is not easily checked. His plan too was
3 I, 52| of Verginius, which could easily be to the profit of any
4 I, 78| The Roman soldier, moving easily in his cuirass, continued
5 I, 82| popularity, and could be most easily urged to civil war by indulgence
6 II, 38| dimensions equality was easily preserved; but when the
7 II, 63| the pressure of fear was easily swayed; here, the danger
8 III, 17| his encouraging voice, easily recognized by the enemy,
9 III, 28| upon Antonius, I cannot easily determine. All I can say
10 III, 49| that all else would follow easily, or, perhaps, success, working
11 III, 64| feelings of the people are easily swayed, and, if you put
12 III, 66| feelings of his partisans as easily as he had himself yielded,
13 III, 78| armies. One cannot, however, easily fix upon one man the blame
14 III, 81| everything might be more easily arranged. The sacred virgins
15 IV, 17| dispersed only to be more easily crushed, and that the guiding
16 IV, 40| Scribonianus, who was a man not easily to be tempted even by a
17 IV, 53| him not to let himself be easily excited by the reports of
18 IV, 74| to them they could more easily bear the burden of the tribute;
19 V, 22| not cautious, and might easily be intercepted, as the multiplicity
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