Book,  Par.

 1    II,     43|           and the emperor rose in reputation. Urgulania's influence,
 2    IV,      8|       known only by their general reputation, and once appointed they
 3    IV,     53|          honour my career and the reputation of my name with praise and
 4    IV,     55|   glorious honour he had won, the reputation of being worthy of an alliance
 5    VI,     22| precipitated the fall of rank and reputation, till at last the emperor
 6    VI,     36|      conscience and a blot on his reputation, if the most intimate of
 7    VI,     78|       bright time in his life and reputation, while under Augustus he
 8    XI,     22|    another revolt, thus getting a reputation which many liked, but of
 9   XII,     50|     Afranius, who had a brilliant reputation as a soldier, but knew well
10   XII,     68|           noble pursuits, and the reputation of an orator, he advocated
11  XIII,     17|      Locusta by name, with a vast reputation for crime. That every one
12  XIII,     21|    precarious and transitory is a reputation for power which has no strong
13    XV,     59|     families, Piso had a splendid reputation with the people from his
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