Book,  Par.

 1     I,     25| departure there was comparative quiet, but there was an arrogant
 2     I,     39|         for the present all was quiet, went back to Rome. ~ ~
 3     I,     59|                                 Quiet being thus restored for
 4    IV,     56|   certain persons of singularly quiet life, wholly free from political
 5    IV,     68|     noises or being deceived by quiet, but to keep, every one,
 6    XI,      3|  friends urged on Asiaticus the quiet death of self-starvation,
 7    XI,     34|       additional advantage of a quiet mind, if only they took
 8   XII,     13|       soldier is forgotten in a quiet period, and peace reduces
 9  XIII,     68|        time everything had been quiet in Germany, from the temper
10   XIV,     69|     friends, can answer for our quiet behaviour. It will likewise
11   XIV,     71|        wealth, not your love of quiet, if you forsake your emperor,
12   XVI,      7|   nobility of his birth and the quiet demeanour of his youth.
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