Book,  Par.

 1     I,      4|             affairs was equal to so great a burden. Tiberius Nero
 2     I,     16|          had the support of so many great men, they should not put
 3     I,     18|          hands. Yet the peril of so great a man did not make him relent,
 4     I,     19|                                     Great too was the Senate's sycophancy
 5     I,     30|             own father, Strabo, had great influence with Tiberius,
 6     I,     68|             and drove him back with great slaughter into the open
 7     I,     79|             shaken them off, as the great Augustus, ranked among dieties,
 8     I,     88|        while the army had lost to a great extent their implements
 9     I,     96|           of Augustus, who in every great house were associated into
10     I,     99|            and the solicitations of great men. This, though it promoted
11    II,      2|          son. Caesar thought this a great honour to himself, and loaded
12    II,     19|            the branches rising to a great height, while there were
13    II,     23|                            It was a great victory and without bloodshed
14    II,     32|             victorious battles on a great scale; he should also remember
15    II,     60|             idea of perfidy, to the great hurt of Germany and to his
16    II,     64|         Libera, and Ceres, near the Great Circus, which last Aulus
17    II,     72|         bordering, as it does, to a great extent on our provinces
18    II,     75|          when some golden crowns of great weight were presented to
19    II,     87|          Thrace induced the king by great promises, though he hesitated
20    II,     95|          kings grieved over him, so great was his courtesy to allies,
21    II,     96|            to that of Alexander the Great. Both had a graceful person
22   III,      3|            entered on office, and a great number of the people thronged
23   III,      4|           to endure the sight of so great an affliction. But I can
24   III,      7|        shows of the festival of the Great Goddess were at hand, even
25   III,     34| compensation for the misfortunes of great houses (for within a short
26   III,     90|          and the celebration of the Great Games, which were to be
27   III,     92|            famous Scaurus, whom his great grandson, a blot on his
28   III,     96|          roused to higher things by great responsibility; others are
29    IV,     12|                           There was great weeping at these words,
30    IV,     15|          far less Tiberius with his great experience, would have thrust
31    IV,     16|          over whose mind Prisca had great influence. She thus made
32    IV,     24|              his having commanded a great army for seven years, and
33    IV,     38|            and Seius Tubero, to the great confusion of the emperor,
34    IV,     44|           in old days. They told of great wars, of the storming of
35    IV,     45|         battles, glorious deaths of great generals, enchain and refresh
36    IV,     61|        grace, then to have attained great wealth, which had been blamelessly
37    IV,     65|   Sugambrian cohort, drawn up at no great distance by the Roman general,
38    IV,     74|             Rome's power indeed was great, but not yet raised to the
39    IV,     80|         Calpurnius, the losses of a great war were matched by an unexpected
40    IV,     81|             forefathers who after a great battle always relieved the
41    VI,      4|   Paconianus, an ex-praetor, to the great joy of the senators, as
42    VI,     22|     followed a scarcity of money, a great shock being given to all
43    VI,     24|      intimate friends of Pompey the Great, and that after his death
44    VI,     28|             quite illiterate and of great physical strength. The man
45    VI,     29|     adversity are happy; many, amid great affluence, are utterly miserable,
46    VI,     58|            business and was not too great for it. ~ ~
47    VI,     73|         matter, the charge was to a great extent invented to gratify
48    XI,      9|          have examples at hand. How great were the fees for which
49    XI,     15|         exposure; the prize too was great, so he consoled himself
50   XII,     10|        consul-elect, was induced by great promises to deliver a speech,
51   XII,     19|             emperor's image, to the great glory of the Roman army,
52   XII,     20|          with the descendant of the great Achaemenes, the only glory
53   XII,     21|                                 The great name of Mithridates, his
54   XII,     27|          even after the conquest of great nations, had never exercised
55   XII,     28|          town, so as to embrace the great altar of Hercules; then,
56   XII,     42|           All were eager to see the great man, who for so many years
57   XII,     45|            out of compassion for so great a king, was more ardent
58   XII,     50|             are the fortunes of the great) was attacked by an accusation
59   XII,     58|             had restored order to a great extent more by moderation
60   XII,     77|                          Under this great burden of anxiety, he had
61  XIII,     16|             he was departing with a great retinue of attendants, the
62  XIII,     37|       people to reserve history for great achievements, and to leave
63  XIII,     58|             proved the beginning of great evils to the State. There
64  XIII,     73|                   The same summer a great battle was fought between
65   XIV,     13|          the Dictator, which from a great height commands a view of
66   XIV,     20|         dress of a singer that that great and prophetic deity was
67   XIV,     26|             the highest honours and great eloquence. The first was
68   XIV,     40|            While he lived, he had a great name for manly independence,
69   XIV,     49|        swelled the piles of bodies. Great glory, equal to that of
70   XIV,     51|             of Britain, Nero having great hopes that his influence
71   XIV,     56|             some injustice in every great precedent, which, though
72   XIV,     57|          undoubted innocence of the great majority. Still, the party
73   XIV,     58|           of the Bithynians, to the great joy of the senators, who
74   XIV,     67|          use of it. I will refer to great examples taken not from
75   XIV,     67|          only proportioned to their great merits. For myself, what
76   XIV,     73|           roused at the name of the great dictator, and I distrust
77   XIV,     73|             Plautus again, with his great wealth, does not so much
78   XIV,     75|             was then at the head of great armies, and would be a special
79    XV,      1|               by weak inaction that great empires are held together;
80    XV,     13|          his army was followed by a great number of camels laden with
81    XV,     14|            citizen, how wonderfully great the glory, when the numbers
82    XV,     27|             opinion was hailed with great unanimity, but the Senate'
83    XV,     46|           while, as is the way with great terrors, they thought what
84    XV,     51|        Servius Tullius to Luna, the great altar and shrine raised
85    XV,     61|             escape, that foe to all great enterprises, which held
86    XV,     74|         undecided, will follow, and great will be the fame of the
87    XV,     92|         latter possessed at first a great fortune, still unimpaired,
88   XVI,      1|            fact, he said, ingots of great weight lay there, with bars
89   XVI,     16|             that Ostorius, with his great military fame and the civic
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