Book,  Par.

 1   XII,      9|           deeds, procured for Annaeus Seneca a remission of his exile,
 2   XII,      9|            designs on the throne. For Seneca, it was believed, was devoted
 3  XIII,      3|           Afranius Burrus and Annaeus Seneca. These two men guided the
 4  XIII,      3|        discipline and severe manners, Seneca, with lessons of eloquence
 5  XIII,      4|         speech, which was composed by Seneca, exhibited much elegance,
 6  XIII,      6|               presiding with him; but Seneca, when every one else was
 7  XIII,      7|       campaign. Burrus, at least, and Seneca were known to be men of
 8  XIII,     12|              number of speeches which Seneca, to show the purity of his
 9  XIII,     14|         himself under the guidance of Seneca, one of whose friends, Annaeus
10  XIII,     16|         crippled Burrus and the exile Seneca, claiming, forsooth, with
11  XIII,     22|             cohorts, but that through Seneca's influence that distinguished
12  XIII,     22|             inclines to the praise of Seneca, through whose friendship
13  XIII,     23|         fulfilled his instructions in Seneca's presence, and some of
14  XIII,     53|        without angry feelings towards Seneca. This was Publius Suilius.
15  XIII,     53|           insolent temper, he taunted Seneca with his savage enmity against
16  XIII,     53|          Germanicus's quaestor, while Seneca had been a paramour in his
17  XIII,     53|              maxims of philosophy had Seneca within four years of royal
18  XIII,     54|         wanting to report all this to Seneca, in the exact words, or
19   XIV,      3|             portending infamy, it was Seneca who sought a female's aid
20   XIV,      9|            once devised by Burrus and Seneca. He had instantly summoned
21   XIV,      9|               once crushed. Thereupon Seneca was so far the more prompt
22   XIV,     16|          beyond any remonstrance, but Seneca who was in ill repute, for
23   XIV,     20|            longer be restrained, when Seneca and Burrus thought it best
24   XIV,     65|               of Burrus was a blow to Seneca's power, for virtue had
25   XIV,     65|               advisers. They assailed Seneca with various charges, representing
26   XIV,     65|             publicly admired but what Seneca was thought to have originated?
27   XIV,     66|                                       Seneca, meanwhile, aware of these
28   XIV,     72|              under delusive flattery. Seneca thanked him, the usual end
29   XIV,     73|                                  When Seneca had fallen, it was easy
30   XIV,     86|              age. Romanus had accused Seneca in stealthy calumnies, of
31   XIV,     86|           crushed more effectually by Seneca on the same charge. This
32    XV,     30|                in which he boasted to Seneca of his reconciliation with
33    XV,     30| reconciliation with Thrasea, on which Seneca congratulated him. And now
34    XV,     56|          heart with sound principles. Seneca, it was said, to avert from
35    XV,     56|              name was Cleonicus. This Seneca avoided through the freedman'
36    XV,     71|             added the name of Annaeus Seneca, either as having been a
37    XV,     71|             favour of Nero, who hated Seneca and sought every means for
38    XV,     77|            the destruction of Annaeus Seneca, a special joy to the emperor,
39    XV,     77|            Natalis alone who divulged Seneca's name, to this extent,
40    XV,     77|              that he had been sent to Seneca when ailing, to see him
41    XV,     77|            familiar intercourse; that Seneca's reply was that mutual
42    XV,     77|             ordered to report this to Seneca and to ask him whether he
43    XV,     77|         Either by chance or purposely Seneca had returned on that day
44    XV,     77|              the emperor's message to Seneca as he was at dinner with
45    XV,     78|                                       Seneca replied that Natalis had
46    XV,     78|               had oftener experienced Seneca's freespokenness than his
47    XV,     78|             of rage, he asked whether Seneca was meditating suicide.
48    XV,     78|           look, and merely sent in to Seneca one of his centurions, who
49    XV,     79|                                       Seneca, quite unmoved, asked for
50    XV,     80|               executioner. There upon Seneca, not to thwart her noble
51    XV,     81|               arteries of their arms. Seneca, as his aged frame, attenuated
52    XV,     83|                                       Seneca meantime, as the tedious
53    XV,     84|              had planned, not without Seneca's knowledge, that when Nero
54    XV,     84|             the empire handed over to Seneca, as a man singled out for
55    XV,     86|               were not, like those of Seneca, generally published, though
56    XV,     92|             of it. Novius Priscus, as Seneca's friend, Glitius Gallus,
57    XV,     96|        terror-stricken at his brother Seneca's death was pleading for
58   XVI,     18|            same parents as Gallio and Seneca, had refrained from seeking
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