Book,  Par.

 1  XIII,     63| gladiatorial shows, had not Paetus Thrasea spoken against it and furnished
 2  XIII,     63|          empire as admirable as if Thrasea and not Nero had the direction
 3  XIII,     64|                                    Thrasea in reply, when his friends
 4   XIV,     17|       among the inauspicious days. Thrasea Paetus, who had been used
 5   XIV,     60|          assented, and then Paetus Thrasea, after much eulogy of Caesar,
 6   XIV,     61|                                    Thrasea's freespokenness broke through
 7   XIV,     62|       terms of the motion, nor did Thrasea withdraw his proposal, or
 8   XIV,     62|        felt safe in numbers, while Thrasea was supported by his usual
 9    XV,     24|            of the province. Paetus Thrasea, turning the occasion to
10    XV,     30|           honour the recent birth, Thrasea was forbidden to go, and
11    XV,     30|            his reconciliation with Thrasea, on which Seneca congratulated
12   XVI,     22|         virtue itself by murdering Thrasea Paetus and Barea Soranus.
13   XVI,     22|           men he had hated of old, Thrasea on additional grounds, because
14   XVI,     22|            deeper, since this same Thrasea had sung in a tragedian'
15   XVI,     22|          death for libels on Nero, Thrasea proposed and carried a more
16   XVI,     22|           he also bore ill-will to Thrasea, the weight of whose influence
17   XVI,     22|         from Cilicia, supported by Thrasea's advocacy, were accusing
18   XVI,     23|           the following charges:- "Thrasea," he said, "at the beginning
19   XVI,     24|       talking of you, Nero, and of Thrasea, as it talked once of Caius
20   XVI,     24|            Caesar and Marcus Cato. Thrasea has his followers or rather
21   XVI,     24|            that they may know what Thrasea has not done. ~ ~
22   XVI,     25|       write nothing yourself about Thrasea; leave the Senate to decide
23   XVI,     27|          emperor and see the king, Thrasea, though forbidden to appear,
24   XVI,     27|        eagerness, in the hope that Thrasea in dismay had written something
25   XVI,     28|                                    Thrasea then consulted his most
26   XVI,     29|        have decided, had they seen Thrasea on his trial. It is with
27   XVI,     30|            sentence of the Senate. Thrasea checked his impetuous temper,
28   XVI,     32|            mocked with impunity by Thrasea throwing off allegiance,
29   XVI,     32|            rites of our ancestors, Thrasea has openly assumed the part
30   XVI,     33|       moment the venerable form of Thrasea rose before their imagination,
31   XVI,     38|       examples of virtue and vice. Thrasea, Soranus, and Servilia were
32   XVI,     39|      consul's quaestor was sent to Thrasea, who was passing his time
33   XVI,     39|           and bitterly complained, Thrasea urged them to hasten their
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