Book,  Par.

 1     I,     51|          itself, he dwelt with the eloquence of pity, and while the throng
 2     I,     70|      understanding, and a perverse eloquence, who had seduced this same
 3    II,     46|            popular favour, or that eloquence which has been the hereditary
 4    II,    111|        similar to the rest, for in eloquence, he said, there was no distinction
 5   III,     15|          you, as far as each man's eloquence and diligence can do so.
 6   III,     16|            Vitellius with striking eloquence, alleged against Piso that
 7   III,     27|         warned him not to ruin his eloquence by rancour. This was the
 8   III,     36|         his distinguished rank and eloquence. But Tiberius, when Silanus
 9   III,     49|          son, in whom the father's eloquence was reproduced, replied
10   III,     93|            even the most practised eloquence. For Tiberius did not refrain
11    IV,     47|           pre-eminently famous for eloquence and truthfulness, extolled
12    IV,     70| prosecution he enjoyed the fame of eloquence rather than of virtue, but
13    IV,     79|          family and famous for his eloquence while he lived, though the
14    VI,     20|           temper and of cultivated eloquence. Cassius was of an ancient
15    VI,     75|           was noted for his savage eloquence and his eagerness to assail
16    XI,      7|          the fairest recompense of eloquence. And, "apart from this,"
17    XI,      7|            a blameless life and by eloquence to the highest honours."~ ~
18    XI,      9|          life that the resource of eloquence is acquired, thanks to which
19    XI,      9|         mercy of the powerful. But eloquence cannot be obtained for nothing;
20  XIII,      3|            Seneca, with lessons of eloquence and a dignified courtesy,
21  XIII,      4|           who needed another man's eloquence. The dictator Caesar rivalled
22  XIII,      9|        noble stature, his imposing eloquence, and the impression he would
23  XIII,     53|      employed a lively and genuine eloquence in the defence of their
24   XIV,     26|          highest honours and great eloquence. The first was a pleader;
25   XIV,     29|         gained the first prize for eloquence, but it was publicly announced
26   XIV,     65|       himself alone the honours of eloquence, and composed poetry more
27    XV,     34|       military man, was as good as eloquence. ~ ~
28    XV,     59|           semblance of virtue. His eloquence he exercised in the defence
29    XV,     81|        Even at the last moment his eloquence failed him not; he summoned
30    XV,     93|        studies of our youth by his eloquence; Rufus by the teachings
31   XVI,      2|          invented, with consummate eloquence and equal sycophancy, confidently
32   XVI,      4|            and added the "crown of eloquence," that thus a veil might
33   XVI,     25|    associated with him the pungent eloquence of Marcellus Eprius. ~ ~
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