Book,  Par.

 1     I,      4|      future masters. "Agrippa was savage, and had been exasperated
 2     I,     15|  thoroughly seen his arrogant and savage temper, he had sought glory
 3     I,     31|           throng, they broke into savage exclamations, then looking
 4     I,     42| resentment and the first cause of savage fury. They threw them to
 5     I,     45|       fury, this seemed to them a savage act and one of evil precedent,
 6     I,     65|                   Even then their savage spirit was seized with desire
 7     I,     87|          glens with merry song or savage shouts, while in the Roman
 8     I,     90|     forests, deeper swamps, and a savage foe awaited them; but if
 9   III,     19|           voices of the Senators, savage opposition indeed from every
10   III,     33|         shouted, without ceasing, savage curses on Quirinus, "to
11   III,     66|           having subdued the most savage nations and received or
12   III,     78|     numerous clientele. After the savage massacres in which greatness
13   III,     92|         they passed by degrees to savage acts. Caius Silanus, pro-consul
14    IV,     17|         island of Amorgus for his savage temper. Carsidius Sacerdos,
15    IV,     36|          he incited the rural and savage slave-population of the
16    IV,     66|         massacre was all the more savage, inasmuch as they were taunted
17    IV,     78|       already all but fallen. The savage temper of Drusus, to say
18     V,      3|      Cotta Messalinus, who made a savage speech. Still, the other
19    VI,      3|           the theatre, received a savage censure. Tiberius, just
20    VI,     26|         He was a man who masked a savage temper under an artful guise
21    VI,     72|         of tears, and, noting the savage face of the other, said, "
22    VI,     75|          Balbus was noted for his savage eloquence and his eagerness
23    XI,      7|       Suilius, attacked them with savage energy. He cited as examples
24  XIII,     53|           taunted Seneca with his savage enmity against the friends
25  XIII,     55|     tongue at the service of that savage harlot? We must punish the
26   XIV,      9|       Germanicus would not dare a savage deed on his offspring. It
27    XV,     73|        into a crime, while to the savage questionings of Nero and
28   XVI,     10|      opportunity of unmasking his savage wrath was furnished by Fortunatus,
29   XVI,     33|         While Marcellus, with the savage and menacing look he usually
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