Book,  Par.

 1     I,      8|       and lamentations with his flattery. Sextus Pompeius and Sextus
 2    II,     15|      spirits, friends a love of flattery. If an assembly were called,
 3    II,     68|     additional dignity to their flattery. ~ ~
 4   III,      3|    weeping as he felt inclined. Flattery there was none, for all
 5   III,     66|        length of a preposterous flattery by proposing that he should
 6   III,     81|         message and hence their flattery was the more elaborate.
 7   III,     95|     however, by way of carrying flattery yet further, sharply censured
 8    IV,      7|        and when they stooped to flattery, the emperor himself checked
 9    IV,     13|     added. Such is the way with flattery, when repeated. The funeral
10    IV,     27|    cruel suggestion made by the flattery of others he changed for
11    IV,     52|    vulgarised by indiscriminate flattery. ~ ~
12    IV,     58| entreaties of friends, with the flattery of the whole assembly, hardly
13     V,      8|      fear, most by the habit of flattery...~ ~
14    VI,      3|      for his carefully prepared flattery, with immediate expulsion
15    VI,     24|      that after his death Greek flattery had paid him divine honours. ~ ~
16    VI,     56|         be so, the truth, which flattery obscures. About the same
17    VI,     64|         the most marked tone of flattery. Three hundred citizens,
18    XI,     33|    himself stopped the consul's flattery, as extravagant. He closed
19   XII,     31|        and still more elaborate flattery was paid to Domitius. A
20   XII,     74|         young prince's heart by flattery and lavish liberality, while
21  XIII,      9|       temple. To their habitual flattery was added a real joy at
22   XIV,     15|       encouraged to hope by the flattery addressed to him, at the
23   XIV,     61|        most enthusiastic in his flattery was Aulus Vitellius, who
24   XIV,     72|       his hatred under delusive flattery. Seneca thanked him, the
25   XIV,     85|   Senate was marked by some new flattery, or by the lowest servility,
26    XV,     29|        there was an outburst of flattery, men voting the honours
27    XV,     78|         no natural aptitude for flattery. No one knew this better
28    XV,     96|        mourn, abased himself in flattery, Salienus Clemens denounced
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