Book,  Par.

 1     I,     30|        hush up every very serious disaster, that he despatched his
 2     I,     81| centurions. Some survivors of the disaster who had escaped from the
 3     I,     82|         spot, six years after the disaster, in grief and anger, began
 4     I,     90|           without any allusion to disaster. Next he handed over the
 5     I,     94|     soften the remembrance of the disaster by kindness, he went round
 6    II,      5|        nor was he deposed without disaster to ourselves. Caius Caesar
 7    II,     17|        and flee; they quail under disaster, just as in success they
 8    II,     29|       novelty and extent did this disaster transcend every other, for
 9    II,     32|      enough of success, enough of disaster. He had fought victorious
10    II,     62|           escape usual in, such a disaster, by rushing out into the
11    II,     68|  grandfather, and vivid images of disaster and success rose before
12    IV,     80|          matched by an unexpected disaster, no sooner begun than ended.
13    IV,     81|       maimed or destroyed in this disaster. For the future it was provided
14    IV,     82|                              This disaster was not forgotten when a
15   XII,     47|  meanwhile been defeated, and the disaster had been exaggerated by
16  XIII,      4|          that during his reign no disaster had befallen Rome from the
17  XIII,     44|     routed. Panic-stricken by his disaster, those who ought to have
18  XIII,     46|          proved more than once by disaster to Rome." Corbulo in reply,
19  XIII,     73|         remedy and in fury at the disaster, flung stones from a distance,
20   XIV,      8|        she had escaped a terrible disaster; that she begged him, alarmed,
21   XIV,     40|  Petronius Turpilianus, a serious disaster was sustained in Britain,
22   XIV,     43|   fortifications. Alarmed by this disaster and by the fury of the province
23   XIV,     85|        was then a token of public disaster. Still, if any decree of
24    XV,     34|      Pontus, had known nothing of disaster, with men of the fifteenth,
25    XV,     48|                                 A disaster followed, whether accidental
26    XV,     57|    afterwards, tidings of a naval disaster was received, but not from
27   XVI,     14|          the prince for a ruinous disaster by a gift of four million
28   XVI,     17|           with such a monotony of disaster, I should myself have been
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