Book,  Par.

 1     I,     34|     their ignorance of the cause regarded as an omen of their condition,
 2     I,     43|     restored freedom. Hence they regarded Germanicus with favour and
 3    II,     32|        had suffered. It was also regarded as a certainty that the
 4    II,     37| senseless and idle; if leniently regarded, pitiable. But there was
 5    II,     52|         how his uncle Marcellus, regarded by the city populace with
 6    II,     58|   countrymen, while Arminius was regarded with favour as the champion
 7    II,     67|      troops, till at last he was regarded as the leader, not of an
 8    II,     67|       whom I am now speaking was regarded as an inexperienced soldier.
 9   III,     29|          experienced in war, who regarded the siege as a disgrace.
10    IV,     24| revolution. All this the emperor regarded as undermining his own power,
11    VI,      6|      proposal, and consequently, regarded with inveterate hatred.
12    VI,     47|     servility so base that he is regarded by an after-generation as
13   XII,     51|       and consequent famine were regarded as a token of calamity.
14  XIII,      1|        and, as a point then much regarded, of the line of the Caesars.
15   XIV,     79|      piece of his wickedness was regarded as a conspicuous merit,
16    XV,     69|         accused, had of old been regarded with a religious sentiment
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