Book,  Par.

 1    II,     32| Germany, and had done more by policy than by arms. By this means
 2    II,     45|       the secrets of imperial policy. Tiberius, however, argued
 3    II,     77|     other secrets of imperial policy, had forbidden senators
 4    II,     83|     established peace by wise policy than if he had finished
 5    II,     86|    emperor did not change the policy which he had once for all
 6   III,     53|       talk, his father's dark policy, it was thought, was mitigated.
 7   III,     65|      generals, and to his own policy. He also gave the reasons
 8   III,     73|   himself the credit of right policy, one alone has to bear the
 9    IV,      7|       the worse in Tiberius's policy. In the first place, public
10    VI,     20|      originating in his state policy, and requested that Macro,
11    VI,     47|   foreign affairs by a crafty policy and keeping war at a distance.
12    VI,     47|      the whole of his eastern policy to Lucius Vitellius. The
13    XI,     10| rather than considerations of policy, made him embarrass himself
14    XI,     29|      me to govern by the same policy of transferring to this
15    XV,     38| adopting a safe and expedient policy. Tiridates first dwelt much
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