Book,  Par.

 1    II,     15|         uttering their hopes and fears at the military mess, among
 2    II,     74|       looks, Piso concealing his fears, Germanicus shunning the
 3    II,     95|          it was supposed, to his fears from Tiberius. Soon afterwards
 4    VI,     16|      population which, unless it fears a strong hand, is disorderly
 5    VI,     74|      peril an old age of anxious fears, long detested by Sejanus,
 6   XII,     40|         by making light of their fears, kindling their hopes, and
 7  XIII,     10|     turned the king's hopes into fears. Nero, to compose their
 8  XIII,     23|        thus allayed the prince's fears, they went at daybreak to
 9  XIII,     69| repeatedly said would excite the fears of the emperor, an assertion
10    XV,     21|          And to hide his anxious fears about foreign affairs, Nero
11    XV,     50|      people had laid aside their fears, the flames returned, with
12    XV,     90|     perhaps by way of hiding his fears, when the soldiers entered
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