Book,  Par.

 1     I,      2|    safety of the present to the dangerous past. Nor did the provinces
 2     I,     46|        begun. Severity would be dangerous; profuse liberality would
 3    II,     54|    friendship was thought to be dangerous. When, after the extinction
 4   III,     67|    Lepida, and the meanness and dangerous power of his last years. ~ ~
 5    IV,     23|         a corrupt age are alike dangerous. Tiberius indeed, who was
 6    IV,     64| threatened us with a difficult, dangerous and sanguinary war. ~ ~
 7    VI,     11|        plans, is a forbidden, a dangerous thing, nor does it follow
 8    VI,     78|        he was more than ever on dangerous ground after his marriage
 9    XI,     19|       men who, base in private, dangerous in public life, had nothing
10   XIV,     63|      books, which, while it was dangerous to procure them, were anxiously
11    XV,     32|    whether they should accept a dangerous war or a disgraceful peace.
12    XV,     89|   considered him a reckless and dangerous associate. Nero's hatred
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