Book,  Par.

  1     I,      2|           with cheap corn, and all men with the sweets of repose,
  2     I,      2|      rivalries between the leading men and the rapacity of the
  3     I,      3|         and even many of the older men had been born during the
  4     I,      5|           and the same report told men that Augustus was dead and
  5     I,     10|             he had named the chief men of the State, most of whom
  6     I,     13|          were wholly new. Sensible men, however, spoke variously
  7     I,     16|           support of so many great men, they should not put everything
  8     I,     18|         Cneius Piso, and all these men, except Lepidus, were soon
  9     I,     21|          Tiberius, had allowed his men a rest from military duties,
 10     I,     21|     nightfall, and when the better men had dispersed, he gathered
 11     I,     27|     centurions and by all the best men among the soldiers. As the
 12     I,     27|         among the soldiers. As the men were dragged off, they struggled
 13     I,     27|    fraternising with deserters and men convicted on capital charges. ~ ~
 14     I,     28|          innocent and most unhappy men, but who restores to my
 15     I,     28|          we may be buried by these men around me." ~ ~
 16     I,     29|      nicknamed Sirpicus, while the men of the fifteenth defended
 17     I,     30|            Drusus with the leading men of the State and with two
 18     I,     31|            ordered bodies of armed men to be in readiness at certain
 19     I,     35|         the common soldiers. These men made their way among the
 20     I,     39|        proof of their loyalty. The men's troubles were increased
 21     I,     40|           had its beginning in the men of the twenty-first and
 22     I,     42|            were distributed by the men themselves. To those who
 23     I,     44|       murmurs became audible. Some men, seizing his hand under
 24     I,     45|            him to relieve worn-out men, and not let them die under
 25     I,     45| impetuously from the tribunal. The men opposed his departure with
 26     I,     48|     respective winterquarters. The men of the fifth and twenty-first
 27     I,     54|         shoe so called, to win the men's goodwill. But nothing
 28     I,     55|      standards from Tiberius, you, men of the twentieth who have
 29     I,     57|        hither and thither, altered men, and dragged the chief mutineers
 30     I,     57|        order from himself the same men were responsible for all
 31     I,     60|    Illyrium was not yet known, and men had heard of the commotion
 32     I,     61|            amused, first, sensible men, then the populace, last,
 33     I,     63|         butchered the unsuspecting men, none but those in the secret
 34     I,     64|            chance. Even some loyal men were slain, for, on its
 35     I,     64|       present to control them; the men were allowed license and
 36     I,     65|           up the enthusiasm of the men, and having bridged over
 37     I,     67|         baggage in the centre, the men of the twenty-first closed
 38     I,     68|         when Caesar rode up to the men of the twentieth legion,
 39     I,     71|       chosen by lot from the chief men of the State; Tiberius,
 40     I,     72|     attempt nothing if the leading men were removed, and that he
 41     I,     73|     slaughtered. Their able-bodied men had swum across the river
 42     I,     79|         hope or grief according as men shrank from war or desired
 43     I,     79|           but openly against armed men do I wage war. There are
 44     I,     81|        were the whitening bones of men, as they had fled, or stood
 45     I,     83|         Arminius having bidden his men to concentrate themselves
 46     I,     83|            assailants, perilous to men unacquainted with it, when
 47     I,     83|         and gave confidence to our men, and they separated without
 48     I,     85|            a confused din from the men at work and the combatants.
 49     I,     86|      twenty-first on the left, the men of the first to lead the
 50     I,     87|       broken exclamations, and the men lay scattered along the
 51     I,     87|            column with some picked men, inflicting wounds chiefly
 52     I,     88|       remained to so many thousand men. ~ ~
 53     I,     89|         the uproar, overthrew some men against whom it dashed.
 54     I,     91|         shout and sudden rush, our men threw themselves on the
 55     I,     91|    destruction of a few half-armed men, and they were struck down,
 56     I,     93|          shallows from deep water. Men were swept away by the waves
 57     I,     93|          higher ground and led his men up to it. There they passed
 58     I,     93|      plight as pitiable as that of men besieged by an enemy. For
 59     I,     95|        Cassius Severus had defamed men and women of distinction
 60     I,     96|           Cassius, the actor, with men of the same profession,
 61     I,     97|            miseries of the age and men's shamelessness. Needy,
 62     I,     99|         the solicitations of great men. This, though it promoted
 63     I,    105|          commands and to keep many men to the end of their life
 64     I,    105|       detested vice. From the best men he apprehended danger to
 65     I,    105|          he appointed to provinces men whom he did not mean to
 66    II,      2|         Rome envoys from the chief men of Parthia, in quest of
 67    II,      2|       asked, "was the glory of the men who slew Crassus, who drove
 68    II,     14|       enemy's fury, cheered on his men to break by a dense formation
 69    II,     16|         the tents, and enjoyed the men's talk about himself, as
 70    II,     18|     fugitives out of Varus's army, men who rather than endure war
 71    II,     20|         cohorts of the allies. The men were quite ready and prepared
 72    II,     26|            his head and begged his men to follow up the slaughter,
 73    II,     31|          carcases of horses and of men, they had rushed to the
 74    II,     39|            and sycophancy of these men, in order to bring to light
 75    II,     41|          serving of food, and that men should not disgrace themselves
 76    II,     41|          recreation, unless indeed men in the highest position
 77    II,     45|     domestic relations, or estate? Men became arrogant even with
 78    II,     47|         these words:- "If all poor men begin to come here and to
 79    II,     59|           the hands of many of his men. As for Maroboduus, he called
 80    II,     62|           might be rivalry between men of equal rank, and consequent
 81    II,     67|         Tacfarinas kept the picked men who were armed in Roman
 82    II,     70|       medley of tribes. As for the men before him, they had been
 83    II,     70|            or to the vilest of the men, while he allowed idleness
 84    II,     78|      Thebes seven hundred thousand men of military age, and how
 85    II,     97|            marks of poisoning. For men according as they pitied
 86    II,    106|     position on the other. But his men had neither heart nor hope,
 87    II,    107|            raised, all the bravest men to mount on them, while
 88    II,    108|        with Plancina. What elderly men had said of Drusus was perfectly
 89    II,    111|            devised and decreed, as men were inspired by affection
 90    II,    112|                              While men's sorrow was yet fresh,
 91   III,      2|       strangers, or the laments of men from those of women; only
 92   III,      5|           favor of Agrippina, whom men spoke of as the glory of
 93   III,      8|          business then ceased, and men went back to their occupations.
 94   III,      9|    avoiding anything like secrecy. Men did not doubt that his answer
 95   III,     10|        other things which provoked men's anger was his house towering
 96   III,     16|         other hand to all the best men, especially to the companions
 97   III,     20|         remember to have heard old men say that a document was
 98   III,     23|         against whom from all good men were growing more and more
 99   III,     29|          disgrace. Cheering on his men to offer battle in the open
100   III,     29|            he fell deserted by his men. ~ ~
101   III,     30|           the dishonour of his own men than by the glory of the
102   III,     35|           a vice so habitual among men and women by the awful name
103   III,     38|          on its own merits; and as men desired nothing against
104   III,     38|        were at first simple, while men's minds were unsophisticated.
105   III,     40|            Poppaea law, so that if men shrank from the privileges
106   III,     40|            into its clutches. Many men's fortunes were ruined,
107   III,     41|         was more constantly before men's eyes, while also the tie
108   III,     42|                     Two remarkable men died at the end of the year,
109   III,     48|        bear in mind that, whenever men are accused of extortion,
110   III,     49|            of course requires that men should be unincumbered,
111   III,     49|             Are then all unmarried men blameless? The Oppian laws
112   III,     49|           imbecility of one or two men, all husbands should be
113   III,     54|            Vetus, one of the chief men of Macedonia, who had been
114   III,     57|           Gauls nearer home. These men accordingly talked sedition
115   III,     58|         uncovered, cheering on his men to fight for Rome, to display,
116   III,     59|          He corrupted a few of the men, but the majority were steadfast
117   III,     61|       usual exaggeration. All good men were saddened by anxiety
118   III,     61|      Senate? We have at last found men to check those murderous
119   III,     62|         army in an open plain. His men in armour he had posted
120   III,     64|            a brief resistance. The men in mail were somewhat of
121   III,     64|        javelins or swords; but our men, snatching up hatchets and
122   III,     64|          effort to rise, like dead men. Sacrovir with his most
123   III,     69|            the imaginations not of men but of silly women. However,
124   III,     72|         the disgrace and infamy of men of distinction, at last
125   III,     73|          them. Had those energetic men, our aediles, first taken
126   III,     78|           for splendour. Even then men were still at liberty to
127   III,     78|      turned to wiser ways. The new men who were often admitted
128   III,     84|           his creditor, as well as men suspected of capital offences.
129   III,     84|            protected the crimes of men as much as the worship of
130   III,     91|            Greek, "How ready these men are to be slaves." Clearly,
131   III,     92|           thus perished, even good men, despising slow and safe
132   III,    106|           victorious army. Several men bore the title at the same
133   III,    107|                    Two illustrious men died that year. One was
134    IV,      7|            the Senate: the leading men were allowed freedom of
135    IV,      7|          that there were no better men to choose. The consul and
136    IV,      8|      intrusted his own property to men of the most tried integrity
137    IV,     15|            regard to the deaths of men in power. Besides, the whole
138    IV,     21|           reasons, the chief being men's and women's indifference;
139    IV,     23|          relatives or were leading men in the State. However he
140    IV,     27|         liking of princes for some men and their antipathy to others
141    IV,     36|            prisoners to Rome where men already trembled at the
142    IV,     37|       against the emperor and that men had been sent to Gaul to
143    IV,     38|       peace charged on two leading men in the state, his own intimate
144    IV,     45|          the age and of being wise men. So now, after a revolution,
145    IV,     45|        what is hurtful, while most men learn wisdom from the fortunes
146    IV,     47|          repeatedly as illustrious men. Asinius Pollio's writings
147    IV,     47|            general. Yet both these men prospered to the end with
148    IV,     49|          laugh at the stupidity of men who suppose that the despotism
149    IV,     54|          mean spirit. "The noblest men," it was said, "have the
150    IV,     56|            adding that while other men's plans depended on their
151    IV,     61|                                Two men of noble rank died in that
152    IV,     64|          armies with their bravest men. Even native princes they
153    IV,     67|          death, and these were all men of spirit, though they differed
154    IV,     68|           the camp, entreating the men not to give a chance to
155    IV,     69|          rest, after their bravest men had been beaten back or
156    IV,     75|        sister's grandson, whom all men esteemed, but yielding to
157    IV,     76|            Atticus, the rest being men of liberal culture, for
158    IV,     76|          amusement. It was said by men who knew the stars that
159    IV,     79|        year died two distinguished men, Asinius Agrippa and Quintus
160    IV,     80|     debarred from such amusements; men and women of every age crowding
161    IV,     87|                                The men whom I have named now consulted
162    IV,     89|        other punishments of guilty men I shall describe in due
163    IV,     93|            but he too, finding his men's position critical and
164     V,     13|       himself a multitude of young men and much popular enthusiasm,
165    VI,      2|          changed language, by such men as Scipio, Silanus, and
166    VI,      2|        succession? Were they to be men who had held office or youths,
167    VI,      3|            then from Italy. And as men complained that he would
168    VI,      5|         destruction of illustrious men. ~ ~
169    VI,      6|         Tiberius." But the leading men of the State failed to convict
170    VI,     13|           with Pollio, his father, men all of illustrious descent,
171    VI,     13|  friendship with this multitude of men of rank! Celsus however,
172    VI,     14|         two of his oldest friends, men who had followed him to
173    VI,     15|            all the more galling to men unaccustomed to obey it. ~ ~
174    VI,     20| complimentary mention of the young men. He next assigned some very
175    VI,     24|        father-in-law Laco, leading men of Achaia, had been ruined
176    VI,     30|                               Most men, however, cannot part with
177    VI,     35|                                    Men's grief at all this had
178    VI,     38|       complained that all the best men who were fit to command
179    VI,     40|         furnished the most learned men of that country and of Greece
180    VI,     48|       Parthian army and despatched men to hire auxiliaries. Pharasmanes,
181    VI,     53|            who guarded his person, men exiled from their own homes,
182    VI,     59|            to death did not strike men as anything horrible, from
183    VI,     65|           thought best to wait for men of such commanding influence,
184    VI,     67|          king, Artabanus knew that men do not necessarily feign
185    XI,      5|      replied, "As I think what all men think about the deeds of
186    XI,      5|         suppose me to say what all men say." A graceful compromise
187    XI,      7|                           When the men, at whom this strong censure
188    XI,      7|      upheld in its integrity, when men looked at the greatness
189    XI,      7|          Arruntius and Aeserninus, men raised by a blameless life
190    XI,     19|           pretext in the mouths of men who, base in private, dangerous
191    XI,     22|          troops and the enemy. Our men gained fresh valour; the
192    XI,     22|           many thought ill. "Why," men asked, "was he irritating
193    XI,     28|           discussed, and the chief men of Gallia Comata, as it
194    XI,     29|           us from Spain, and other men not less illustrious from
195    XI,     32|           was to rid the Senate of men of notorious infamy, he
196    XI,     37|         personages especially, the men who had much to fear from
197   XII,     14|           the arrival of the chief men of Parthia and of Acbarus,
198   XII,     19|          the Roman army, which all men knew to have come after
199   XII,     30|            It was noted by learned men, that no previous example
200   XII,     33|        with sleep. It added to the men's joy that they had rescued
201   XII,     39|         would be difficult for our men and comparatively easy for
202   XII,     40|     confirming the spirit of their men by making light of their
203   XII,     41|  resistance and masses of fighting men everywhere apparent, daunted
204   XII,     41|       position, led on his furious men, and crossed the river without
205   XII,     43|         degrading to myself. I had men and horses, arms and wealth.
206   XII,     45|            a foraging party of our men, with some cavalry squadrons
207   XII,     58|       through the desertion of his men and the raids of the barbarians,
208   XII,     66|        oars, and nineteen thousand men; he lined the circumference
209   XII,     66|           all the courage of brave men, though it was between condemned
210   XII,     73|         home opposite to the blind men's country. This obscure
211  XIII,      1|            and Helius, a freedman, men who had the charge of the
212  XIII,      3|          Annaeus Seneca. These two men guided the emperor's youth
213  XIII,      4|           ear of the time. Elderly men who amuse their leisure
214  XIII,      7|            Seneca were known to be men of very varied experience,
215  XIII,     13|        Claudius Senecio, two young men of fashion, the first of
216  XIII,     20|          there were who reproached men of austere professions with
217  XIII,     20|          secure the most important men by wholesale bribery. But
218  XIII,     27|          did Pallas did not please men so much, as his arrogance
219  XIII,     29|      assailant, and the insults on men and women of distinction
220  XIII,     31|        ought to be the ruin of the men themselves, there should
221  XIII,     35|           suspected in the voting, men were chosen by lot for the
222  XIII,     36|          Rebilus, one of the first men in legal knowledge and vastness
223  XIII,     36|     trickle from his veins, though men did not credit him with
224  XIII,     41|            remembered by a few old men, as having been the colleague
225  XIII,     43|            new and strange sights, men without helmets or breastplates,
226  XIII,     43|          being dug up. Many of the men had their limbs frost-bitten
227  XIII,     43|           was continually with his men on the march, amid their
228  XIII,     47|          had united three thousand men of the third, brought up
229  XIII,     50|          legions, with some picked men of the tenth in the centre;
230  XIII,     53|         intent of crushing him, so men believed, a decree of the
231  XIII,     54|            were on the spot. These men charged Suilius with having
232  XIII,     56|      Nerullinus on the strength of men's hatred of the father and
233  XIII,     58|       veiled, either to disappoint men's gaze or to set off her
234  XIII,     59|         his lot, to that which all men pray for, the joy of the
235  XIII,     67|                                Two men under prosecution from Africa,
236  XIII,     70|             they exclaimed that no men on earth surpassed the Germans
237  XIII,     71|            for their cattle, while men are starving; only let them
238  XIII,     73|         vow which consigns horses, men, everything indeed on the
239   XIV,     10|        speed and take with you the men readiest to execute your
240   XIV,     15|            not, as do the looks of men, and as he had ever before
241   XIV,     19|           experience in his person men's veneration for him." They
242   XIV,     20|       instead of sickening him, as men expected. Imagining that
243   XIV,     21|            the title of Augustani, men in their prime and remarkable
244   XIV,     26|          deaths of two illustrious men, Domitius Afer and Marcus
245   XIV,     27|          was censured by the older men of the day for having set
246   XIV,     33|            and his associates. The men who under a show of friendship
247   XIV,     42|            outraged. All the chief men of the Iceni, as if Rome
248   XIV,     42|      seemed, of perpetual tyranny. Men chosen as priests had to
249   XIV,     43|            was to send two hundred men, and no more, without regular
250   XIV,     43|         had they removed their old men and women, leaving their
251   XIV,     44|           fire and the cross, like men soon about to pay the penalty,
252   XIV,     45|           about ten thousand armed men, when he prepared to break
253   XIV,     46|            woman's resolve; as for men, they may live and be slaves." ~ ~
254   XIV,     47|      confided in the valour of his men, he yet mingled encouragements
255   XIV,     49|         knew of the success of the men of the fourteenth and twentieth,
256   XIV,     50|      cavalry. On their arrival the men of the ninth had their number
257   XIV,     52|         for his accomplices. These men had associated with them
258   XIV,     56|         the deliberations of wiser men than ourselves? Even if
259   XIV,     60|           treason was revived, and men thought that it was not
260   XIV,     61|          who attacked all the best men with abuse, and was silent
261   XIV,     64|          emperor had appointed two men to the command of the praetorian
262   XIV,     67|       capital itself. One of these men shared his wars; the other
263   XIV,     68|           numbered among the chief men of Rome? Among nobles who
264   XIV,     69|       raised to the highest places men who could also bear moderate
265   XIV,     71|      cruelty, which will be in all men's mouths. Even if your self-control
266   XIV,     73|         Plautus and Sulla were the men he most dreaded, Plautus
267   XIV,     73|            philosophy, which makes men restless, and eager for
268   XIV,     75|           illustrious and innocent men were to be destroyed. Again
269   XIV,     76|            he would soon find good men to help him, and daring
270   XIV,     80|          applause for the emperor, men hailing the recalled Octavia.
271   XIV,     81|       vehement hatred, inasmuch as men look on their instruments
272   XIV,     83|    Claudius exiled, was present to men's thoughts. But they had
273    XV,      1|        plundering raids. The chief men of the tribes were indignant
274    XV,      1|           be the struggle of brave men in arms; might is right
275    XV,      5|          conveyance of these a few men had hurried on too eagerly,
276    XV,      5|     showers of arrows do not alarm men within walls, and only disappoint
277    XV,      5|         cut down by a sally of our men.~ ~
278    XV,     11|        others. But though military men had put him on his guard
279    XV,     11|            or the rampart, but the men's bodies and weapons were
280    XV,     11|      enhanced. Yet he ordered 1000 men from each of his three legions
281    XV,     15|           formidable, and even the men of old, with all their strength
282    XV,     18|          of use to them, while our men went a different way. Rumour
283    XV,     19|          them by the contrast. His men, in their grief and pity
284    XV,     19|         glory, emotions which stir men in success, had died away;
285    XV,     29|           an outburst of flattery, men voting the honours of deification,
286    XV,     30|         peril of these illustrious men grew greater. ~ ~
287    XV,     32|           consulted with the chief men of the State whether they
288    XV,     34|          the loss of their bravest men and the panic of the remainder,
289    XV,     34|          nothing of disaster, with men of the fifteenth, lately
290    XV,     43|           by accusing all the best men, that in influence, wealth,
291    XV,     51|            historical monuments of men of genius, and, notwithstanding
292    XV,     51|          of the restored city, old men will remember many things
293    XV,     72|          fire, nor the fury of the men as they increased the torture
294    XV,     72|         hardly knew, when freeborn men, Roman knights, and senators,
295    XV,     74|          no precaution. Even brave men are dismayed by sudden perils;
296    XV,     74|           can overcome everything. Men will soon come to put you
297    XV,     75|          arrived, raw recruits, or men recently enlisted, whom
298    XV,     86|            information of the same men proved fatal to Subrius
299    XV,     92|      Gallus, and Annius Pollio, as men disgraced rather than convicted,
300    XV,     96|         said that he had destroyed men perfectly innocent out of
301    XV,     97|           has ceased to live among men. ~ ~
302   XVI,      2|          the report and despatched men to bring the spoil, as if
303   XVI,      5|     subsequently paid off, towards men of distinction. There was
304   XVI,      8|        appeal to the emperor these men eluded an impending doom
305   XVI,     15|         criminals rather than with men on their trial, so completely,
306   XVI,     17|           I be not thought to hate men who perished so tamely.
307   XVI,     17|           posterity of illustrious men, that just as in their funeral
308   XVI,     17|       their funeral obsequies such men are not confounded in a
309   XVI,     18|           than the others, because men remembered that he had betrayed
310   XVI,     20|     Tigellinus or any other of the men in power. On the contrary,
311   XVI,     22|      butchered so many illustrious men, at last aspired to extirpate
312   XVI,     22|            and Barea Soranus. Both men he had hated of old, Thrasea
313   XVI,     26|          the murder of illustrious men, as though it were a kingly
314   XVI,     29|         their brutality. Even good men through fear do the like.
315   XVI,     31|            is it," he asked, "that men do not come from remote
316   XVI,     36|         must have seen this, those men before unknown to me, both
317   XVI,     37|     deceitful in friendship, as of men wholly entangled in falsehoods
318   XVI,     39|         gathering of distinguished men and women, giving special
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