Book,  Par.

  1     I,      1|          and reverses of the old Roman people have been recorded
  2     I,     10|    legionary cohorts composed of Roman citizens. ~ ~
  3     I,     35|        control the empire of the Roman people? Why are we not rather
  4     I,     37|   Blaesus and Lucius Apronius, a Roman knight on Drusus's staff,
  5     I,     41|      many a face and voice. "The Roman world," they said, was in
  6     I,     43|        was held in honour by the Roman people, and they believed
  7     I,     46|       the enemy was aware of the Roman mutiny, and would certainly
  8     I,     50|         blood of an envoy of the Roman people, an occurrence rare
  9     I,     50|       among our foes, would in a Roman camp have stained the altars
 10     I,     66|         our dissensions. But the Roman general in a forced march,
 11     I,     77|    steadfast loyalty towards the Roman people. From the time that
 12     I,     79|        the groves of Germany the Roman standards which I hung up
 13     I,     79|       the Elbe and the Rhine the Roman rods, axes, and toga. Other
 14     I,     79|    nations in their ignorance of Roman rule, have no experience
 15     I,     80|          river Amisia with forty Roman cohorts to distract the
 16     I,     82|                       And so the Roman army now on the spot, six
 17     I,     87|      savage shouts, while in the Roman camp were flickering fires,
 18     I,     96|         of Falanius and Rubrius, Roman knights of moderate fortune,
 19     I,    102|         a pantomime player, that Roman knights should not crowd
 20    II,      1|    commotion in the kingdoms and Roman provinces of the East. It
 21    II,     13|      Much of what he said was in Roman speech, for he had served
 22    II,     16|       enemy, acquainted with the Roman tongue, spurred his horse
 23    II,     17|         good for the fighting of Roman soldiers, but woods and
 24    II,     21|        he exclaimed, "follow the Roman birds, the true deities
 25    II,     21|         Chauci serving among the Roman auxiliaries, who let him
 26    II,     24|     young and old, rushed on the Roman army, and spread disorder.
 27    II,     35|   through Flaccus Vescularius, a Roman knight, who was more intimate
 28    II,     44|   suitable to the majesty of the Roman people, unless done before
 29    II,     51|      dictator, bequeathed to the Roman people; a chapel to the
 30    II,     52|      were the attachments of the Roman people.~ ~
 31    II,     55|          a majority desiring the Roman rule, some, that of their
 32    II,     57|          his great-grandfather a Roman knight, Pomponius Atticus,
 33    II,     61|       right to invoke the aid of Roman arms against the Cherusci,
 34    II,     63|          of Patuleius, a wealthy Roman knight, though he was himself
 35    II,     64|        was the first to make the Roman power successful at sea
 36    II,     67|    served as an auxiliary in the Roman camp, then becoming a deserter,
 37    II,     67|     picked men who were armed in Roman fashion within a camp, and
 38    II,     70| derogated from the honour of the Roman name in having treated with
 39    II,     75|        was given to the son of a Roman emperor, not of a Parthian
 40    II,     77|       had forbidden senators and Roman knights of the higher rank
 41    II,     79|       formerly the limits of the Roman empire, which now extends
 42    II,     81|      Pyrrhus or Antiochus to the Roman people, as was Maroboduus.
 43    II,     87|       guilty deeds, to enter the Roman lines. He then surrounded
 44    II,    106|          doubtful only while the Roman cohorts were struggling
 45    II,    108|      restored era of freedom the Roman people under equal laws."~ ~
 46    II,    112|          the senators that to no Roman of the same rank had twin
 47    II,    113|    father, or husband had been a Roman knight should get money
 48   III,      7|      past, showing how often the Roman people had patiently endured
 49   III,     29|          Finally, he hemmed in a Roman cohort near the river Pagyda.
 50   III,     29|     standard-bearers for letting Roman soldiers show their backs
 51   III,     40|           and Rome and Italy and Roman citizens everywhere fell
 52   III,     43|  Sallustius, that most admirable Roman historian, by whom he was
 53   III,     48|     panic in war, and converts a Roman army on the march into the
 54   III,     53|          too and Coelius Cursor, Roman knights, were punished on
 55   III,     57|          by ancestors, for which Roman citizenship had formerly
 56   III,     59| hostilities by a massacre of the Roman traders. He corrupted a
 57   III,     60|         as by strife between the Roman generals, each of whom claimed
 58   III,     68|        Caius Lutorius Priscus, a Roman knight, who, after writing
 59   III,     85|         to their services to the Roman people. It was a grand spectacle
 60   III,     87|          in their loyalty to the Roman people. Aphrodisia maintained
 61   III,     98|      extortion. Lucius Ennius, a Roman knight, was accused of treason,
 62   III,     99| deposited the offering which the Roman knights had vowed to Fortune
 63   III,    103|        insult to himself and the Roman people as by a deserter
 64   III,    104|         way he turned, a body of Roman soldiers was in his face,
 65    IV,      2|       the son of Seius Strabo, a Roman knight, he attached himself
 66    IV,      6|   received it as a gift from the Roman people. The rest of Africa
 67    IV,      6|       ancient Latium and the old Roman colonies. There were besides,
 68    IV,      8|        the hands of companies of Roman knights. The emperor intrusted
 69    IV,     18|        connected with the place. Roman citizens had been admitted
 70    IV,     33|   approach, by the terror of the Roman name and because the Numidians
 71    IV,     34|         distant pastures. On the Roman side, the infantry was in
 72    IV,     35|      them to crave pardon of the Roman people. And now that this
 73    IV,     41|       horrors. Caius Cominius, a Roman knight, was spared by the
 74    IV,     50|      also of acts of violence to Roman citizens. They were deprived
 75    IV,     55|     entertained some thoughts of Roman knights, so if a husband
 76    IV,     56|          her old age with a mere Roman knight. Though I might allow
 77    IV,     56|         giving his daughter to a Roman knight. Is it surprising
 78    IV,     61|    further into Germany than any Roman before him. For this achievement
 79    IV,     65|        the open hills; these the Roman general approached in fighting
 80    IV,     65|         no great distance by the Roman general, ready for any emergency
 81    IV,     66|        the other, to fall on the Roman camp, not with the hope
 82    IV,     73|        spoke too of letters from Roman generals, of treaties concluded
 83    IV,     74|    relied, their services to the Roman people, whom they had helped
 84    IV,     75|          thoughts of putting the Roman state under Germanicus,
 85    IV,     76|         learned in the laws, one Roman knight, besides Sejanus,
 86    IV,     77|         they said, "was what the Roman people wished, what the
 87    IV,     86|         with a foul beginning. A Roman knight of the highest rank,
 88    IV,     93|         by their wounds. But the Roman general did not attempt
 89     V,     13|        other sea at Nicopolis, a Roman colony, he there at last
 90    VI,     11|                                A Roman knight, Marcus Terentius,
 91    VI,     16|         gave Cilnius Maecenas, a Roman knight, charge of everything
 92    VI,     19|   Geminius, Celsus and Pompeius, Roman knights, fell beneath a
 93    VI,     24|         likewise, an illustrious Roman knight, and her brother,
 94    VI,     38| grandfather many remembered as a Roman knight from Tibur. At the
 95    VI,     47|           where he threw off the Roman fashions to which for so
 96    VI,     54|      sacrificing, the one, after Roman custom, offering a swine,
 97    VI,     55|          this been rewarded with Roman citizenship. Subsequently,
 98    VI,     59|        when Vibulenus Agrippa, a Roman knight, as soon as his accusers
 99    VI,     62|   because they were compelled in Roman fashion to render an account
100    VI,     63|         a kindly spirit from his Roman training. ~ ~
101    VI,     68|       which would be sent by the Roman general, they might try
102    VI,     78|        for twelve years, and the Roman world, with absolute sway,
103    XI,      1|          face an assembly of the Roman people, to own the deed,
104    XI,      6|      happened that one Samius, a Roman knight of the first rank,
105    XI,     13|         a secret entreaty to the Roman emperor that Meherdates
106    XI,     18|        at the instigation of the Roman Senate, had retained this
107    XI,     23|     nothing but this, "Happy the Roman generals of old," and gave
108    XI,     26|    ascertained, Cneius Nonius, a Roman knight, was found wearing
109    XI,     28|          rights of allies and of Roman citizens, sought the privilege
110    XI,     28|        under our old customs the Roman character exhibited as to
111    XI,     31|          name of brothers of the Roman people. ~ ~
112    XI,     45|        like courage made several Roman knights of the first rank
113    XI,     47|   defence of Traulus Montanus, a Roman knight, was not admitted.
114   XII,      8|        too was the prayer of the Roman people. Claudius without
115   XII,      8|    marriage, Alledius Severus, a Roman knight, who, as many said,
116   XII,     11|         sovereign, familiar with Roman habits." ~ ~
117   XII,     16|  Arsacids, but a foreigner and a Roman, and having cut off his
118   XII,     17|    outcast, on learning that the Roman general, Didius, and the
119   XII,     17|   cohorts under Julius Aquila, a Roman knight, disdaining both,
120   XII,     18|          troops of Bosporus with Roman arms. Thus the enemy was
121   XII,     19|        to the great glory of the Roman army, which all men knew
122   XII,     20|        become his open enemy. No Roman was on the spot of authority
123   XII,     27|          boundaries of Rome. But Roman generals, even after the
124   XII,     28|       the chapel of Larunda. The Roman forum and the Capitol were
125   XII,     37|       Through these defences the Roman general, though he had with
126   XII,     40|          they were free from the Roman axe and tribute, and still
127   XII,     41|        enthusiasm confounded the Roman general. The river too in
128   XII,     44|         woman to sit in front of Roman standards. In fact, Agrippina
129   XII,     46|          have been spoken by the Roman general, to the effect,
130   XII,     51|        and trust the life of the Roman people to ships and all
131   XII,     54|         Armenia, the gift of the Roman people, through iniquity
132   XII,     57|          very principle on which Roman emperors had often under
133   XII,     70|         Divine Augustus that the Roman knights who governed Egypt
134   XII,     70|        be as binding as those of Roman magistrates, and after a
135   XII,     70|         too influential names of Roman knights would be superfluous,
136  XIII,      1|       deed were Publius Celer, a Roman knight, and Helius, a freedman,
137  XIII,     37|         suits the dignity of the Roman people to reserve history
138  XIII,     43|      impatiently the duties of a Roman camp. It was well known
139  XIII,     47|    rather than heard. And so the Roman general, without any conference,
140  XIII,     50|          he threw himself on the Roman columns, without however
141  XIII,     54|          conviction of troops of Roman knights, and with all the
142  XIII,     58|      wife of Rufius Crispinus, a Roman knight, by whom she had
143  XIII,     63|          other matters involving Roman interests? The senators,
144  XIII,     65|          when the freedom of the Roman people was still in its
145  XIII,     70|          threatening them with a Roman attack if they did not retire
146  XIII,     70|       behold the vastness of the Roman people. There at their leisure (
147  XIII,     70|       Nero gave both of them the Roman franchise, and ordered the
148  XIII,     71|          flocks and herds of the Roman soldiers may some day be
149   XIV,     20|      prophetic deity was seen in Roman temples as well as in Greek
150   XIV,     20| prevailed too on some well-known Roman knights, by immense presents,
151   XIV,     21|      applauded. Then it was that Roman knights were first enrolled
152   XIV,     25|          with his kingdom to the Roman people, and which had since
153   XIV,     27|    applied a compulsion to drive Roman nobles into disgracing themselves
154   XIV,     32|      that they held dearest. The Roman general accordingly dealt
155   XIV,     35|  Hyrcanians, who had sent to the Roman emperor, imploring alliance,
156   XIV,     39|          year Vibius Secundus, a Roman knight, on the accusation
157   XIV,     46|        chastity of my daughters. Roman lust has gone so far that
158   XIV,     52|          and Terentius Lentinus, Roman knights, for his accomplices.
159    XV,      1|         inroads, not indeed of a Roman general, but of a daring
160    XV,      3|          by way of menace to the Roman provinces. ~ ~
161    XV,      6|   against the violence done to a Roman province, and the blockade
162    XV,      6|         and friendly king and of Roman cohorts. "He had better
163    XV,      6|         would send envoys to the Roman emperor for the possession
164    XV,      7|           it was asked, "had the Roman army been withdrawn from
165    XV,      7|   conquered tribute and laws and Roman administration, instead
166    XV,     14|       towns of Armenia, but to a Roman camp with two legions, a
167    XV,     15| Carthaginians, the rivals of the Roman empire, were, it seemed,
168    XV,     16|        who always had been under Roman dominion, or subject to
169    XV,     17|         to determine the fate of Roman legions. Messengers were
170    XV,     18|     entered our lines before the Roman army began to retire, but
171    XV,     19|         to be witnesses, that no Roman was to enter Armenia until
172    XV,     25|        adopt a measure worthy of Roman good faith and resolution,
173    XV,     31|       the emperor's image in the Roman headquarters, and there
174    XV,     33|          scale as that which the Roman people had granted to Cneius
175    XV,     37|       Alexander, a distinguished Roman knight, sent to assist in
176    XV,     38|                         Then the Roman commended the young prince
177    XV,     38|        the slaughter or siege of Roman armies. "But now," they
178    XV,     41|        the maritime Alps. To the Roman knights he assigned places
179    XV,     51|          tutelary deities of the Roman people, were burnt. So too
180    XV,     56|          a triumph or a vow, the Roman people in every age had
181    XV,     61|          and Marcius Festus, all Roman knights. Of these Senecio,
182    XV,     72|         knew, when freeborn men, Roman knights, and senators, yet
183    XV,     85| especially Cervarius Proculus, a Roman knight, did their utmost
184   XVI,      6|    consumed by fire according to Roman usage, but after the custom
185   XVI,      8|         senators, and Fabatus, a Roman knight, were drawn in as
186   XVI,     13|                Publius Gallus, a Roman knight, was outlawed for
187   XVI,     17|      wrath of heaven against the Roman State that one may not pass
188   XVI,     18|         Mela and Crispinus being Roman knights with senatorian
189   XVI,     18|          which wished to raise a Roman knight to an equality with
190   XVI,     24|         The daily records of the Roman people are read attentively
191   XVI,     26|     Soranus, Ostorius Sabinus, a Roman knight, had already claimed
192   XVI,     31|     drawing by their example the Roman knights into idleness. "
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