Book,  Par.

  1     I,      3|   Tiberius had a son, now a young man, in his house; but he did
  2     I,      5|           was a hope of the young man being restored to the home
  3     I,      6|           complained of the young man's character, and had thus
  4     I,      8|   senators, knights. The higher a man's rank, the more eager his
  5     I,     10|         of three hundred to every man in the legionary cohorts
  6     I,     13|          was the rule of a single man. Yet the State had been
  7     I,     14|        bribery, had, when a young man and a subject, raised an
  8     I,     16|         not put everything on one man, as many, by uniting their
  9     I,     18|           the peril of so great a man did not make him relent,
 10     I,     21|      service after Augustus, this man gradually influenced them
 11     I,     22|         got their two denarii per man, and which after sixteen
 12     I,     23|      upbraided them and held back man after man with the exclamation, "
 13     I,     23|           and held back man after man with the exclamation, "Better
 14     I,     25|       successful. After the young man departure there was comparative
 15     I,     29|        himself at the feet of one man after another, he roused
 16     I,     29|          the murder, and that the man never had a brother, they
 17     I,     29|        broken one vine-stick on a man's back, he would call in
 18     I,     43|       hope. He was indeed a young man of unaspiring temper, and
 19     I,     56|         loving was the act of the man who offered me the sword.
 20     I,     57|        drawn swords. Each accused man was on a raised platform
 21     I,     62|         he said, "the merits of a man's case are carefully weighed;
 22     I,     70|         on Sempronius Gracchus, a man of noble family, of shrewd
 23     I,     75|      barbarians, the more eager a man's daring, the more does
 24     I,     95|        any corrupt act by which a man had impaired "the majesty
 25     I,     96|           be considered as if the man had deceived Jupiter. Wrongs
 26    II,     11|      Flavus, was with our army, a man famous for his loyalty,
 27    II,     34|        Libo's, prompted the young man, who was thoughtless and
 28    II,     38|         the groans of the falling man his freedmen hurried up,
 29    II,     45|          interval what would be a man's temper, or domestic relations,
 30    II,     47|      idleness be encouraged, if a man has nothing to fear, nothing
 31    II,     57|    appointed to it Cneius Piso, a man of violent temper, without
 32    II,     67|   branches of the family, and the man of whom I am now speaking
 33    II,     69|         from a secret spring, the man, who is commonly ignorant
 34    II,     74|         have said, a kind-hearted man. But friends who knew well
 35    II,     81|        and in it he magnifies the man's power, the ferocity of
 36    II,     88|     ground for believing that the man, conscious of guilty complicity
 37    II,     93|        from you, if you loved the man more than his fortune. Show
 38    II,     94|         friends clasped the dying man's right hand, and swore
 39    II,    101|      confront it by arms than the man who had received the authority
 40   III,     14|    punished, whoever the murdered man may be, it is for you to
 41   III,     15|        one of you, as far as each man's eloquence and diligence
 42   III,     26|            Clearly, the very last man marked out for empire by
 43   III,     30|      flogged to death every tenth man drawn by lot from the disgraced
 44   III,     32|    Quirinus, a rich and childless man. Then, too, there were charges
 45   III,     47|           poor-spirited and needy man, who was a disgrace to his
 46   III,     49|     allies. In all other respects man and wife share alike, and
 47   III,     54|           treason, as a seditious man who had been implicated
 48   III,     69|           be apprehended from the man who is the betrayer of his
 49   III,     76|          corruption, I praise the man, and I confess that I am
 50   III,     82|      pontiff was also the supreme man, and was influenced by no
 51   III,     93|      perilous even to an innocent man. Besides a host of adverse
 52   III,     96|        nothing by hearsay. Many a man has behaved in a province
 53   III,     97|        the Junian family and to a man of the same order as themselves,
 54   III,    107|      peace. But while Labeo was a man of sturdy independence and
 55    IV,     16|       selected Julius Postumus, a man well suited to her purpose,
 56    IV,     20|           And so, though he was a man of humble origin, the Senate
 57    IV,     20|           he had merely given the man authority over the slaves
 58    IV,     21|        was the objection that the man who obtained this priesthood
 59    IV,     27|          wise and high-principled man. Many a cruel suggestion
 60    IV,     30|      Cassius Severus' an exile. A man of mean origin and a life
 61    IV,     34|     eluded, sated themselves to a man with vengeance and bloodshed.
 62    IV,     38|  unfavourable to the accuser. The man, maddened by remorse, and
 63    IV,     41|    fluently whenever he came to a man's rescue. ~ ~
 64    IV,     42|        decision, he held that the man ought to be banished to
 65    IV,     45|           the nobility, or by one man. A constitution, formed
 66    IV,     48|           by historians? To every man posterity gives his due
 67    IV,     56|      immense elevation to which a man would be raised above others
 68    IV,     58|     witness, Aemilius, a military man, in his eagerness to prove
 69    IV,     68|       their chiefs, Dinis, an old man who well knew by long experience
 70    IV,     70|         Afer. Lately a praetor, a man of but moderate position
 71    IV,     70|          exclaimed, "for the same man to slay victims to the Divine
 72    IV,     77|          to with confidence, as a man who had no care for himself.
 73    IV,     78|          continually arising. One man would avoid meeting him;
 74    IV,     84|          Quintilius Varus, a rich man and related to the emperor,
 75    IV,     88|     hesitation, and the condemned man was dragged off, exclaiming
 76     V,      2|   partiality. Fufius was indeed a man well fitted to win the affection
 77     V,      4|         his secret purposes. This man, whether through some fatal
 78     V,      4|        might one day move the old man's remorse. At the same moment
 79     V,      9|       error. As for the rest, the man whom they encouraged by
 80     V,      9|        decide. I will not put any man's cruelty or compassion
 81     V,     11|        broken heart. Pomponius, a man of refined manners and brilliant
 82     V,     13|          There was indeed a young man of much the same age, whom
 83     V,     13|         last ascertained that the man, when skilfully questioned,
 84     V,     14|       broke out. Trio, a reckless man in incurring enmities and
 85    VI,      2|     entered the Senate House. The man had actually believed a
 86    VI,      4|         was a daring, mischievous man, who pryed into every person'
 87    VI,      6|         question whether he was a man, and of an entertainment
 88    VI,     11|    partner in the consulship, the man who administered your political
 89    VI,     13|       that there had been found a man to speak out what was in
 90    VI,     20|         rank of knights. He was a man of amiable temper and of
 91    VI,     22|          prices, and the deeper a man was in debt, the more reluctantly
 92    VI,     25|        Sextus Marius, the richest man in Spain, was next accused
 93    VI,     25|         his wealth had proved the man's ruin, Tiberius kept his
 94    VI,     26|          Marcus Silanus. He was a man who masked a savage temper
 95    VI,     27|   Thrasyllus for instructor. This man's skill he tested in the
 96    VI,     28|      great physical strength. The man always walked in front of
 97    VI,     33|           utterances of the dying man in which, at first feigning
 98    VI,     36|      afterwards Cocceius Nerva, a man always at the emperor's
 99    VI,     38|        censor's funeral. He was a man of illustrious descent,
100    VI,     43|          second time impeached, a man of distinguished rank and
101    VI,     44|          singular affection, as a man of unbounded kindliness,
102    VI,     46|           embassy was Sinnaces, a man of distinguished family
103    VI,     47|          to Lucius Vitellius. The man, I am aware, had a bad name
104    VI,     51|        his horse, and the wounded man was protected by the bravest
105    VI,     58|          Poppaeus Sabinus died, a man of somewhat humble extraction,
106    VI,     59|          neck of the now lifeless man was crushed with the halter.
107    VI,     66|         overpowered, and all to a man would have yielded. By besieging
108    VI,     69|          the emperor such as each man's ingenuity suggested. It
109    VI,     70|          excessive. Every day the man cultivated more assiduously
110    VI,     72|           thirty, require another man's advice to distinguish
111    VI,     74|           for any fault, but as a man who could not tolerate gross
112    VI,     77|          immediate disposal. This man, as if he were leaving on
113    XI,      2|          Vitellius not to let the man escape. She hastened herself
114    XI,      4|         whatever it was, both the man and his brother perished. ~ ~
115    XI,      9|        neglected, in order that a man may devote himself to the
116    XI,     19|           his father's spirit, no man, be it remembered, had ever
117    XI,     21|     leadership of Gannascus. This man was of the tribe of the
118    XI,     22|           violently roused by the man's death, and Corbulo was
119    XI,     25|      voice, "Thou, Rufus, art the man who will one day come into
120    XI,     26|      respects to the emperor. The man confessed his own guilt
121    XI,     27|         of age, which prevented a man in his early youth from
122    XI,     43|      commanded the praetorians, a man swayed with good case to
123    XI,     47|         was not admitted. A young man of pure life, yet of singular
124   XII,      4|           Lucius Silanus, a young man otherwise famous, whom he
125   XII,     42|       were eager to see the great man, who for so many years had
126   XII,     55|      concubines and was reputed a man who could be bribed into
127   XII,     58|       procurator of Cappadocia, a man despised alike for his feebleness
128   XII,     60|          of her being left to any man's mercy. Finally, urged
129   XII,     74|          births of monsters, half man, half beast, and of a pig
130   XII,     78|          s efforts to vomit, this man, it is supposed, introduced
131  XIII,      1|         the empire by crime, to a man of mature age, of blameless
132  XIII,      4|   elegance, as indeed that famous man had an attractive genius
133  XIII,      4|        emperor who needed another man's eloquence. The dictator
134  XIII,      7|        out of favouritism, a rich man backed up by interest." ~ ~
135  XIII,     22|       command of the guards, as a man who had been promoted by
136  XIII,     24|           to empire. Only let the man come forward who can charge
137  XIII,     40|         put off the case till the man died of old age. Celer,
138  XIII,     40|       people of Cilicia; he was a man stained with the foulest
139  XIII,     40|        had imperilled an innocent man.~ ~
140  XIII,     53|                                 A man who had struggled with various
141  XIII,     53|  righteously deserved exile. "The man," he said, "familiar as
142  XIII,     58|   grandfather Poppaeus Sabinus, a man of illustrious memory and
143  XIII,     60|     virtuously, a pleasure-loving man when idle, and self-restrained
144  XIII,     69|          his legions into another man's province, and so drawing
145  XIII,     71|      Their cause was pleaded by a man, famous among those nations
146   XIV,     10|        accusation, and, while the man was repeating his message,
147   XIV,     16|    shipwrecked woman had sent one man with a weapon to break through
148   XIV,     21|    gestures and songs unfit for a man. Noble ladies too actually
149   XIV,     30|     people believed him to be the man marked out by divine providence;
150   XIV,     52|         Marcellus. Antonius was a man of ready audacity; Marcellus
151   XIV,     56|      beaten army when every tenth man is felled by the club, the
152   XIV,     59|         by the fact that he was a man of newly-risen family and
153   XIV,     68|           humble lot? Is this the man who is building up his garden
154   XIV,     71|           not be seemly in a wise man to get glory for himself
155   XIV,     75|          partiality for the young man, had taken up arms, and
156   XIV,     78|          The head of the murdered man was brought to Rome. At
157   XIV,     79|        intrigue with a slave. The man fixed on as the guilty lover
158    XV,      2|           speak as follows: "This man before you, born from the
159    XV,     25|            that the estimate of a man's character is to found
160    XV,     26|           they thought about each man's loyalty. And nations were
161    XV,     34|       which in him, as a military man, was as good as eloquence. ~ ~
162    XV,     43|        exhibited by Vatinius. The man was one of the most conspicuously
163    XV,     55|      public good, but to glut one man's cruelty, that they were
164    XV,     61|         commander of the guard, a man of esteemed life and character,
165    XV,     65|    resentment against an innocent man.~ ~
166    XV,     66|         necessities, and, being a man of strong nerve and huge
167    XV,     67|        seen what he had; that one man's silence would be useless,
168    XV,     69|         his order, but as all the man's other charges were absurd,
169    XV,     73|          refused, and checked the man's impulse as he was putting
170    XV,     75|            The tame spirit of the man, the profligacy of the woman,
171    XV,     84|       handed over to Seneca, as a man singled out for his splendid
172    XV,     86|     incendiary." I have given the man's very words, because they
173    XV,     89|  impetuous and deeply disaffected man, would be involved in the
174    XV,     95|           amused himself with the man's mother. ~ ~
175   XVI,      1|       Carthaginian by birth and a man of a crazed imagination,
176   XVI,      9|        sent to slay him. When the man advised him to sever his
177   XVI,      9|         enraged than a frightened man, ordered his soldiers to
178   XVI,     11|           him to hear an innocent man, and not surrender to a
179   XVI,     15| opportunities, made a friend of a man in like condition with himself,
180   XVI,     16|     firmly, and then pressing the man's hand towards him, he met
181   XVI,     18|      about Crispinus, because the man had been already murdered;
182   XVI,     19|   squander their substance, but a man of refined luxury. And indeed
183   XVI,     19|       consul, he showed himself a man of vigour and equal to business.
184   XVI,     21|         Tigellinus, such that the man had to atone for them himself
185   XVI,     24|   reproach to you. He is the only man who cares not for your safety,
186   XVI,     27|     independence of the guiltless man, he ordered the Senate to
187   XVI,     28|           Let the people behold a man who could meet death. Let
188   XVI,     32|         enemy. In a word, let the man, wont to act the senator
189   XVI,     32|           armies which vex him? A man who grieves at the country'
190   XVI,     38|        wealth made him a foremost man in Bithynia. He had honoured
191   XVI,     39|         with the fate of a doomed man. Arria, too, who aspired
192   XVI,     41|          Deliverer. Behold, young man, and may the gods avert
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