Book,  Par.

 1     I,      6|            and Livia, the one from fear, the other from a stepmother'
 2     I,      9|       Senate. His chief motive was fear that Germanicus, who had
 3     I,     16|      Senators, however, whose only fear was lest they might seem
 4     I,     16|        present limits, either from fear or out of jealousy. ~ ~
 5     I,     37|        knows no mean, and inspires fear, unless they are afraid,
 6     I,     61|          he to prefer, without the fear that those whom he slighted
 7     I,     66|          tables, without the least fear, or any sentries before
 8     I,     91|         and seemingly paralysed by fear. When they were fairly within
 9     I,     98|         what to follow; if last, I fear that I may differ from you
10     I,    101|           his gloomy temper, and a fear of contrast with the gracious
11    II,     36|         the Senate met, jaded with fear and mental anguish, or,
12    II,     47|            if a man has nothing to fear, nothing to hope from himself,
13    II,     54|  degradation, not, certainly, from fear of the charges fabricated
14    II,     58|            they were free from the fear of an invader, these tribes,
15    II,     62|     expraetors, was chosen, from a fear that, as an exconsul was
16    II,     67|       eluding an engagement out of fear. It was by the hope of victory
17    II,     77|       reserved the country, from a fear that any one who held a
18    II,     86|    Rhescuporis, hesitating between fear and rage, preferred to be
19    II,     90|           anger, no less than with fear. "If my doors," he said, "
20    II,    103|         battle, and then in mutual fear confined themselves to revilings,
21   III,     10|            or because the plans of fear are uncertain, he sailed
22   III,     38|           debarred from nothing by fear. When however they began
23   III,     57|         any to whom poverty or the fear of guilt was an irresistible
24   III,     64|        Augustodunum and then, from fear of being surrendered, to
25   III,     65|           he was not influenced by fear, he would go to examine
26   III,     71|          talk, and had suggested a fear that a prince who clung
27   III,     74|          yet forbidden, there is a fear that it may be forbidden;
28   III,     74|             there is no longer any fear or any shame.~ ~
29    IV,      4|      magnitude of the crime caused fear and delay, and sometimes
30    IV,     14|      eagerness, apparently, out of fear and shame, bringing on himself
31    IV,     68|       breaking off of all hope and fear, and, by way of example,
32    IV,     87|      behind the doors, there was a fear of their being seen or heard,
33    IV,     94|           frontiers of the empire. Fear at home had filled their
34     V,      8|          of which were prompted by fear, most by the habit of flattery...~ ~
35     V,     11|            weary alike of hope and fear, asked for a penknife, avowedly,
36    VI,      5|           one another. "It must be fear," he said, "and a guilty
37    VI,     23| celebrating his birthday without a fear, he was hurried before the
38    VI,     47|        returned, and then, through fear of Caius Caesar and intimacy
39    VI,     52|         been kept in subjection by fear rather than by goodwill,
40    VI,     66|          the coronation, some from fear, some out of jealousy of
41    VI,     78|      wickedness and disgrace, when fear and shame being cast off,
42    XI,     22|                                The fear thus inspired variously
43    XI,     35|            her husband, but from a fear that Silius, after attaining
44    XI,     37|            the men who had much to fear from a revolution. From
45    XI,     42|             Silius, to conceal his fear, to his business in the
46   XII,     42|          the rest stooped in their fear to abject supplication;
47   XII,     60|           somehow or other, out of fear of the enemy and love of
48   XII,     64|            hearty submission, as a fear still lingered that any
49   XII,     77|      lingering poison, there was a fear that Claudius, when near
50  XIII,     29|           people at strife and the fear of a worse commotion, the
51  XIII,     30|            back into slavery, that fear might be a restraint where
52  XIII,     35|           lax in their duties from fear of offending, he promised
53   XIV,      1|         her sincere heart? No; the fear was that as a wife at least
54   XIV,      6|         soothing words allayed her fear; she was graciously received,
55   XIV,     13|           his mistress or from the fear of destruction. ~ ~
56   XIV,     19|              He might go without a fear," they said, "and experience
57   XIV,     30|           lived in retirement from fear, the more fame did he acquire.
58   XIV,     71|       emperor, but my avarice, the fear of my cruelty, which will
59   XIV,     78|        Nero?" Then casting off all fear he prepared to hurry on
60   XIV,     80|         she was now enraged by the fear that either the violence
61    XV,      5|     comrades with rage rather than fear. But the Parthian has not
62    XV,      6|           leaf. And so, hiding his fear and presenting a more conciliatory
63    XV,     12|       those who trembled with like fear. Even the general did not
64    XV,     45|             he was never free from fear, he relinquished his purpose,
65    XV,     62|          suspense between hope and fear, a certain Epicharis (how
66    XV,     64|            however, alarmed by the fear of disclosure, resolved
67    XV,     78|            that he saw no signs of fear, and perceived no sadness
68    XV,     96|        innocent out of jealousy or fear. However, that a conspiracy
69   XVI,      1|      concealed these riches in the fear that a new people might
70   XVI,     20|          no longer the suspense of fear or of hope. Yet he did not
71   XVI,     29|   brutality. Even good men through fear do the like. Better save
72   XVI,     29|          we have far more cause to fear that he will vent his fury
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