Book,  Par.

 1     I,      1|      beginning was ruled by kings. Freedom and the consulship were
 2     I,      4|           vain of the blessings of freedom, but most people dreaded
 3     I,     12|         still something fresh, and freedom had been resought in vain,
 4     I,     43|             he would have restored freedom. Hence they regarded Germanicus
 5     I,     79|           Arminius to glory and to freedom rather than Segestes to
 6     I,     95|            been, by the licentious freedom with which Cassius Severus
 7     I,     98|            a few signs of expiring freedom. And so Cneius Piso asked, "
 8     I,     99|           promoted justice, ruined freedom. Pius Aurelius, for example,
 9     I,    102|           the Senate such shows of freedom. Still the interposition
10     I,    106|            greater the disguise of freedom which marked it, the more
11    II,      5|      without a ruler than enjoying freedom, they received for their
12    II,     12|           fatherland, of ancestral freedom, of the gods of the homes
13    II,     18|           for us but to retain our freedom or to die before we are
14    II,     44|  forestalled him in the display of freedom, maintained that nothing
15    II,     58|          favour as the champion of freedom. ~ ~
16    II,     59|          band, boasted of regained freedom, of slaughtered legions,
17    II,     61|        ancient renown or newly-won freedom; the other side for the
18    II,     80|        various homes, first by the freedom of commerce, next by the
19    II,    108| comprehending in a restored era of freedom the Roman people under equal
20    II,    116|        under an emperor who feared freedom while he hated sycophancy.~ ~
21   III,     39|        devised many safeguards for freedom and for the establishment
22   III,     52|            wretches used a growing freedom in exciting insult and obloquy
23   III,     57|    opportunity for the recovery of freedom, if only they would contrast
24   III,     62|             how grand would be the freedom of the victorious, how more
25   III,     91|         with his dislike of public freedom, was disgusted at the abject
26    IV,      7|           leading men were allowed freedom of discussion, and when
27    IV,     33|          the part of all who loved freedom more than slavery. He thus
28    IV,     36|            forests to assert their freedom. By divine providence, three
29    IV,     57|           and solitude, with their freedom from vexations and misunderstandings,
30    IV,     64|      warriors and a spirit bent on freedom or resigned to death. As
31    IV,     68|           fall together with their freedom. Tarsa however kept urging
32    VI,      6|  perversely misrepresented and the freedom of table talk might not
33    VI,     18|            theatre with an unusual freedom of language towards the
34    VI,     22|            sesterces, and allowing freedom to borrow without interest
35    VI,     64|       government almost amounts to freedom, while the rule of the few
36    XI,     19|        being robbed of her ancient freedom, and that the might of Rome
37    XI,     36|            passed the night in the freedom which marriage permits.
38   XII,     40|           of the recovery of their freedom, or of everlasting bondage.
39   XII,     68|            Rhodians also had their freedom restored to them, which
40  XIII,     28|         might be a greater show of freedom, that the soldiery too might
41  XIII,     30|         have the right of revoking freedom. There were several who
42  XIII,     30|            irreverent spirit which freedom had fostered, had broken
43  XIII,     30| enfranchised to have to keep their freedom by the same respectful behaviour
44  XIII,     31|           different orders, thrown freedom open to all. Again, two
45  XIII,     42|  subjection, in their ignorance of freedom, they rather inclined.~ ~
46  XIII,     63|            public welfare required freedom of speech in the Senate,
47  XIII,     65|     consuls and tribunes, when the freedom of the Roman people was
48   XIV,     17|       senators any impulse towards freedom. ~ ~
49   XIV,     42|        conspiracy to reclaim their freedom. It was against the veterans
50   XIV,     46|            that I am avenging lost freedom, my scourged body, the outraged
51   XIV,     54|            he had been refused his freedom, for which he had made a
52   XIV,     63|           and much read. Soon full freedom for their possession caused
53    XV,     65|            rise up in the cause of freedom, or, by choosing another
54    XV,     67|         his favourite slaves their freedom, and money to others. He
55    XV,     67|        with the remembrance of the freedom he had received, fled from
56    XV,     69|       presents of money as well as freedom to some of his slaves, only
57   XVI,     12|            life which had clung to freedom by a final act of servility,
58   XVI,     25|      republic. They make a show of freedom, to overturn the empire;
59   XVI,     25|       destroy it, they will attack freedom itself. In vain have you
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