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Alphabetical [« »] honoured 13 honouring 1 honours 49 hope 58 hoped 11 hopeful 1 hopeless 2 | Frequency [« »] 59 military 59 sought 58 ancient 58 hope 58 present 58 seneca 58 youth | Publius (Gaius) Cornelius Tacitus Annals Concordances hope |
Book, Par.
1 I, 5| and that thus there was a hope of the young man being restored 2 I, 18| remark that there was a hope that the Senate's prayers 3 I, 35| the camp-gates, suggesting hope or holding out threats. " 4 I, 40| numbers, in the confident hope that Germanicus Caesar would 5 I, 43| favour and with the same hope. He was indeed a young man 6 I, 44| Germanicus was to the highest hope, the more laboriously did 7 I, 70| disgrace, deprived of all hope after the murder of Postumus 8 I, 72| had, in fact, sprung up a hope of the enemy being divided 9 I, 75| rebels. Induced, however, to hope for mercy from Rome, he 10 I, 76| eyes which dwelt on her hope of offspring. The spoils 11 I, 79| generally known, was heard with hope or grief according as men 12 I, 90| approached closer, in the hope of storming them; then, 13 II, 18| hostile deities, with no hope of advantage. They have, 14 II, 25| position; valour was their only hope, victory their only safety.~ ~ 15 II, 31| fleet stirred the Germans to hope for war, as it did Caesar 16 II, 47| nothing to fear, nothing to hope from himself, and every 17 II, 64| Carthaginians. A temple to Hope was consecrated by Germanicus; 18 II, 67| out of fear. It was by the hope of victory that they were 19 II, 73| were diminished, to inspire hope of a gentler rule under 20 II, 99| death, with an uncertain hope of revenge, with apprehensions 21 II, 106| men had neither heart nor hope, and only rustic weapons, 22 III, 5| commonwealth was ruined, that not a hope remained, too boldly and 23 III, 63| one hand, though confident hope took away any need for encouragement, 24 IV, 66| Roman camp, not with the hope of taking it, but to hinder 25 IV, 68| instant breaking off of all hope and fear, and, by way of 26 V, 3| Senate, till a few who had no hope from merit (and public calamities 27 V, 11| Vitellius, weary alike of hope and fear, asked for a penknife, 28 VI, 33| Tiberius, and then, when hope of life was gone, denounced 29 VI, 35| had lived on, sustained by hope, I suppose, after the destruction 30 VI, 53| borders of Scythia, in the hope of aid, as he was connected 31 XI, 9| arrogant as to anticipate in hope an eternity of renown? It 32 XI, 15| destruction, and he had some hope of escaping exposure; the 33 XI, 19| public life, had nothing to hope except from civil discord."~ ~ 34 XI, 25| proconsul." Raised high in hope by such a presage, he returned 35 XI, 37| emperor inspired confident hope that if they could overpower 36 XI, 43| declared that the only hope of safety for the emperor 37 XI, 48| as she alternated between hope arid fury. In her extremity, 38 XII, 9| that time prolonged his hope of life, or else choosing 39 XII, 79| soldiers might be encouraged to hope, and that the fortunate 40 XIII, 12| by the senators, in the hope that his youthful spirit, 41 XIII, 59| inflame Nero's passion, in the hope of adding to his own influence 42 XIV, 1| ardent. As the woman had no hope of marriage for herself 43 XIV, 3| seduced by Lepidus in the hope of winning power, had stooped 44 XIV, 15| was first encouraged to hope by the flattery addressed 45 XIV, 21| frivolity, others from the hope of promotion. Day and night 46 XIV, 32| lest might cut off all hope of quarter, but still without 47 XIV, 77| was weary of an uncertain hope, or was swayed by his love 48 XV, 33| presents, in order to inspire a hope that Tiridates would not 49 XV, 44| gifts, and with having no hope but in revolution. They 50 XV, 52| traces of his disappointed hope. ~ ~ 51 XV, 62| prolonged suspense between hope and fear, a certain Epicharis ( 52 XV, 62| arise. He thus inspired the hope that he could be persuaded, 53 XV, 89| Nero waited in the hope that Vestinus also, the 54 XVI, 3| strength of a chimerical hope, and ancient wealth was 55 XVI, 12| by message that she cast hope aside and yielded to necessity. 56 XVI, 20| the suspense of fear or of hope. Yet he did not fling away 57 XVI, 27| received with eagerness, in the hope that Thrasea in dismay had 58 XVI, 29| trial. It is with a vain hope we are aiming to touch Nero