Book,  Par.

 1     I,     12|          soldiers that his burial may be undisturbed." ~ ~
 2     I,     28|           good of the legions, we may be buried by these men around
 3     I,     35|     slowly; a separate favour you may deserve and receive at the
 4     I,     55| wickedness is thereby threatened, may be expiated by my blood
 5     I,     55|          blood only, and that you may not be made more guilty
 6     I,     56|       three legions. Never indeed may heaven suffer the Belgae,
 7     I,     77|           my last. What followed, may be deplored rather than
 8     I,     77|          get a reward, but that I may clear myself from treachery
 9     I,     98|            if last, I fear that I may differ from you unwillingly."
10    II,     52|        Caesar, on the 26th day of May, celebrated his triumph
11    II,    101|          leave time in which they may die away. Often the innocent
12    II,    101|       unheard and undefended, you may be hurried to ruin by the
13   III,      4|        are mentioned by name. She may either have been hindered
14   III,      4|          overpowered by grief she may not have had the heart to
15   III,     14|          whoever the murdered man may be, it is for you to give
16   III,     22|         in my career, whatever it may have been, seeing that all
17   III,     22|       earnestly that the innocent may not pay the penalty of my
18   III,     69|    sentence by which this offence may not go unpunished, while
19   III,     74|           there is a fear that it may be forbidden; but when people
20   III,     78|          kind of cycle, and there may be moral revolutions just
21   III,     78|         for posterity to imitate. May we still keep up with our
22   III,     83|         counsels. An aged emperor may indeed shrink from the citizen'
23    IV,     15|           for by any good writer, may be instantly refuted. For
24    IV,     44|         and shall have to relate, may perhaps, I am aware, seem
25    IV,     45|           the families themselves may be now extinct, you will
26    IV,     52|         the Senate. But though it may be pardonable to have allowed
27    IV,     54|         pursue, that their memory may be glorious. For to despise
28    IV,     85|         their private life were I may say regularly chronicled.
29    VI,      7|        striking. It opened thus: "May all the gods and goddesses
30    VI,     11|         to criticise one whom you may raise above all others,
31    XI,      5|           that of his counsels. I may add that when Scipio was
32    XI,      9|    neglected, in order that a man may devote himself to the business
33    XI,     17|       subsequently disused. These may still be seen on the tablets
34    XI,     18|    observed during times of peril may not be forgotten in prosperity."
35    XI,     21|       general's real severity. We may be sure that he was strict
36   XII,     28|  boundaries now fixed by Claudius may be easily recognized, as
37  XIII,     37|          city's daily register. I may mention that the colonies
38  XIII,     71|       herds of the Roman soldiers may some day be sent! Let them
39  XIII,     72|           of treason, adding, "We may lack a land to live in;
40   XIV,     46|         resolve; as for men, they may live and be slaves." ~ ~
41   XIV,     56|        are divulged by slaves, we may live singly amid numbers,
42    XV,     19|         to the peace. Though this may have been invented to enhance
43    XV,     25|    resolution, whereby our allies may lose nothing of our protection,
44    XV,     25|  protection, while public opinion may cease to say of us, that
45    XV,     47|           an illustration, that I may not have again and again
46    XV,     66| suppressing it, however absurd it may seem, either that Antonia
47    XV,     87|        said he, "that your stroke may be as resolute." The tribune
48   XVI,     17|          the Roman State that one may not pass over it with a
49   XVI,     17|          record of their end they may receive and retain a special
50   XVI,     24|          and the armies that they may know what Thrasea has not
51   XVI,     32|           any reform or change he may desire. We shall more readily
52   XVI,     41|            Behold, young man, and may the gods avert the omen,
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