Book,  Par.

 1     I,      4|         experience in affairs was equal to so great a burden. Tiberius
 2     I,     16|           the Divine Augustus was equal to such a burden. Called
 3     I,     17|          that although he was not equal to the whole burden of the
 4     I,     18|        aspire to it without being equal to it, and who would unite
 5     I,     73|         himself at the head of an equal number of legions and twice
 6     I,     91|     swamps, but that they were on equal ground, with equal chances.
 7     I,     91|        were on equal ground, with equal chances. The sound of trumpets,
 8    II,     31|       with the same courage, with equal spirit, and, seemingly,
 9    II,     43| afterwards this same Piso gave an equal proof of a fearless sense
10    II,     58|       valour of their chiefs were equal. But the title of king rendered
11    II,     59|        armies were drawn up, with equal confidence on both sides,
12    II,     60|          the Germans, and then on equal terms the armies had parted.
13    II,     62|         be rivalry between men of equal rank, and consequent embarrassment.~ ~
14    II,    108|    freedom the Roman people under equal laws."~ ~
15   III,      4|           their sorrow might seem equal to hers, and that the grandmother
16   III,     16|           and Vitellius, all with equal earnestness, Vitellius with
17   III,     43|         this was a vigorous mind, equal to the greatest labours,
18   III,     47|        constitution, who would be equal to the war. Sextus Pompeius
19   III,    102|          member of the family was equal to restoring it, but Pompeius'
20   III,    108|          Quinctius, and others of equal rank. But Cassius and Brutus
21    IV,     18|        sea-coast. Cos could boast equal antiquity, and it had an
22    VI,     41|          flight, as soon as it is equal to the burden and to the
23    VI,     51|  accustomed to pursue or fly with equal science, deployed their
24    VI,     58|       ability, but because he was equal to business and was not
25    XI,     43|                         There was equal alarm on the emperor's side.
26   XII,     10|      affianced son-in-law, and an equal of Britannicus, through
27   XII,     41|          torn down, and it was an equal hand-to-hand engagement,
28   XII,     43|     moderation in prosperity been equal to my noble birth and fortune,
29  XIII,      3|        wholly different, they had equal influence. Burrus, with
30  XIII,      9|      while Corbulo was to have an equal number of citizen and allied
31  XIII,     30|            legal proceedings were equal and the same for both. Some
32  XIII,     48|           distance, so that, with equal tumult everywhere, no support
33   XIV,     40|           Corbulo, and aspired to equal the glory of the recovery
34   XIV,     49|           of bodies. Great glory, equal to that of our old victories,
35   XIV,     71|           vigorous manhood, quite equal to the labours of business
36    XV,     11|          with 800 cavalry, and an equal number of infantry to be
37    XV,     14|         when the numbers would be equal of those who had brought
38    XV,     36|      their fortresses, and spread equal panic throughout the plain
39    XV,     51|           two conflagrations into equal numbers of years, months,
40    XV,     88|         But Faenius Rufus had not equal spirit; he even put his
41   XVI,      2|          consummate eloquence and equal sycophancy, confidently
42   XVI,     10|                              With equal courage Lucius Vetus, his
43   XVI,     11|          against each other on an equal footing, he retired to his
44   XVI,     19|       himself a man of vigour and equal to business. Then falling
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