Book,  Par.

 1     I,     21|          be the terms of military service after Augustus, this man
 2     I,     22|   dismissal is not the end of our service, but, quartered under a
 3     I,     22|       wastes. Assuredly, military service itself is burdensome and
 4     I,     22|    sixteenth year terminating our service. We must be retained no
 5     I,     25|         the soldiers release from service after sixteen years. He
 6     I,     32|          the rewards of completed service, of the daily pay being
 7     I,     45|          an end of such harassing service, and repose without beggary.
 8     I,     48|       demands. The discharge from service was quickly arranged by
 9     I,     58|     cruelty, he was dismissed the service.~ ~
10     I,    103|      unless the twentieth year of service were to be that of the veteran'
11    II,     17|          sea you desire an end of service, this battle prepares the
12    II,     45|          discharged this military service should at once become praetorselect,
13    II,     58|        familiarised with military service, and to win the goodwill
14    II,    111|         he had died in the public service. A cenotaph was raised at
15   III,     59|           Treveri, trained in our service and discipline, to begin
16   III,     59| particularly eager to render us a service, was sent on in advance
17   III,    106|          on generals who for good service to the State were saluted
18    IV,     43|         Tiberius remembering this service, while he alleged other
19    VI,     38|       command armies declined the service, and that he was thus necessarily
20    XI,     12|          rebelled against distant service. So after erecting monuments
21   XII,     71|         place devoted to the sole service of their god. It was also
22  XIII,     43|         of the climate and of the service, and deserted, he sought
23  XIII,     53|        obtain a reward for honest service with the litigant's consent,
24  XIII,     55|          to put his tongue at the service of that savage harlot? We
25   XIV,     37|          completed their military service. Not being accustomed to
26   XIV,     53|     whoever bought or sold such a service was to be just as liable
27   XIV,     67|           an ample reward for the service.~ ~
28   XIV,     82|        reminded him of his former service. "He alone," he said, "had
29    XV,     23|          department of the public service, or even hold good for acquiring
30    XV,     34|           frequent and successful service. And he added to his army
31    XV,     88|        not have rendered a better service to his infamous career.
32   XVI,      9|   cutthroat have the glory of the service. The centurion seeing that,
33   XVI,     13|        given, as a reward for his service, a seat in the theatre among
34   XVI,     17|         deaths encountered in the service of the State with such a
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