Book,  Par.

 1     I,     29|            he would call in a loud voice for another and another.
 2     I,     31|      Senate, which ought to have a voice in showing either favour
 3     I,     41|        sedition in many a face and voice. "The Roman world," they
 4     I,     68|    twentieth legion, and in a loud voice exclaimed that this was
 5     I,     72|          into war by the unanimous voice of the nation, continued
 6     I,     93|           comrades or drowned. The voice of mutual encouragement
 7    II,     16|       entrenchments, and in a loud voice promised in the name of
 8    II,     21| conspicuous among them by gesture, voice, and a wound he had received,
 9    II,     36|            imploring some eloquent voice to ward off his perils;
10    II,     36|            he raised his hands and voice in supplication to Tiberius,
11    II,     79|           out the sound of a human voice; the pyramids, rising up
12    II,     95|        reverence alike by look and voice, and while he maintained
13   III,     93|            pressing him with angry voice and look, himself putting
14    IV,     20|         was his face they saw, his voice they heard. The youth too
15    IV,     38|     terror-stricken by the popular voice, which menaced him with
16    IV,     63|             he exclaimed in a loud voice, in the language of his
17    IV,     72|           her features nor tone of voice as she sat by him at dinner,
18    VI,     51|         the Sarmatae the general's voice was not alone to be heard.
19    VI,     77|        Tiberius was recovering his voice and sight, and calling for
20    XI,     25|         human stature, and heard a voice, "Thou, Rufus, art the man
21   XII,      6|         not resist their unanimous voice, Vitellius requested him
22   XII,     80|            the Senate followed the voice of the soldiers, and there
23  XIII,     18|           frame that he lost alike voice and breath. There was a
24  XIII,     27|           so as not to degrade his voice in such company. Burrus,
25   XIV,     21|      elaborate care and trying his voice with his attendants. There
26   XIV,     21|           the emperor's person and voice the epithets of deities.
27   XIV,     65|          horses, and ridiculed his voice whenever he sang. When was
28    XV,     42|        small a scale for so fine a voice. As, however, he did not
29    XV,     70|         wretch, with so fearless a voice and look that the information
30    XV,     96|          State, till the unanimous voice of the senators deterred
31   XVI,     11|         her sex and lifting up her voice in a tone of menace, till
32   XVI,     23|         prince or for his heavenly voice. Though formerly he had
33   XVI,     33|            with rising fury in his voice, countenance, and eye, that
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