Book,  Par.

 1     I,     22|      arms, tents, as well as the mercy of centurions and exemptions
 2     I,     75|    Induced, however, to hope for mercy from Rome, he brought his
 3    II,     12|        the vanquished, the ready mercy for him who surrenders,
 4    II,     54|       son's displeasure promised mercy if he would come to beg
 5    II,     81|       had no resource but in the mercy of Caesar. Having crossed
 6    II,     99|          repeatedly at fortune's mercy by reason of the ill-starred
 7   III,     17|         province had been at the mercy of the vilest of them, that
 8   III,     49|          to itself and be at the mercy of its own voluptuousness
 9   III,     69|          one has anticipated his mercy by a self-inflicted death.
10   III,     75|          of Rome is daily at the mercy of uncertain waves and storms.
11    IV,     41|         the glory which waits on mercy, should prefer harsher courses.
12    VI,     19|          to throw himself on the mercy of the Parthians. He was,
13    VI,     19|     forgetfulness rather than to mercy. ~ ~
14    VI,     64|  interest, put the people at the mercy of the nobles. As a fact,
15    XI,      3|          was in the same tone of mercy. Some friends urged on Asiaticus
16    XI,      9|         of an advocate is at the mercy of the powerful. But eloquence
17    XI,     42|   supreme pontiff and to beg for mercy. Meanwhile, with only three
18    XI,     47|       his appeal and inclined to mercy, but his freedmen prevailed
19   XII,     19|      they sent an embassy asking mercy for the freeborn, and offering
20   XII,     20|    resource, considered on whose mercy he was to throw himself.
21   XII,     21|          good faith in suing for mercy. He sent at the same time
22   XII,     38|       Silures neither terror nor mercy had the least effect; they
23   XII,     60|          being left to any man's mercy. Finally, urged by the intensity
24  XIII,     12| aspirations. Then came an act of mercy to Plautius Lateranus, who
25  XIII,     29|       recognizing him begged for mercy, as though this was a reproach,
26  XIII,     43|   wholesome measure, better than mercy; for there were fewer desertions
27  XIII,     57|         he surrendered it to her mercy. When she spurned him, he
28   XIV,     32|       sparing it, win a name for mercy. Thither he marched his
29   XIV,     57|         an ancient custom, which mercy had not relaxed, to be strained
30    XV,     13|          throw themselves on the mercy of Paetus. "For himself,"
31    XV,     48|         and so completely at its mercy the city, with those narrow
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