Book,  Par.

 1     I,     18|  unworthy of it, and, should the chance be given him, sure to make
 2     I,     35|       their temper and turn what chance had offered to a wise account,
 3     I,     64|      else was at the disposal of chance. Even some loyal men were
 4     I,     93|       careless, forethought from chance; the same strong power swept
 5    II,     53|      eagerly fastened on such as chance presented. ~ ~
 6    II,     70|      could have been referred to chance, he sent some triremes,
 7   III,      6|       paid him, because at first chance had denied them. His brother
 8   III,     47|        deserved to lose even his chance of the province of Asia.
 9    IV,     67|      forces in the plain, on the chance of the barbarians being
10    IV,     68| entreating the men not to give a chance to their stealthy assailants
11    IV,     69|          heightened by this last chance of deliverance and the presence
12    VI,     29|        unchangeable necessity or chance which governs the revolutions
13    XI,     41|       perhaps, a word dropped by chance became a prophecy. ~ ~
14   XII,     34|      vengeance, would give him a chance of fighting. They however
15   XII,     46|           with encounters due to chance or to courage, to mere heedlessness
16   XIV,      4|         could not be referred to chance after the recent circumstances
17   XIV,      7|         such naval implements as chance offered. Agrippina was silent
18   XIV,     27|         might not, by having the chance of sitting down, spend a
19   XIV,     82|      mother. Close at hand was a chance of winning no less gratitude
20    XV,     62|       have vengeance, should the chance arise. He thus inspired
21    XV,     77|        his own answer. Either by chance or purposely Seneca had
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