Book, Chapter
1 1, XI | themselves to Sicily: when Scipio heard of this, he went to meet
2 1, XV | reveal the things they saw or heard, then with execrable phrases
3 1, XLVII | he was a private citizen) heard him speak, and afterwards
4 1, LIV | house; who, as soon as he heard the noise and saw the disturbance,
5 1, LVI | Nova [New Road], he had heard a voice louder than human
6 2, II | his killers; but when they heard that there was shouting
7 2, VIII | Gauls coming into Italy were heard: where he [also] says that
8 2, XII | OUT OR AWAIT WAR~I have heard from men much practiced
9 2, XII | assault him. And I have heard reasons cited on every side.
10 2, XIII | the distant Princes, who heard the Roman name and not their
11 2, XIV | borne this pain. They have heard we are preparing an army
12 2, XVII | City, nor from what was heard had he received any recordable
13 2, XXXIII| this, who, when they had heard of the victory Fabius had
14 3, II | trouble, for these excuses are heard and not accepted: nor can
15 3, VI | conspirators: for I have heard many prudent men say that
16 3, XII | in a way that the Veienti heard, that no one was to be harmed
17 3, XIV | something new that is seen or heard in conflicts and battles,
18 3, XLIII | events. Everyone may have heard of what ensued in the war
19 3, XLV | Roman legions. When this was heard by Fabius, so as not to
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