Book, Par.
1 II, 19| amenable to command. The walls were strengthened, battlements
2 II, 21| troops came close under the walls, stupefied by excess in
3 II, 21| building, situated outside the walls, was burnt to the ground,
4 II, 21| sheds, for undermining the walls and screening the assailants;
5 II, 22| Almost before dawn of day the walls were crowded with combatants,
6 II, 22| the loftier parts of the walls, attacking them at close
7 II, 22| hurdles, undermined the walls, threw up earth-works, and
8 II, 22| and the attack from the walls became fiercer, retreated
9 II, 29| javelins and lances the walls of the general's tent and
10 III, 20| town, the enemy inside the walls, and all possible facilities
11 III, 20| what is the height of the walls, whether the city is to
12 III, 20| break through and undermine walls with swords and lances?
13 III, 21| had advanced to the very walls of Cremona, seized some
14 III, 26| formed their camp round the walls of the city, round this
15 III, 29| between the camp and the walls of Cremona was filled with
16 III, 30| themselves in the lofty walls of the town, its stone towers,
17 III, 30| allegiance. Some houses near the walls, which overtopped the fortifications,
18 III, 31| they displayed from the walls the olive branches and chaplets
19 III, 33| of Mephitis outside the walls alone remained standing,
20 III, 76| who dared not leave the walls and risk an engagement in
21 III, 80| citizens before the very walls of their Country. The envoys
22 III, 82| issue took place before the walls, but they generally ended
23 IV, 23| their entrenchments and walls. The buildings, which during
24 IV, 24| turrets and battlements of the walls, and they themselves suffered
25 IV, 24| within and undermining the walls. But the stones thrown by
26 IV, 30| up logs of wood round the walls and lighting them, they
27 IV, 30| ladders placed against the walls brought the enemy within
28 IV, 30| had struggled on to the walls, they stabbed with their
29 IV, 35| saw everything from the walls, sallied out from every
30 IV, 51| were trembling within their walls, when the Garamantes were
31 IV, 60| the Gauls lead you to the walls of the capital, will you
32 IV, 65| and encamped under the walls of the colony of the Treveri. ~ ~
33 IV, 67| to strip your city of its walls, which are the bulwarks
34 V, 10| had nothing to reveal. The walls of Jerusalem were destroyed,
35 V, 12| have related, before the walls of Jerusalem, and displayed
36 V, 13| their line close under their walls, whence, if successful,
37 V, 13| they were driven within the walls by continual defeats. The
38 V, 13| height were fenced in by walls which had been skilfully
39 V, 13| elevation. Within were other walls surrounding the palace,
40 V, 14| citadel, and had its own walls, which were more laboriously
41 V, 14| raised in time of peace such walls as were suited for war.
42 V, 14| outer and larger circuit of walls. John, also called Bargioras,
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