Book, Par.
1 I, 2 | in the highest ranks; the sea was crowded with exiles,
2 I, 75| all the armies beyond the sea, still adhered to Otho,
3 II, 3 | after her birth from the sea was wafted to this spot,
4 II, 4 | the way was open and the sea propitious, he then, after
5 II, 6 | been followed across the sea by civil war, had met with
6 II, 6 | Mediterranean. And there was the sea itself, which during the
7 II, 8 | great offers, he put to sea. Driven by stress of weather
8 II, 12| fleets, which commanded the sea, he held the greater part
9 II, 14| the shore, while on the sea was the fleet, moored to
10 II, 32| people and an intervening sea keep from him the army of
11 II, 32| cannot be relieved from the sea, and has been exhausted
12 II, 81| nothing, was crossing the sea with all speed. Queen Berenice
13 II, 81| provinces washed by the sea, as far as Asia and Achaia,
14 II, 83| the same time blockade the sea on the side of Italy with
15 II, 98| intelligence. And on the sea the prevalent Etesian winds
16 III, 1 | addition the command of the sea, his fleets, and provinces
17 III, 2 | fleets, and the Illyrian sea open to them. What good
18 III, 38| lastly, so vast an extent of sea and land with enormous distances,
19 III, 42| shore, invested the place by sea and land. His troops occupied
20 III, 43| Julii, which commanded the sea. His influence was all the
21 III, 43| For Valens indeed the open sea was safer than the coast
22 III, 47| to the fleet, and, as the sea was not guarded, escaped,
23 III, 47| even insolently scoured the sea in hastily constructed vessels
24 III, 48| also preparing to invade by sea and land the province of
25 III, 52| cover the Padus and the sea with convoys. Some there
26 IV, 16| the Rhine, he assailed by sea the winter quarters of two
27 IV, 52| the perils of the wintry sea. Envoys had come from king
28 IV, 53| perils of the still stormy sea. Rome indeed was in the
29 IV, 84| gales and settled weather at sea, many wonders occurred which
30 IV, 87| vast as was the extent of sea that they traversed, they
31 V, 7 | discharge itself into the sea, but flows entire through
32 V, 7 | circumference; it resembles the sea, but is more nauseous in
33 V, 8 | also flows into the Jewish sea. About its mouth is a kind
34 V, 25| of water, not unlike the sea, where the mouth of the
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