Book, Par.
1 I, 2 | disasters, frightful in its wars, torn by civil strife, and
2 I, 2 | There were three civil wars; there were more with foreign
3 I, 2 | enemies; there were often wars that had both characters
4 I, 9 | troubles of these civil wars, either because they were
5 I, 29| you will suffer from the wars that will follow. Again,
6 I, 49| recollections of the civil wars, that men recurred, speaking
7 I, 88| power of the Caesars, the wars of the Roman people had
8 II, 11| employed throughout the civil wars even by strict disciplinarians.
9 II, 29| well aware that in civil wars the soldiers have more license
10 II, 34| for, as is usual in civil wars, there were many deserters,
11 II, 38| that we first essayed civil wars. Then rose C. Marius, sprung
12 II, 38| incentives to crime. That these wars were terminated by what
13 III, 34| most unfortunate in civil wars. Ashamed of the atrocious
14 III, 46| closely occupied with foreign wars, was sound policy and essential
15 III, 51| recorded. In the earlier civil wars indeed a similar horror
16 IV, 13| long training in the German wars, and they had gained further
17 IV, 55| continuous succession of civil wars and internal calamities. ~ ~
18 IV, 56| armies were occupied by wars of their own. If they were
19 IV, 76| we have waged our German wars, is perfectly well known.
20 IV, 77| petty kingdoms and intestine wars, till you submitted to our
21 IV, 77| forbid) what can result but wars between all these nations?
22 V, 10| the course of our civil wars, into the hands of Marcus
23 V, 14| had foreseen that frequent wars would result from the singularity
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