Book, Par.
1 I, 52| to throw everything into confusion, and under the disasters
2 I, 83| darkness, and the general confusion, an opportunity may well
3 II, 16| greater criminals, in the vast confusion of events, they were neither
4 II, 22| slaughter increased with the confusion, and the attack from the
5 II, 23| to plunge everything into confusion, resorting, now to openly
6 II, 26| it increased the general confusion, because the troops who
7 II, 26| troops, who, once thrown into confusion, would have no reserves
8 II, 40| either when they were in the confusion of an advance, or when they
9 II, 49| tumult and he was told of the confusion and outrageous conduct of
10 III, 26| sortie they might cause confusion among them while dispersed
11 III, 77| awaking from sleep, amid the confusion of darkness and panic, the
12 III, 77| fleet, escaped in the first confusion. The rest were either seized
13 III, 79| rest fled in disgraceful confusion, but the victors did not
14 IV, 21| driven back, retreating in confusion on the entrenchments and
15 IV, 30| extinguishing the fires, threw the confusion of darkness over the attack.
16 IV, 31| enemy were attacked in their confusion by a sudden and successful
17 IV, 34| that he could do in the confusion was to order the veteran
18 IV, 73| throwing everything into confusion and ruin, the legions withdrew
19 IV, 80| Germans. Undismayed by the confusion, Cerialis held back the
20 V, 17| have been expected from the confusion, for the Germans, not venturing
21 V, 20| river. Here there was some confusion. The line of the allied
22 V, 24| force put the fleet into confusion, threw their grapling irons
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