Book, Par.
1 I, 78| auxiliaries attacked them. The Romans had everything ready for
2 IV, 19| order that by betraying the Romans in the moment of actual
3 IV, 21| have no quarrel with the Romans, for whom we have so often
4 IV, 30| the darkness, but to the Romans the ranks of the barbarians
5 IV, 34| restored the courage of the Romans, and in relying on the strength
6 IV, 35| representing that with the Romans all was lost, and that victory
7 IV, 35| his own troops. With the Romans the fortune of the day varied,
8 IV, 56| rather than the ally of the Romans. Julius Tutor and Julius
9 IV, 56| vehement assertions that the Romans were in a frenzy of discord,
10 IV, 67| Up to this day have the Romans closed river and land and,
11 IV, 67| require of you to massacre all Romans within your territory; liberty
12 IV, 67| through their arms, the Romans secure their power against
13 IV, 77| you now pay. Should the Romans be driven out (which God
14 IV, 79| more plentiful among the Romans, and no one can be so bent
15 V, 9 | full strength, and, as the Romans were still far off, the
16 V, 13| by continual defeats. The Romans then began to prepare for
17 V, 14| two factions, till, as the Romans approached, war with the
18 V, 17| flushed with success; the Romans were thoroughly roused by
19 V, 24| sides a deafening shout. The Romans, awakened by sounds, looked
20 V, 25| size of the vessels. The Romans had the stream with them,
21 V, 26| and the guilt, with the Romans the vengeance of heaven. ~ ~
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