Book, Par.
1 II, 12| foreigner and the cities of a hostile people, and all with the
2 II, 21| break and overwhelm the hostile ranks. The shame of failure,
3 II, 25| Before the hostile lines engaged, the Vitellianists
4 II, 32| of the Rhine, when such hostile tribes are ready to burst
5 II, 32| not answer his purpose. A hostile people and an intervening
6 II, 52| judging the Senate to be hostile to Otho, watched their language,
7 II, 83| Calabria and Lucania menaced by hostile fleets, would be in utter
8 II, 85| themselves, had assumed a hostile attitude. Then they began
9 III, 5 | they should attempt some hostile enterprise, or, influenced
10 III, 5 | auxiliaries, for Rhaetia was hostile, Portius Septimius, the
11 III, 15| determined to attack the hostile armies, while they were
12 III, 23| legion, was crushing the hostile ranks with huge stones,
13 III, 42| everything around him was hostile, had not yet thrown off
14 III, 82| presented the appearance of a hostile array. They advanced in
15 III, 82| Campus Martius also the hostile armies met, the Flavianists
16 IV, 17| run the sterns on to the hostile shore. At last they killed
17 IV, 21| not venture on any other hostile act during the remainder
18 IV, 47| opposed to them what seemed a hostile array, threatening them
19 IV, 59| have inspired them with hostile feelings. They are now enemies,
20 IV, 60| compassion. Against you indeed no hostile ranks are gathering. That
21 V, 18| Germans, the strength of the hostile army, had been routed; a
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