Book, Par.
1 I, 53| rewards bestowed on the neighbouring states, and, when they found
2 II, 4 | and the glory won by the neighbouring army had banished all tendency
3 II, 5 | administration of these neighbouring provinces jealousy had produced
4 II, 14| the mountaineers on the neighbouring heights, and their infantry
5 II, 15| under the protection of some neighbouring heights which they had occupied.
6 II, 16| the other islands of the neighbouring seas, were retained in the
7 II, 21| certain persons from the neighbouring colonies, who viewed it
8 II, 61| taking possession of the neighbouring villages of the Aedui, when
9 III, 27| little delay, while from the neighbouring fields some were collecting
10 III, 34| intermarriages formed with neighbouring nations, it grew and flourished,
11 III, 38| the Servilian gardens a neighbouring turret brilliantly illuminated
12 III, 42| the throne, had made the neighbouring States swear allegiance
13 IV, 13| coast of Gaul, and also of a neighbouring island, surrounded by the
14 IV, 16| crowd of idlers from the neighbouring villages of the Nervii and
15 IV, 38| up in the camp and in the neighbouring Belgian towns, and this
16 IV, 60| armies pour in from the neighbouring provinces. It may be that
17 IV, 69| to attach to himself the neighbouring States, or to make war on
18 IV, 70| to attack the Sequani, a neighbouring people, still faithful to
19 V, 3 | in Crete called Ida; the neighbouring tribe, the Idaei, came to
20 V, 3 | discharged itself into the neighbouring countries. Many, again,
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