Book, Par.
1 I, 58| lest that high-spirited nation should be alienated by his
2 III, 5 | hands the government of that nation, were enrolled in the army.
3 III, 5 | long standing, and their nation was more faithful than the
4 IV, 13| by the noblest men in the nation. They had also at home a
5 IV, 14| above the rest of their nation. Paullus was executed by
6 IV, 15| banquet, the chiefs of the nation and the boldest spirits
7 IV, 22| hurried the whole Batavian nation into open war. The Bructeri
8 IV, 26| flow in; for at first that nation zealously supported the
9 IV, 29| the Ubii, because, this nation, being of German origin,
10 IV, 67| the unity of the German nation and name we give thanks
11 IV, 79| the chief strength of the nation, the Belgae, are with us,
12 IV, 84| the God Serapis, whom this nation, devoted as it is to many
13 V, 3 | they were the Solymi, a nation celebrated in the poems
14 V, 5 | future his authority over the nation, gave them a novel form
15 V, 6 | apart, and though, as a nation, they are singularly prone
16 V, 10| governor of Syria, and the nation, with its liberties curtailed,
17 V, 15| had occurred, which this nation, prone to superstition,
18 V, 15| Such was this city and nation; and Titus Caesar, seeing
19 V, 27| cannot be averted by a single nation. What has been accomplished
20 V, 27| by the destruction of his nation. Then were the Gods angry
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