Book, Par.
1 I, 71| enjoy a special license, broke out into seditious clamours.
2 I, 85| river became vastly swollen, broke down the wooden bridge,
3 II, 19| soldiery of the capital, broke their spirits. All the oldest
4 II, 26| Besides this, a mutiny broke out in the camp because
5 II, 30| them, and the mutiny nearly broke out afresh from an impression
6 II, 38| innate in man increased and broke out as the Empire grew in
7 II, 88| ever since the mutiny which broke out at Ticinum there had
8 III, 2 | and Pannonian cavalry then broke through the enemy; now the
9 III, 6 | surrendered, but the greater part broke down the bridge, and thus
10 III, 11| furiously because their rage broke out, not as before, when
11 III, 18| foot, thus mixed together, broke through the line of the
12 III, 29| assailants; for a moment it broke and overwhelmed those on
13 III, 29| force an entrance, the 3rd broke down the gate with axes
14 IV, 19| the Ubii and the Treveri broke at once in shameful flight,
15 IV, 31| battering it with beams, broke it down, causing great destruction
16 IV, 47| mutiny in the army all but broke out. The troops who, having
17 IV, 51| over at full speed, and broke into the dwelling of the
18 V, 4 | horribly disfigured the body, broke out over Egypt; that king
19 V, 11| procurator. In his time the war broke out. Cestius Gallus, legate
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