Book, Par.
1 I, 12| legions of Upper Germany had broken through the obligation of
2 I, 69| collected some auxiliaries, and broken down the bridges over the
3 II, 12| mountaineers were cut down and broken by the first charge, as
4 II, 33| of those who remained was broken, for the men suspected their
5 II, 44| the rest of the army was broken, but the Praetorians angrily
6 II, 66| which was anything but broken. Scattered through all parts
7 II, 66| fierce battle would have broken out, had not two Praetorian
8 III, 17| which crossed it had been broken down, and the stream itself,
9 III, 21| and a mutiny had almost broken out, when some cavalry,
10 III, 25| loose ranks were at once broken, and, entangled as they
11 III, 27| and long poles into the broken and tottering "testudo,"
12 III, 81| intercourse of war had been broken off by the murder of Sabinus
13 IV, 55| should the power of Rome be broken by a continuous succession
14 IV, 73| the position, as he had broken down the bridge over the
15 IV, 80| to the camp, he saw the broken companies of the legions,
16 IV, 81| cohorts, which, after being broken at the first onset, rallied
17 IV, 88| strength of the enemy has been broken, it would little become
18 V, 28| generals advanced to the broken extremities. Civilis thus
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