Book, Par.
1 I, 17| be obtained by honourable means. Meanwhile the expectant
2 I, 45| bought his furlough. His means exhausted by this outlay,
3 I, 56| camps, who had abundant means at hand, and might indulge
4 I, 65| supplies from their private means. Report, however, has uniformly
5 II, 4 | than to any sufficient means of enduring extremities
6 II, 10| was condemned, but by no means with that unanimity on the
7 II, 84| liberal with his private means because he helped himself
8 II, 86| contemptible ally. United by these means, the armies of Moesia and
9 III, 20| the town when we have no means seeing where the ground
10 III, 47| the head of a force by no means contemptible, made a sudden
11 III, 49| fall of Cremona, was by no means as blameless as before.
12 III, 59| been said by many that the means of escape were likewise
13 III, 73| about for ways of escape and means of concealment. The Vitellianists
14 IV, 26| the legions, through whose means they were read by the soldiers
15 IV, 60| have fortifications and the means of prolonging the war, till
16 IV, 82| direction, nor was he by any means weak, as he had still, in
17 V, 6 | institutions do not by any means harmonize with the theory;
|