Book,  Par.

  1     I,      3|   safeguards to rest on. He had no war at the time on his hands
  2     I,      4|        dreaded and some longed for war. The popular gossip of the
  3     I,      4|            established his fame in war, but he had the old arrogance
  4     I,     13|        place, drove him into civil war, which can neither be planned
  5     I,     21|         and of profit from a civil war. In the summer camp three
  6     I,     22|     wearisome summers, of terrible war, or barren peace, there
  7     I,     46|            retiring legions, civil war was in fact begun. Severity
  8     I,     59|            Rhine, resolved to make war on them should they reject
  9     I,     62|            carefully weighed; when war bursts on us, innocent and
 10     I,     66|  carelessness and disorder; and of war indeed there was no apprehension.
 11     I,     72|        triumph decreed him, though war still lasted. And though
 12     I,     72|      Segestes, though dragged into war by the unanimous voice of
 13     I,     75|   influence, because he counselled war. For with barbarians, the
 14     I,     77|          that peace is better than war. And therefore I denounced
 15     I,     79|       according as men shrank from war or desired it. Arminius,
 16     I,     79|           the Cherusci, demanding "war against Segestes, war against
 17     I,     79|   demanding "war against Segestes, war against Caesar." And he
 18     I,     79|        against armed men do I wage war. There are still to be seen
 19     I,     80|           Caesar's alarm. That the war might not burst in all its
 20     I,     94|            zeal, took only for the war their arms and horses, and
 21    II,      5|         given by the Armenians, or war with Parthia would have
 22    II,      6|           more than three years of war had fallen to his lot. The
 23    II,      8|          the army and carrying the war across the river. For the
 24    II,     16|       hundred sesterces as long as war lasted. The insult fired
 25    II,     17|         the Rhine, and there is no war beyond, provided only you
 26    II,     18|         men who rather than endure war had taken to mutiny. Half
 27    II,     26|         the only conclusion of the war. And now, late in the day,
 28    II,     27|     charged Stertinius with making war on the Angrivarii, but they
 29    II,     31|            the Germans to hope for war, as it did Caesar to hold
 30    II,     32|           campaign next summer the war might be ended. Tiberius,
 31    II,     33|      person. He also added that if war must still be waged, he
 32    II,     49|         State by discord and civil war. A servant of Postumus Agrippa,
 33    II,     52|        rivers and battles; and the war, seeing that he had been
 34    II,     57|      father Piso, who in the civil war supported with the most
 35    II,     59|            the crowning success in war. ~ ~
 36    II,     60|          whether they preferred to war with all their might against
 37    II,     64|            by Atilius in that same war. ~ ~
 38    II,     67|                In this same year a war broke out in Africa, where
 39    II,     67|        Moorish neighbours into the war. These too had a leader,
 40    II,     77|           in Sicily, even when the war with Carthage was still
 41    II,     83|          than if he had finished a war by battle. And so next he
 42    II,     83|    fortresses, as a provocation to war. ~ ~
 43    II,     84|      Meanwhile, under pretext of a war against the Bastarnian and
 44    II,    100|          Sentius resist you, civil war is begun, and you will not
 45    II,    102|   assisting in all the business of war, though he had advised against
 46    II,    104|      corruption or the province by war. He gathered round him all
 47    II,    118|         indecisive battles, yet in war remained unconquered. He
 48   III,     16|          threatened the State with war, and had been defeated in
 49   III,     17|    merciless, the emperor, because war had been made on a province,
 50   III,     23|        Piso of the charge of civil war on the ground that a son
 51   III,     25|       Marcus Antonius who had made war on his country, and that
 52   III,     29|          action and experienced in war, who regarded the siege
 53   III,     39|         Italian and then the Civil war did not pass without the
 54   III,     47|          who would be equal to the war. Sextus Pompeius caught
 55   III,     48|         peace and through panic in war, and converts a Roman army
 56   III,     49|      involves no trouble in peace. War of course requires that
 57   III,     54|        brother Cotys had meditated war against us. The accused
 58   III,     55|          combining in a formidable war. Some roused their immediate
 59   III,     58|      information, and fostered the war by his irresolution. ~ ~
 60   III,     60|           each of whom claimed the war for himself. Varro after
 61   III,     61|        missives by the sword. Even war is a good exchange for a
 62   III,     63|      townsfolk who knew nothing of war had their faculties of sight
 63   III,     65|    beginning and completion of the war, without either taking away
 64   III,     65|         nor Drusus had gone to the war; he magnified the greatness
 65   III,     77|        which from the close of the war ended at Actium to the armed
 66   III,     83|         country's soil. There is a war, forsooth, or he is kept
 67   III,     86|        Bacchus, when victorious in war, pardoned the suppliant
 68   III,    101|        from applying the spoils of war or their superfluous wealth
 69   III,    103|            us with an interminable war. Never, it is said, was
 70   III,    104|          strength, but better in a war of surprises, he would attack,
 71   III,    106|    Tiberius however considered the war as finished, and awarded
 72    IV,      6|          coast of Gaul by ships of war captured in the victory
 73    IV,     23|          the State almost by civil war. "There were those," he
 74    IV,     24|     triumph for his success in the war with Sacrovir, would make
 75    IV,     32|             Juba's son, had chosen war in preference to the despotism
 76    IV,     32|      orders more than the risks of war. ~ ~
 77    IV,     34|        there would be no rest from war except by the destruction
 78    IV,     35|                     This ended the war. Dolabella asked for triumphal
 79    IV,     35|          leader and terminated the war. In his train were envoys
 80    IV,     35|          people. And now that this war had proved the zealous loyalty
 81    IV,     36|       summer, the germs of a slave war in Italy were crushed by
 82    IV,     48|         harangues to stir up civil war? Did they not fall more
 83    IV,     50|         they had earned during the war with Mithridates, when their
 84    IV,     61|        father who during the civil war had been master of the sea,
 85    IV,     64|           dangerous and sanguinary war. ~ ~
 86    IV,     65|            with the noise of their war songs and the clashing of
 87    IV,     68|            age or sex unfitted for war, by all too who had a stronger
 88    IV,     73|           us during the Macedonian war, and of their copious rivers,
 89    IV,     80|  Calpurnius, the losses of a great war were matched by an unexpected
 90    IV,     92|            they sought a remedy in war. The soldiers appointed
 91    IV,     94|           entrust any one with the war. Nor did the Senate care
 92     V,      1|          exile during the Perusian war, returned to Rome when peace
 93    VI,     17|          the Capitol in the social war, when there was a search
 94    VI,     47|          crafty policy and keeping war at a distance. Artabanus
 95    VI,     52|    Mesopotamia, raised an alarm of war with Rome. Armenia was then
 96    VI,     52|          ruinously unsuccessful in war. And so Sinnaces, whose
 97    VI,     55|         completion of the Dalmatic war, and had for this been rewarded
 98    VI,     68|         against him or prolong the war by delay. Those who wished
 99    VI,     68|           might try the fortune of war. This advice prevailed,
100    XI,     10|            Hyrcanians, renewed the war; and Vardanes, compelled
101    XI,     12|           of Syria, who threatened war. Meanwhile Gotarzes, who
102    XI,     19|         remembered, had ever waged war against his country and
103    XI,     23|            though he had forbidden war, yet granted him triumphal
104    XI,     30|        that mighty as they were in war, they spurned from them
105   XII,     11|           home and unsuccessful in war, he made cruelty a screen
106   XII,     13|            it was possible without war, revived ancient discipline,
107   XII,     19|         perish by the just doom of war. The signal for massacre
108   XII,     22|          it would be undertaking a war in a country without roads,
109   XII,     35|        positions, and protract the war. ~ ~
110   XII,     37|            a powerful tribe, which war had not weakened, as they
111   XII,     38|            were hesitating between war and peace. Then the army
112   XII,     38|          effect; they persisted in war and could be quelled only
113   XII,     39|             he at once shifted the war by a stratagem into the
114   XII,     42|         after the beginning of the war in Britain. His fame had
115   XII,     45|       under an impression that the war was ended, or because the
116   XII,     47|        them, followed instantly by war, and he then assumed a hostile
117   XII,     47|        their youth, picked out for war, invaded her kingdom. This
118   XII,     52|                   In the same year war broke out between the Armenians
119   XII,     53|  Pharasmanes invented pretexts for war; when he was fighting with
120   XII,     58|           might arise to provoke a war with Parthia.~ ~
121   XII,     64|            to pieces. The flame of war would have spread through
122   XII,     70|            had been by sedition or war so many struggles; the Sempronian
123   XII,     70|   conditions of peace and terms of war. To mention after them the
124  XIII,      7|            the other operations of war could be directed by tutors. "
125  XIII,      9|           obey orders, just as the war might require. But they
126  XIII,     10|           choose peace rather than war, and to give hostages and
127  XIII,     10|             wishing to prepare for war at an advantage, or to rid
128  XIII,     10|  appointment to the conduct of the war turned the king's hopes
129  XIII,     42|               Early in this year a war between Parthia and Rome
130  XIII,     45|       raids as before, but in open war, plundering all whom he
131  XIII,     46|           violence. Should however war be persisted in, the Arsacids
132  XIII,     48|          our forces. Corbulo, that war might not be uselessly protracted,
133  XIII,     48|          neither for peace nor for war, but who confessed his treachery
134  XIII,     51| garrisoning it and carrying on the war. If again the place were
135  XIII,     54|        into the extremity of civil war, with having forced Julia,
136  XIII,     63|           for or against peace and war, or on the taxes and laws
137  XIII,     72|       tribes to be their allies in war. Avitus, having written
138  XIII,     73|          burning pile of wood. The war was a success for the Hermunduri,
139   XIV,     35|     Parthians were distracted by a war with the Hyrcanians, who
140   XIV,     36|            and abandon the idea of war. Having harried with fire
141   XIV,     40|           death from extending the war. While he lived, he had
142   XIV,     42|            they were the spoils of war. First, his wife Boudicea
143   XIV,     43|           which he had goaded into war by his rapacity, the procurator
144   XIV,     44|      should choose it as a seat of war, as he looked round on his
145   XIV,     44|            on any of the barter of war, that the enemy was bent,
146   XIV,     46|      armies, and the causes of the war, you will see that in this
147   XIV,     50|        finish the remainder of the war. The emperor strengthened
148   XIV,     50|       every age having gone to the war, while they reckoned on
149   XIV,     51|            who had finished such a war cringing to slaves. Everything,
150   XIV,     51|         was ordered, as though the war continued, to hand over
151   XIV,     70|            he had given. It was by war and its perils they had
152   XIV,     76|      follow which would ripen into war. Finally, by this plan he
153   XIV,     80|        what could hardly happen in war. "Those arms," she said, "
154    XV,      4|        sustain rather than to make war. And indeed he had written
155    XV,      7|         that with the cessation of war on both sides and the departure
156    XV,      7|          what they had defended in war? Was it better for them
157    XV,      7|      disparaged the results of the war, and said repeatedly that
158    XV,      8|            the Parthians made open war. Nor did Paetus decline
159    XV,      9|          to the emperor, as if the war was finished, in pompous
160    XV,     11|           a powerful force bent on war. He summoned the 12th legion,
161    XV,     11|        baffled, by protracting the war, had Paetus stood firm either
162    XV,     13|            usual accompaniments of war, his army was followed by
163    XV,     15|            years unfitted them for war. He advanced closer than
164    XV,     16|          with which to sustain the war. ~ ~
165    XV,     20|        been fruitless and that the war might have been ended with
166    XV,     21|          trophies for the Parthian war, and arches were erected
167    XV,     21|           by the Senate, while the war was yet undecided, and even
168    XV,     32|          should accept a dangerous war or a disgraceful peace.
169    XV,     32|            was no hesitation about war. Corbulo, who had known
170    XV,     33|         Pompeius on the eve of his war against the Pirates. When
171    XV,     35|           require the extremity of war. Many successes have fallen
172    XV,     35|           unhurt by the ravages of war, and Vologeses will better
173    XV,     35|          him, and this is his only war." ~ ~
174    XV,     57|         was received, but not from war, for never had there been
175    XV,     94|           to describe successes in war, he summoned the Senate,
176    XV,     97|          the moment, but after the war of Julius Vindex it was
177   XVI,      1|        lust of gold be provoked to war. ~ ~
178   XVI,      7|          to sow the seeds of civil war and revolt from the House
179   XVI,     23|            the like, it was actual war." ~ ~
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