Book,  Par.

 1     I,      1|      yielded before Caesar; the arms of Lepidus and Antonius
 2     I,      9|          He had the guard under arms, with all the other adjuncts
 3     I,     14|    turned against the State the arms with which he had been intrusted
 4     I,     16|       citizens and allies under arms, of the fleets, subject
 5     I,     22|         go with your prayers or arms to a new and yet tottering
 6     I,     22|          out of this, clothing, arms, tents, as well as the mercy
 7     I,     28|      whom the general keeps and arms for the destruction of his
 8     I,     55|    beset with entrenchments and arms your general's son, or citizens,
 9     I,     72|      after which they rushed to arms, and he urged Varus to arrest
10     I,     74|        cowed them, carrying his arms everywhere, and the Marsi
11     I,     84|  heavily laden with baggage and arms. As Caecina was in doubt
12     I,     90|          he said, "lay in their arms, which they must, however,
13     I,     91|       of trumpets, the gleam of arms, which were so unexpected,
14     I,     94|      whatever they had at hand, arms, horses, gold. Germanicus
15     I,     94|     took only for the war their arms and horses, and relieved
16    II,      5|         was to be upheld by our arms, the governor of Syria,
17    II,      6|     marches and damage to their arms. Gaul had been exhausted
18    II,     23|         miles were covered with arms and dead bodies, while there
19    II,     23|         raised a mound on which arms were piled in the style
20    II,     24|   longed for battle and flew to arms. Common people and chiefs,
21    II,     27|         Caesar raised a pile of arms with the proud inscription, "
22    II,     31|        fleet, having lost their arms, after strewing the shores
23    II,     32|     done more by policy than by arms. By this means the submission
24    II,     58|       in fame, had turned their arms against each other. The
25    II,     59|        of Arminius, who took up arms, but even the Semnones and
26    II,     61|         invoke the aid of Roman arms against the Cherusci, when
27    II,     67| civilisation of cities, took up arms and drew their Moorish neighbours
28    II,     78|    silver and gold, the tale of arms and horses, the gifts of
29    II,     84|         decide their dispute by arms. Cotys at once dismissed
30    II,    101|       rightfully confront it by arms than the man who had received
31    II,    105|       if right is to decide; if arms, is far from powerless." ~ ~
32    II,    107|    fortress on surrendering his arms, while the emperor was being
33    II,    117|     treachery but openly and by arms that the people of Rome
34   III,      5|        There the soldiers under arms, the magistrates without
35   III,     15|      himself of the province by arms, or whether these are falsehoods
36   III,     40|     been the author, he lost by arms what by arms he had been
37   III,     40|         he lost by arms what by arms he had been maintaining.
38   III,     55|        powerful tribes, took up arms, under different leaders,
39   III,     59|  debtors and dependents took up arms, and they were on their
40   III,     60|     distributed among the youth arms which he had had secretly
41   III,     62|         associated with them in arms. He then pushed on by forced
42   III,    103|   prospect of laying down their arms without hurt to themselves,
43    IV,      5|      forces Rome then had under arms, what kings were our allies,
44    IV,     34|      utterly surprised, without arms, order, or plan, were seized,
45    IV,     48|       Cassius and Brutus now in arms on the fields of Philippi,
46    IV,     59|         from, they said, by the arms of the Macedonian Philip,
47    IV,     64|     Before however they took up arms, they sent envoys with assurances
48    IV,     65|       and the clashing of their arms. ~ ~
49    IV,     66|        and traitors and bearing arms for their own and their
50    IV,     68|        they must lay down their arms, this being the only remedy
51    VI,      2|        it had to be defended by arms." This was his answer to
52    VI,     51|       breast, with the clash of arms, they repulsed the foe or
53    VI,     55|    enough to have displayed the arms of Rome, and he then bade
54    XI,      9|       life by the profession of arms, some by cultivating land.
55    XI,     21|         were always to be under arms. One soldier, it was said,
56   XII,     18|   troops of Bosporus with Roman arms. Thus the enemy was defeated,
57   XII,     20|  Meanwhile Mithridates, finding arms an unavailing resource,
58   XII,     35|        declined to interpose by arms in the conflict of the barbarians,
59   XII,     42|     cohorts were drawn up under arms in the plain in front of
60   XII,     43|   myself. I had men and horses, arms and wealth. What wonder
61   XII,     47|        had been defended by our arms while he was united in marriage
62   XII,     55|        bloodless negotiation to arms." As Mithridates wavered,
63   XII,     59|    gathered round the palace in arms. ~ ~
64  XIII,     20|      would clasp Octavia to her arms, and have many a secret
65  XIII,     43|       they dropped off from his arms, now mere stumps. The general,
66  XIII,     45|        widely by rumour than by arms. So Corbulo, frustrated
67  XIII,     70|        surpassed the Germans in arms or in loyalty. Then they
68  XIII,     73|      settling every question by arms, but also a deep-rooted
69   XIV,     11|         stood with outstretched arms, while the whole shore rung
70   XIV,     27|     such battles instead of the arms of legitimate warfare? Would
71   XIV,     42|        a province, they flew to arms and stirred to revolt the
72   XIV,     43|        no more, without regular arms, and there was in the place
73   XIV,     70|        I had passed my years in arms, your sword and right hand
74   XIV,     75|         young man, had taken up arms, and the soldiers sent to
75   XIV,     80|    hardly happen in war. "Those arms," she said, "have been taken
76    XV,      1|        struggle of brave men in arms; might is right with those
77    XV,      2|       good cause rather than by arms, that I had wished to retain
78    XV,      6|         that he should shun the arms of Rome. Nor was the present
79    XV,      7|       in short, a suspension of arms, in order that Vologeses
80    XV,     18|   Vologeses having piled up the arms and bodies of the slain
81    XV,     19|    display of his standards and arms as to shame them by the
82    XV,     44|     divided the arteries in his arms. A speech from Nero followed,
83    XV,     74|  concubines in his train, raise arms against you. Many things
84    XV,     75|         having the veins in his arms severed. His will, full
85    XV,     81|    dagger the arteries of their arms. Seneca, as his aged frame,
86    XV,     82|       and freedmen bound up her arms, and stanched the bleeding,
87   XVI,     16|    bodily strength and skill in arms, had made Nero, who was
88   XVI,     31|        praetorian cohorts under arms occupied the temple of Venus
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