Book,  Par.

 1     I,      3|           he was on his way to our armies in Spain, and Caius while
 2     I,      3|            paraded through all the armies, no longer through his mother'
 3     I,      9|           letters to the different armies, as though supreme power
 4     I,     14|    possessed himself of both their armies, wrested the consulate from
 5     I,     40|          before it. There were two armies on the bank of the Rhine;
 6     I,     41| apprehension to other and mightier armies, but there was sedition
 7     I,     55|          of Rome that of our other armies. My wife and children whom,
 8     I,     69|          he confirmed, too, in the armies of Pannonia all the concessions
 9     I,     92|            now more power with the armies than officers, than generals.
10     I,    105|           their life with the same armies and in the same administrations.
11    II,      1|           he had driven before him armies and generals from Rome,
12    II,     49|            and bringing him to the armies of Germany. The slowness
13    II,     59|        brother's youthful son. The armies were drawn up, with equal
14    II,     60|            then on equal terms the armies had parted. He was by no
15    II,     61|        words, which roused the two armies, was added the stimulus
16    II,     61|            the right wings of both armies were routed. Further fighting
17    II,    104|      warned him not to disturb the armies by agents of corruption
18   III,      7|   patiently endured the defeats of armies, the destruction of generals,
19   III,      8|             Drusus was sent to the armies of Illyricum, amidst an
20   III,     15|        whether Piso dealt with the armies in a revolutionary and seditious
21   III,     48|            our tribunals, even our armies." ~ ~
22   III,     57|           utter weakness of Rome's armies in all but their foreign
23   III,     59|         sent from their respective armies, by opposite routes, to
24   III,    103|         destroyed so many consular armies and was burning Italy with
25    IV,     24|     steadfastly loyal, while other armies were falling into mutiny,
26    IV,     45|           praise more heartily the armies of Carthage or Rome. But
27    IV,     64|           levies and to supply our armies with their bravest men.
28    IV,     77|            people wished, what the armies desired, and Sejanus would
29    IV,     85|         advise them to flee to the armies of Germany, or when the
30    IV,     93|           Instantly conveying both armies down the Rhine, he threw
31     V,     13|          and was on his way to the armies of his father, with the
32    VI,     38|            who were fit to command armies declined the service, and
33    VI,     77|     despatches to the generals and armies. On the 15th of March, his
34    XI,      1|          planning a journey to the armies of Germany. Born at Vienna,
35    XI,     24|        despatch in the name of the armies, begging the emperor to
36    XI,     28|       hostile tribes destroyed our armies with fire and sword, and
37   XII,     19|       impossible when they saw how armies and ramparts, heights and
38   XII,     72|            passage of generals and armies, as well as for the conveyance
39  XIII,      5|          from the senators. Of the armies he would himself take charge,
40  XIII,      9|      seemed, a field to merit. The armies of the East were so divided
41  XIII,     43|       discipline. Not, as in other armies, was a first or second offense
42  XIII,     47|         the presence of the entire armies, and he selected a place
43  XIII,     70|          continued inaction of our armies, a rumour prevailed that
44   XIV,     46|           well the strength of the armies, and the causes of the war,
45   XIV,     73|        respective proximity to the armies of the East and of Germany. "
46   XIV,     75|          then at the head of great armies, and would be a special
47    XV,     38|        slaughter or siege of Roman armies. "But now," they thought, "
48   XVI,     17|            one might the defeat of armies and the capture of cities.
49   XVI,     24|           in the provinces and the armies that they may know what
50   XVI,     32|            won without loss to our armies which vex him? A man who
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