Book,  Par.

 1    II,     14|       pressed fiercely on their retreat, driving them before them,
 2    II,     24|        their settlements and to retreat to the further side of the
 3    II,     42|       obscure and distant rural retreat. At the same moment he rose
 4   III,    104|        on the Leptitani and his retreat to the Garamantes. In another
 5    IV,     75|        hide by the place of his retreat the cruelty and licentiousness
 6    VI,     52|         Still Artabanus did not retreat till Vitellius had assembled
 7    VI,     68|   Abdageses, however, advised a retreat into Mesopotamia. There,
 8    VI,     68|       face of danger. But their retreat resembled a flight. The
 9    XI,     23|         and gave the signal for retreat. To keep his soldiers free
10   XII,     39| engagement in which advance and retreat alike would be difficult
11  XIII,     50|    enemy, but not to pursue his retreat. On the wings were the foot-archers
12   XIV,     36|   marches, and compelled him to retreat to a distance and abandon
13   XIV,     49| surrounding waggons had blocked retreat. Our soldiers spared not
14   XIV,     67|         equivalent to a foreign retreat in the capital itself. One
15   XIV,     82| recompense, and some delightful retreat, while he threatened him
16    XV,     56|     seclusion of a remote rural retreat, and, when it was refused,
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