Chap.

 1  7|        quarter, whom he had not thought proper to force from their
 2  8|         was on no account to be thought of, not only by those that
 3 10|     Upon this information, they thought fortune had thrown in their
 4 17| resource for the future, Caesar thought it by all means necessary
 5 17|        the Gallic cavalry as he thought fittest for his purpose,
 6 24|         speaking as they really thought, yet he judged it best to
 7 25|         the Nile, by which they thought it most likely our supplies
 8 27|  against him, sufficient, as he thought, if not to overwhelm and
 9 27|        see him defeated, yet he thought it a great point gained,
10 33|        reigned for some time he thought proper to banish the kingdom,
11 34|        of the war, but likewise thought it dishonorable to the people
12 51|      succors to Pompey, and was thought likely to send more. These
13 58|     were so infatuated with the thought, that they had Pompey's
14 61|        Ulia, a town on which he thought he could rely. There he
15 63|        works, either because he thought his cause the justest, or
16 64| continuing his voyage, which he thought he might do with safety,
17 65|       presence to redress them; thought it was yet first incumbent
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License