Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 5 | to share with Pompey on account of his connection with him,
2 I, 6 | fear being called to an account for their actions, till
3 I, 13 | Caesar, having received an account of this, and relying on
4 I, 23 | driven out of the city on his account, and to assert his own liberty,
5 I, 30 | Gibraltar. But this, on account of the season of the year,
6 I, 39 | the vicinity of Herba, on account of the advantages of its
7 I, 46 | disadvantage of our troops, both on account of its narrowness, and because
8 I, 49 | states to a great distance on account of the war. They who had
9 I, 67 | Each returned with the same account to his camp, that there
10 II, 11 | fell on it slid off, on account of the sloping roof. When
11 II, 17 | fuller and more exaggerated account of these matters, he began
12 II, 20 | in greater haste on this account to reach Gades with his
13 II, 39 | prisoners corresponds with the account of the deserters, that the
14 II, 39 | Numidians. However, the account was enlarged by themselves,
15 III, 7 | the continent, before any account whatsoever of his approach
16 III, 9 | were unable to resist, on account of the smallness of their
17 III, 10 | him a proper person, on account of his favors conferred
18 III, 25 | feeling some trouble on this account, wrote in severe terms to
19 III, 27 | to be uneasy on their own account: and thus, by a change of
20 III, 30 | might be the more secret. An account of this was immediately
21 III, 45 | down a precipice, on which account they pushed on with more
22 III, 47 | and unusual, as well on account of the number of forts,
23 III, 47 | attack and defense, as on account of other circumstances.
24 III, 60 | proper time to call them to account, and willing to pardon many
25 III, 60 | to pardon many faults, on account of their valor, deferred
26 III, 61 | different posts, gave an exact account of all to Pompey. ~
27 III, 79 | provinces and states, with an account of the action at Dyrrachium,
28 III, 79 | vain glory, gave them an account of all that had happened,
29 III, 106| his course into Egypt, on account of his connection with that
30 III, 108| regent of the kingdom on account of his youthfulness. He
31 III, 112| can enter the harbor, on account of its narrowness. Caesar
32 III, 112| greatly alarmed on this account, while the enemy were engaged
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 33 I, 9 | the Sequani, by which, on account of its narrowness, they
34 I, 13 | that he ought not on that account to ascribe very much to
35 I, 14 | replied:—that “on that very account he felt less hesitation,
36 I, 14 | had been given by them, on account of which they should be
37 I, 18 | favor with the people on account of his liberality, a man
38 I, 18 | well to the Helvetii on account of this connection; and
39 I, 18 | and the Romans, on his own account, because by their arrival
40 I, 20 | suffered more pain on that account than he himself did; for
41 I, 20 | Dumnorix] very little on account of his youth, the latter
42 I, 26 | for three days, both on account of the wounds of the soldiers
43 I, 28 | he did, chiefly, on this account, because he was unwilling
44 I, 28 | of the Rhine, should, on account of the excellence of the
45 I, 31 | children as hostages. On that account he had fled from his state
46 I, 32 | that of the rest, on this account, because they alone durst
47 I, 39 | few days at Vesontio, on account of corn and provisions;
48 I, 40 | greatly favored, and in it, on account of its valor, placed the
49 I, 47 | Valerius Flaccus), both on account of his fidelity and on account
50 I, 47 | account of his fidelity and on account of his knowledge of the
51 II, 4 | they had settled there, on account of the fertility of the
52 II, 4 | consent of all, upon him, on account of his integrity and prudence;
53 II, 8 | decline a battle, as well on account of the great number of the
54 II, 12 | carry it by assault, on account of the breadth of the ditch
55 II, 15 | 15 Caesar said that on account of his respect for Divitiacus
56 II, 16 | approach for an army, on account of the marshes. ~
57 II, 20 | was fortified. These, on account of the near approach and
58 III, 2 | despised a single legion, on account of its small number, and
59 III, 2 | because they thought that on account of the disadvantageous character
60 III, 9 | very long among them, on account of the insufficiency of
61 III, 13 | their strength), nor on account of their height was a weapon
62 III, 23 | likewise] that his forces, on account of their small number could
63 III, 23 | their camp; that on that account, corn and provision could
64 III, 24 | take. They, although on account of their great number and
65 III, 24 | provisions: and if the Romans, on account of the want of corn, should
66 IV, 2 | with housings. They on no account permit wine to be imported
67 IV, 3 | from their territories, on account of the extent and population
68 IV, 4 | either to force a passage on account of their deficiency in shipping,
69 IV, 4 | or cross by stealth on account of the guards of the Menapii,
70 IV, 9 | delay was caused on this account. ~
71 IV, 17 | was presented to him, on account of the breadth, rapidity,
72 IV, 19 | accomplished all these things on account of which he had resolved
73 IV, 24 | namely, because our ships, on account of their great size, could
74 IV, 25 | to the shore], chiefly on account of the depth of the sea,
75 IV, 27 | it might be pardoned on account of their indiscretion. Caesar,
76 IV, 30 | which, too, was on this account more limited than ordinary,
77 IV, 38 | which they might retreat, on account of the drying up of their
78 V, 1 | because he knew that, on account of the frequent changes
79 V, 3 | from coming to him on this account, that he might the more
80 V, 9 | they had before prepared on account of a civil war; for all
81 V, 13 | length of this side, as their account states, is 700 miles. The
82 V, 15 | perceived that our men, on account of the weight of their arms,
83 V, 21 | winter on the continent, on account of the sudden revolts of
84 V, 32 | on the march, and on that account had not been an adviser
85 V, 48 | thought that he might, on that account, relax his speed, he halted
86 VI, 11 | lay before the reader an account of the manners of Gaul and
87 VI, 12 | with Caesar, those, who on account of their old animosities
88 VI, 16 | superstitious rites; and on that account they who are troubled with
89 VI, 19 | of their own estates. An account is kept of all this money
90 VI, 23 | that they shall be on that account the more secure, because
91 VI, 24 | them offensively, and, on account of the great number of their
92 VII, 22 | more skillfully on this account, because there are in their
93 VII, 25 | enemy: the more so on this account because they saw the coverings
94 VII, 41 | incessant toil, since on account of the size of the camp,
95 VII, 43 | think worse of the state on account of the ignorance and fickleness
96 VII, 44 | could scarcely be seen on account of the numbers on it. Being
97 VII, 53 | not be dispirited on this account, nor attribute to the valor
98 VII, 55 | purchased in Italy and Spain on account of this war. When Eporedirix
99 VII, 57 | called to that honor on account of his extraordinary knowledge
100 VII, 75 | the Romans on their own account, and at their own discretion,
101 VII, 77 | thoughts of personal danger on account of your safety; nor by your
102 VII, 77 | appeared useless for war on account of their age, and did not
103 VII, 83 | include in their works, on account of the extent of the circuit,
104 VII, 86 | fortifications in the plains on account of the greatness of the
105 VII, 88 | undertaken that war, not on account of his own exigences, but
106 VII, 88 | his own exigences, but on account of the general freedom;
107 VIII, 8 | convinced of the truth of this account from the concurring testimony
108 VIII, 17 | send to look for forage, on account of the abundance of corn
109 VIII, 35 | sent out, having brought an account of what was going on, Caninius
110 VIII, 48 | aversion to Comius, on which account he executed the more willingly
|