Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 1 | citizenship, ordered the principal man of the colony to be arrested
2 I, 1 | great kindness, as he was a man of the highest rank, and
3 I, 9 | came Lucius Caesar, a young man, whose father was a lieutenant-general
4 I, 18 | walls, and assigned to each man a particular part of the
5 I, 22 | out privately. Nor was any man so negligent or drowsy as
6 I, 23 | province to do mischief [to any man], but to protect himself
7 I, 36 | submit to the will of any one man." He made use of such arguments
8 I, 57 | terrified by numbers; they man them with a great number
9 I, 65 | and taken up, and not a man perished. His army being
10 I, 69 | by each other. But not a man murmured at the fatigue,
11 I, 75 | Afranius's son, a young man, endeavored, by means of
12 I, 75 | blows; and Caesar, in every man's judgment, reaped the advantage
13 I, 86 | sue for mercy became no man less than him: for that
14 II, 8 | thing on which the wit of man is employed, it was found
15 II, 43 | soldiers were all killed to a man. Marcus Rufus, the quaestor,
16 II, 43 | general consternation, every man consulted his own safety.
17 III, 11 | and ordered the Greeks to man the walls, and to take arms.
18 III, 13 | that they almost every man deserted their colors in
19 III, 16 | Bibulus, "that he was a man of strong passion, and had
20 III, 19 | humble language, as became a man pleading for his own and
21 III, 20 | sale, is the behavior of a man even of a moderate temper;
22 III, 32 | inhumanity, was esteemed the best man, and best citizen. The province
23 III, 34 | Menedemus, the principal man of those regions, on that
24 III, 35 | inclinations. Hegasaretus, a man of established power, favored
25 III, 35 | interest. Petreius, a young man of a most noble family,
26 III, 37 | and returned quickly every man to his own rank, and in
27 III, 53 | holes. In reward for this man's services, both to himself
28 III, 57 | his acquaintance. To this man he gave letters and instructions
29 III, 69 | colors. Nor did a single man face about. ~
30 III, 74 | their disgrace, that not a man required the command of
31 III, 91 | centurion of the tenth legion, a man of pre-eminent bravery.
32 III, 93 | with such fury, that not a man of them stood; but all wheeling
33 III, 104| of the king's guards, a man of singular boldness, and
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 34 I, 18 | Dumnorix is the person, a man of the highest daring, in
35 I, 18 | account of his liberality, a man eager for a revolution:
36 I, 18 | among the Bituriges to a man the most noble and most
37 I, 19 | by the punishment of this man, he should hurt the feelings
38 I, 31 | passionate, and reckless man, and that his commands could
39 I, 47 | Valerius Caburus, a young man of the highest courage and
40 I, 52 | which, P. Crassus, a young man, who commanded the cavalry,—
41 I, 53 | itself; because he saw a man of the first rank in the
42 II, 4 | Divitiacus, the most powerful man of all Gaul, had been king;
43 II, 6 | town, one of the Remi, a man of the highest rank and
44 II, 11 | broke their ranks, and, to a man, rested their safety in
45 II, 25 | Baculus, a very valiant man, who was so exhausted by
46 III, 5 | tribune of the soldiers, a man of great skill and valor,
47 III, 7 | this: P. Crassus, a young man, had taken up his winter
48 III, 11 | appoints D. Brutus, a young man, over the fleet and those
49 III, 13 | spikes of the thickness of a man’s thumb; the anchors were
50 IV, 12 | Aquitanian, a most valiant man, and descended from a very
51 IV, 15 | their camp, all safe to a man, very few being even wounded.
52 IV, 21 | had created king there, a man whose courage and conduct
53 V, 7 | do nothing as a rational man while he himself was absent,
54 V, 7 | They surround and kill the man as they had been commanded;
55 V, 19 | parts, from which the young man, Mandubratius embracing
56 V, 24 | was among the Carnutes a man named Tasgetius, born of
57 V, 33 | through the ranks “that no man should quit his place; that
58 V, 34 | chief centurion, a brave man and one of great authority,
59 V, 36 | of safety, they all to a man destroy themselves in the
60 V, 43 | hand, and having slain one man, for a short time drove
61 V, 47 | rewards he induces a certain man of the Gallic horse to convey
62 V, 57 | Indutiomarus, and no one wound any man before he should have seen
63 V, 57 | justifies the policy of the man, and since all aimed at
64 VI, 16 | that unless the life of a man be offered for the life
65 VI, 16 | offered for the life of a man, the mind of the immortal
66 VI, 23 | both the enterprise and the man arise and promise their
67 VI, 28 | extraordinary; they spare neither man nor wild beast which they
68 VI, 29 | Volcatius Tullus, a young man; he himself, when the corn
69 VI, 35 | as their guide the same man by whose information they
70 VI, 40 | arrive in the camp safe to a man. The camp attendants and
71 VII, 4 | Celtillus the Arvernian, a young man of the highest power (whose
72 VII, 5 | Lucterius, one of the Cadurci, a man the utmost daring, with
73 VII, 9 | he places Brutus, a young man, in command of these forces;
74 VII, 25 | office: when the second man was slain in the same manner
75 VII, 32 | family, and personally a man of very great influence
76 VII, 39 | Eporedirix, the Aeduan, a young man born in the highest rank
77 VII, 63 | votes of the mass; all to a man approve of Vercingetorix
78 VII, 65 | of Caburus, the principal man of the state, and several
79 VII, 71 | distributes among them, man by man, the cattle, great
80 VII, 71 | distributes among them, man by man, the cattle, great quantities
81 VII, 73 | stakes, of the thickness of a man’s thigh; sharpened at the
82 VII, 81 | town. Our troops, as each man’s post had been assigned
83 VII, 81 | assigned him some days before, man the fortifications; they
84 VIII, 21 | had fallen, that scarce a man had escaped to bring the
85 VIII, 22 | despite of every virtuous man; however he was satisfied
86 VIII, 28 | general of the horse, a man of uncommon spirit and skill,
87 VIII, 35 | and did not allow a single man to be taken alive. Luterius
88 VIII, 37 | without having scarcely a man wounded, returned to besiege
89 VIII, 42 | both sides; therefore every man faced the weapons of the
90 VIII, 43 | was not done by the art of man, but the will of the gods;
91 VIII, 50 | cheerfully in favor of a man strongly attached to him,
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