Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 30 | approved of collecting a fleet, and crossing the sea, and
2 I, 30 | Caesar, was to wait for a fleet from the distant regions
3 I, 32 | Tubero came to Utica with his fleet, prevented his entering
4 I, 35 | repairing the walls, the fleet, and the gates. ~
5 I, 37 | arrived at Massilia with his fleet, and was received into the
6 I, 37 | his command they send the fleet to all parts; they seize
7 I, 57 | smaller vessels, that our fleet might be terrified by numbers;
8 I, 57 | brought along with him. A fleet being thus furnished with
9 I, 58 | Caesar had appointed to that fleet the bravest men selected
10 II, 3 | by Cneius Pompey with a fleet of sixteen sail, a few of
11 II, 3 | Curio, and, putting with his fleet into Messana, and making
12 II, 3 | another battle with Brutus's fleet with the addition of his
13 II, 4 | archers and engines. With a fleet thus appointed, encouraged
14 II, 4 | and there ranged their fleet and again encouraged each
15 II, 5 | place with an augmented fleet; for to those made by Caesar
16 II, 5 | solicited, had gone on board the fleet, that if any adverse fate
17 II, 6 | observed, the ships of Brutus's fleet, which were nearest that
18 II, 7 | not one was lost: of the fleet of the Massilians five were
19 II, 23 | town. The rest of Caesar's fleet, after his flight, retired
20 II, 23 | rope, and returned with his fleet to Curio. ~
21 II, 24 | detached Marcus before with the fleet to Utica, and marched thither
22 II, 32 | attack, I routed the enemy's fleet? That twice in two days
23 II, 43 | suspected that the enemy's fleet would immediately be upon
24 II, 43 | who were on board of the fleet, were in a hurry to set
25 III, 3 | had collected a numerous fleet from Asia, and the Cyclades,
26 III, 4 | son, had brought in his fleet eight hundred, whom he had
27 III, 5 | purpose had stationed his fleet along the sea-coast. The
28 III, 5 | sea-coast. The Egyptian fleet was commanded by Pompey,
29 III, 7 | decks; nor did Bibulus, his fleet being disordered and his
30 III, 9 | departure Of the Liburnian fleet, Marcus Octavius sailed
31 III, 14 | occupied by the enemy's fleet: on receiving this information
32 III, 15 | observed before, lay with his fleet near Oricum, and as he debarred
33 III, 17 | divided, that they by their fleet deprived him of his shipping
34 III, 23 | sailed from Oricum, with a fleet of fifty ships, which he
35 III, 23 | and ports blocked up by a fleet. By his sudden arrival,
36 III, 23 | repaired; for that with his own fleet he could prevent Caesar
37 III, 25 | those who commanded Pompey's fleet to guard the coast, and
38 III, 25 | unguarded by the enemy's fleet, because they dare not venture
39 III, 26 | who commanded the Rhodian fleet at Dyrrachium, put out of
40 III, 26 | attacked by the enemy's fleet, if the wind abated, having
41 III, 27 | had threatened ruin to our fleet, were forced to be uneasy
42 III, 27 | and damaged the Rhodian fleet to such a degree that all
43 III, 28 | who commanded Pompey's fleet, detached after them several
44 III, 40 | who commanded the Egyptian fleet, having got intelligence
45 III, 40 | land, with ladders and his fleet, in order to divide the
46 III, 40 | the command of the Asiatic fleet, to hinder provisions from
47 III, 100| Laelius arrived with his fleet at Brundusium and in the
48 III, 100| endeavored to entice Laelius's fleet, and took one five-banked
49 III, 101| arrived in Sicily with a fleet of Syrians, Phoenicians,
50 III, 101| Cicilians: and as Caesar's fleet was divided into two parts,
51 III, 101| got into Messana with his fleet, before Pomponius had notice
52 III, 101| them against Pomponius's fleet, and set fire to all his
53 III, 101| thence to attack Sulpicius's fleet at Vibo, and our ships being
54 III, 101| had been left to guard the fleet, being considered as invalids,
55 III, 101| having attacked Cassius's fleet, captured two five-banked
56 III, 101| Cassius departed with his fleet from that coast. ~
57 III, 102| added a few galleys to his fleet he went to Cilicia, and
58 III, 111| Caesar being deprived of his fleet, they would have the command
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 59 III, 11 | Brutus, a young man, over the fleet and those Gallic vessels
60 III, 13 | them. The encounter of our fleet with these ships’ was of
61 III, 13 | of such a nature that our fleet excelled in speed alone,
62 III, 14 | determined to wait for his fleet. As soon as it came up and
63 III, 14 | Brutus, who commanded the fleet, or to the tribunes of the
64 IV, 21 | neighboring countries, and the fleet which the preceding summer
65 IV, 23 | place, and stationed his fleet over against an open and
66 IV, 36 | after midnight, and all his fleet arrived safe at the continent,
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