Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 3 | whoever spoke with the greatest acrimony and cruelty was
2 I, 5 | their common enemies; the greatest part of whom he had himself
3 I, 19 | Nearly at the time when the greatest part of the work was completed,
4 I, 46 | too inconsiderately. The greatest contest was in this place,
5 II, 21 | where embassadors from the greatest part of the nearer province
6 II, 30 | forced to submit to the greatest cruelties." There were some
7 II, 32 | were ready to submit to the greatest difficulties, cast you off?
8 II, 40 | infantry on which he had the greatest dependence, and he himself
9 III, 9 | every hardship, and their greatest distress was the want of
10 III, 32 | whosoever of them acted with the greatest rigor and inhumanity, was
11 III, 59 | committed the offices of greatest honor in their own country,
12 III, 64 | have I defended with the greatest care for many years, at
13 III, 71 | and centurions. But the greatest part of all these perished
14 III, 81 | preserved them with the greatest care, there was not a state
15 III, 94 | on which he reposed his greatest hopes thrown into confusion,
16 III, 109| his friends, who had the greatest influence, as deputies to
17 III, 110| wives there, by whom the greatest part of them had children.
18 III, 111| was maintained with the greatest obstinacy. For the forces
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 19 I, 31 | they should be put to the greatest tortures. For these Divitiacus
20 I, 38 | that he ought to take the greatest precautions lest this should
21 I, 40 | of its valor, placed the greatest confidence. ~~
22 I, 41 | of all others he had the greatest faith [he found] that by
23 I, 42 | in which he placed the greatest confidence, in order that
24 III, 15 | soldiers strove with the greatest energy to board the ships
25 III, 27 | heard of this battle, the greatest part of Aquitania surrendered
26 III, 28 | they perceived that the greatest nations [of Gaul] who had
27 IV, 2 | which the Gauls take the greatest pleasure, and which they
28 IV, 2 | they render capable of the greatest labor by daily exercise.
29 IV, 3 | 3 They esteem it their greatest praise as a nation, that
30 IV, 12 | his antagonists] with the greatest intrepidity, as long as
31 IV, 13 | concluded, would be the greatest madness; and knowing the
32 IV, 17 | Therefore, although the greatest difficulty in forming a
33 IV, 24 | landing. In this was the greatest difficulty, for the following
34 IV, 31 | by the soldiers with the greatest energy, he effected that,
35 IV, 33 | betake themselves with the greatest celerity to their chariots
36 V, 23 | among the Eburones, the greatest portion of whom lie between
37 V, 30 | bring the matter into the greatest jeopardy by their dissension
38 V, 32 | was not done without the greatest fear and despair. Besides
39 V, 36 | while fighting with the greatest courage before the camp.
40 V, 47 | and fills all with the greatest joy. Then the smoke of the
41 V, 48 | that he may come into the greatest contempt with the enemy.
42 VI, 11 | judgment to possess the greatest influence, upon whose will
43 VI, 15 | and resources, have the greatest number of vassals and dependents
44 VI, 21 | longest time, receive the greatest commendation among their
45 VI, 23 | 23 It is the greatest glory to the several states
46 VI, 28 | those who have slain the greatest number of them, having produced
47 VI, 36 | soldiers in camp with the greatest exactness, and agreeable
48 VII, 17 | army was distressed by the greatest want of corn, through the
49 VII, 32 | and, finding there the greatest plenty of corn and other
50 VII, 55 | which is a town of the greatest importance among them, that
51 VII, 63 | Viridomarus, youths of the greatest promise, submit reluctantly
52 VIII, 15 | barbarians fled with the greatest precipitation. ~
53 VIII, 38 | they seemed to be in the greatest terror: to relieve the state
54 VIII, 43 | and even, after losing the greatest part of their forces by
55 VIII, 48 | because he had lost the greatest part of his followers, sent
56 VIII, 52 | Gaul, he returned with the greatest haste to the army at Nemetocenna;
57 VIII, 54 | Belgae, a people of the greatest valor, and the Aedui, who
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