Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 1 | dispatch, and reached the city in three days' time, before
2 I, 3 | senate was convened in the city, and Pompey was near at
3 I, 3 | and keeping them near the city to do him injury:" as Marcus
4 I, 4 | Caesar, were sent for. The city and the comitium were crowded
5 I, 6 | proposers except when the city was in danger of being set
6 I, 6 | people, and proconsuls in the city, should take care that the
7 I, 6 | made their escape from the city, and withdrew to Caesar,
8 I, 7 | is convened outside the city. Pompey repeated the same
9 I, 7 | oath, and march out of the city in a public manner, robed
10 I, 7 | Both the consuls leave the city, and private men had lictors
11 I, 7 | private men had lictors in the city and capital, contrary to
12 I, 8 | temples and eminences of the city; (and these instances of
13 I, 10 | and dragged back to the city, though the people had ordered
14 I, 10 | fears be removed from the city; let free elections, and
15 I, 15 | hallowed door he fled from the city. For it was falsely rumored
16 I, 15 | Cneius Pompey had left the city the day before, and was
17 I, 15 | were stopped within the city. No place on this side of
18 I, 18 | a particular part of the city to defend. In a speech to
19 I, 23 | had been driven out of the city on his account, and to assert
20 I, 34 | For Pompey, on leaving the city, had declared in the open
21 I, 34 | to no purpose, left the city, in order that he might
22 I, 35 | from all the forts into the city; had opened armories in
23 I, 35 | had opened armories in the city; and were repairing the
24 I, 36 | admit either into their city or harbors." ~
25 I, 37 | and was received into the city, and made governor of it.
26 I, 37 | lieutenant, to invest the city. ~
27 I, 86 | direct the affairs of the city; and though absent, have
28 II, 5 | hopes of preserving the city, either by their internal
29 II, 6 | the citizens, who, if the city was taken, must undergo
30 II, 7 | and when it came near the city, the whole people crowded
31 II, 7 | would have imagined that the city had been taken by an enemy
32 II, 7 | for the defense of their city with unwearied energy. ~
33 II, 12 | dreading the pillage of their city, rush all together out of
34 II, 12 | arrival; they saw that their city was taken, our works completed,
35 II, 20 | town, and to secure the city and island for Caesar. That
36 II, 36 | protect and defend their city, a circumstance which greatly
37 III, 1 | legions quartered in the city (these trials were finished
38 III, 2 | dictatorship, set out from the city, and went to Brundusium,
39 III, 20 | of Caius Trebonius, the city praetor, and promised if
40 III, 79 | marched to Heraclea Sentica, a city subject to Candavia; so
41 III, 81 | acquainted with the fate of the city of Gomphi by some prisoners,
42 III, 83 | boasting his interest in the city and his dignity, and Scipio
43 III, 106| killed in all parts of the city. ~
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 44 I, 7 | hastens to set out from the city, and, by as great marches
45 I, 39 | followed Caesar from the city [Rome] from motives of friendship,
46 I, 47 | with the freedom of the city by C. Valerius Flaccus),
47 VI, 1 | he was remaining near the city invested with military command
48 VII, 1 | detained by commotions in the city, and could not, amid so
49 VII, 6 | understood that matters in the city had been reduced to a more
50 VII, 11 | forth silently from the city before midnight, and began
51 VII, 15 | own hands to the fairest city of almost the whole of Gaul,
52 VII, 36 | viewing the situation of the city, which, being built on a
53 VII, 47 | in every quarter of the city, those who were at a distance
54 VII, 68 | reconnoitering the situation of the city, finding that the enemy
55 VIII, 52 | their armies. That then the city would be free, and enjoy
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