Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 1 I, 12| themselves in the nearest woods. That canton [which was
2 II, 18| the interior. Within these woods the enemy kept themselves
3 II, 19| betook themselves into the woods to their companions, and
4 II, 19| those who lay hid in the woods, which had been agreed on
5 II, 19| formed their ranks within the woods, and had encouraged one
6 II, 19| they seemed to be in the woods, the river, and close upon
7 IV, 18| themselves in deserts and woods. ~
8 IV, 19| their possessions into the woods, and that all who could
9 IV, 32| concealed themselves in the woods during the night. Then attacking
10 IV, 38| themselves in their thickest woods. Caesar fixed the winter
11 V, 9 | concealed themselves in woods, as they had secured a place
12 V, 9 | themselves rushed out of the woods to fight here and there,
13 V, 9 | and drove them out of the woods, receiving only a few wounds.
14 V, 15| and drove them to their woods and hills; but, having slain
15 V, 15| camp, rushed out of the woods, and making an attack upon
16 V, 18| from the fields into the woods; and, when our cavalry,
17 V, 18| out charioteers from the woods by all the well-known roads
18 V, 20| place, and was defended by woods and morasses, and a very
19 V, 20| fortified the intricate woods, in which they are wont
20 V, 31| in two divisions in the woods, in a suitable and concealed
21 V, 36| wandering at random through the woods, and inform him of these
22 V, 38| who had gone off into the woods for the purpose of procuring
23 V, 51| pursue them very far, because woods and morasses intervened,
24 VI, 5 | continued extent of morasses and woods; and they alone out of Gaul
25 VI, 5 | position, retreat into the woods and morasses, and convey
26 VI, 8 | onslaught, sought the nearest woods; Labienus pursuing them
27 VI, 29| Suevi had retired into their woods, apprehending a scarcity
28 VI, 30| seek the neighborhood of woods and rivers), his attendants
29 VI, 30| mounted him on a horse; the woods sheltered him as he fled.
30 VI, 34| leading many too far, and the woods with their unknown and hidden
31 VI, 34| might be hazarded in the woods rather than the legionary
32 VI, 37| seen, in consequence of woods lying in the way on that
33 VI, 41| they had deposited in the woods. And so great was the alarm,
34 VII, 1 | among themselves in the woods, and retired places, complain
35 VII, 16| camp a place defended by woods and marshes, at the distance
36 VII, 18| the thickest parts of the woods, and drew up all their forces
37 VII, 32| them from the marshes and woods, or else press them by a
38 VII, 45| and congeals it in the woods. The suspicion of the Gauls
39 VII, 62| own fugitives, such as the woods and mountains did not shelter
40 VIII, 5 | sufficient protection in the woods, from the violence of the
41 VIII, 7 | baggage into the most remote woods: that several noblemen were
42 VIII, 12| in a place covered with woods; to it they sent their horse
43 VIII, 19| enemy broke out from the woods while Correus was engaged.
44 VIII, 19| gradually advanced from the woods in order of battle and forced
45 VIII, 19| carried them; some sought the woods, others the river, but were
46 VIII, 19| field and take refuge in the woods, or accept our offers of
47 VIII, 20| escaped by the shelter of the woods, had returned to them after
48 VIII, 35| narrow paths through the woods, to fetch the corn into
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