Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 1 | his efforts were vain, he fled through fear of his adversaries,
2 I, 9 | met the tribunes, who had fled to him for protection; he
3 I, 14| which he had introduced, and fled. A fear of Caesar's front
4 I, 15| opening the hallowed door he fled from the city. For it was
5 I, 16| of Caesar's approach, he fled from the town, and, in attempting
6 I, 25| horse. Lucius, the praetor, fled from Alba, with six cohorts:
7 I, 31| combined [against him], fled from Sardinia to Africa.
8 I, 31| in a public assembly, he fled from his province. ~
9 I, 32| Auximum, had straightway fled to Africa, and finding it
10 I, 60| horse at a distance, they fled in the midst of their expedition,
11 II, 14| pursuing them when they fled. They retired to their walls,
12 II, 23| the number of our ships, fled the sea, and running his
13 II, 34| setting spurs to their horses, fled back to their friends: the
14 II, 35| and crowds of those that fled, the gates of the camps
15 II, 41| pursue them far when they fled, or to press their horses
16 III, 60| they might appear to have fled to Pompey after conferring
17 III, 94| maintain their ground, but all fled, nor was Caesar deceived
18 III, 95| For the soldiers who had fled for refuge to it from the
19 III, 95| centurions and tribunes, fled, without stopping, to the
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 20 I, 31| On that account he had fled from his state and had gone
21 II, 14| brought upon the state, had fled into Britain. That not only
22 III, 20| Manilius, the proconsul, had fled with the loss of his baggage,
23 IV, 15| abandoning their standards, fled out of the camp, and when
24 V, 10| to pursue those who had fled. These having advanced a
25 V, 34| made a charge, the enemy fled very precipitately. In the
26 V, 53| discovered their plot and fled, pursued him even to the
27 VI, 30| woods sheltered him as he fled. Thus fortune tended much
28 VI, 31| himself; and a part of them fled into the forest Arduenna,
29 VI, 44| ancestors. Some fearing a trial, fled; when he had forbidden these
30 VII, 28| scarcely eight hundred, who fled from the town when they
31 VII, 31| takes care that those who fled to him on the storming of
32 VII, 40| discovers that they had fled a short time before to the
33 VII, 47| alarmed by the sudden tumult, fled hastily from the town, since
34 VIII, 3 | first coming of the Romans, fled to the neighboring states,
35 VIII, 5 | towns), and dispersed and fled. Caesar, unwilling to expose
36 VIII, 13| distance to support them, fled disgracefully; and being
37 VIII, 13| some, impelled by fear, had fled further. Their danger threw
38 VIII, 15| happened than the barbarians fled with the greatest precipitation. ~
39 VIII, 19| part of their men, they fled in consternation whithersoever
40 VIII, 21| approbation, Comius the Atrebatian fled to those Germans from whom
41 VIII, 35| at so unexpected an evil, fled by different ways to their
42 VIII, 36| that none of the enemy had fled back from the slaughter
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