Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 8 | favored and promoted Pompey's honor and dignity. He complained
2 I, 8 | enemies the reputation and honor of that general under whose
3 I, 9 | Caesar, too, for his own honor, ought to sacrifice his
4 I, 10| from her fears. "That the honor of the republic had ever
5 I, 10| submitted to this loss of honor, for the sake of the republic;
6 I, 33| aimed at no extraordinary honor, but had waited for the
7 I, 33| loss both of dignity and honor. He urged the virulence
8 I, 75| they inquired about the honor of our general, and whether
9 I, 78| on the Roman knights the honor of tribunes. ~
10 I, 86| if not with some mark of honor, at least without disgrace;
11 II, 14| enemy, destitute of all honor, only waited a time and
12 II, 17| lieutenant, he was bound in honor to him, that, nevertheless,
13 II, 21| manner conferred marks of honor both publicly and privately
14 II, 32| appear to have conferred the honor on me as a reproach." ~
15 II, 44| Varus complained that his honor was insulted by Juba, yet
16 III, 59| the offices of greatest honor in their own country, and
17 III, 71| the laurel as a mark of honor. But Labienus, having obtained
18 III, 82| friends imploring Pompey's honor to fulfill the engagements
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 19 I, 40| possible, whether a sense of honor and duty, or whether fear
20 I, 43| influence, dignity, and honor: who then could endure that
21 II, 35| receiving Caesar’s letter; [an honor] which before that time
22 IV, 19| far enough to serve both honor and interest, he returned
23 V, 6 | sight of Gaul, to pledge his honor to the rest, to ask for
24 V, 7 | he had conferred so much honor upon the Aeduan state, determined
25 V, 53| always held in especial honor, the one people for their
26 VI, 12| held the second post of honor. ~
27 VI, 13| the Druids] are in great honor among them. For they determine
28 VII, 2 | them by oath and plighted honor, their military standards
29 VII, 20| thought that they conferred honor on him, rather than received
30 VII, 21| they had no doubt of his honor; that the war could not
31 VII, 57| age, was called to that honor on account of his extraordinary
32 VII, 77| approve of this opinion (for honor is a powerful motive with
33 VIII, 6 | considering that not only his honor, but his interest was concerned,
34 VIII, 23| his safety to any person’s honor. For the year before, while
35 VIII, 24| most consistent with his honor to waste his country both
36 VIII, 44| and threw himself on the honor of several persons, as he
37 VIII, 48| sudden, appealed to the honor of all about him for assistance
38 VIII, 50| yet he thought himself in honor bound to visit the free
39 VIII, 50| to them himself, and his honor in his suit for the consulate
40 VIII, 50| would strip Caesar of all honor and dignity: and that the
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