Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 44| same post. The two parties engage, and as Afranius's men had
2 I, 67| the night and obliged to engage under their baggage, or
3 I, 83| dissuaded from wishing to engage, and the more especially,
4 I, 86| himself, in having declined to engage on favorable terms, in an
5 II, 4 | encouraged each other to engage and communicated their plan
6 II, 31| former recommended us to engage at a great disadvantage.
7 II, 33| spirits, and not hesitate to engage the enemy and put their
8 II, 33| tamper with our men or to engage on equal terms he might
9 II, 34| pass it, that they might engage with the advantage of the
10 II, 41| fatigue, deficient in ardor to engage, and courage: but the latter
11 III, 22| Bibulus: and he endeavored to engage in his interest all persons
12 III, 34| Thessaly and Aetolia, to engage that the states in those
13 III, 37| alacrity of our troops to engage, suspecting that he should
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 14 I, 46| did not think proper to engage, lest, after the enemy were
15 I, 48| Ariovistus should be willing to engage in battle, an opportunity
16 II, 5 | might not be necessary to engage with so large a number at
17 III, 17| that a lieutenant ought to engage in battle with so great
18 IV, 5 | know of there. They often engage in resolutions concerning
19 IV, 7 | if they are provoked, to engage with them in arms; for that
20 IV, 11| army, and forbid them to engage; and grant them permission
21 IV, 33| from their chariots and engage on foot. The charioteers
22 V, 16| time did the enemy ever engage with us in very large numbers. ~
23 V, 18| great danger of our horse, engage with them; and this source
24 V, 49| position, so that he might engage in battle, in front of his
25 VI, 17| they have determined to engage in battle, they commonly
26 VI, 31| considered he ought not to engage in a battle, or [whether]
27 VII, 27| therefore ordered his own men to engage in their work more remissly,
28 VII, 56| in order that he might engage before greater forces of
29 VII, 65| who were accustomed to engage among them. On their arrival,
30 VII, 84| of making a sally. They engage on all sides at once and
31 VIII, 7 | Comius had left the camp to engage the Germans to their aid
32 VIII, 28| before him, with orders to engage the enemy, and delay their
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