Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 2 | tribunes, prevailed on to suffer it to be read in the senate;
2 I, 14| rest of the freemen would suffer Caius Caesar, a general,
3 I, 32| port or town, and did not suffer his son, though laboring
4 I, 33| by which he himself would suffer the loss both of dignity
5 I, 51| along the banks did not suffer them to be completed; and
6 I, 82| did not attack them, nor suffer a tent to be pitched that
7 I, 85| should not be necessitated to suffer the most severe penalties."
8 II, 13| Trebonius strict charge not to suffer the town to be taken by
9 II, 36| Attius that he should not suffer the fortune of them all
10 III, 17| commissioners to Pompey, who should suffer no personal injury; and
11 III, 64| Do not, I conjure you, suffer a dishonor to be sustained
12 III, 92| from their position, or suffer their line to be put into
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 13 I, 14| in order that they may suffer the more severely from a
14 I, 27| their arms, they should suffer punishment, or else induced
15 I, 43| he should at all events suffer none of them any more to
16 I, 45| people’s practice would suffer him to abandon most meritorious
17 II, 31| reduced to that state, to suffer any fate from the Roman
18 III, 6 | panic-stricken, and do not suffer them to halt even upon the
19 IV, 13| order that he might not suffer any opportunity for engaging
20 VI, 8 | that their dignity did not suffer them to fear to attack with
21 VI, 9 | Germans, the innocent should suffer the penalty of the guilty:
22 VII, 8 | their property, and not to suffer them to be plundered by
23 VII, 30| they ought to endure and suffer every thing which should
24 VII, 39| entreats that Caesar should not suffer their state to swerve from
25 VIII, 6 | of the republic, should suffer no calamity; he again draws
26 VIII, 12| the command, nor would he suffer them to fight without him.
27 VIII, 19| fought by turns, and did not suffer themselves to be surrounded,
28 VIII, 48| him for assistance not to suffer the wound, which he had
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