Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 48 | opinion of all, yet they had stood our attack and sustained
2 I, 62 | parties, that, which had stood by Sertorius in the late
3 I, 86 | the length of the peace, stood in need of no such aid;
4 I, 87 | from the rampart where they stood, that they should be discharged
5 III, 32 | homes and countries, they stood in need of every necessary;
6 III, 93 | they received our javelins, stood our charge, and maintained
7 III, 93 | that not a man of them stood; but all wheeling about,
8 III, 105| Victory, in which there stood a statue consecrated to
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 9 I, 19 | so. One thing [however] stood in the way of all this—that
10 I, 31 | of Gaul: that the Aedui stood at the head of one of these,
11 I, 48 | fallen from his horse, they stood around him: if it was necessary
12 II, 21 | he saw first, at these he stood, lest in seeking his own
13 II, 26 | the seventh legion, which stood close by him, was also hard
14 II, 27 | them had fallen, the next stood upon them prostrate, and
15 III, 26 | having demolished these, stood in the camp of the enemy
16 IV, 37 | they, forming a circle, stood on their defense, a shout
17 V, 17 | such ardor, though they stood above the water by their
18 V, 34 | retreated and by those who stood next them; but if, on the
19 V, 50 | flight, so that no one at all stood his ground with the intention
20 VII, 48 | quarter. As each first came he stood beneath the wall, and increased
21 VII, 62 | where the seventh legion stood: on the left wing, which
22 VIII, 18 | troops. Our men resolutely stood the charge, and did not
23 VIII, 19 | usually happens, our men, who stood the enemy’s first charge,
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