Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 1 | description had never before been offered to a Roman citizen. While
2 I, 4 | Lucius Piso, the censor, offered to go to Caesar: as did
3 I, 16 | at his own expense, and offered most earnestly to comply
4 I, 42 | short time under arms, he offered him battle on equal terms.
5 I, 85 | but a public interview offered if they chose it, Afranius'
6 II, 20 | every one most earnestly offered to entertain them in their
7 II, 33 | determined, whenever opportunity offered, to hazard a battle. The
8 III, 1 | sentences), because they had offered their service to him in
9 III, 17 | distress, but that they offered no hopes or terms of peace,
10 III, 41 | forces before his camp, he offered Pompey battle. But perceiving
11 III, 47 | neither barley nor pulse when offered them, and they held in great
12 III, 56 | army on a level ground, and offered Pompey battle, and led his
13 III, 60 | execution, and no opportunity offered to accomplish it, they borrowed
14 III, 73 | overcome them when they offered resistance; but whether
15 III, 110| their lives, every violence offered to any of their body. These
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 16 III, 10 | that war;—the open insult offered to the state in the detention
17 V, 29 | sides, when opposition was offered strenuously by Cotta and
18 V, 39 | Cicero, great rewards being offered [to the messengers] if they
19 VI, 16 | unless the life of a man be offered for the life of a man, the
20 VII, 88 | must yield to fortune, he offered himself to them for either
21 VIII, 51 | meet him. Sacrifices were offered up in every quarter. The
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