Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 52| they retired to the higher grounds. There were missing that
2 I, 65| perceived from the rising grounds which joined Caesar's camp,
3 I, 80| made a stand on the level grounds. If they had a mountain
4 I, 80| guards, from the rising grounds, protected the rest in their
5 I, 80| at them from the rising grounds with advantage; then their
6 II, 5 | camp and all the higher grounds it was easy to see into
7 II, 40| his army from the rising grounds down to the plain. ~
8 III, 49| search for low and marshy grounds, and to sink wells, and
9 III, 98| come down from the higher grounds into the plain, and pile
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 10 I, 20| the future to avoid all grounds of suspicion; he says that
11 I, 23| had seized on the higher grounds, they had not joined battle
12 I, 43| old and how just were the grounds of connection that existed
13 III, 6 | halt even upon the higher grounds. All the forces of the enemy
14 III, 14| all the hills and higher grounds, from which there was a
15 V, 28| that nature without sure grounds? That his own opinion was
16 V, 40| who had any intimacy and grounds of friendship with Cicero,
17 VII, 37| undertake the war on slight grounds. It was resolved that Litavicus
18 VII, 88| as these low and sloping grounds were plainly visible from
19 VIII, 13| often beaten from the rising grounds, did not stop till they
20 VIII, 36| river, and that the higher grounds were unoccupied: but that
21 VIII, 36| possession of the higher grounds. Upon this the German horse
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