Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 III, 2 | cavalry to meet him. But he scarcely found as many ships as would
2 III, 18| confidential secrets. He had scarcely entered on the subject when
3 III, 49| deserters, that they could scarcely maintain their horses, and
4 III, 63| in every manner, and were scarcely able to make resistance,
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 5 I, 6 | the river Rhone (by which scarcely one wagon at a time could
6 II, 28| men they [were reduced] to scarcely 500 who could bear arms;
7 III, 4 | elapsed, so that time was scarcely given for arranging and
8 III, 26| plains, and after leaving scarcely a fourth part out of the
9 IV, 32| overpowered by the enemy and scarcely able to stand their ground,
10 V, 27| consideration, that it was scarcely credible that the obscure
11 V, 42| withdrawing from the scene, but scarcely did any one even then look
12 V, 48| in itself, [there being] scarcely 7,000 men, and these too
13 V, 53| the Gallic war, there was scarcely a state which was not suspected
14 VI, 8 | 8 Scarcely had the rear advanced beyond
15 VI, 37| the cohort on the outpost scarcely sustains the first attack.
16 VII, 28| to about forty thousand, scarcely eight hundred, who fled
17 VII, 44| the former days, it could scarcely be seen on account of the
18 VIII, 12| their horse, who, though scarcely able to sit on horseback
19 VIII, 16| enough to attempt it being scarcely able to see their horse’
20 VIII, 37| successfully, without having scarcely a man wounded, returned
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