Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 37 | rig and refit their other vessels. They lay up in the public
2 I, 57 | they add several smaller vessels, that our fleet might be
3 I, 59 | heaviness and slowness of our vessels, which having been built
4 II, 43 | board, that some of the vessels sank with the weight of
5 III, 8 | mariners and masters of the vessels, hoping by the severity
6 III, 14 | harbor, and recalled all the vessels. One of them, which continued
7 III, 28 | frightened at the number of vessels, and fatigued with the rolling
8 III, 100| five-banked galley and two smaller vessels that had ventured further
9 III, 111| these, there were twenty-two vessels with decks, which were usually
10 III, 112| masters of the Pharos, no vessels can enter the harbor, on
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 11 III, 11 | the fleet and those Gallic vessels which he had ordered to
12 III, 14 | all the hope of the Gallic vessels depended on their sails
13 III, 15 | having now turned their vessels to that quarter in which
14 IV, 17 | that if trunks of trees or vessels were floated down the river
15 IV, 25 | little from the transport vessels, and to be propelled by
16 IV, 25 | When those in the nearest vessels saw them, they speedily
17 IV, 29 | of service in repairing vessels were wanting, and, corn
18 V, 8 | year, and those private vessels which each had built for
19 VII, 55 | they carried away in their vessels whatever corn they could
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