Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 85| fodder, and having no water, wood, or corn, they beg a conference;
2 II, 37| began to lay in corn and wood, and to fortify his camp,
3 III, 15| not allowed to get either wood or water, or even anchor
4 III, 15| only provisions, but even wood and water; and it once happened
5 III, 66| were retired behind the wood, and were on their march
6 III, 66| This camp joined a certain wood, and was not above four
7 III, 76| excursions, some to collect wood and forage; others, invited
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 8 II, 19| made an assault out of the wood upon our men, who did not
9 V, 14| indeed, dye themselves with wood, which occasions a bluish
10 V, 25| soldiers engaged in procuring wood, came with a large body
11 VI, 10| territories: that there is a wood there of very great extent,
12 VI, 30| house being surrounded by a wood (as are generally the dwellings
13 VII, 23| protects it from fire, and the wood from the battering ram,
14 VII, 23| battering ram, since it [the wood] being mortised in the inside
15 VII, 24| casting torches and dry wood from the wall on the mound,
16 VIII, 18| on every side by a thick wood or a very deep river, as
17 VIII, 42| tallow, pitch, and dried wood: these they set on fire,
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