Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 II, 6 | galleys; having descried the ship of Decimus Brutus, which
2 II, 6 | by the swiftness of his ship extricated himself with
3 II, 6 | being broken off, the whole ship was ready to founder, which
4 II, 22| pursued him. But of these, the ship on board of which he was,
5 II, 23| merchantmen, and seeing a ship left on the shore, he brought
6 II, 32| without the loss of a single ship? That on my arrival, in
7 III, 28| obliged the pilot to run the ship aground: and having got
8 III, 40| Oricum, and weighed up the ship, that had been sunk, with
9 III, 40| number of darts, and took the ship, having beat off the men
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 10 IV, 21| him Caius Volusenus with a ship of war, to acquire a knowledge
11 IV, 21| who dared not leave his ship and trust himself to barbarians,
12 IV, 25| voice, he leaped from the ship and proceeded to bear the
13 IV, 25| incurred, all leaped from the ship. When those in the nearest
14 IV, 26| standards, and as one from one ship and another from another
15 IV, 26| they saw any coming from a ship one by one, spurred on their
16 IV, 27| seized upon when leaving his ship, although in the character
17 V, 22| the previous year was any ship missing which conveyed soldiers;
|