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Julius Caesar Commentaries on the Gallic War IntraText - Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
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1501 VI, 37| their hands so valuable a prize. ~ 1502 V, 55| his own territories, he proclaims an armed council (this according 1503 I, 13| forces of the Helvetii, he procures a bridge to be made across 1504 VIII, 25| and had killed or taken prodigious numbers, he sent Labienus 1505 I, 28| support their hunger, all the productions of the earth having been 1506 I, 30| most convenient and most productive of all Gaul, and hold the 1507 VI, 14| advantages, many embrace this profession of their own accord, and [ 1508 I, 42| mind as he spontaneously proffered that which he had previously 1509 VII, 20| determined, if he made no progress in the siege, to draw off 1510 V, 57| he gives this command and prohibition, that, when the enemy should 1511 VII, 73| sunk in such a manner as to project from the ground not more 1512 VIII, 32| always the author of new projects, had considerable authority 1513 V, 30| dissension.” The matter is prolonged by debate till midnight. 1514 VI, 21| concealment, because they bathe promiscuously in the rivers and [only] 1515 III, 12| points [of land] and on promontories, they neither had an approach 1516 IV, 1| their inclination), both promote their strength and render 1517 VIII, 38| demanded that Guturvatus, the promoter of that treason, and the 1518 V, 43| year used to contend for promotion with the utmost animosity. 1519 IV, 5| the Gauls, who are easily prompted to take up resolutions, 1520 VII, 24| the work, measures were promptly taken, that some should 1521 I, 50| custom for their matrons to pronounce from lots and divination, 1522 IV, 25| transport vessels, and to be propelled by their oars, and be stationed 1523 VII, 42| credulity, which is an innate propensity in that race of men to such 1524 VI, 16| gods can not be rendered propitious, and they have sacrifices 1525 VII, 27| the harvest of victory proportionate to their exertions. He proposed 1526 VI, 40| already affrighted. Some propose that, forming a wedge, they 1527 VII, 42| be ashamed to return to propriety. They entice from the town 1528 VII, 14| them “that the war must be prosecuted on a very different system 1529 V, 23| the corn that year had not prospered in Gaul by reason of the 1530 II, 27| the next stood upon them prostrate, and fought from their bodies; 1531 VI, 34| attention, not so much in protecting the main body of the army ( 1532 VII, 23| of cities; for the stone protects it from fire, and the wood 1533 IV, 30| corn and provisions and protract the affair till winter; 1534 I, 38| afford a great facility for protracting the war, inasmuch as the 1535 I, 3| daughter in marriage. He proves to them that to accomplish 1536 VI, 10| learned these things, he provides a supply of corn, selects 1537 VII, 1| out for Italy to hold the provincial assizes. There he receives 1538 II, 9| skirmishes of the horse [proving] favorable to our men, led 1539 IV, 13| treachery, had made war without provocation. And to wait until the enemy’ 1540 III, 13| ebbing of the tide: the prows were raised very high, and, 1541 VIII, 14| Caesar did not think it prudent to attack them when standing 1542 VII, 89| Commentaries, which were published for the use of historians, 1543 VIII, 12| spirits of the barbarians were puffed up, and inflated at the 1544 V, 50| that way, some began to pull down the rampart with their 1545 III, 14| were caught by them and pulled, and our vessel vigorously 1546 II, 5| all which commands they punctually performed by the day [appointed]. 1547 VI, 44| contriver of that plot, he punished him after the custom of 1548 V, 37| themselves forever and of punishing the Romans for those wrongs 1549 VI, 35| by which day Caesar had purposed to return to the baggage 1550 V, 49| orders the horse to give way purposely, and retreat to the camp: 1551 VIII, 41| men, yet they obstinately pushed on and were not deterred 1552 I, 1| the river Garonne to the Pyrenaean mountains and to that part 1553 VII, 71| by man, the cattle, great quantities of which had been driven 1554 V, 27| Caesar; lastly, they put the query, “what could be more undetermined, 1555 IV, 5| most people give to their questions answers framed agreeably 1556 V, 24| all the lieutenants and questors to whom he had assigned 1557 VI, 25| referred to above, is to a quick traveler, a journey of nine 1558 II, 17| on to the sides, and the quick-briars and thorns springing up 1559 II, 26| being reported to them, quickened their pace, and were seen 1560 VI, 8| would happen, was proceeding quietly, and using the same pretense 1561 VII, 73| oblique rows in the form of a quincunx, pits three feet deep were 1562 VII, 31| recruited, he levies a fixed quota of soldiers from each state, 1563 V, 55| whole assembly after being racked with every torture. In that 1564 III, 29| through the continuance of the rains, the soldiers could not 1565 VI, 29| extremity of the bridge raises towers of four stories, 1566 VII, 23| wood from the battering ram, since it [the wood] being 1567 IV, 17| then driven them in with rammers, not quite perpendicularly, 1568 V, 36| winter-quarters, after wandering at random through the woods, and inform 1569 VIII, 8| of only three legions, he ranged his army in the following 1570 III, 28| they possessed continuous ranges of forests and morasses, 1571 I, 40| one judge that he would so rashly depart from his duty? He 1572 VI, 37| side, before they were just reaching the camp: so much so, that 1573 VII, 89| wish that those who may read them could know how unwillingly 1574 VI, 11| subject to lay before the reader an account of the manners 1575 V, 47| He, after perusing it, reads it out in an assembly of 1576 VIII, 35| Caninius instantly with the ready-armed cohorts from the nearest 1577 VI, 23| They consider this the real evidence of their prowess, 1578 VII, 27| vineae, and exhorts them to reap, at least, the harvest of 1579 IV, 32| For as all the corn was reaped in every part with the exception 1580 IV, 32| arms, and were engaged in reaping, they killed a small number, 1581 VII, 29| in the mean time it was reasonable that he should prevail on 1582 VI, 22| enactment they advance many reasons-lest seduced by long-continued 1583 VIII, 44| states should attempt to rebel in like manner and in different 1584 I, 31| savage, passionate, and reckless man, and that his commands 1585 VI, 21| the twentieth year they reckon among the most disgraceful 1586 V, 29| occurred, they will demand a reckoning at your hands; these, who, 1587 VI, 27| themselves against them, and thus reclining only slightly, they take 1588 VII, 40| friends. When they were recognized and the treachery of Litavicus 1589 VII, 39| the highest rank, on being recommended to him by Divitiacus, had 1590 V, 4| chief men of the Treviri, he reconciled them individually to Cingetorix: 1591 VII, 68| Alesia on the next day. On reconnoitering the situation of the city, 1592 V, 40| permission was granted, they recount the same things which Ambiorix 1593 II, 28| themselves to him; and in recounting the calamity of their state, 1594 VII, 89| country of the] Aedui, and recovers that state. To this place 1595 VII, 87| cohorts from the nearest redoubt, and orders part of the 1596 V, 27| accord. Accordingly, they refer the matter to a council, 1597 IV, 28| eighteen ships, to which reference has been made above, and 1598 VI, 25| Hercynian forest, which has been referred to above, is to a quick 1599 IV, 3| and who are somewhat more refined than those of the same race 1600 VIII, 46| in all parts of Gaul, and reflecting that, in former campaigns [ 1601 V, 3| from his countrymen, and refrained from coming to him on this 1602 I, 22| waiting for our men, and refraining from battle. When, at length, 1603 VII, 83| ordered his soldiers to refresh themselves after their labor 1604 VII, 32| corn and other provisions, refreshed his army after their fatigue 1605 VII, 56| cattle in the fields, after refreshing his army with them, he determined 1606 VII, 89| difficult task, as my daily refusals appear to plead not my inability, 1607 VII, 23| possesses great advantages as regards utility and the defense 1608 VI, 1| lieutenants, after three regiments had been both formed and 1609 VI, 13| is reckoned the central region of the whole of Gaul. Hither 1610 V, 53| prowess in war, most keenly regretted that they had lost so much 1611 VIII, 52| interposed to prevent it; and regulating matters as they desired, 1612 V, 24| in the third year of his reign, many even of his own state 1613 V, 21| districts four several kings reigned, Cingetorix, Carvilius, 1614 VII, 88| wearied by sending frequent reinforcements, and the labor of the entire 1615 V, 27| 28 Arpineius and Junius relate to the lieutenants what 1616 V, 46| from winter-quarters; he relates at large the affairs which 1617 VII, 83| four generals, and a near relative of Vercingetorix. He, having 1618 VIII, 12| and their vigilance was relaxed by custom (an effect which 1619 II, 25| the lower ground, were not relaxing in front, and were [at the 1620 V, 48| he knew that Cicero was released from the blockade, and thought 1621 VI, 13| interpret all matters of religion. To these a large number 1622 IV, 22| 22 While Caesar remains in these parts for the purpose 1623 VII, 16| them; although the evil was remedied by our men, as far as precautions 1624 IV, 31| happen. He therefore provided remedies against all contingencies; 1625 V, 23| thought he could most easily remedy the scarcity of corn and 1626 III, 6| tempt fortune again, and remembered that he had come into winter 1627 VIII, 22| 22 Caesar reminded the embassadors who made 1628 I, 19| thing; at the same time he reminds him of what was said about 1629 VII, 71| that, if they should be remiss, eighty thousand chosen 1630 VII, 27| engage in their work more remissly, and pointed out what he 1631 VIII, 24| him, but that some were removing and fleeing from their country 1632 I, 44| seduced from him, he would renounce the friendship of the Roman 1633 VIII, 45| an Aeduan, who was highly renowned both for his valor and birth, 1634 V, 1| damages and determine the reparation. ~ 1635 VI, 15| were inflecting injuries or repelling those which others inflected 1636 VI, 23| incursion. When a state either repels war waged against it, or 1637 IV, 5| must necessarily instantly repent, since they yield to mere 1638 VII, 31| at Avaricum are speedily replaced. In the mean time, Teutomarus, 1639 I, 19| friend of his, in whom he reposed the highest confidence in 1640 I, 7| according to their own representations,] “no other route: that 1641 I, 16| countrymen), he severely reprimands them, because he is not 1642 VII, 87| renewing the action, and repulsing the enemy, he marches in 1643 I, 35| are the things which he requires of him; first, that he do 1644 V, 26| winter-quarters, and also making a requital to Caesar for his obligations.” ~ 1645 VII, 73| called this a lily from its resemblance to that flower. Stakes a 1646 V, 46| from his winter-quarters, resembling a flight, he should not 1647 II, 22| remarked, neither could proper reserves be posted, nor could the 1648 IV, 1| place for the purpose of residence. They do not live much on 1649 II, 31| close quarters; that they resigned themselves and all their 1650 III, 19| is weak, and by no means resolute in enduring calamities. ~ 1651 III, 5| sally, and trying the last resource. Whereupon assembling the 1652 III, 16| might be more carefully respected by barbarians; having, therefore, 1653 V, 14| children of those by whom respectively each was first espoused 1654 VIII, 31| recent sufferings, but if respite and time were given them, 1655 VII, 89| legions to winter-quarters; he restores about twenty thousand captives 1656 I, 2| From these circumstances it resulted, that they could range less 1657 VI, 38| having intervened, the others resume courage so far as to venture 1658 VI, 24| Which nation to this time retains its position in those settlements, 1659 VII, 40| sending on his cavalry, retards and impedes their march; 1660 I, 36| arrival he was making his revenues less valuable to him; that 1661 I, 14| the more severely from a reverse of circumstances. Although 1662 VI, 19| one the portion of both reverts together with the profits 1663 V, 21| on account of the sudden revolts of Gaul, and as much of 1664 VIII, 51| the magnificence of the richer and zeal of the poorer ranks 1665 VI, 35| to become even now most richly endowed by fortune? In three 1666 VII, 66| who shall not twice have ridden through the enemy’s army.” ~~ 1667 VII, 45| and guise of horsemen, to ride round the hills. To these 1668 III, 14| depended on their sails and rigging, upon these being cut away, 1669 VII, 4| vigilance he adds the utmost rigor of authority; and by the 1670 III, 5| enemy were pressing on more rigorously, and had begun to demolish 1671 V, 12| use either brass or iron rings, determined at a certain 1672 VI, 29| when the corn began to ripen, having set forth for the 1673 VIII, 24| rumored that some states had risen in arms, and he did not 1674 V, 43| thus] embarrassed. His rival runs up to him and succors 1675 V, 43| dealt with both in this rivalry and conflict, that the one 1676 V, 48| considerable valley and rivulet. It was an affair of great 1677 VIII, 32| no longer at liberty to roam up and down and pillage, 1678 VI, 23| among their own people. Robberies which are committed beyond 1679 VI, 16| been taken in theft, or in robbery, or any other offense, is 1680 VII, 88| known from the color of his robe, and the troops of cavalry, 1681 VI, 27| their skins, is much like roes, but in size they surpass 1682 VIII, 42| these they set on fire, and roll down on our works. At the 1683 V, 8| by the tide, when the sun rose, espied Britain passed on 1684 VII, 38| state of the Aedui, and rouses them completely by the same 1685 VIII, 19| defeated and put to the rout, and having lost the greater 1686 III, 9| which flows into the ocean; rowers to be raised from the province; 1687 I, 18| he despairs not only of royalty, but even of that influence 1688 IV, 22| He ordered P. Sulpicius Rufus, his lieutenant, to hold 1689 VII, 33| Although Caesar considered it ruinous to leave the war and the 1690 II, 31| they had been accustomed to rule.” ~ 1691 III, 17| Over these people Viridovix ruled, and held the chief command 1692 VII, 36| appearance; he ordered the rulers of the states, whom he had 1693 VIII, 24| of Gaul, because it was rumored that some states had risen 1694 V, 43| embarrassed. His rival runs up to him and succors him 1695 VII, 89| attaches Marcus Sempronius Rutilus; he places Caius Fabius, 1696 III, 24| nevertheless considered it safer to gain the victory without 1697 III, 14| ropes which fastened the sail-yards to the masts were caught 1698 III, 14| kind of [naval] implement, sailed forth from the harbor, and 1699 V, 33| and as often as any cohort sallied forth on that side, a great 1700 VII, 4| short time previously. He is saluted king by his partisans; he 1701 I, 46| insnared by him under the sanction of a conference. When it 1702 VI, 17| any one, disregarding the sanctity of the case, dares either 1703 VII, 76| conducted. All march to Alesia, sanguine and full of confidence: 1704 II, 8| sloping in front gradually sank to the plain); on either 1705 III, 11| by the Pictones and the Santoni, and the other provinces 1706 IV, 10| through the territories of the Sarunates, Helvetii, Sequani, Mediomatrici, 1707 VIII, 15| and sticks on which they sat (for it is the custom of 1708 I, 14| provided they will give satisfaction to the Aedui for the outrages 1709 VII, 74| completing these works, saving selected as level ground 1710 V, 43| circumstance turns aside his scabbard and obstructs his right 1711 VII, 27| for those who should first scale the walls, and gave the 1712 VII, 72| to prevent the enemy from scaling it, and surrounded the entire 1713 VII, 81| immense number of hurdles, scaling-ladders, and iron hooks, silently 1714 IV, 1| skins, by reason of the scantiness of which, a great portion 1715 V, 42| mind, that though they were scorched on all sides, and harassed 1716 V, 26| his duty to them on the score of patriotism [he said], 1717 VII, 14| Romans appeared capable of scouring in their search for forage. 1718 VIII, 15| The continued blaze soon screened all their forces from the 1719 IV, 20| of it known, except the sea-coast and those parts which are 1720 IV, 10| on fish and the eggs of sea-fowl), flows into the ocean by 1721 I, 39| general danger. Wills were sealed universally throughout the 1722 V, 1| those which we use in other seas. All these he orders to 1723 IV, 13| engaging to escape him, a very seasonable event occurred, namely, 1724 IV, 34| mode of battle, Caesar most seasonably brought assistance; for 1725 VIII, 18| ambush, had chosen for the seat of action a level piece 1726 VII, 88| chieftains delivered up. He seated himself at the head of the 1727 V, 52| holding councils by night in secluded places. Nor did any period 1728 VI, 17| the case, dares either to secrete in his house things captured, 1729 III, 13| more easily and heave to securely in the shallows, and when 1730 VI, 37| itself and the fortification secures the other accesses. There 1731 VII, 28| flight (fearing that any sedition should arise in the camp 1732 I, 17| themselves: that these by seditions and violent language are 1733 VII, 88| great slaughter ensues. Sedulius the general and chief of 1734 I, 51| Tribocci, Vangiones, Nemetes, Sedusii, Suevi; and surrounded their 1735 VII, 60| the head of three legions, seeks that place to which he had 1736 V, 21| Carvilius, Taximagulus and Segonax, and commands them to collect 1737 V, 20| soldiers, the Cenimagni, the Segontiaci, the Ancalites, the Bibroci, 1738 VI, 32| 32 The Segui and Condrusi, of the nation 1739 VII, 38| protection. He immediately seizes a great quantity of corn 1740 I, 30| the government of it, and selecting, out of a great abundance, 1741 VII, 10| perplexity to Caesar in the selection of his plans; [he feared] 1742 VII, 52| soldiers forbearance and self-command, not less than valor and 1743 IV, 11| these things tended to the self-same point [as their other proposal]; [ 1744 IV, 2| persons to whom they may sell those things which they 1745 VII, 89| to him he attaches Marcus Sempronius Rutilus; he places Caius 1746 VIII, 30| ascertained that Drapes, a Senonian (who in the beginning of 1747 I, 40| soon as possible, whether a sense of honor and duty, or whether 1748 VII, 75| Senones, Sequani, Bituriges, Sentones, Ruteni, and Carnutes; ten 1749 VIII, 50| been injuriously taken from Sergius Galba, though he had been 1750 VII, 14| after sustaining such a series of losses at Vellaunodunum, 1751 IV, 31| such ships as were most seriously damaged for repairing the 1752 III, 23| They who had been with Q. Sertorius the whole period [of his 1753 VIII, 10| inconsiderable loss of cattle and servants, yet it raised foolish hopes 1754 III, 1| setting out for Italy, he sent Servius Galba with the twelfth legion 1755 VIII, 4| intolerable cold, two hundred sestertii each, and to every centurian 1756 II, 34| Osismii, the Curiosolitae, the Sesuvii, the Aulerci, and the Rhedones, 1757 II, 29| chose this place as their settlement. ~ 1758 V, 15| their relief, and these severally the first of two legions, 1759 VIII, 44| captivity, or through fear of severer punishments, abstained from 1760 VII, 8| deep snow, as it was the severest season of the year; yet 1761 III, 17| days, the Aulerci and the Sexovii, having slain their senate 1762 I, 39| withdraw; some, influenced by shame, stayed behind in order 1763 VII, 37| a most noble family. He shares the bribe with them, and 1764 V, 14| every part of their body shaved except their head and upper 1765 VII, 20| destroyed by famine, without shedding one drop of your blood; 1766 VI, 30| him on a horse; the woods sheltered him as he fled. Thus fortune 1767 III, 13| feared nothing from rocks and shelves: the risk of all which things 1768 IV, 4| account of their deficiency in shipping, or cross by stealth on 1769 III, 12| likely to be dashed upon the shoals. Thus, by either circumstance, 1770 V, 2| passage into Britain was shortest, [being only] about thirty 1771 V, 25| from the assault. Then they shouted, according to their custom, 1772 VIII, 14| could, with his engines, shower darts upon the thickest 1773 VII, 24| mud, cold, and constant showers, yet by their incessant 1774 VII, 19| discover that they were showing off an empty affectation 1775 I, 32| complain or supplicate aid; and shuddered at the cruelty of Ariovistus [ 1776 VI, 13| impious and the criminal: all shun them, and avoid their society 1777 VII, 30| not concealed himself, nor shunned the eyes of the people: 1778 I, 38| mountain of great height shuts in the remaining space, 1779 III, 27| Ausci, the Garumni, the Sibuzates, the Cocosates. A few [and 1780 V, 39| the night: not even to the sick, or wounded, is opportunity 1781 VII, 12| town understood from the signal-making of the Gauls that they were 1782 V, 43| better] opportunity of signalizing your valor do you seek? 1783 VI, 1| levy by the means of M. Silanus C. Antistius Reginus, and 1784 I, 17| that reason, he had been silent as long as he could.” ~~ 1785 VII, 50| diversion. These, from the similarity of their arms, greatly terrified 1786 VIII, 44| Epasnactus, the Arvernian, a sincere friend of the Roman people, 1787 VI, 21| powers are increased and the sinews are strengthened. And to 1788 VII, 24| discovered that the mound was sinking, since the enemy had set 1789 I, 13| had so learned from their sires and ancestors, as to rely 1790 III, 12| 12 The sites of their towns were generally 1791 I, 8| a wall, to the height of sixteen feet, and a trench, from 1792 VIII, 4| draws the fourteenth and sixth legion out of quarters on 1793 III, 21| the Aquitani are eminently skilled, because in many places 1794 VII, 22| consummate ingenuity, and most skillful in imitating and making 1795 VII, 22| undermined the mound the more skillfully on this account, because 1796 VIII, 41| great labor and continual skirmishing. For the townsmen ran down 1797 VIII, 31| territories, wandering and skulking about, was forced to seek 1798 II, 25| perceived that the rest were slackening their efforts, and that 1799 V, 44| to him. He persuades his slave, by the hope of freedom, 1800 I, 11| children carried off into slavery-their towns stormed, almost within 1801 VII, 4| sort of tortures; for a slighter cause, he sends home the 1802 VII, 62| any one of them show the slightest intention of flying. Camulogenus, 1803 VI, 27| and thus reclining only slightly, they take their rest; when 1804 V, 34| wounded full in the mouth by a sling. ~ 1805 V, 43| he urges on too eagerly, slipping into a hollow, he fell. 1806 IV, 26| ships of war and the spy sloops to be filled with soldiers, 1807 VI, 23| youth and of preventing sloth. And when any of their chiefs 1808 VIII, 19| lest if they should be slow in their operations they 1809 VIII, 16| he advances himself but slowly. The horse, being afraid 1810 I, 12| Rhone with such incredible slowness, that it can not be determined 1811 VIII, 12| the Remi to fall into this snare, to whom that day had been 1812 II, 25| brought up, having therefore snatched a shield from one of the 1813 VI, 38| in the utmost danger; he snatches arms from those nearest, 1814 VII, 55| from the melting of the snows, that it did not seem capable 1815 VI, 13| shun them, and avoid their society and conversation, lest they 1816 I, 11| nothing remaining, except the soil of their land. Caesar, induced 1817 III, 22| followers whom they call soldurii (the conditions of whose 1818 I, 33| particularly as the Rhone [was the sole barrier that] separated 1819 VII, 2| divulged, they require that a solemn assurance be given them 1820 VII, 8| Arverni crowd in alarm, and solemnly entreat him to protect their 1821 VIII, 52| frequently told that Labienus was solicited by his enemies, and was 1822 V, 13| at the time of the winter solstice it is night there for thirty 1823 V, 55| the other faction, his own son-in-law (whom we have above mentioned, 1824 VI, 5| entirely both in mind and soul to the war with the Treviri 1825 VI, 14| their leading tenets, that souls do not become extinct, but 1826 VII, 47| ordered the signal to be sounded for a retreat; and the soldiers 1827 VII, 30| possess greater foresight and sounder judgment than the rest, 1828 V, 13| the lower looks to the south. This side extends about 1829 V, 8| borne forward by a gentle south-west wind, he did not maintain 1830 VII, 4| reason, because he aimed at sovereign power), summoned together 1831 V, 14| inland inhabitants do not sow corn, but live on milk and 1832 I, 3| and wagons-to make their sowings as large as possible, so 1833 VII, 23| touch one another, but equal spaces intervening, each row of 1834 V, 25| rampart, and sending out some Spanish horse on one side, had proved 1835 VII, 71| to measure out the corn sparingly, and by little and little; 1836 I, 27| themselves at his feet, and speaking in suppliant tone had with 1837 I, 18| the meeting. He [Liscus] speaks more unreservedly and boldly. 1838 VII, 1| their lives. They say that special care should be paid to this, 1839 V, 1| to be brought to him on a specified day, and assures them that 1840 IV, 14| circumstances, both by the speediness of our arrival and the absence 1841 VII, 47| animated by the prospect of speedy victory, and the flight 1842 VIII, 46| two legions, designing to spend the latter part of the summer 1843 V, 57| advances up to the camp and spends a great part of the day 1844 III, 13| breadth, were fastened by iron spikes of the thickness of a man’ 1845 VIII, 51| anticipating the joy of a most splendid triumph. So great was the 1846 VII, 22| works; and, moreover, by splicing the upright timbers of their 1847 V, 39| to spare himself by the spontaneous movement and entreaties 1848 I, 42| rational state of mind as he spontaneously proffered that which he 1849 VI, 17| up in their consecrated spots; nor does it often happen 1850 III, 7| countries, a sudden war sprang up in Gaul. The occasion 1851 IV, 24| throw their weapons and spur on their horses, which were 1852 VII, 77| your aid, for they have spurned all thoughts of personal 1853 IV, 26| the ships of war and the spy sloops to be filled with 1854 IV, 23| reached Britain with the first squadron of ships, about the fourth 1855 VIII, 8| formed his army almost into a square, and brought them within 1856 IV, 12| horses to their feet, and stabbing our horses in the belly 1857 VII, 73| giving them strength and stability, they were each filled with 1858 VI, 26| an ox of the shape of a stag, between whose ears a horn 1859 VIII, 50| by the longest possible stages, in order to visit the free 1860 VII, 72| with large stakes cut like stags’ horns, projecting from 1861 IV, 17| perpendicularly, dike a stake, but bending forward and 1862 II, 25| cohort were slain, and the standard-bearer killed, the standard itself 1863 I, 1| of the sun, and the north star. ~~ 1864 VI, 14| many things respecting the stars and their motion, respecting 1865 IV, 28| port from which they had started;-others, to their great 1866 I, 34| he wished to treat him on state-business and matters of the highest 1867 VII, 29| defended, of the truth of which statement he had themselves as witnesses, 1868 II, 7| enemy. Therefore, after staying a short time before the 1869 VII, 60| considered to be the most steady in action, to guard the 1870 IV, 4| in shipping, or cross by stealth on account of the guards 1871 III, 14| yet the height of the stems of the barbarian ships exceeded 1872 VII, 25| dead. One of those next him stepped over him as he lay, and 1873 III, 13| and, in like manner the sterns were adapted to the force 1874 VII, 19| the higher ground while sticking in it, so that whoever saw 1875 VIII, 15| the bundles of straw and sticks on which they sat (for it 1876 VII, 43| to form plans of war and stir up the other states by embassies. 1877 VII, 77| all Gaul, which we have stirred up to our aid. What courage 1878 VII, 28| arms, and sought, without stopping, the most remote parts of 1879 I, 3| plenty of corn might be in store-and to establish peace and friendship 1880 II, 10| country, and might enjoy the stores of provision which they 1881 VIII, 52| neither gave credit to any story concerning Labienus, nor 1882 V, 22| at hand, he of necessity stowed his soldiers the more closely, 1883 V, 18| fear hindered them from straggling very extensively. The result 1884 VI, 26| the forehead, higher and straighter than those horns which are 1885 IV, 29| which he had drawn up on the strand; and the storm began to 1886 VI, 31| their possessions to perfect strangers. Cativolcus, king of one 1887 VIII, 53| them, that they ought to strengthen their interest by enlarging 1888 VI, 29| defending the bridge, and strengthens the place with considerable 1889 V, 29| when opposition was offered strenuously by Cotta and the principal 1890 VII, 48| who a little before were stretching their hands from the walls 1891 VII, 40| their march; he then issues strict orders to all his soldiers 1892 V, 57| by guards with such great strictness, that that fact could by 1893 VIII, 42| threw down the precipice, striking against the vineae and agger, 1894 VII, 63| authority, or money, they strive to excite the state [to 1895 VIII, 48| were trampled to death in striving to escape, and some were 1896 VIII, 7| condition; but if he brought a stronger force, they intended to 1897 VIII, 7| they knew that he had the strongest aversion to the name of 1898 I, 31| dependents had repeatedly struggled in arms; that they had been 1899 I, 44| the Roman people in the struggles which the Aedui had been 1900 I, 31| these had been violently struggling with one another for the 1901 V, 47| been directed. Is by chance stuck in a tower, and, not being 1902 VI, 13| thither for the purpose of studying it. ~ 1903 IV, 21| them Commius, whom, upon subduing the Atrebates, he had created 1904 VII, 77| its rights and laws, and subjected to Roman despotism, is oppressed 1905 V, 28| previous victories were subjects of great indignation to 1906 VIII, 31| that they would be more submissive after their recent sufferings, 1907 IV, 1| not live much on corn, but subsist for the most part on milk 1908 VII, 31| fitting emissaries, by whose subtle pleading or private friendship, 1909 VI, 13| pre-eminent in dignity, he succeeds; but, if there are many 1910 VII, 3| the others take it up in succession, and pass it to their neighbors, 1911 VII, 86| and exhorts them not to succumb to the toil; he shows them 1912 II, 6| Caesar as embassador [to sue] for peace, sends messengers 1913 I, 53| Ariovistus had two wives, one a Suevan by nation, whom he brought 1914 VIII, 31| submissive after their recent sufferings, but if respite and time 1915 VI, 11| none [of those leaders] suffers his party to be oppressed 1916 VI, 13| election is made by the suffrages of the Druids; sometimes 1917 II, 20| engagements, they could suggest to themselves what ought 1918 V, 30| to leave; every reason is suggested to show why they could not 1919 V, 51| encourages the soldiers; he suggests, that the disaster, which 1920 V, 15| their standards, were little suited to this kind of enemy; that 1921 I, 21| been in the army of Lucius Sulla, and afterward in that of 1922 I, 29| The sum of all amounted to~~~~ ~~~~ 1923 III, 2| designed to seize upon the summits of the Alps, and unite those 1924 VI, 28| use as cups at their most sumptuous entertainments. ~ 1925 VI, 19| 19 Whatever sums of money the husbands have 1926 VII, 61| quickly transported, under the superintendence of the Roman knights, whom 1927 I, 31| with one another for the superiority for many years, it came 1928 IV, 25| the tenth legion, after supplicating the gods that the matter 1929 VII, 89| to winter at Bibracte. A supplication of twenty-days is decreed 1930 VIII, 22| embassadors who made these supplications, that the Bellovaci had 1931 VII, 56| could be above water for supporting their accoutrements, he 1932 V, 28| design of that nature without sure grounds? That his own opinion 1933 VIII, 41| forward the vineae, and from surmounting by their assiduity the difficulties 1934 VI, 30| expectations of all, he surprises in the fields many not expecting 1935 III, 10| the rebellion raised after surrendering, the revolt after hostages 1936 I, 38| as the river Doubs almost surrounds the whole town, as though 1937 VIII, 45| power, and, among them, Surus, an Aeduan, who was highly 1938 V, 2| arrived there, having made a survey of the winter quarter, he 1939 VIII, 24| fortune suffered any to survive, he might be excluded from 1940 III, 29| the work was necessarily suspended, and, through the continuance 1941 I, 19| circumstances, since to these suspicions the most unequivocal facts 1942 VII, 14| 14 Vercingetorix, after sustaining such a series of losses 1943 VI, 37| on the outpost scarcely sustains the first attack. The enemy 1944 VI, 12| hostages, and compelled them to swear in their public character 1945 V, 1| changes of the tide, less swells occurred there; for the 1946 VII, 39| not suffer their state to swerve from the alliance with the 1947 I, 53| strength, endeavored to swim over, or, finding boats, 1948 VII, 55| circumstance that the Loire had swollen to such a degree from the 1949 IV, 29| cables, anchors, and other tackling, were unfit for sailing, 1950 VI, 28| rendered familiar to men and tamed. The size, shape, and appearance 1951 V, 6| being lost, he began to tamper with the chief persons of 1952 VII, 64| messages and embassies, he tampers with the Allobroges, whose 1953 VII, 73| the bottom. In these pits tapering stakes, of the thickness 1954 III, 27| in which number were the Tarbelli, the Bigerriones, the Preciani, 1955 IV, 23| this was performed rather tardily by them, he himself reached 1956 I, 39| 39 While he is tarrying a few days at Vesontio, 1957 VII, 89| engaged in a most difficult task, as my daily refusals appear 1958 II, 30| from their wall, and to taunt them with the following 1959 III, 17| enemy, but also was somewhat taunted by the speeches of our soldiers; 1960 V, 21| Cingetorix, Carvilius, Taximagulus and Segonax, and commands 1961 VII, 86| then clear the way; they tear down the rampart and breast-work 1962 VI, 24| Accordingly, the Volcae Tectosages, seized on those parts of 1963 VI, 8| anticipated booty, that it was a tedious thing, while the Romans 1964 II, 3| as their embassadors: to tell him that they surrendered 1965 I, 17| they ought to supply; [by telling them] that, if they can 1966 V, 12| pleasure. The climate is more temperate than in Gaul, the colds 1967 VIII, 51| quarter. The market places and temples were laid out with entertainments, 1968 I, 1| import those things which tend to effeminate the mind; 1969 VII, 84| their rear, had a great tendency to intimidate our men, because 1970 VI, 14| they think that men by this tenet are in a great degree excited 1971 VI, 14| as one of their leading tenets, that souls do not become 1972 VIII, 24| happened the year before to the Tergestines, who were cut off by a sudden 1973 I, 3| states. They reckoned that a term of two years would be sufficient 1974 III, 28| that that war might soon be terminated. They resolved to conduct 1975 V, 14| and thereby have a more terrible appearance in fight. They 1976 VII, 63| deposited with them, they terrify the hesitating by putting 1977 VII, 36| any day to pass without testing in a cavalry action, the 1978 VIII, 5| and hastily covered with thatch. But the horse and auxiliaries 1979 V, 42| the Gallic custom, were thatched with straw. These quickly 1980 VI, 16| such as have been taken in theft, or in robbery, or any other 1981 | therein 1982 II, 14| Roman people, being urged thereto by their nobles, who said 1983 | Thereupon 1984 V, 38| of procuring timber and therewith constructing fortifications, 1985 III, 13| sails they used skins and thin dressed leather. These [ 1986 VIII, 41| number of men also died of thirst. ~ 1987 V, 41| eleven feet high, and a ditch thirteen feet in depth. These military 1988 VII, 75| them with corn. They demand thirty-five thousand men from the Aedui 1989 V, 26| occasion of the war was this-that it could not withstand the 1990 V, 47| the letter fastened to the thong, inside the fortifications 1991 II, 17| and the quick-briars and thorns springing up between them, 1992 VII, 89| elegance of style, but also a thorough knowledge of the method 1993 VII, 77| for they have spurned all thoughts of personal danger on account 1994 VIII, 3| make their escape. Many thousands being taken, as many of 1995 I, 33| kinsmen,” were held in the thraldom and dominion of the Germans, 1996 I, 53| presence, the lots had been thrice consulted respecting him, 1997 IV, 5| towns the common people throng around merchants and force 1998 II, 27| disgrace of their flight, thrust themselves before the legionary 1999 III, 13| the thickness of a man’s thumb; the anchors were secured 2000 I, 53| meeting with a small vessel tied to the bank, escaped in