Book,  Par.

  1     I,      2|          there was no longer any army of the Commonwealth, when
  2     I,      3|         Quintilius Varus and his army than out of an ambition
  3     I,     14|         and a subject, raised an army, tampered with the Consul'
  4     I,     24|          that the desires of the army ought to be communicated
  5     I,     28|        Sent to you by the German army in our common cause, he
  6     I,     40|      Rhine; that named the upper army had Caius Silius for general;
  7     I,     40|        the soldiers of the lower army fell into a frenzy, which
  8     I,     46|       who were to draw the upper army into their cause; that the
  9     I,     48|     Germanicus went to the Upper Army, and the second, thirteenth,
 10     I,     52|       for not going to the Upper Army, where he might find obedience
 11     I,     55|    Divine Julius once quelled an army's mutiny with a single word
 12     I,     56|          all the disgraces of my army, while you would have chosen
 13     I,     61|       thoughts troubled him. The army in Germany was the stronger;
 14     I,     62|          he had concentrated his army and prepared vengeance against
 15     I,     62|     urged them to save the whole army from disgrace, and themselves
 16     I,     67|         passes through which the army had to return. The general
 17     I,     68|         enemy moved not till the army began to defile in column
 18     I,     74|         the rear of the retiring army, which was his usual practice
 19     I,     76|     Germanicus to march back his army. A battle was fought against
 20     I,     77|          who then commanded your army, Arminius, the ravisher
 21     I,     78|   province. He then led back the army and received on the proposal
 22     I,     79|    mighty the general, brave the army which, with such strength,
 23     I,     79|     stripling, before a mutinous army. If you prefer your fatherland,
 24     I,     81|         general, while the whole army present was moved to compassion
 25     I,     81|         shattered remnant of the army which had there taken up
 26     I,     81|       Arminius had harangued his army, the number of gibbets for
 27     I,     82|                 And so the Roman army now on the spot, six years
 28     I,     82|      slain and unburied made the army slow to fight and more afraid
 29     I,     84|          Germanicus led back his army to the Amisia, taking his
 30     I,     88|        for earthworks, while the army had lost to a great extent
 31     I,     90|          bravest fighters in the army, quite impartially, that
 32     I,     92|       rumour had spread that our army was cut off, and that a
 33     I,     93|       swells to its highest, his army was driven and tossed hither
 34     I,     93|          they saw Caesar and the army returned.~ ~
 35     I,     94|      repairing the losses of the army, offering whatever they
 36     I,     95|       such as the betrayal of an army, or seditious stirring up
 37    II,      8|    convenience for receiving the army and carrying the war across
 38    II,     11|    surnamed Flavus, was with our army, a man famous for his loyalty,
 39    II,     14|              Next day the German army took up its position on
 40    II,     18|         fugitives out of Varus's army, men who rather than endure
 41    II,     19|        the trunks. The barbarian army occupied the plain and the
 42    II,     20|                              Our army advanced in the following
 43    II,     24|         old, rushed on the Roman army, and spread disorder. At
 44    II,     27|          proud inscription, "The army of Tiberius Caesar, after
 45    II,     31|        He himself, with a larger army, invaded the Marsi, whose
 46    II,     58|          win the goodwill of the army. Tiberius also thought that
 47    II,     67|       had a leader, Mazippa. The army was so divided that Tacfarinas
 48    II,     67|    enlisted allies, and, with an army insignificant indeed compared
 49    II,     67|  defeated. The legion was in the army's centre; the light cohorts
 50    II,     77|      force against the mightiest army, might distress Italy by
 51    II,     78|        age, and how with such an army king Rhamses conquered Libya,
 52    II,    101|         possesses himself of the army, and increases his resources,
 53    II,    102|       resumed the command of the army in the same loyal spirit
 54   III,     48|        war, and converts a Roman army on the march into the likeness
 55   III,     56|        who commanded the nearest army, he sent some allied cavalry
 56   III,     60|       impenetrable to them. This army was continually increased,
 57   III,     62|     before them Sacrovir and his army in an open plain. His men
 58   III,     63|       few companies of this very army. Prove to these Aedui once
 59   III,    103|   settlement for himself and his army, or else threatening us
 60   III,    105|       further divided his triple army into several detachments
 61   III,    106|       enthusiasm by a victorious army. Several men bore the title
 62   III,    107|       but a centurion in Sulla's army, his father having been
 63    IV,      5|          of fresh levies for the army. Volunteers were not forthcoming,
 64    IV,     24|         having commanded a great army for seven years, and won
 65    IV,     32|        not indeed with a regular army, but with detachments of
 66    IV,     35|          in fact, with a smaller army, brought back with him illustrious
 67    IV,     61|          and subsequently led an army across the Elbe, penetrating
 68    IV,     74|       the of Lucius Sulla, whose army was once in terrible jeopardy
 69    VI,     44|       even with the neighbouring army through his father-in-law,
 70    VI,     48|         He gave him the Parthian army and despatched men to hire
 71    VI,     55|         been constructed and the army having crossed, the first
 72    VI,     55|          Sinnaces reinforced the army, and Abdageses, the mainstay
 73    XI,     39|         divorce? The people, the army, the Senate saw the marriage
 74   XII,     16|                    Gotarzes, his army not being yet in sufficient
 75   XII,     17|         the main strength of his army had retired, and that Cotys,
 76   XII,     17|          At last he collected an army, drove out the king of the
 77   XII,     18|                         Then the army advanced in regular formation,
 78   XII,     19|         great glory of the Roman army, which all men knew to have
 79   XII,     35|          Iazyges of Sarmatia; an army which was no match for his
 80   XII,     37|     winter beginning and with an army of which he knew nothing.
 81   XII,     38|          war and peace. Then the army was marched against the
 82   XII,     39|                              The army then marched against the
 83   XII,     53|        same time he gave a large army to his son, who by a sudden
 84   XII,     59|        foreign prince, raised an army and prepared to establish
 85  XIII,      9|   Armenia to take command of the army, he would draw all eyes
 86  XIII,     43|         was well known that that army contained veterans who had
 87  XIII,     43|       light infantry. The entire army was kept under canvas, though
 88  XIII,     44|        intercession of the whole army.~ ~
 89  XIII,     45|          everywhere, divided his army, so that his generals and
 90  XIII,     48|          spoil. Then forming his army into four divisions, he
 91  XIII,     48|          were the efforts of the army that within a third part
 92  XIII,     50|      general, who had formed his army for fighting as well as
 93  XIII,     68|      were then in command of the army. Still, to avoid keeping
 94  XIII,     72|           commander of the Upper army, asking him to cross the
 95  XIII,     73|          of victory, the enemy's army to Mars and Mercury, a vow
 96   XIV,     32|           Thither he marched his army, with no hostile demonstrations,
 97   XIV,     33|             Both Corbulo and his army, though suffering no losses
 98   XIV,     41|         shore stood the opposing army with its dense array of
 99   XIV,     44| departure and receiving into his army all who would go with him.
100   XIV,     45|           On the other side, the army of the Britons, with its
101   XIV,     47|          the renown of an entire army. Only close up the ranks,
102   XIV,     50|                        The whole army was then brought together
103   XIV,     51|          to see a general and an army who had finished such a
104   XIV,     51|      continued, to hand over his army to Petronius Turpilianus,
105   XIV,     56|           Well, even in a beaten army when every tenth man is
106    XV,      7|        was asked, "had the Roman army been withdrawn from Tigranocerta?
107    XV,      7|         had now arrived, and the army was thus divided; the fourth
108    XV,      9|         corn supply, hurried his army across Mount Taurus, for
109    XV,      9|         at hand, he led back his army and wrote a letter to the
110    XV,     11|       the repute of an augmented army. Yet even thus the camp
111    XV,     12|          left to the unfortunate army; they meantime, he said,
112    XV,     13|          fearless, left half his army in Syria to retain the forts
113    XV,     13|       accompaniments of war, his army was followed by a great
114    XV,     13|     first he met of the defeated army was Paccius, a first-rank
115    XV,     16|   overcome by the despair of his army, first wrote a letter to
116    XV,     18|       our lines before the Roman army began to retire, but also
117    XV,     34|     service. And he added to his army the fifth legion, which,
118    XV,     34|        the due lustration of his army, he called them together
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