Book,  Par.

 1     I,     42|       Then tearing them from the ground, mangled, and some lifeless,
 2     I,     44|          camp, eyes fixed on the ground, and seemingly repentant.
 3     I,     67|      tribes, was levelled to the ground. There was not a wound among
 4     I,     81|         had fled, or stood their ground, strewn everywhere or piled
 5     I,     81|       pointed out too the raised ground from which Arminius had
 6     I,     85|      into the lands beneath. The ground being thus flooded and the
 7     I,     87|    struggled on to open and firm ground. ~ ~
 8     I,     91|          in swampy and intricate ground. Inguiomerus, with fiercer
 9     I,     91|          that they were on equal ground, with equal chances. The
10     I,     93|      full of shoals, or take the ground more lightly at the ebb-tide.
11     I,     93|         distinguished from solid ground or shallows from deep water.
12     I,     93|          struggled out to higher ground and led his men up to it.
13    II,      6|         in the field and on fair ground; they were helped by woods,
14    II,      7|   flat-bottomed, that they might ground without being injured; several,
15    II,     17|  brushwood that springs from the ground, be so well managed as our
16    II,     19|        by themselves on the high ground, so as to rush down on the
17    II,     22|        Others were dashed to the ground by the felling of the trees. ~ ~
18    II,     25|      part might advance on level ground into the forest, and part
19    II,     25|          Those who had the level ground easily forced a passage.
20    II,     31|         in his rear and open the ground. Fortune favoured both.
21    II,     62|   collapsed; what had been level ground seemed to be raised aloft,
22    II,     71|          whispered rumour gained ground that the emperor was not
23    II,     75|        he threw his crown on the ground, with a long speech against
24    II,     88|      sword. Hence there was more ground for believing that the man,
25    II,     93|       nature, I should have just ground of complaint even against
26    II,    106|      were struggling up to level ground; then, the Cilicians turned
27   III,     19|         and a sword lying on the ground. ~ ~
28   III,     23|       charge of civil war on the ground that a son could not have
29   III,     32|          it to malignity, on the ground that he would have yielded
30   III,     64|      they were left lying on the ground, without an effort to rise,
31   III,    102|          extolled Sejanus on the ground that it was through his
32    IV,     39|         this he rejected, on the ground that both these islands
33    IV,     78|        friends would stand their ground and laugh at him. Tiberius
34     V,      2|        duty to his mother on the ground of the pressure of business.
35     V,      5|         more furious, and he had ground for alleging that the Senate
36    VI,     11|           when impeached on that ground, to cling to it by the following
37    VI,     32|          as a rumour was gaining ground that he was on the point
38    VI,     54|     would not be lasting, on the ground, that though a confident
39    VI,     78|      more than ever on dangerous ground after his marriage with
40    XI,     48|     Messalina stretched upon the ground, while by her side sat Lepida,
41   XII,     18|        Uspe, which stood on high ground, and had the defence of
42   XII,     56|     Mithridates flung him to the ground. At the same moment a rush
43   XII,     56|       but had them thrown on the ground and then smothered them
44   XII,     61| Scribonianus was banished on the ground that he was consulting the
45  XIII,     43|    winter was so severe that the ground, covered as it was with
46  XIII,     50|         his cavalry on difficult ground, resolved finally to display
47  XIII,     51|   demolished and levelled to the ground, as it could not be held
48  XIII,     63|   furnished his traducers with a ground for censuring his motion. "
49    XV,      2|      waived in my favour, on the ground of age, the highest title
50    XV,      6|         territory, as on hostile ground." Casperius, a centurion
51    XV,     18|          for a rumour had gained ground that the bridge would give
52    XV,     50|        the fire was met by clear ground and an open sky. But before
53    XV,     50|       three were levelled to the ground, while in the other seven
54    XV,     53|    cleared of the debris, to the ground landlords. He also offered
55    XV,     66|      huge frame, hurl him to the ground and hold him down. When
56    XV,     78|        he excused himself on the ground of failing health and the
57    XV,     92|          the tribuneship, on the ground, not of actually hating
58   XVI,     36|       first flung herself on the ground and wept long in silence.
59   XVI,     41|        as he sprinkled it on the ground, he called the quaestor
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