Book,  Par.

 1     I,     93|            sail more easily over a sea full of shoals, or take
 2     I,     93|       equinoctial season, when the sea swells to its highest, his
 3     I,     93|           country too was flooded; sea, shore, fields presented
 4    II,      6|            But by embarking on the sea, invasion would be easy
 5    II,     17|         your weariness of land and sea you desire an end of service,
 6    II,     28|     experience of disasters on the sea, by embarrassing the sailors
 7    II,     29|          be the remotest shoreless sea. Some of the vessels were
 8    II,     29|          seeking death in the same sea. ~ ~
 9    II,     30|          birds, of monsters of the sea, of forms half-human, half
10    II,     32| compensated for their disasters at sea by a successful expedition.
11    II,     56|       Senate, the provinces beyond sea were entrusted to Germanicus,
12    II,     64|          Roman power successful at sea and to win a naval triumph
13    II,     68|          and afterwards the Ionian Sea. He accordingly devoted
14    II,     77|         key of the land and of the sea, with ever so small a force
15    II,     78|          was driven into a distant sea and to the shores of Libya.
16    II,     78|            Bithynian to the Lycian sea. There was also to be read
17    II,     79|       which now extends to the Red Sea.~ ~
18    II,    102|          to Syria through the open sea away from the islands. He
19    II,    106|         precipitous hill, with the sea surrounding him on every
20   III,     10|       after crossing the Dalmatian sea and leaving his ships at
21    IV,     36|           those who traversed that sea. In the same part of the
22    IV,     61|         war had been master of the sea, till he united himself
23    IV,     85|      attraction, for a harbourless sea surrounds it and even for
24    IV,     85|      western breezes, and the open sea round it renders it most
25     V,     13|        having arrived by the other sea at Nicopolis, a Roman colony,
26    VI,      1|         and to the solitude of the sea shores, in shame at the
27    VI,     28|           as he returned, into the sea beneath, that no one might
28    VI,     48|            except one, between the sea and the mountains on the
29    VI,     48|            the waves, and when the sea is driven back upon itself,
30    VI,     57|            no longer parted by the sea, as he had been once, or
31   XII,     20|          so many years by land and sea, stands before you by his
32   XII,     22|            roads, on a harbourless sea, against warlike kings and
33   XII,     38|           a little distance of the sea, facing the island Hibernia,
34   XII,     72|         convenient for the land or sea passage of generals and
35  XIII,     48|            were coming up from the sea of Pontus and the town of
36  XIII,     68|           that troops crossing the sea and then conveyed on the
37  XIII,     71|            submerge it beneath the sea against the plunderers of
38  XIII,     73|           up of an overflow of the sea, but by the combination
39   XIV,      5|           be detached, when out at sea, so as to plunge her unawares
40   XIV,      5|           accidents so much as the sea, and should she be overtaken
41   XIV,      6|             washed by a bay of the sea, between the promontory
42   XIV,      7|        with the calm of a tranquil sea was granted by heaven, seemingly,
43   XIV,      7|            a gentler fall into the sea. Acerronia, however, thoughtlessly
44   XIV,     11|     stature allowed, went into the sea; some, again, stood with
45   XIV,     15|         the dreadful sight of that sea with its shores (some too
46   XIV,     35|           to the shores of the Red Sea, whence, avoiding Parthian
47   XIV,     40|            uncertain depths of the sea. Thus the infantry crossed,
48   XIV,     75|           distance too by land and sea, and the interval of time,
49    XV,     43|            on his way to cross the sea of Hadria, he rested awhile
50    XV,     47|         from remote countries, and sea monsters from the ocean.
51    XV,     57|   allowance for the dangers of the sea. Consequently the pilots,
52    XV,     62|          frequent enjoyment of the sea off Puteoli and Misenum. ~ ~
53    XV,     93|          had islands in the Aegean Sea assigned to them. Caedicia,
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