Book,  Par.

 1     I,     75|       counselled war. For with barbarians, the more eager a man's
 2     I,     85|                            The barbarians attempted to break through
 3     I,     87|     for different reasons, the barbarians in their festivity filling
 4     I,     91|  counsels, heartily welcome to barbarians, was for beleaguering the
 5    II,      2|       Vonones with wealth. The barbarians, too, welcomed him with
 6    II,     17|        unwieldly lances of the barbarians cannot, amid trunks of trees
 7    II,     26|       and exposed faces of the barbarians, cutting a passage through
 8    II,     72|        the popular pastimes of barbarians, and who had thus bound
 9    II,     82|      of Narbonensian Gaul. The barbarians who followed the two kings,
10    IV,     34|        were on the half-asleep barbarians, whose horses were tethered
11    IV,     63| rigorously for the patience of barbarians. ~ ~
12    IV,     65|       a small slaughter of the barbarians, who had not far to flee.
13    IV,     67|    plain, on the chance of the barbarians being encouraged by the
14    IV,     67|     them, after the fashion of barbarians, were dying of want of fodder;
15    IV,     69|                            The barbarians meanwhile rushed down with
16    VI,     46|      from being despised among barbarians, actually possesses power.
17    VI,     47|      longing for revenge. With barbarians, indecision is a slave's
18    VI,     62|      two hills occupied by the barbarians, the lesser of which was
19    XI,     19|      of wine and lust in which barbarians delight. He was winning
20    XI,     20|      fierce conflict among the barbarians, the king was victorious.
21    XI,     22|       gained fresh valour; the barbarians felt their pride broken.
22    XI,     23|     emperor, of scorn from the barbarians, of ridicule from the allies,
23    XI,     28|        the hands of these same barbarians! Let them enjoy indeed the
24   XII,     12|     clemency and justice which barbarians would like the more for
25   XII,     14|        impulsive enthusiasm of barbarians soon flags from delay or
26   XII,     16|      previous experience, that barbarians prefer to seek a king from
27   XII,     19|       Tauri and cut off by the barbarians, who slew the commander
28   XII,     35|    arms in the conflict of the barbarians, and simply promised Vannius
29   XII,     41|   hand-to-hand engagement, the barbarians retired to the heights.
30   XII,     54|      There is nothing of which barbarians are so ignorant as military
31   XII,     57|        excite the minds of the barbarians. Rhadamistus might retain
32   XII,     58|       men and the raids of the barbarians, utterly defenceless, he
33  XIII,     44|  officer had reported that the barbarians were heedless, and that
34  XIII,     70|        the sights shown to the barbarians they were admitted into
35   XIV,     32|       slow to meet danger. The barbarians, following their individual
36   XIV,     43|      by an immense host of the barbarians. All else was plundered
37   XIV,     44|    town of Verulamium, for the barbarians, who delighted in plunder
38   XIV,     47|       and empty threats of the barbarians. "There," he said, "you
39   XIV,     51|       rebellious spirit of the barbarians. And Polyclitus, who with
40    XV,     10|      balistas he drove off the barbarians. The stones and spears penetrated
41    XV,     12|      cut to pieces such of the barbarians as came close up to the
42    XV,     32|   perceived the mockery of the barbarians in petitioning for what
43    XV,     37|      an enemy, was felt by the barbarians, and they therefore thought
44    XV,     37|     for this was chosen by the barbarians in remembrance for their
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