Book,  Par.

 1     I,     73|             trying to keep back the Romans as they were commencing
 2     I,     77|             but because I held that Romans and Germans have the same
 3     I,     80|          long been respected by the Romans. This increased Caesar's
 4     I,     85|             was unfavourable to the Romans, the place with its deep
 5     I,     91|          that they should allow the Romans to quit their position,
 6    II,     11|         Visurgis flowed between the Romans and the Cherusci. On its
 7    II,     18|     clansmen to witness that "these Romans were the most cowardly fugitives
 8    II,     19|           so as to rush down on the Romans during the battle. ~ ~
 9    II,     23|           brought with them for the Romans, as though the issue were
10    II,     25|           the enemy's rear, and the Romans were hemmed in by the river
11    II,     31|            more panic-stricken. The Romans, they declared, were invincible,
12    II,     58|          the Cherusci. For when the Romans had departed and they were
13    II,     59|            weapons wrested from the Romans, and still in the hands
14    II,     59|          the final expulsion of the Romans, sufficiently showed who
15    II,     61|       rendered no assistance to the Romans in their conflict with the
16    II,    118|       Arminius, meanwhile, when the Romans retired and Maroboduus was
17    II,    118| achievements, he is unknown, and to Romans not as famous as he should
18   III,      7|      proclamation that many eminent Romans had died for their country
19   III,     31|           the baffled and exhausted Romans. But when he marched away
20   III,     62|           they had inflicted on the Romans, how grand would be the
21    IV,     34|             son a prisoner, and the Romans bursting on him from every
22    IV,     46|             Cassius the last of the Romans. His accusers were Satrius
23    IV,     69|              were a stimulus to the Romans, while the courage of the
24    IV,     69|             such confusion that the Romans abandoned some of their
25    IV,     92|         means contemptible force of Romans and allies kept guard over
26    IV,     93|         deserters that nine hundred Romans had been cut to pieces in
27    VI,     45|         that prince faithful to the Romans and just to his people,
28   XII,     17|           with his cavalry, and the Romans undertake the siege of towns. ~ ~
29   XII,     20|               Mithridates, whom the Romans have sought so many years
30   XII,     34|        hemmed in on one side by the Romans, on the other by the Cherusci,
31   XII,     43|            them reluctantly? If you Romans choose to lord it over the
32   XII,     53|      Albanians and appealing to the Romans for aid, his brother, he
33  XIII,     51|           and their property to the Romans. This saved their lives;
34  XIII,     72|          them, was to rest with the Romans, who would allow none but
35   XIV,     73|           his imitations of the old Romans, and assumes the self-consciousness
36    XV,      2|          rivalries of brothers. The Romans thwart me, and though they
37    XV,     16|      against two legions, while the Romans had all the rest of the
38    XV,     32|             He replied that all the Romans had quitted it. Then was
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