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Hae permanserunt aquae dies complures. conatus est Caesar reficere pontes, sed nec magnitudo fluminis permittebat, neque ad ripam dispositae cohortes adversariorum perfici patiebantur. [2] quod illis prohibere erat facile cum ipsius fluminis natura atque aquae magnitudine, tum quod ex totis ripis in unum atque angustum [3] locum tela iaciebantur; atque erat difficile eodem tempore rapidissimo flumine opera perficere et tela vitare.
C. Julius Caesar. C. Iuli Caesaris Commentariorum, pars posterior. Renatus du Pontet. Oxonii. e Typographeo Clarendoniano. 1901. Scriptorum Classicorum Bibliotheca Oxoniensis.
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These things were greatly exaggerated by Afranius, Petreius, and their friends, in the letters they sent, upon this occasion, to Rome. Nor was fame backward in adding to the account; insomuch that the war appeared to be almost at an end. These couriers and letters having reached Rome there was a great concourse of people at Afranius's house, many congratulations passed, and multitudes of the nobility flocked out of Italy to Pompey; some to carry the first accounts of this grateful news; others, that they might not be so late as to subject them to the reproach of having waited for the event of things.
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(1):
- Allen and Greenough's New Latin Grammar for Schools and Colleges, SUBSTANTIVE CLAUSES
- Cross-references in general dictionaries to this page
(2):
- Lewis & Short, dif-fĭcĭlis
- Lewis & Short, dis-pōno
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