Dīviciācus, -ī, m.: Diviciacus: (1) a druid, one of the Aedui. He was brother of Dumnorix, but, unlike the latter, was friendly to the Romans; (2) a king of the Suessiones.
flētus, -ūs m.: weeping, lamenting.
animadvertō, -vertere, -vertī, -versus: turn the thoughts toward, give attention to, notice, perceive; animadvertere in, take notice of, take measures against, punish; cf. animum advertere.
Sēquanī, -ōrum m.: the Sequani, a tribe of eastern Gaul, west of the Jura Mountains
dēmissus, -a, -um: bowed; low.
intueor, -tuērī, -tuitus: look upon.
trīstitia, -ae f.: sadness, sorrow, dejection.
tacitus, -a, -um: silent.
permaneō, -manēre, -mānsī, -mānsūrus: stay, remain; continue, hold out.
omnīnō: adv., wholly, entirely, utterly; in all; only; at all.
exprimō, -primere, -pressī, -pressus: force out, extort; carry up.
Aeduus, -a, -um: Aeduan; as subst., m., a Aeduan; pl., the Aedui, a prominent tribe of Gaul, usually friendly to the Romans.
quod: conj., that, in that, because, since; as to the fact that: the fact that.
occultus, -a, -um: covered up, hidden, secret; ex occultō, in (from) ambush; sē in occultum abdere, go into hiding; in occultō, in a secret place, secretly
implōrō, -āre, -āvī, -ātus: beg, entreat.
Ariovistus, -ī, m.: Ariovistus, a German chief, or king.
crūdēlitās, -ātis f.: harshness, cruelty, barbarity.
cōram: adv., present, before one's eyes, face to face, in person.
horreō, horrēre, horruī: bristle; shudder at, dread.
proptereā: adv., therefore, on that account; proptereā quod, for the reason that, because.
facultās, -ātis f.: ability, power; opportunity, chance, occasion, leave; supply, abundance; pl., resources.
cruciātus, -ūs m.: torment, torture.
perferō, -ferre, -tulī, -lātus: bear through, bear; endure, submit to, suffer; carry, announce, report.