Book, Chapter
1 1, XIII | siege, being taken by this hope of capturing the town, and
2 1, XV | remedies to be able to revive hope and reestablish their lost
3 1, XXXVI | Republic ought to have more hope, and more confidence in
4 1, XLII | take away from them the hope of being able to err with
5 1, LVIII | is feared, and there is hope for the future, men persuading
6 1, LIX | opportunity to defend him, can hope that with time he [the latter]
7 1, LX | without reward, nor can the hope of obtaining the reward
8 1, LX | the plebs should have the hope of obtaining the Consulship,
9 1, LX | they should nourish this hope for a time, without attaining
10 1, LX | attaining it: When afterward the hope was not enough, they had
11 2, XIX | would not have put their hope in flight, and those who
12 2, XXIII | punishment, what peace can we hope to have with you? To which
13 2, XXVII | that victory, or the false hope of victory, gives you; which
14 2, XXVII | gives you; which false hope makes men err not only in
15 2, XXVII | deeds. For when this [false] hope enters the hearts of men,
16 2, XXVII | to seek to lose it in the hope of a greater one. This proceeding
17 2, XXVII | Citizens who had given them hope that, as soon as they had
18 2, XXVIII| for a time kept him in the hope of avenging him, but not
19 2, XXIX | takes, they always have hope; and in hoping, not to abandon
20 2, XXXI | Lucanians, who had given him the hope that he could through their
21 2, XXXI | he, upon their faith and hope, having come into Italy,
22 2, XXXI | believe, they fill you with hope, so that relying on them
23 3, VI | the Prince lack all that hope and opportunities that are
24 3, XI | powerful than he, none the less hope ought always to be placed
25 3, XII | returned to Samnium without hope for any accord, Claudius
26 3, XII | necessity, and where there is no hope but in arms; upon which
27 3, XII | which necessity he based his hope of victory with his soldiers.~
28 3, XXXII | Roman people, under the hope of being defended by the
29 3, XXXII | they were deprived of that hope, many citizens counselled
30 3, XXXIII| through which they could hope for victory, he said he
31 3, XXXVI | ardor, nourished by the hope of victory, which is never
32 3, XXXVII| greatest advantages and certain hope of victory: he ought not
33 3, XXXVII| reputation in the war nor the hope of winning it. But when
34 3, XXXIX | That strong point is our hope and our safety, if we (as
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