Book, Chapter
1 Gre | but to those who although unable to would want to do so.
2 1, I | and small parties, each unable by himself both because
3 1, I | apt to making men idle and unable to exercise any virtu: that
4 1, XII | temporal things has made her unable to call in a power that
5 1, XVII | maintain her liberty, but was unable to reestablish it. And so
6 1, XXXIX | of the Nobles, who, being unable to castigate the Plebs within
7 1, LV | the Roman Pleb, and being unable otherwise to review the
8 2, IV | dominion which they were unable to maintain. For to undertake
9 2, VIII | And thus those who were unable to defend their own country,
10 2, VIII | discussed, for they are unable to use as much violence
11 2, VIII | country of a kind which was unable to feed them, they are forced
12 2, IX | which a City has, that is unable to defend itself, but wants
13 2, XII | their own country] they were unable to resist [even] Agathocles.
14 2, XIX | because those Princes [are unable to aid him] part of whom
15 2, XXVIII| force that which he was unable to obtain by other means.
16 2, XXXII | was left weak so as to be unable to resist a sortie that
17 3, XVII | Lords, who, seeing they are unable to hold the State by force
18 3, XXXI | themselves inferior and unable to sustain their [enemy’
19 3, XLIV | the Roman army, and being unable to stay abreast of the Romans
20 3, XLV | glory by death which he was unable to gain by victory, in imitation
21 3, XLVIII| in fear of a deception, unable to believe that there should
22 3, XLIX | so that they should be unable (reduced to such small a
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