Book, Chapter
1 1, I | their names had not been extinguished by antiquity, it would be
2 1, II | that had organized it was extinguished, for they quickly came to
3 1, VII | authority would have been extinguished with injury to himself only,
4 1, XVII | his lives [family] may be extinguished, can never become free;
5 1, XXXIX | dignity of the Consuls was extinguished: and after some other regulations
6 1, XL | would have been entirely extinguished except that the Senate,
7 1, XL | Nobility, and after they are extinguished he will turn to the oppression
8 1, XL | People until they are also extinguished; and by the time the People
9 1, XLIII | Magistracy of the Ten was extinguished and they begun to fight
10 2 | hating past events come to be extinguished, as they are not able to
11 2, I | of one the other would be extinguished, or in extinguishing one
12 2, II | Tuscany, whose line was extinguished in a manner of which history
13 2, IV | the Gauls, and afterwards extinguished by the Romans: and was so
14 2, IV | Romans: and was so completely extinguished, that, although two thousand
15 2, V | DELUGES AND PESTILENCE, EXTINGUISHED THE MEMORY OF THINGS~To
16 2, V | all of its ceremonies, and extinguished every record of that ancient
17 2, V | language; all of which was extinguished by the Roman power. So that (
18 3, I | would have been entirely extinguished: for by their poverty and
19 3, I | where it had already been extinguished; and their new orders were
20 3, XXX | goodness and virtu, he has extinguished envy; this, many times,
21 3, XXX | events.~This envy can be extinguished in two ways: either by some
22 3, XXXIII| many victories, cannot be extinguished in a moment; nor does a
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