Book, Chapter
1 1 | Captain, or Citizen, who has recourse to the examples of the ancients.
2 1, VI | it is necessary to have recourse to those Republics which
3 1, VII | vented, they ordinarily have recourse to extra ordinary means
4 1, VII | not exist, they will have recourse to extraordinary ones, and
5 1, IX | anyone to whom he could have recourse, he was defeated, and his
6 1, XI | people who did not have recourse to God, because otherwise
7 1, XI | difficulty, therefore, have recourse to God. Thus did Lycurgus,
8 1, XV | XV~HOW THE SAMNITES HAD RECOURSE TO RELIGION AS AN EXTREME
9 1, XXXVII| further confidence in them, recourse was had to private remedies,
10 1, XXXVII| vent to their appetites had recourse to those extraordinary proceedings
11 1, XLVII | them [their own], they had recourse to those who merited it.
12 1, XLIX | should be dangerous, they had recourse to the Dictator, who executed
13 1, XLIX | which refuge they never had recourse except in necessity. But
14 1, L | having any other remedy had recourse to the aid of the Tribunes,
15 1, LVII | Chiefs to whom they have recourse, for, on the one hand, there
16 2, IX | hard pressed and having recourse to Rome, beyond the thoughts
17 2, XX | proceeding than to have recourse to bringing auxiliary forces
18 2, XXI | liberality made the Capuans have recourse to request the Praetor from
19 3, V | Collatinus would have had recourse to Tarquin for vengeance
20 3, XV | seeing this disaster, had recourse to the creation of a Dictator,
21 3, XXV | be lost, so that they had recourse to the creation of a Dictator,
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