Book, Chapter
1 1, XVI | and] who when they are deprived of the faculty of thus availing
2 1, XXXVII| greater part) had to be deprived of it, and by dividing the
3 1, XXXVII| enemy among the Plebs, it deprived them [Nobles] that means
4 1, XXXVII| way, and even when they deprived them of some land from their
5 1, XLIX | took so badly, that they deprived Mamercus from [treating
6 1, LVI | had been driven out and deprived of his rank, the palace
7 2, II | practiced against those who had deprived them of it. It is also to
8 2, II | vengeance against those who deprived them of liberty. Of which
9 2, XX | the Capuans, who had been deprived of their garrisons should
10 2, XXIII | condemned to death, and they deprived all of them of their honors
11 2, XXIV | never in that manner have deprived the Florentines of that
12 2, XXXI | those who find themselves deprived of their country. For, as
13 3, IX | that Republic being almost deprived of her good troops and discouraged,
14 3, XVI | the one, to see themselves deprived of their rank; the other,
15 3, XXIII | importance, because when a man is deprived of those things which are
16 3, XXV | about to become prey; and he deprived Minitius of the Consulship,
17 3, XXVI | committed against Lucretia deprived the Tarquins of their State;
18 3, XXVI | committed against Virginia deprived the Ten [Decemvirs] of their
19 3, XXXII | been defeated, they were deprived of that hope, many citizens
20 3, XLIII | Milan, and how Florence, deprived of other expedients, decided
21 3, XLIII | faith of the Gauls, suddenly deprived of their money and the aid
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