Book, Chapter
1 1 | understanding of History ought to be sought. And although this enterprise
2 1, V | nor in their own virtu, sought to attain those dignities,
3 1, VII | City, he would not have sought the barbarian forces. But
4 1, XXII | Veienti, it is seen that he sought to deceive them, as one
5 1, XL | who were his friends, and sought to have as friends those
6 1, XLVI | incidents is, that while men sought not to fear, they begun
7 1, LI | which they would never have sought by themselves. And although
8 1, LVIII | the Ten, and others who sought to oppress them; and so
9 2, XV | considering such a passage sought to make an accord with the
10 2, XXII | from necessity refuge is sought among those who in times
11 2, XXV | war away from them, and sought to oppress them by the arts
12 2, XXVII | and had his army intact, sought peace first rather than
13 2, XXVIII| and having several times sought that he should consent [
14 2, XXX | given money to her, and sought, not to sell their friendship,
15 2, XXXII | abandoned and other means sought to win the war, as did Scipio,
16 2, XXXII | himself from the field and sought to break the Carthaginian
17 3, VIII | one, that glory is to be sought by other means in a corrupt
18 3, XV | armies of our times should be sought, this would be found to
19 3, XXVIII| theirs, by private means sought to make themselves powerful:
20 3, XLIV | remain neutral, and having sought the one and the other and
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