Book, Chapter
1 1, XI | institutions in that City, and was apprehensive that his authority was not
2 1, XIII | which thing, the Tribunes, apprehensive of their losing all their
3 1, XVI | any suspicion, not being apprehensive of the honor of his womenfolk,
4 1, XXX | not have cause for being apprehensive of any of them, there being
5 1, XXXII | thy Tarquins, the Senate apprehensive of the plebs who might want
6 1, XL | much haughtiness. And being apprehensive of opposing him openly,
7 1, XLV | for men who begin to be apprehensive of having done a capital
8 1, XLVIII| the [Roman] Senate became apprehensive that the Tribunes with Consular
9 2 | restrained in talking, being apprehensive of falling into that deception
10 2, II | able to raise without being apprehensive that their patrimony will
11 2, X | lacking money, and being apprehensive that, for the want of which,
12 2, XXV | not to make them wholly apprehensive because of your large forces
13 3, VI | him and not obey him, and apprehensive that coming to the accusation,
14 3, VI | seeing this long talk were apprehensive that the said Popilius might
15 3, VI | than a Prince, and are less apprehensive, and because of this are
16 3, XXXVI | opposite; they were less apprehensive of danger because of their
17 3, XLVII | armies in Tuscany, and being apprehensive that as he was hostile he
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