Book, Chapter
1 I, II | the country. Leaving his friends the Zepidi in Pannonia,
2 I, III | Thus the popes, at one time friends of the Greeks, and at another
3 I, III | his distress, to seek new friends, and he applied to the king
4 I, V | endeavoring to discover what friends and foes he had in that
5 I, V | resided, assembled a few friends, and in the night took him
6 I, VI | country, determined to make friends of all who had usurped the
7 I, VII | estates, and arranged with his friends that a marriage should be
8 II, II | not only received them as friends, but gave them a standard
9 II, II | party by appointing its friends to the principal offices
10 II, III | noble with his relations and friends defended himself against
11 II, III | enemies to injure him, or his friends to offend the laws, he determined
12 II, III | Tuscany, either as subjects or friends, owed obedience to Florence.
13 II, IV | Donati family, with their friends, upon horseback, were standing
14 II, IV | returned.~Corso and his friends, thinking the pope favorable
15 II, IV | authorized, Charles armed all his friends and followers, which step
16 II, IV | together a great number of friends and people desirous of change,
17 II, IV | Cerchi, with many of his friends, went to his estates, and
18 II, V | bravest and most trusted friends, fought a passage through
19 II, V | many troubles upon both his friends and his country. Uguccione,
20 II, V | able to obtain it of him as friends, they gave their city to
21 II, V | Uguccione, became divided into friends and enemies of the king.
22 II, V | by Lando d’Agobbio.~The friends of the king and those who
23 II, V | greatest respect by the friends of the king, who complained
24 II, V | exertions of the king’s friends, the citizens were again
25 II, V | appointed of the king’s friends, and some magistracies were
26 II, VI | the number of Castruccio’s friends and augment their own, the
27 II, VI | authority. Of their citizens and friends they mustered an army amounting
28 II, VI | troops, and sending to their friends for assistance; but all
29 II, VI | brought upon them by their friends; for the Signory could not
30 II, VII | upon themselves or their friends; the other, that having
31 II, VII | from the nobles and their friends in the country. Their design
32 II, VII | Frescobaldi, with their friends, should leave the city,
33 II, VIII| who are at present your friends, and advise you to adopt
34 II, VIII| Giotto, who, bribed by the friends of the duke, without waiting
35 II, VIII| within the city, he made friends of all he could around it,
36 II, VIII| affair to some Siennese, his friends, naming certain of the conspirators,
37 II, VIII| increasing the number of his friends, took the lead and assailed
38 II, VIII| conveyed safely away by his friends.~The rage of the multitude
39 II, I | might make use of them as friends. They also, in the best
40 II, I | themselves abandoned; for their friends, seeing all the people in
41 II, I | and even sent to their friends in Lombardy for assistance.
42 II, I | among their relatives and friends, and remain unarmed. Being
43 II, I | notwithstanding the failure of their friends, the union of the people
44 III, I | the evil which he and his friends had originated, and with
45 III, II | the church, that if as her friends they had defended, they
46 III, II | city and that of their own friends in particular, and found
47 III, II | prepared by himself and his friends, which, being a novelty,
48 III, II | interest of their numerous friends and relations, they might
49 III, IV | and others similarly their friends; though many received the
50 III, IV | houses or those of their friends. The power of the plebeians
51 III, IV | stipulated in favor of their friends, and a requisition made
52 III, IV | upon many other citizens, friends of the plebeians; not so
53 III, VI | one of the most earnest friends of the plebeians, and thought
54 III, VI | according to the custom of old friends, demanded their assistance,
55 III, VI | which, with the favor of his friends, would enable him to recover
56 III, VII | upon the trades and their friends, had so excited the minds
57 III, VII | were odious even to the friends of the Signory themselves,
58 III, VII | river Arno, and with their friends hasten to the residences
59 III, VII | wrongs and those of his friends were thought sufficient
60 IV, II | themselves disarmed, without friends, and opposed by the people,
61 IV, II | proposition, he would gain few friends and make many enemies, and
62 IV, II | of those who were not his friends, consented to the ruin of
63 IV, III | persecute enemies and favor friends; condemning his coldness
64 IV, III | ruin of himself and his friends. He endeavored to excite
65 IV, III | carefully conveyed to their friends; nor was the republic less
66 IV, III | mother, that they became friends of the Florentines. By this
67 IV, IV | of his most confidential friends, he assured them that by
68 IV, V | tyrant, who forsook his old friends to join the Ghibelline faction,
69 IV, V | indignation. However his friends, from regard to their own
70 IV, VI | boldness in regard to his friends than his father had done,
71 IV, VI | arms and the favor of his friends would enable him to become
72 IV, VI | increased. Although the friends of Cosmo had been in favor
73 IV, VI | whether they are most our friends our those of our opponents.
74 IV, VI | surrounded by his innumerable friends, who would constantly reproach
75 IV, VI | of his first discovered friends as you might expel, so many
76 IV, VI | the assurance that their friends would be ready in arms to
77 IV, VI | Cosmo, who, though many friends dissuaded him from it, obeyed
78 IV, VI | since you have so many friends both within the palace and
79 IV, VI | preserve your life for your friends and your country. And that
80 IV, VII | assembled many citizens, his friends, and informed them that
81 IV, VII | left Cosmo alive, and his friends in Florence; for great offenders
82 IV, VII | provide themselves with friends. Many thought this course
83 IV, VII | this conclusion, Rinaldo’s friends separated.~The new Signory
84 IV, VII | occasion they had given his friends for thus assembling in arms;
85 IV, VII | desirable in which property and friends may be safely enjoyed, not
86 IV, VII | taken from us, and where friends, from fear of losing their
87 IV, VII | and the coldness of his friends, went into exile.~Cosmo,
88 V, I | them with those of their friends. Taking advice from the
89 V, II | solicit a passage for his friends. But he could not possibly
90 V, II | own safety, or induce his friends to defend themselves, took
91 V, III | attachment to their distant friends, surrendered. In the same
92 V, III | and both have proved our friends. And as they have delivered
93 V, III | would attach the duke’s friends to him to find they were
94 V, III | would lose his honor and his friends, and forfeit the confidence
95 V, IV | the count having become friends, hopes were entertained
96 V, IV | divide two such attached friends as the duke and himself,
97 V, IV | of their old and habitual friends. Having foreseen the necessity
98 V, VI | abandon his own subjects and friends, and that having come into
99 VI, I | those occasioned by his friends, which being less justifiable,
100 VI, I | would take the advice of his friends upon that subject.”~The
101 VI, I | insolent behavior of his friends made him willing to propose.
102 VI, I | to avoid rewarding his friends, he would save his enemies,
103 VI, I | compelled to leave country and friends, complaining of his hard
104 VI, II | lose both influence and friends. Nor did this satisfy the
105 VI, II | used for storing grain. The friends of the Bentivogli, having
106 VI, II | the count should become friends.~The duke’s anger caused
107 VI, IV | with few followers, no friends, or any money; hopeless
108 VI, IV | and the Venetians their friends, felt assured that the count
109 VI, IV | state, and privately from friends, particularly from Cosmo
110 VI, IV | satisfactory to Cosmo’s friends, for they imagined that
111 VI, V | braver or more faithful friends, to defend him against the
112 VI, V | followers, assembled a few friends, attacked and routed part
113 VI, V | demand assistance from their friends, gain information about
114 VI, V | through his means they became friends with the Genoese, the old
115 VI, VI | in learning, eloquence, friends, and influence, superior
116 VI, VI | cautiously corresponded with his friends, and often went and returned
117 VI, VI | delay, and arranged with his friends at Rome to provide an evening
118 VI, VI | him his most trust-worthy friends, and himself promised to
119 VI, VI | country, he might defend his friends and attempt the recovery
120 VI, VI | uphold the influence of his friends, he should return to Provence,
121 VI, VII | perished, or whose cattle or friends were buried beneath the
122 VI, VII | who, through his numerous friends, entertained the strongest
123 VI, VII | him; and by soliciting his friends, he obtained money and a
124 VII, I | services; so that he had many friends but few partisans. Cosmo,
125 VII, I | many partisans as well as friends. While both lived, having
126 VII, I | enough, by Cosmo’s private friends, and the most influential
127 VII, I | its course, and let his friends see they were not depriving
128 VII, I | with the names of his own friends, he incurred no risk, and
129 VII, I | Great. At the same time, the friends of different grandees were
130 VII, I | increased, and he died. Friends and enemies alike grieved
131 VII, I | enemies and exalted his friends. He was born in the year
132 VII, I | sometimes complained to his friends that he had never been able
133 VII, I | capacity, generous to his friends, kind to the poor, comprehensive
134 VII, II | by the mediation of his friends, to be reconciled with the
135 VII, II | citizens he had acquired many friends and universal popularity,
136 VII, II | partisans in Florence and friends abroad, was extremely liberal
137 VII, II | cannot expect to have them as friends. The leaders of the sedition
138 VII, II | government, and without friends, they would, either by force
139 VII, II | nocturnal assemblies; the friends of the Medici meeting in
140 VII, II | to rule the city, and his friends would make him a prince,
141 VII, II | and by the advice of his friends he resolved to take the
142 VII, III | in vain hopes, which his friends, the leading conspirators,
143 VII, III | of Piero’s party, whose friends entertained stronger hopes,
144 VII, III | glide into the ranks of his friends. The principal citizens,
145 VII, III | his own or his father’s friends should think themselves
146 VII, III | assembled. In the streets, his friends and relatives, instead of
147 VII, III | her pleasure, she converts friends into enemies, and enemies
148 VII, III | enemies, and enemies into friends. You may remember that during
149 VII, III | annoyed Piero; but by his friends’ assistance, he was enabled
150 VII, IV | on good terms with their friends, their enemies occasioned
151 VII, IV | when the behavior of my friends would compel me to esteem
152 VII, V | against them. He said he had friends in Florence who would join
153 VII, V | taken, the governor and his friends put to death, and the place
154 VII, V | which one of the intimate friends of Tommaso Soderini, reminding
155 VII, VI | pretexts, assemble their friends. It was also resolved that
156 VII, VI | some of their most trusty friends and servants to arm, telling
157 VII, VI | various pretenses, other friends and relatives, trusting
158 VIII, I | on imparting this to his friends at Rome, it was thought
159 VIII, I | the Medici, the numerous friends the Salviati and the Pazzi
160 VIII, II | city. Lorenzo, with the friends he had about him, took refuge
161 VIII, II | Poggio, and the Salviati, his friends, took these Perugini with
162 VIII, II | possess more warm and resolute friends than I could ever have hoped
163 VIII, II | reduced our family, when among friends, amidst our own relatives,
164 VIII, II | in danger turn to their friends for assistance; they call
165 VIII, III | forces, and finding their friends slow to assist; for though
166 VIII, III | the Castelletto and of his friends, became lord of Genoa; and
167 VIII, IV | necessity, and assembled the friends in whose wisdom and fidelity
168 VIII, IV | Genoese, and entirely without friends; for they had no confidence
169 VIII, VI | to Rome. He entreated the friends and relatives of the Count
170 VIII, VII | bestow states and attach friends who might be useful to him
171 VIII, VII | stand alone, and find no friends to assist them with the
172 VIII, VII | apprehensions, was advised by his friends to provide for his own safety,
173 VIII, VII | purpose; for many of their friends being sure to come from
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