Book, Chapter
1 II, III| called upon, either by the Signors themselves or the Capitano.
2 II, III| for they were afraid the Signors would submit to them; and
3 II, III| induced by finding that the Signors appointed from the families,
4 II, V | were then in office seven Signors of the party of Lando, six
5 II, V | were composed of thirteen Signors; but not long afterward
6 II, VI | only, the then existing Signors and the Colleagues, feeling
7 II, VI | authority to fix upon the Signors that would have to sit during
8 II, I | hence there would be six signors, one for each sixth, except
9 II, I | and for each created three signors. They abolished the office
10 II, I | for the defense of their signors, they determined not to
11 II, I | excitement were astonishing. The Signors of the nobility found themselves
12 II, I | within his own house. The Signors of the people endeavored
13 II, I | the people. To the eight signors who remained, a Gonfalonier
14 II, I | should be opened. But the signors, by threats and the force
15 II, I | first should appoint two signors; the two latter three each,
16 III, I | presented themselves before the Signors, whom one of the principal
17 III, I | Many of us, magnificent Signors! were afraid of meeting
18 III, I | our country, magnificent Signors! caused us to assemble first,
19 III, I | cities of Italy, magnificent Signors! has infested and still
20 III, II | against the orders of the Signors, but when they heard the
21 III, II | is called Balia, to the Signors, the Colleagues, the Eight,
22 III, II | reverence for one of the Signors, who on horseback, and followed
23 III, III| by the authority of the Signors and the approach of night,
24 III, III| acceded to, not only by the Signors, but by all the Councils;
25 III, III| following words: “If these Signors, and I with them, had not
26 III, III| city. Now, I, and these Signors command, and if it were
27 III, III| committed to them. And the Signors, to prove the sincerity
28 III, III| their resolutions to the Signors.~While these things were
29 III, III| closely united, and the signors are constantly with the
30 III, III| evening, and they advised the signors to assemble the consuls
31 III, IV | arts should furnish two Signors; the fourteen minor arts,
32 III, IV | joint deliberation of the Signors, Colleagues, and Council
33 III, IV | they insisted that all the Signors should quit the palace,
34 III, IV | had now been passed; the Signors were in their own apartments;
35 III, IV | Niccolo del Bene, two of the Signors, with anger; and, reassuming
36 III, IV | to his house. The other Signors were, one after another,
37 III, IV | after the departure of the Signors, left sole masters of the
38 III, V | latter were to furnish five Signors, and the former only four.
39 III, V | presented himself before the signors, and said “He had cheerfully
40 III, VI | question was examined by the signors, and part of them out of
41 III, VI | This greatly displeased the signors; but without disclosing
42 III, VI | might always be two of the signors particularly devoted to
43 IV, VII| months, and with him eight signors, all partisans of Cosmo.
44 IV, VII| terms of agreement with the signors; upon which they immediately
45 VII, I | without his consent, the Signors who were of Cosmo’s party
46 VII, III| expiring. Upon the election of Signors for the months of September
47 VIII, II | found no followers. The signors, who held the upper part
48 VIII, II | follows:—“Most excellent signors, and you, magnificent citizens,
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