Book, Chapter
1 I, III | also occasioned them the loss of Italy; for the Lombards,
2 II, II | count to flight, with the loss of many of his followers.
3 II, III | the nobility that their loss of power, and the laws which
4 II, III | could bear with patience the loss of the supreme magistracy,
5 II, IV | hand, and apprehending the loss of their power, and the
6 II, IV | that with disgrace and the loss of many of his followers,
7 II, VII | her; but after a long war, loss of money, and accumulation
8 II, VII | became lords of Lucca.~The loss of this city, as in like
9 II, VIII| a prince countervail the loss of it. Consider, my lord,
10 II, I | were repulsed with great loss. Finding their labor at
11 II, I | were always repulsed with loss. There had in former times
12 IV, II | should be overcome, their loss would be still greater if
13 IV, II | not be sensible of their loss or the duke of his victory.
14 IV, II | quite subdued by the recent loss, took courage and drained
15 IV, III | Florentines to obtain by their loss, what, perhaps, they would
16 IV, IV | acquisition than by the fear of loss. The suggestions of the
17 V, I | danger, and concluded without loss. Thus the military energy
18 V, I | either through grief for his loss or by some unfair means,
19 V, III | any suffer so much for the loss of their own lawful property
20 V, IV | was dissatisfied with the loss of so large a portion of
21 V, V | Venetians, alarmed at this loss, and fearing that in consequence
22 V, V | s disgrace, and with the loss of great numbers of his
23 V, VI | territory and money. That if the loss of their inland possessions
24 V, VI | thirty-two days; and the loss of so much time, for the
25 V, VII | departure, mourning the loss of a territory which his
26 VI, III | important position, the loss of which would be severely
27 VI, III | Venetians, since they knew the loss of it would involve the
28 VI, VII | all Christendom, on the loss of Constantinople, having
29 VII, I | enemies alike grieved for his loss; for his political opponents,
30 VII, I | with his son Piero for his loss. His funeral was conducted
31 VII, II | as a consequence of his loss of influence in the government,
32 VIII, V | which they routed with the loss of above two hundred vessels,
33 VIII, VII | for wisdom, or for whose loss such universal regret was
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