Book, Chapter
1 II, III| nobility began to entertain hopes of recovering their authority;
2 II, VI | expectation of their most sanguine hopes, the Florentines found themselves
3 II, VII| inspire them with fresh hopes by the appointment of a
4 III, II | order to frustrate their hopes of the future harvest, upon
5 III, III| themselves, those who were in hopes of benefiting by these disorders
6 III, VII| families. Excited with these hopes, on the fourth of August,
7 IV, IV | instigations, added to other hopes, induced the Signory to
8 V, II | aspect of affairs, conceived hopes of being able to induce
9 V, II | recent losses, and the vain hopes of the exiles, alarmed him.
10 V, III| Pisan territory, and were in hopes of inducing him to renew
11 V, IV | count having become friends, hopes were entertained that the
12 V, IV | greatest assurance that his hopes would be realized as shortly
13 V, VI | and gave the inhabitants hopes of repelling the enemy from
14 VI, I | to give the duke of Milan hopes of defending Lombardy, which
15 VI, II | recent services, and his hopes of the future, all which
16 VI, III| have occurred. He had great hopes, that if the Milanese were
17 VI, III| refused, indulging great hopes of becoming masters of Lombardy,
18 VI, IV | such a condition as to give hopes of his ultimate success,
19 VI, VII| This victory gave John hopes of recovering the kingdom;
20 VI, VII| losing the kingdom. His hopes were thus revived; and,
21 VII, I | entertained the greatest hopes, died; and the former was
22 VII, II | induced by most certain hopes, disclosed the whole affair
23 VII, III| Gonfalonier of Justice—Great hopes excited in consequence—The
24 VII, III| of his magistracy in vain hopes, which his friends, the
25 VII, III| friends entertained stronger hopes, while those who had been
26 VII, IV | thinking men, though each gave hopes of future usefulness to
27 VII, IV | the peace extinguished all hopes of his return to the city,
28 VII, VI | memory of his father, and the hopes they entertained from himself,
29 VIII, III| the walls of Sienna. These hopes, however, were not realized;
30 VIII, III| assembled in Perugia, conceived hopes of overcoming the Florentines,
31 VIII, IV | princes and people, his hopes from peace, his fears of
32 VIII, V | Venetians gave them increasing hopes of occupying Ferrara. The
33 VIII, VI | arranged, they might entertain hopes of obtaining the place.~
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