Book, Chapter
1 II, I | attack our bodies are more dangerous and mortal in proportion
2 II, VII | government.~But, as the more a dangerous business is considered,
3 II, VIII| although they were aware of the dangerous position in which they stood,
4 II, VIII| take upon yourself, and the dangerous course you adopt; to the
5 III, II | reluctantly, considering the delay dangerous, and that, as no opportunity
6 III, III | poverty and safety to the dangerous pursuit of an uncertain
7 III, III | this course is bold and dangerous, but when necessity presses,
8 III, V | considered their enterprise to be dangerous.~Benedetto was one of the
9 III, VII | saw, when too late, how dangerous a thing it is to attempt
10 IV, I | explaining to them how dangerous it was to aggrandize one
11 IV, II | and live disorderly and dangerous, or be under the command
12 IV, III | himself, would soon become as dangerous to them as to the Florentines
13 IV, IV | on a more unjust or more dangerous project, or one more pregnant
14 IV, V | well knew how difficult and dangerous a thing it was to serve
15 IV, VII | thought further delay would be dangerous: he therefore left his house
16 V, I | with any greater or more dangerous deceit, enter a well regulated
17 V, I | alarmed at the prospect of a dangerous war than of an ignominious
18 V, II | yet his past expenses, the dangerous measures necessary, the
19 V, III | still more unreasonable and dangerous. It therefore seemed necessary
20 V, V | fatal, he resolved to make a dangerous experiment. Of all his attendants
21 VI, II | who, thinking it alike dangerous either to discharge or retain
22 VI, III | they thought it would be dangerous to encamp among the thickets
23 VI, IV | extent of territory, would be dangerous to themselves, and that
24 VI, V | themselves greater evils and more dangerous wars. He was listened to
25 VII, IV | enterprise as imminently dangerous, and almost impracticable;
26 VII, VI | the chase, uncertain and dangerous; while going about the city
27 VIII, I | advisers pointed out to him how dangerous it was, and how injurious
28 VIII, I | affair seemed difficult and dangerous, while the archbishop endeavored
29 VIII, VI | incurring the imminent risk of a dangerous rebellion. This establishment
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