Book, Chapter
1 I, II | honor. He kept within their proper bounds, wholly by the influence
2 I, IV | to Rome when they thought proper; and that he should annul
3 I, VII| were armed with their own proper forces. Duke Filippo kept
4 II, I | occupied and preserve a proper distribution of its inhabitants
5 II, IV | of the city as he thought proper.~Thus authorized, Charles
6 II, IV | government as he should think proper. As he was of Ghibelline
7 II, VI | forces wherever he thought proper, and it seemed sufficient
8 III, II | private cases (for which proper judges were appointed, who
9 IV, II | them or not, as he thought proper, and that at the meeting
10 IV, IV | and your countrymen think proper to bestow, thus you will
11 V, I | against such as thought proper to assail them, or decided
12 V, III| solemnized whenever he thought proper. The prospect of this connection
13 V, IV | threaten it. But as at the proper crisis you withheld from
14 V, VI | and that those whom it is proper to take, it is not well
15 VI, II | those pursuits which are proper to your family and worthy
16 VI, V | which it was not thought proper to disclose. Be this as
17 VI, VII| grasp, but he did not take proper means to secure it. The
18 VI, VII| that they did not think proper to assist the son in a war
19 VII, I | adopt what course he thought proper, that if any trouble should
20 VII, I | any terms it was thought proper to grant. Whatever difficulties
21 VII, II | course they might think proper to adopt. Many of the assembly
22 VII, VI | join them if they thought proper, the two latter also entered
23 VIII, V | join them if they thought proper. When this was accomplished,
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