Book, Chapter
1 I, IV | the popes, who received far more injuries from them
2 I, IV | the places interjacent as far as Rome, and afterward Sicily,
3 II, II | to unite the city, and so far succeeded that the Florentines
4 II, III| numbers, and hatred, were far stronger than they; and
5 III, I | Ricci suffered from it by far the most; for if Piero was
6 III, VII| renewed the war, which became far more disastrous to the Florentines
7 IV, I | possessed several qualities far surpassing those of Salvestro.
8 IV, III| hesitated, not knowing how far to trust him; for they thought
9 V, III| oppress us; so that it is far preferable to have this
10 V, III| condottieri, who was so far influenced by the duke as
11 V, III| the Florentines having so far completed the building of
12 V, VI | he overran the country as far as the mountains of Fiesole;
13 V, VII| give way, and was pushed as far as the foot of the hill
14 VI, I | also by the colleagues as far as themselves were concerned.
15 VI, II | they overran the country as far as Milan. Upon this the
16 VI, III| respectable as himself, could so far err as to speak disparagingly
17 VI, IV | neighbor a powerful friend or a far more powerful foe. Neither
18 VII, I | inferior; and those formerly far beneath them were now become
19 VII, I | she did ill to lay so far from the nest.” Some other
20 VII, III| anxious for peace, it would be far better to be in a condition
21 VII, IV | first who began to show how far a pope might go, and how
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