Book, Chapter
1 I, I | charge full of danger and expense; and sometimes, without
2 I, IV | under them at their own expense; so great was the influence
3 I, VI | obtained with so much labor and expense; and although they have
4 II, VII| restored with great care and expense.~In the year 1340, new sources
5 IV, I | attended with greater immediate expense, to make war at another’
6 IV, II | reduced, and the future expense would not be so great as
7 IV, III| on the war at the common expense of both: the conquests in
8 IV, IV | liberty, now, after so much expense and trouble, with their
9 V, II | through the dangers and expense which they had incurred;
10 V, II | attended with difficulty, expense, and disgrace, this will
11 V, IV | to pay two-thirds of the expense of the war, the Florentines
12 V, VII| without any very serious expense. Nor was there ever an instance
13 VI, I | being exhausted with the expense, he could not forego a certain
14 VI, II | accommodating himself at his expense, caused Ciarpellone to be
15 VII, I | felt he had incurred great expense and trouble for an ungrateful
16 VII, V | times of peace, injury and expense.”~
17 VII, VI | extraordinary even for a king, the expense exceeding twenty thousand
18 VIII, III| be defended at the public expense. The Florentines, in order
19 VIII, III| honorably buried at the public expense, provision was made for
20 VIII, IV | and equipped, at their own expense, as long as the Turks should
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