Book, Chapter
1 II, VII | liquidate them, and, by the slavery of their country, to deliver
2 II, VIII| endeavoring to reduce to slavery a city that has always existed
3 II, VIII| those cities alone are in slavery that are disunited, while
4 II, VIII| their liberty cannot endure slavery, but the most servile people
5 III, I | freedom nor be content with slavery. Nor did we hesitate (so
6 III, III | your discords, reduce to slavery in a time of peace, that
7 III, VI | free, she cannot in her slavery take from me; and the recollection
8 III, VII | deliver themselves from the slavery which weighed so heavily
9 IV, I | CHAPTER I~License and Slavery peculiar defects in republican
10 IV, I | suppose, but by that of slavery and license; for with the
11 IV, I | ministers respectively of slavery or licentiousness, only
12 IV, VI | inevitably reducing it to slavery. These practices of Rinaldo,
13 IV, VII | held in greater esteem than slavery at home.” He then left the
14 V, II | afflict a republic than slavery? and what remedy is more
15 V, II | rescues our country from slavery. Our cause is therefore
16 VII, V | deliver the country from slavery, reminding them how glorious
17 VIII, IV | their republic might escape slavery, which is the death of free
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