Book, Chapter
1 I, II | the Vandals, than from any avarice or natural cruelty of the
2 III, I | suggestion of their own avarice or ambition; and from 1356,
3 III, I | correct. Hence arises the avarice so observable among the
4 III, I | them through ambition and avarice, and necessity compels the
5 III, III| heard you complain of the avarice of your superiors and the
6 IV, I | condemned the ambition and avarice of the great, declaring
7 IV, IV | country, with the greatest avarice and cruelty, making no distinction
8 IV, V | citizen, whose cruelty and avarice, had we known them before
9 V, II | people feel more deeply the avarice of their rulers, than the
10 V, III| with our blood, and their avarice with our property, so that
11 VI, V | ambition and others from avarice were averse to their possessing
12 VII, II | such an alliance from mere avarice, and that there was nothing
13 VII, IV | set some bounds to their avarice, and who, after having avenged
14 VII, IV | examples of violence and avarice as in this city. Has our
15 VII, IV | injured by the pride and avarice of their governors, and
16 VIII, II | who, by their pride and avarice, lost the reputation which
17 VIII, VII| the people (who hated the avarice and cruelty of the count)
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