Book, Chapter
1 II, V | wished to obtain anything extraordinary had recourse to him. This
2 II, VII | this time they had made an extraordinary appointment, under the title
3 II, VIII| your intention to effect by extraordinary means the design from which
4 III, IV | his origin, determined by extraordinary means to punish such extraordinary
5 III, IV | extraordinary means to punish such extraordinary insolence, and drawing the
6 IV, IV | eloquence, but possessed of extraordinary prudence. His demeanor expressed
7 IV, V | and whose merit was so extraordinary, that after his death his
8 IV, VI | foes.~All these events and extraordinary modes of proceeding were
9 V, I | not overwhelmed by some extraordinary force. These causes made
10 V, V | forces, resolved by some extraordinary exertion to cancel the impression
11 VII, I | had recourse to the most extraordinary means; for not only citizens
12 VII, I | occasion wonder; for of so extraordinary an individual I was compelled
13 VII, II | that if they adopted no extraordinary measures against him, he
14 VII, VI | which would have seemed extraordinary even for a king, the expense
15 VIII, II | to mark the event by some extraordinary circumstance, Jacopo de’
16 VIII, IV | all the joy merited by his extraordinary qualities and recent services,
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