Book,  Par.

 1   III,     48|    hardship, but, when it has liberty, it is spiteful, intriguing
 2   III,     70|      Still the Senate had not liberty to alter their purpose,
 3   III,     78|   Even then men were still at liberty to court and be courted
 4   III,     85|       very deities, with full liberty as in former days, to ratify
 5    IV,     48|   nothing; with them not only liberty, but even license went unpunished,
 6    XI,     19| promised to Rome. The name of liberty was a lying pretext in the
 7  XIII,     63|   stating an opinion, were at liberty to say out what they pleased,
 8   XIV,      1|      that he had not even his liberty. "Why," she asked, "was
 9   XIV,     51|  retained some of the fire of liberty, knowing nothing yet of
10   XIV,     61|    pleased, and they had free liberty to acquit."~ ~
11    XV,     74|      State and invoke aid for liberty. Rather let the soldiers
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