Chapter
1 III | are not able to keep those friends who put you there because
2 III | induce the Romans to be his friends without first humbling him,
3 III | in Italy, and having no friends there — seeing rather that
4 III | the Florentines became his friends; the Marquess of Mantua,
5 III | laid down, and kept all his friends secure and protected; for
6 III | himself, depriving himself of friends and of those who had thrown
7 III | and deprived himself of friends, he, wishing to have the
8 VII | their partisans into his friends, the duke had laid sufficiently
9 VII | new principality, to win friends, to overcome either by force
10 VIII| fellow-citizens, to deceive friends, to be without faith, without
11 VIII| one hundred horsemen, his friends and retainers; and he entreated
12 XII | unfaithful, valiant before friends, cowardly before enemies;
13 XIV | was in the country with friends, he often stopped and reasoned
14 XV | prince towards subject and friends. And as I know that many
15 XIX | armed he will have good friends, and affairs will always
16 XIX | laws, the protection of friends and the state to defend
17 XIX | he should keep them his friends. The kingdom of the Soldan
18 XIX | people, he must keep them his friends. But you must note that
19 XX | easier for the prince to make friends of those men who were contented
20 XXI | conquers does not want doubtful friends who will not aid him in
21 XXI | to the Achaeans, who were friends of the Romans, exhorting
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