bold = Main text
Chapter grey = Comment text
1 II | that make for change are lost, for one change always leaves
2 III | occupied Milan, and as quickly lost it; and to turn him out
3 III | they are not so lightly lost afterwards, because the
4 III | authority which Charles had lost: Genoa yielded; the Florentines
5 III | be kept.~Thus King Louis lost Lombardy by not having followed
6 IV | exterminate them, that state is lost whenever time brings the
7 V | oligarchy, nevertheless they lost them. The Romans, in order
8 VII | father, and on its decline he lost it, notwithstanding that
9 VII | how men are to be won or lost, and so firm were the foundations
10 XII(21)| the realm of Naples, and lost it again, in a kind of a
11 XII | where in one battle they lost that which in eight hundred
12 XIV | ease than of arms they have lost their states. And the first
13 XIX | nevertheless they have lost their empire or have been
14 XX | divided cities you are quickly lost, because the weakest party
15 XXIV | THE PRINCES OF ITALY HAVE LOST THEIR STATES~THE previous
16 XXIV | are considered who have lost their states in Italy in
17 XXIV | army in the field cannot be lost.~Philip of Macedon, not
18 XXIV | years, and if in the end he lost the dominion of some cities,
19 XXV | entirely upon fortune is lost when it changes. I believe
|