Book, Chapter
1 1 | statue has been bought at a great price in order to have it
2 1, I | rarely happens that they make great progress and are able to
3 1, I | ordained by the laws was so great, that most excellent men
4 1, I | praise than Alexander the Great, and many others of whom
5 1, I | limits by laws.~Alexander the Great, wishing to build a city
6 1, II | eight hundred years, with great praise to himself and tranquillity
7 1, III | in Rome there was a very great harmony between the Plebs
8 1, IV | a Republic, which in so great a time sent into exile no
9 1, V | seen that the former have a great desire to dominate, and
10 1, VI | wish that Rome had done the great things that she did without
11 1, VI | they had increased to so great a number, with the desire
12 1, VI | very many, or of such a great number that these would
13 1, VI | armed in order to create a great Empire, you will make it
14 1, VI | but desiring to build a great Empire, she could not, like
15 1, VI | best he can; for without a great number of men, and [those]
16 1, VI | Venice having occupied a great part of Italy, and the greater
17 1, VII | happened] experiencing a great scarcity of provisions,
18 1, VII | of the people, caused so great an indignation against Coriolanus,
19 1, VIII | part is not well organized great disorders always follow,
20 1, VIII | From which there arose great indignation among the friends
21 1, X | resulted from their very great good fortune and virtu,
22 1, XI | were not sufficient for so great an Empire, put it into the
23 1, XI | which the Senate or those of great Roman men should plan to
24 1, XI | coarse [which] gave him great facility to pursue his designs,
25 1, XI | ought not to talk of so great a man except with reverence.
26 1, XII | the medium of Charles the Great she drove out the Lombards
27 1, XII | should need to be of such great power that he should be
28 1, XIV | of the Pollari seeing the great disposition of the army
29 1, XVI | enemies can easily and without great scandals make sure of them,
30 1, XVII | to reestablish it. And so great a difference in events in
31 1, XVII | maintain it. It was therefore a great good fortune for Rome that
32 1, XIX | after the other, are of great virtu, it will often be
33 1, XIX | seen that they achieve most great things and that they will
34 1, XIX | and in judgment, and so great was his virtu, that having
35 1, XIX | of the Kingdom only with great effort. Bajazet, Sultan
36 1, XIX | virtu of Romulus was so great, that it was able to give
37 1, XX | PRINCES OF VIRTU ACHIEVE GREAT RESULTS; AND THAT WELL ORGANIZED
38 1, XX | ACQUISITIONS AND EXPANSIONS ARE GREAT~After Rome had driven out
39 1, XX | Macedonia and Alexander the Great. A Republic ought to be
40 1, XX | infinite number of Princes of great virtu who are successors
41 1, XXI | people, did not hesitate (so great was their virtu) to put
42 1, XXIV | of Horatius had been very great, having by his virtu conquered
43 1, XXIV | that his merits were so great and so recent. Which thing,
44 1, XXIV | then current in Rome) was great and of quality; [but] when
45 1, XXVIII | that [City] there was no great reason to be suspicious
46 1, XXIX | having won) has acquired great glory, that People or that
47 1, XXIX | their ensigns, have made great conquest. And if a Prince
48 1, XXIX | already corrupted cause great evils, and which many times
49 1, XXIX | corrupted they are the cause of great good, and make for a longer
50 1, XXXI | they judged that it was of great importance to those who
51 1, XXXI | of having lost would be a great punishment for such a one,
52 1, XXXIII | causes, and has become so great that it begins to make [
53 1, XXXIV | cause of the greatness of so great an Empire: For without a
54 1, XXXVI | were adept at making her great, and how much the other
55 1, XXXVI | although the Romans were great lovers of glory, none the
56 1, XXXVII | change my opinion, for so great is the ambition of the Nobles,
57 1, XXXVII | it came to property, so great was its obstinacy in defending
58 1, XXXVIII| ELECTION~Because of a very great pestilence occurring in
59 1, XXXVIII| whom the Florentines had great confidence. This Captain
60 1, XXXIX | without any fruit: from the great spending there resulted
61 1, XXXIX | spending there resulted great taxes, from the taxes infinite
62 1, XXXIX | prudence, and there followed so great disorders that in addition
63 1, XXXIX | Nobility. None the less, so great was the obstinacy of the
64 1, XL | this [results] from the too great desire of the people to
65 1, XL | be free, and from the too great desire of the Nobles to
66 1, XL | over to him because of the great ambition and avarice that
67 1, XL | and the People made very great errors in this creation
68 1, XLIII | their armies, have made great advances. The Roman armies
69 1, XLV | different times, so that a great fright existed in the Nobility,
70 1, XLV | Nobility was destroyed. And great evils would have been generated
71 1, XLVII | there was raised a very great noise, calling him haughty,
72 1, XLIX | themselves, like Rome, have great difficulty in finding good
73 1, L | This resulted in a very great disorder, because suddenly
74 1, LI | it seemed to them to be a great benefit which they never
75 1, LII | by which he made himself great, than to want to oppose
76 1, LII | having gathered together that great army in good part from the
77 1, LIII | SPECIES OF GOOD: AND HOW GREAT HOPES AND STRONG PROMISES
78 1, LIV | LIV~HOW MUCH AUTHORITY A GREAT MAN HAS IN RESTRAINING AN
79 1, LV | religion is seen to exist in great [measure] in those People,
80 1, LV | one, that they do not have great commerce with their neighbors,
81 1, LV | misfortunes have been so great, that up to these times
82 1, LV | Principality where there is great equality, will never be
83 1, LV | fact, as they do not have great incomes from possessions,
84 1, LV | can be established where a great equality exists or can be
85 1, LV | can be established where a great inequality exists; otherwise
86 1, LVI | CHAPTER LVI~BEFORE GREAT EVENTS OCCUR IN A CITY OR
87 1, LVI | examples it is seen that no great event ever takes place in
88 1, LVII | ought not to be held of great account, if you are well
89 1, LVII | thing, and have need of great remedies to restrain them:
90 1, LIX | break his faith, and where a great usefulness has not caused
91 1, LIX | counsel that would be of great usefulness to their country,
92 1, LX | when a young man is of such great virtu as to have made himself
93 2 | which accomplished such great things and occupied so much
94 2, I | mixed with Fortune a very great Virtu and Prudence. So that
95 2, I | or a People arrives at so great a reputation, that any neighboring
96 2, I | Carthaginians who were of great power and of great reputation
97 2, I | were of great power and of great reputation when the Romans
98 2, II | good is what makes Cities great. And, without doubt, this
99 2, II | liberty is avenged with great energy when it is taken
100 2, II | suffering than in achieving great deeds.~This mode of living
101 2, II | securely, seeing that the great body of men, in order to
102 2, III | CHAPTER III~ROME BECAME A GREAT CITY BY RUINING THE SURROUNDING
103 2, III | plan for a City to achieve great Empire ought with all industry
104 2, III | succeed in making a City great. This is done in two ways,
105 2, III | which sustains it only with great effort with every little
106 2, III | mentioned below, made Rome great and most powerful. Which
107 2, IV | with their acquisitions, a great part of which still remained
108 2, IV | they are come to such a great number that it appears to
109 2, IV | power of the Tuscans was great, at present there is almost
110 2, V | to reply, that, if such great antiquity was true, it would
111 2, VI | usefulness to them and resultant great convenience. They [the Romans]
112 2, VIII | wars that Alexander the Great waged, and those that the
113 2, VIII | such are sometimes of a great number, and then enter into
114 2, VIII | of their neighbors.~The great numbers of people that went
115 2, VIII | where, because there were a great number of men and the country
116 2, VIII | reasons. The first, the great evacuation which that country
117 2, VIII | times there occurred very great movements of Tartars, who
118 2, X | arms. For without them, great amounts of money will not
119 2, X | the death of Alexander the Great, a great multitude of Gauls
120 2, X | of Alexander the Great, a great multitude of Gauls passed
121 2, X | the world, considering the great enterprises that they made
122 2, X | discussing if Alexander the Great should have come into Italy,
123 2, XII | inconvenience you can cause great inconveniences of provisions
124 2, XII | three such defeats in so great a space of time as they
125 2, XII | they could not have led so great a force against so great
126 2, XII | great a force against so great a number of enemies at so
127 2, XII | number of enemies at so great a distance, nor fight them
128 2, XIII | COMES FROM THE BOTTOM TO A GREAT FORTUNE MORE BY FRAUD THAN
129 2, XIII | to a Kingdom or to very great Empires. Xenophon shows
130 2, XIII | a Prince who wants to do great things, it is necessary
131 2, XIII | fortune to have arrived at great Empire only by force and
132 2, XIII | them, she achieved such great expansion that she could
133 2, XV | the Carthaginian. And so great was the ardor of the parties
134 2, XVIII | of these systems, but so great is the infelicity of these
135 2, XIX | ways to make a Republic great and to acquire Empire. And
136 2, XIX | necessary to occur to all great Cities. And if the Republics
137 2, XX | the ambition of men is so great, that to gratify a present
138 2, XXII | IN JUDGING THINGS [TO BE] GREAT ARE FALSE~Those who have
139 2, XXII | where men who do not have a great amount of experience of
140 2, XXII | and thus he would, with great glory to himself, to remain
141 2, XXIV | commanded all the port and great part of the town of Genoa.
142 2, XXV | abuse the Roman name; and so great was their temerity and insolence
143 2, XXVI | believe that it is one of the great signs of prudence which
144 2, XXVI | returned to the siege, and so great was his indignation at this
145 2, XXVII | one. After Alexander the Great had already conquered all
146 2, XXVII | and it should have been a great enough victory for them
147 2, XXVII | with arms in hand made so great a man condescend to their
148 2, XXVII | and it would have been a great victory for them, if the
149 2, XXIX | up arms, that only with great effort were they in time
150 2, XXIX | men who ordinarily live in great adversity or prosperity
151 2, XXIX | or to greatness by some great expedient which Heaven has
152 2, XXIX | she wants to bring some great things, she selects a man
153 2, XXIX | she wants to bring some great ruin, she promotes men who
154 2, XXX | money from it, then it is a great sign of its weakness. Let
155 2, XXX | King of France, who with so great a Kingdom lives tributary
156 2, XXX | beginning of the ruin of so great an Empire. Such troubles
157 2, XXX | because that Kingdom is so great that it has few enemies
158 2, XXX | springs up one who is a great lover of antiquity who is
159 2, XXXI | subject. When Alexander the Great crossed with his army into
160 2, XXXIII | that the authority was very great, as the Senate did not reserve
161 3, I | had sprung up in Rome, so great was the interval between
162 3, I | corrected with [accompanying] great disorders, or that the Kingdom
163 3, I | particular had made Rome great and caused many good results
164 3, I | actions of the Kings were great and notable, none the less,
165 3, IV | this desire to reign is so great, that it not only enters
166 3, VI | another reason, and a very great one, which makes men conspire
167 3, VI | Conspiracies (as I said above) are great, being incurred at all times:
168 3, VI | whatever sort, small or great, noble or ignoble, familiar
169 3, VI | conspiracies were made by great men, or those most familiar
170 3, VI | to expose themselves to great dangers, so that as [the
171 3, VI | in its execution. For if great men and those who have easy
172 3, VI | who have conspired are all great men, or familiars of the
173 3, VI | if any conspiracy made by great men against a Prince ought
174 3, VI | speak, and one who had so great an opportunity to fulfil
175 3, VI | desire of dominating is as great or greater than is that
176 3, VI | who conspire having to be great men and have easy access
177 3, VI | be very prudent and have great good fortune, that in conducting
178 3, VI | will they bear you is so great that the plot does not appear
179 3, VI | the Prince] must be very great or your authority [over
180 3, VI | Philotas against Alexander the Great, who communicated the conspiracy
181 3, VI | conspirators taken, concealed with great virtu all the conspirators,
182 3, VI | when Ortanus, one of the great men of the kingdom, had
183 3, VI | to above. Piso was a very great and reputed man, and a familiar
184 3, VI | which is very easy for a great man to do; and when Nero
185 3, VI | the world, often make very great errors, and so much greater
186 3, VI | accusing her to Nero, but so great was the audacity of Epicaris
187 3, VI | to you, [and] which is so great that it does not give you
188 3, VI | goodwill of the executor. So great is the majesty and reverence
189 3, VI | have more respect for their Great citizens, and because of
190 3, VI | Senate and the Consul, so great was the respect which that
191 3, VI | manifestly. Hanno, a very great citizen in Carthage, aspiring
192 3, VI | banquets and nuptials, so great was the respect they had
193 3, VII | general public who had made it great, then there is no reason
194 3, VIII | and he was held in so great suspicion, that in talking
195 3, X | much the actions concerning great things are different from
196 3, XI | in the City of Rome was great and necessary, as has been
197 3, XI | Senate. Which remedy was a great tempering force against
198 3, XIV | if such voices have such great effects in a well organized
199 3, XV | of the administration of great things, the principal authority
200 3, XVI | always will be, that rare and great men are neglected in a Republic
201 3, XVII | A Republic ought to take great care not to promote anyone
202 3, XVII | entire City, not without great dishonor and indignity to
203 3, XIX | you, because of your too great easiness. But this also
204 3, XX | people desired this virtu in great men, and how much it is
205 3, XX | Among whom Xenophon makes a great effort to show how many
206 3, XX | that Hannibal had acquired great victories and fame by contrary
207 3, XXI | he will succeed in making great progress in those areas.
208 3, XXI | among men. For when this is great, as it was with Hannibal
209 3, XXI | both of these two methods great evils may arise and apt
210 3, XXI | other hand, he derived a great advantage from it, which
211 3, XXI | his person, which was so great, and combined with that
212 3, XXI | as there is in him such great virtu that it permits him
213 3, XXII | which your other virtues and great reputation inspire, as we
214 3, XXIV | would not have come to so great power, and her conquests
215 3, XXV | there still existed a very great poverty; nor can it be believed
216 3, XXV | believed that any other great institution caused this
217 3, XXVI | ruinations, and have done great damage to those who govern
218 3, XXVI | outside succor, which is a great beginning to a sure servitude.
219 3, XVII | themselves. So that two very great evils arise. The one, that
220 3, XXVIII | expense. For which thing a great assembly of people gave
221 3, XXIX | criminal life, as here a great many killings and robberies
222 3, XXXI | which words it is seen how great men are always the same
223 3, XXXIII | ancestors made this Republic great. For in these little things
224 3, XXXIV | of such men who had been great and valiant men in the City
225 3, XXXV | country where there are great deserts and rivers are rare,
226 3, XXXV | superior in the war) he lost a great part of his forces by famine
227 3, XXXV | you will obtain a very great glory. And although you
228 3, XXXVII | the less, there is a very great danger that if your soldiers
229 3, XXXVII | Perseus, a military man and of great renown in his times, having
230 3, XXXVIII| the engagement; and with great efficacy he showed them
231 3, XXXVIII| this discourse, that, if great” Captains have employed
232 3, XXXIX | honorable and necessary to great men. This knowledge of countries
233 3, XXXIX | Decius] seeing it in so great danger, said to the Consul:
234 3, XL | who write biographies of great men, and who praise Hannibal
235 3, XLIII | showed the bad faith and great avarice of his. But let
236 3, XLIX | times) it happens that in a great City incidents arise every
237 3, XLIX | accustomed to punish the great number of guilty men. For,
|