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Alphabetical    [«  »]
favoring 5
favorite 2
favors 13
fear 90
feared 27
fearful 2
fearfully 1
Frequency    [«  »]
95 whoever
93 sent
91 ancient
90 fear
90 long
89 easily
89 found
Niccolò Machiavelli
Discourses on the first Ten (Books) of Titus Livius

IntraText - Concordances

fear

   Book,  Chapter
1 1, II | of this hate he began to fear, and passing therefore from 2 1, II | and passing therefore from fear to injury, a tyranny quickly 3 1, III | nobility feared, and having fear that the maltreated plebs 4 1, III | Tarquins were dead, and that fear left the Nobles, they begun 5 1, III | Tarquins being dead through fear of whom the Nobles were 6 1, V | to acquire, or those who fear to lose that which they 7 1, V | possess [power], for the fear of losing it generates in 8 1, VI | caused the Plebs neither to fear nor to desire authority, 9 1, VI | having the dominion, nor fear of it, there was eliminated 10 1, VI | over her: the other, the fear of being occupied by her. 11 1, VI | happen that someone for fear of her will make war against 12 1, VII | The first is, that for fear of being accused, the citizens 13 1, VII | which offense generates fear, fear seeks defense, for 14 1, VII | offense generates fear, fear seeks defense, for this 15 1, VII | that he [Valori] having no fear except from some extraordinary 16 1, VII | to move against him, for fear that they would be accused 17 1, VIII | every citizen without any fear and without any suspicion: 18 1, X | censure, to security or fear. For of the twenty-six who 19 1, XI | centuries there never was more fear of God than in that Republic, 20 1, XI | swear, and he [Marcus] from fear of having sworn withdrew 21 1, XI | their ruin, for where the fear of God is lacking it will 22 1, XI | will be sustained through fear of a Prince, which may supply 23 1, XII | not been so weak that the fear of losing her dominion of 24 1, XIII | Terentillan law, saying that that fear was fictitious and not true; [ 25 1, XIII | shows that the Plebs for fear of Religion wanted more 26 1, XV | the oath] was to inspire fear, and not courage, in those [ 27 1, XV | made them at the same time fear their own Citizens, their 28 1, XV | virtu of the Romans, and the fear conceived from the past 29 1, XVI | his children, and not to fear offer himself; for no one 30 1, XVIII | abstained from asking from fear. This evil did not come 31 1, XVIII | enemies who should give them fear. This security, and this 32 1, XVIII | power, and everyone for fear of them was not able to 33 1, XXIV | to do some wrong without fear of punishment, he will in 34 1, XXIX | maintaining itself because the fear of punishment makes men 35 1, XXXIII| that he begun to bring fear to the State, so that the 36 1, XXXIII| while later was converted to fear: to which Cicero gives testimony, 37 1, XXXIII| Pompey had too late begun to fear Caesar. Which fear caused 38 1, XXXIII| begun to fear Caesar. Which fear caused them to think of 39 1, XXXVII| some to have more, some in fear of losing their acquisition, 40 1, XL | twenty. For some days the fear was equal [on both sides], 41 1, XL | against the Romans, from the fear of which the Ten Began to 42 1, XLV | their subjects in a state of fear by continuing penalties 43 1, XLVI | while men sought not to fear, they begun to make others 44 1, XLVI | they begun to make others fear, and that injury which they 45 1, XLVI | a kind whom the Citizen fear, and the Magistrates treat 46 1, XLVII | reconciled together, because the fear in which the Senators have 47 1, LVII | ferocious when together, fear made them individually obedient. 48 1, LVIII | not to be feared, nor is fear to be had of the present 49 1, LVIII | against those whom they fear will oppose the common good, 50 1, LVIII | people freely and without fear even while they reign; of 51 1, LIX | Republic: I believe that when fear of [losing] the State comes 52 1, LIX | the Prince. Where there is fear, therefore, there will be 53 2 | hating things either from fear or envy, these two reasons 54 2, I | assault him, and he has no fear of them, it will always 55 2, XIII | envy and so powerful this fear, that not only the Latins, 56 2, XIV | by force, rather than by fear of force; for if you permit 57 2, XIV | for if you permit it from fear, you do so in order to avoid 58 2, XXI | and so much less will they fear you in connection with their 59 2, XXIV | from the fact that that fear arises from the hate which 60 2, XXIV | who guarded it, or from fear of a greater evil: for if 61 2, XXV | peace; the cause of unity is fear and war. And, therefore, 62 2, XXXI | either from shame or from fear of punishment. And if this 63 2, XXXII | the night which puts more fear into those who are engaged 64 3, I | memory, and revives the fear in their minds, so many 65 3, I | government” to put the same fear and terror in men as they 66 3, I | can, because they do not fear that punishment they do 67 3, V | security, not having to fear those things which had harmed 68 3, VI | from Conspiracies ought to fear more those men to whom he 69 3, VI | greater than the danger and fear greater than the punishment: 70 3, VI | Syracuse or gave any sign of fear. The conduct of a Conspiracy, 71 3, VI | that bad Princes always fear that others will inflict 72 3, XII | beginning, not having cause to fear punishment because they 73 3, XII | them pardon if they have fear of punishment, and if they 74 3, XII | punishment, and if they have fear of losing their liberty, 75 3, XXI | things, either by love or by fear; so that he who makes himself 76 3, XXI | other than they did not fear him: for men are so restless 77 3, XXI | remained so because of fear of them [his cruelty and 78 3, XXII | principal] citizens, or by fear of the Magistrates, but 79 3, XXX | advantage, had caused men not to fear his power; and as he was 80 3, XXXII | the accord made. For the fear of that punishment which 81 3, XXXIII| that true virtu does not fear every least incident. The 82 3, XXXIII| does a vain thing make them fear, or a disorder injure them; 83 3, XXXVI | he said: Let no one have fear of men or Gods; but let 84 3, XXXVII| new enemy should make them fear. None the less, there is 85 3, XXXVII| those slight battles, their fear and apprehension will increase, 86 3, XXXVII| and their coming spread fear because of their numbers 87 3, XXXVII| might lose that terror which fear of the enemy may have given 88 3, XXXVII| do as the Gauls: who in fear from some small thing, retreated 89 3, XLVIII| night without entering in fear of a deception, unable to 90 3, XLIX | those who are not punished fear that another time the lot


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