Book, Chapter
1 1, I | taken place either through public Councils or private [individuals]
2 1, I | occured inside; and as for the public Council, which is worthy
3 1, II | and preserved private and public affairs with the greatest
4 1, II | where neither private men or public men were feared: this was
5 1, IV | institutions in benefit of public liberty. And if anyone should
6 1, IV | the remedy of haranguing [public assembly], where some upright
7 1, VII | which are those that ruin public liberty, but is done by
8 1, VII | liberty, but is done by public force and arrangement which
9 1, VIII | it could be converted to public usefulness, alleviating
10 1, VIII | they met face to face in public, the Dictator in the midst
11 1, XVI | knowing to reason either on public defense or offense, not
12 1, XVI | but he who has the general public hostile to him can never
13 1, XVII | the virtu of the general public, that the good institutions
14 1, XVIII | intended some good for the public was able to propose it,
15 1, XXIV | each of those men by the public. The history of Manlius
16 1, XXXII | the poor did much for the public benefit if they reared their
17 1, XXXIV | Caesar could not under any public [title] have imposed his
18 1, XXXIV | it was given according to public orders and not by individual
19 1, XXXV | NOTWITHSTANDING THAT IT WAS CREATED BY PUBLIC AND FREE SUFFRAGE~The election
20 1, XXXVI | entirely useless for the public. For a Republic ought to
21 1, XXXVI | to the detriment of the public.~
22 1, XXXVII| Republics have to keep the public [State] rich and its Citizens
23 1, XXXVII| they were defending the public, whenever (as I have said)
24 1, XXXVII| and custom. So that the public Magistrates not being able
25 1, XXXIX | of the War”, the general public begun to hold them in aversion
26 1, XXXIX | end the war as the general public had persuaded itself it
27 1, XL | them exposed them to the public, so that all could read
28 1, XL | Tyrants who have the general public as friends and the Nobles
29 1, XLVII | certain ambitious license, and public affairs going from bad to
30 1, XLIX | ample authority was given by public and free suffrage to a few
31 1, L | happened that the general public, either from contempt or
32 1, L | to the Republic to stop public activities.~
33 1, LI | when they decided that a public stipend be given to the
34 1, LII | by favoring the General Public; this among the People gave
35 1, LII | the councils and all the public deliberations boldly and
36 1, LIII | throughout all the plazas and public places of Rome to rout Hannibal
37 1, LIII | that desire of the general public which was based on the brave
38 1, LV | any quantity of money for public account, those Magistrates
39 1, LVII | disorder, commanded through its public edicts that everyone within
40 1, LVIII | it was necessary for the public safety to obey the Dictators
41 2, II | competing for both private and public betterment, both come to
42 2, VI | themselves of it so that the public should not be constrained
43 2, VII | that all the colonies have public fields where everyone could
44 2, XV | indecisions to interfere with public actions, with damage and
45 2, XIX | and by sieges, to keep the public rich, the private citizen
46 2, XXVIII| INJURY MADE AGAINST THE PUBLIC OR A PRIVATE [CITIZEN]~That
47 2, XXVIII| greatly offended either by the public or by a private citizen,
48 3, III | so terrified the general public, that after his death they
49 3, V | funds which were marked for public improvements with which
50 3, VI | being hated by the general public; for in the case of that
51 3, VI | therefore to avoid these public charges, but I do not want
52 3, VII | common consent of the general public who had made it great, then
53 3, VII | overthrown, for the said general public to harm anyone but the Head.
54 3, VIII | received for the grain that the public had caused to be sent from
55 3, XVI | honor and little of the public good, and planning to be
56 3, XVI | that should ensue to the public for not having sent Antonio
57 3, XXII | method is all in favor of the public, and does not regard in
58 3, XXII | not lack usefulness to the public, and there not being able
59 3, XXII | are produced as far as the public is concerned, none the less,
60 3, XXII | rule, had effects against [public] liberty. And if these bad
61 3, XXIII | sold, he applied to the public [treasury] and did not divide
62 3, XXIV | Senate as being useful to the public) was what in time brought
63 3, XXIV | follow them against the public good. Because of this Caesar
64 3, XXV | the useful things to the public; for if they thought of
65 3, XXVIII| by a famine, and as the public provisions were not enough
66 3, XXVIII| effect, are two, either public or private. The public methods
67 3, XXVIII| either public or private. The public methods are when one acquires
68 3, XXVIII| to be able to corrupt the public and break the laws. A well
69 3, XXVIII| whoever seeks favors through public means, and close them to
70 3, XXVIII| whoever seeks them through public means, as was seen that
71 3, XXVIII| whoever acts well for the public she ordered triumphs and
72 3, XXX | charge of the Senate and the public council, so that he should
73 3, XXX | always employed that rank for public usefulness and not for his
74 3, XXXIV | agreeable to the general public, that not only was he not
75 3, XXXIV | what is said of one by the public voice and fame, even if
76 3, XXXIV | with them. Or truly this public fame is acquired by some
77 3, XXXIV | imputed to his glory, to make public in the assemblies to defects
78 3, XXXIV | defects of that one [named for public office], so that the people (
79 3, XLII | forced promises regarding public affairs, will be disregarded
80 3, XLVI | Censors. And although many public meetings were held on this
81 3, XLVII | hatred and name him for the public benefit: which Fabius did,
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