Book, Chapter
1 Gre | Syracuse when he was a private citizen than Perseus the Macedonian
2 1 | Republic, or Captain, or Citizen, who has recourse to the
3 1, VII | being able to accuse the citizen to the People or to any
4 1, VII | generally conceived against a citizen, for if these ordinary means
5 1, VII | others. For ordinarily when a citizen is oppressed, even if he
6 1, VII | an offense by a private [citizen] against a private [citizen];
7 1, VII | citizen] against a private [citizen]; which offense generates
8 1, VII | Plebs nor any particular citizen, ever attempted to avail [
9 1, VIII | possible to accuse every citizen without any fear and without
10 1, XIII | Publius Rubetius, a grave citizen of authority, went out from
11 1, XVIII | A Tribune or some other Citizen could propose a law to the
12 1, XVIII | the people on which every Citizen could speak in favor or
13 1, XXIV | quickly be ruined. For if to a citizen who has done some eminent
14 1, XXIX | called free where there was a Citizen who was feared by the Magistrates.
15 1, XXX | WHAT THAT CAPTAIN OR THAT CITIZEN OUGHT TO DO SO AS NOT TO
16 1, XXX | govern as Rome did, and a Citizen who wants to avoid its sting
17 1, XXXIII| occurs that it allows a Citizen more power than is reasonable,
18 1, XXXIV | reasons: First, because if a Citizen would want to [offend and ]
19 1, XXXVI | orders, and practices of the Citizen of our times: and in Venice
20 1, XXXVI | error still holds that a Citizen having had a high rank would
21 1, XXXVI | should be for a private [citizen] is entirely useless for
22 1, XXXVI | and more confidence in a Citizen who descends from a high
23 1, XXXVII| first it provided that each Citizen could not possess more than
24 1, XL | having to punish a Roman Citizen for homicide, they cited
25 1, XLV | anyone or to accuse any Roman Citizen; this reassured all the
26 1, XLVI | becomes of a kind whom the Citizen fear, and the Magistrates
27 1, XLVII | first (when he was a private citizen) heard him speak, and afterwards
28 1, XLIX | be so constituted that a Citizen in order to promulgate a
29 1, XLIX | who are able to punish any Citizen without appeal. And as this
30 1, LII | to the ambitions of any Citizen, than to forestall him those
31 1, LIV | Pagolantonio Soderini, a Citizen greatly reputed in those
32 2, XIX | public rich, the private citizen poor, to maintain military
33 2, XXI | necessary to have a Roman Citizen within that City who would
34 2, XXIII | City entire. And when any Citizen in their deliberations advised
35 2, XXVII | and prudent Carthaginian Citizen advised that they should
36 2, XXVIII| THE PUBLIC OR A PRIVATE [CITIZEN]~That which indignation
37 2, XXVIII| the public or by a private citizen, and is not avenged according
38 3, I | alive by the virtu of one Citizen who will courageously take
39 3, VI | not many dangers, for a citizen can aspire to power without
40 3, VI | manifestly. Hanno, a very great citizen in Carthage, aspiring to
41 3, VIII | discussed above how a bad Citizen cannot work evil in a Republic
42 3, VIII | that City moved to defend a Citizen full of every virtu, and
43 3, XVI | in making war he knew no citizen would be his equal or superior.
44 3, XVI | that virtuous but neglected Citizen is vindictive, and has reputation
45 3, XVI | injury of some particular citizen. From which a Republic ought
46 3, XVII | could so exist in a Roman Citizen, and in those times when
47 3, XVII | much they could exist in a Citizen of a City that was not like
48 3, XXII | undecided, I say, that in a citizen who lives under the laws
49 3, XXII | interests of the State. But in a citizen who has the army as his
50 3, XXII | Prince, but pernicious in a citizen, not only towards the country,
51 3, XXII | Prince, but useful in a citizen and especially to the country;
52 3, XXIV | a few: the other, that a citizen being a command of an army
53 3, XXV | of that Republic, when a citizen who had enriched Rome with
54 3, XXVIII| ought to be opened to every Citizen, and rewards proposed for
55 3, XXX | CHAPTER XXX~FOR A CITIZEN WHO WANTS TO DO SOME GOOD
56 3, XXXII | than battle, sent their citizen Hasdrubal as an ambassador
57 3, XXXIV | PEOPLE MAKE BEGINS TO FAVOR A CITIZEN; AND WHETHER THEY DISTRIBUTE
58 3, XXXIV | accusing some prominent citizen as a transgressor of the
59 3, XXXIV | it be allowed to every citizen, and it should be imputed
60 3, XXXIV | less than Princes: and the Citizen who desires to begin to
61 3, XLI | noted and observed by any citizen who finds himself counselling
62 3, XLVII | LOVE OF HIS COUNTRY, A GOOD CITIZEN OUGHT TO FORGET PRIVATE
63 3, XLVIII| Alfonso Del Mutolo, a Pisan citizen, was [found to be] a prisoner
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