Book, Chapter
1 Gre | so as not to incur this error, have selected, not those
2 Gre | should continue in this error that these thoughts of mine
3 1 | therefore, to draw men from this error, I have judged it necessary
4 1, XXIII | be considered worse. This error is also almost always committed
5 1, XXIX | the trouble, they make an error that has no excuse, but
6 1, XXXI | any other. For if their error had been from malice, they
7 1, XXXIII| late) to recognize their error, and wanting to remedy that
8 1, XXXIII| a free society: and this error is allowed to run so far,
9 1, XXXIII| when the Citizens see their error, they will have few remedies
10 1, XXXIII| and having made the first error in not recognizing the dangers
11 1, XXXIII| he lived that a second [error] be made, that is, that
12 1, XXXVI | times: and in Venice this error still holds that a Citizen
13 1, XXXIX | people perceiving their error, [and] that the cause of
14 1, XXXIX | until they recognized their error and returned to the Ten
15 1, XL | year, begun to show their error to the People and to the
16 1, XL | Plebs recognizing their error began, full of affliction,
17 1, XL | People is led to commit this error of giving reputation to
18 1, XL | Nobles, made a most obvious error, both for the reasons mentioned
19 1, XL | proposed in the beginning, the error which the Roman people made
20 1, XLIX | Magistracy they indeed made one error at the start, creating them
21 1, LII | who hated Piero made an error in not forestalling him
22 1, LII | People, Piero also made an error in not forestalling him
23 1, LIII | Roman People had made that error of giving authority to the
24 2, I | pertain to them. In which error they remain until the conflagration
25 2, I | did they see before this error was made, that the Romans
26 2, XI | Livius, wanting to show the error of the Sidicians in trusting
27 2, XI | the Campanians, and the error of the Campanians in believing
28 2, XVIII | to mounted troops. Which error arose from the malignity
29 2, XVIII | the Ultramontanes. This error of esteeming cavalry more
30 2, XVIII | moderns, nor the confession of error, is enough to cause the
31 2, XXII | that a common deception [error] is judged good, or it is
32 2, XXII | general good. When this error, in times of adversity,
33 2, XXII | have been said of that [error] which the Praetor Numicus (
34 2, XXII | persuaded them, and of that [error] which a few years ago was
35 2, XXII | of the Latins and by the error that the Praetor Numicus
36 2, XXV | MEANS OF ITS DISUNION IS AN ERROR~There was so much disunity
37 2, XXVII | attacked cannot make a greater error, therefore, especially when
38 2, XXVII | he do? But men make this error of not knowing where to
39 2, XXXI | punishment. And if this error was made by Themistocles,
40 2, XXXII | broken, every least least error and every least fault made,
41 3, V | Sextus had not made that error, Brutus and Collatinus would
42 3, VI | should execute it, or from an error that the executor makes
43 3, VI | another. They fell into this error several times, so that the
44 3, VI | executions arise either from the error of little prudence or little
45 3, VI | having too late seen their error, suffered the penalty of
46 3, X | disadvantage of the place. When an error is followed in which all
47 3, X | reason. Yet these make less error in showing themselves with
48 3, XVIII | believed he had won. Such an error had made men decide things
49 3, XVIII | Cassius, who by such an error lost the war, for Brutus
50 3, XVIII | his safety because of this error, killed himself. And in
51 3, XVIII | routed and killed: which error caused them not to save
52 3, XVIII | that they also made another error; and this same error came
53 3, XVIII | another error; and this same error came near ruining the army
54 3, XVIII | victorious.~Such a similar error occurred in the camps of
55 3, XXXII | be merited because of the error they committed will always
56 3, XLVIII| CHAPTER XLVIII~WHEN A GOOD ERROR IS SEEN TO BE MADE BY THE
57 3, XLVIII| ought not to trust in an error which he sees done by the
58 3, XLIX | will guard themselves from error. The Poisoners and the Bacchanals,
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