Book, Chapter
1 1, I | whom is recognized in two ways: the first is in the selection
2 1, VII | thought of extraordinary ways, so that it came to arms.
3 1, X | consider that there are two ways: The one which will make
4 1, XIII | served themselves in two ways. In the first, they caused
5 1, XIX | himself to want to hold the ways of peace, but he soon knew
6 1, XXIII | This may be done in many ways. One is to do as Tullus
7 1, XXX | him. There are no other ways: but (as was said above)
8 1, XXXII | ill-used and injured in many ways, was fresh. And as similar
9 1, XXXIII| stalwart, and to think of new ways by which in a short time
10 1, XXXIV | to decide by himself the ways of meeting that urgent peril, [
11 1, XXXVII| not beaten down in various ways and means in a City, it
12 1, LII | THAN TO FORESTALL HIM THOSE WAYS BY WHICH HE COMES TO POWER~
13 1, LII | than to forestall him those ways by which he observes to
14 1, LII | have forestalled him in the ways by which he made himself
15 1, LII | not forestalling him the ways with which he gained reputation
16 1, LII | not forestalling him those ways by which his adversaries
17 1, LV | afterwards having taken other ways and means for satisfying
18 1, LVIII | easily and in a thousand ways. It will be seen that when
19 2, III | great. This is done in two ways, by love and by force. Through
20 2, III | Through love, by keeping the ways open and secure for foreigners
21 2, III | the City in both those two ways, was enabled to put two
22 2, IV | REPUBLICS HAVE HAD THREE WAYS OF EXPANDING~Whoever has
23 2, IV | that Republics had three ways of expanding. One has been
24 2, V | itself in one of the three ways, so that men having been
25 2, XIII | to be deceived in so many ways, without which fraud he
26 2, XIX | greatest zeal, these are the ways to make a Republic great
27 2, XIX | ruin, for in a thousand ways and for many reasons, the
28 2, XXIX | the devious and unknown ways she takes, they always have
29 2, XXXI | some account of how many ways the Romans acquired them.~
30 2, XXXII | CHAPTER XXXII~IN HOW MANY WAYS THE ROMANS OCCUPIED TOWNS~
31 3, VI | ordinarily little learned in the ways of the world, often make
32 3, VI | therefore, through many ways and means can aspire to
33 3, VIII | by his methods and evil ways begin to corrupt the people
34 3, XVI | them to be indignant in two ways: the one, to see themselves
35 3, XVII | in a thousand unforeseen ways its ruin may be caused.~
36 3, XXI | Captain by which of these ways he proceeds, as long as
37 3, XVII | necessary to take one of three ways: either to kill them as
38 3, XXVIII| through these pure and simple ways, it will never be dangerous:
39 3, XXVIII| wholly harmful. The private ways are by doing good to this
40 3, XXVIII| therefore, to open the ways (as has been said) to whoever
41 3, XXX | can be extinguished in two ways: either by some extraordinary
42 3, XL | been very notable in such ways of proceeding. Of which
43 3, XLVI | City not only has certain ways and institutions different
44 3, XLVII | silence and in many other ways that this nomination was
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