Book, Chapter
1 1, I | of the Empire, could not corrupt her for many centuries,
2 1, VI | opportunity either of becoming corrupt or of increasing so much
3 1, X | ought to desire to possess a corrupt City, not to spoil it entirely
4 1, XI | City, where civilization is corrupt, as a sculptor more easily
5 1, XVI | the people is not wholly corrupt; for a people where corruption
6 1, XVII | CHAPTER XVII~A CORRUPT PEOPLE COMING INTO THEIR
7 1, XVII | time of Tarquin was not yet corrupt, and in the latter time [
8 1, XVII | Caesar’s] it became very corrupt. For to keep her sound and
9 1, XVII | those people are entirely corrupt. Which was seen after the
10 1, XVII | sooner had these Kings become corrupt than they were driven out,
11 1, XVIII | CHAPTER XVIII~IN WHAT WAY IN A CORRUPT CITY A FREE STATE CAN BE
12 1, XVIII | will presuppose a City very corrupt, where such difficulties
13 1, XVIII | institutions that remain firm will corrupt it. And in order to make
14 1, XVIII | Citizens from day to day became corrupt. But the institutions of
15 1, XVIII | although no longer good for the corrupt [people], those laws that
16 1, XVIII | in a City that had become corrupt were not good, is expressly
17 1, XVIII | system became pernicious in a corrupt City, for it was not those
18 1, XXX | fortresses with his men, corrupt the Princes [Leaders] of
19 1, XXX | himself of those he cannot corrupt, and by these means seek
20 1, XLIX | beginnings in liberty but become corrupt by themselves, like Rome,
21 1, LII | especially in those that are corrupt, a better method, less troublesome
22 1, LV | WHERE THE MULTITUDE IS NOT CORRUPT, AND THAT WHERE THERE IS
23 1, LV | feared or to be hoped for in corrupt Cities, none the less it
24 1, LV | these times, are seen to be corrupt, as is Italy above all others,
25 1, LVIII | dignity a man of infamous and corrupt habits: to which a Prince
26 2 | if the judgment of men is corrupt in deciding whether the
27 2 | the old men ought not to corrupt themselves in judging the
28 2, XIX | been introduced by these corrupt centuries of ours, causes
29 2, XXII | because excellent men in corrupt Republics (especially in
30 3, I | more latitude in becoming corrupt, and the carrying out of
31 3, I | it would never have been corrupt: but as they caused both
32 3, I | finding the City in good part corrupt, was not able by his example
33 3, VIII | a Republic which is not corrupt, this conclusion is fortified (
34 3, VIII | if this people had been corrupt, it would not have refused
35 3, VIII | sought by other means in a corrupt City than in one which still
36 3, VIII | Sulla, when the people were corrupt, and when he could have
37 3, VIII | methods and evil ways begin to corrupt the people of a City, but
38 3, VIII | one is [long] enough to corrupt them so that they, through
39 3, VIII | if he had been born in a corrupt City. And therefore the
40 3, XVI | should not enable them to corrupt either themselves or others;
41 3, XXII | the Romans were not yet corrupt, and he had not been long
42 3, XXVIII| thus favored to be able to corrupt the public and break the
43 3, XXX | accustomed to live in a corrupt City, where education has
44 3, XLIX | to such small a space) to corrupt all Rome. This was well
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