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Alphabetical    [«  »]
ambassadors 24
ambiguity 2
ambiguous 3
ambition 43
ambitions 23
ambitious 17
ambush 3
Frequency    [«  »]
44 seeing
44 titus
44 ways
43 ambition
43 day
43 decided
43 easy
Niccolò Machiavelli
Discourses on the first Ten (Books) of Titus Livius

IntraText - Concordances

ambition

   Book,  Chapter
1 Gre | some Prince, and blinded by ambition and avarice laud him for 2 1, II | they turned to avarice, ambition, violation of women, caused 3 1, V | search out who in Rome from ambition and by extraordinary means 4 1, V | were seeking the honors for ambition, or by extraordinary means, 5 1, VI | is seen that there is no ambition in her, it will never happen 6 1, VIII | citizens who opposed his ambition, did much for them; for 7 1, IX | the citizens could, from ambition and the desire to rule, 8 1, IX | could employ for reasons of ambition that which should be employed 9 1, IX | good and not for his own ambition, is shown by his immediate 10 1, X | license, corruption, and ambition extinct; he will see that 11 1, XVIII | the Sumptuary, that of Ambition, and many others, according 12 1, XX | heredity or deceit or violent ambition, but by free suffrage, and 13 1, XXX | not to show any shadow of ambition, nor give reason to the 14 1, XXXIII | if there is any stitch of ambition in him, the assemblage of 15 1, XXXVI | make, and because of their ambition which they could have indulged 16 1, XXXVII | necessity, they fight from ambition; which is so powerful in 17 1, XXXVII | that) begun to fight from ambition and to want to divide with 18 1, XXXVII | opinion, for so great is the ambition of the Nobles, that if it 19 1, XXXIX | believed it had arisen from the ambition of neighbors who wanted 20 1, XXXIX | thought it had arisen form the ambition of the Nobles, who, being 21 1, XL | him because of the great ambition and avarice that exists 22 1, XLII | but] blinded by a little ambition and persuaded by the malignity 23 1, XLVI | CHAPTER XLVI~MEN JUMP FROM ONE AMBITION TO ANOTHER, AND FIRST THEY 24 1, XLVI | what way men jump from one ambition to another, and how very 25 2, VI | whether by election or from ambition, is to acquire and maintain 26 2, VI | in the first system, the ambition of the Consuls contributed 27 2, XIX | place a restraint to all ambition, regulating the internal 28 2, XX | sends them or from their own ambition. And although the intention 29 2, XX | he acquired it. But the ambition of men is so great, that 30 2, XXI | sent, not because of their ambition, but because they had been 31 2, XXII | and from other reasons of ambition, it follows that a common 32 3, II | elect it truly and without ambition, they would not be believed: 33 3, III | and that chance and their ambition which drove them, gave them 34 3, III | country, and not from him ambition; and he could have regulated 35 3, VI | which Plautanias, blinded by ambition, gave him: whence it ensued 36 3, VIII | from the Hernicians; this ambition of his was discovered by 37 3, VIII | afterward cancelled by the evil ambition to rule; which (as is seen) 38 3, VIII | shaped them according to his ambition, he would have obtained 39 3, XII | which proceeds from the ambition to dominate and the jealousy 40 3, XV | although he did not show his ambition by opposing him, he showed 41 3, XVI | dangerous wars to wage, all the ambition of her citizens ceased, 42 3, XXX | perish, lays aside every ambition and runs voluntarily to 43 3, XXXVIII| he may have been led by ambition or fortune) to have been


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