Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
damnable 1
danger 46
dangerous 53
dangers 42
dante 2
dare 8
dared 3
Frequency    [«  »]
43 remained
42 aid
42 constrained
42 dangers
42 established
42 extraordinary
42 hundred
Niccolò Machiavelli
Discourses on the first Ten (Books) of Titus Livius

IntraText - Concordances

dangers

   Book,  Chapter
1 1, I | in order to avoid these dangers, moved either by themselves 2 1, III | confusions, tumults, and dangers of troubles, which arose 3 1, XVII | be restored through many dangers and much bloodshed. For 4 1, XIX | she was subject to these dangers of being ruined under a 5 1, XXXIII| error in not recognizing the dangers that could arise from the 6 1, XXXIII| only overcame the imminent dangers, but was the cause of obviating 7 1, XLVI | mentioned above concerning the dangers involved in abating an evil 8 1, XLVII | had against them, and the dangers to which they were exposed 9 1, XLVII | disorders arose, and the dangers that hung over them, and 10 1, LIII | is subjected to infinite dangers and damage. And if chance 11 2, II | examples, it is known into what dangers they placed themselves in 12 2, XVII | one and the other of these dangers rarely caused extraordinary 13 2, XVII | conquered by assault, the dangers are not much greater now 14 2, XVIII | optimum remedy in their dangers. Nor is the opinion of Hannibal 15 2, XXIII | being able with a thousand dangers to hold them, for the Prince 16 3, VI | guard themselves from these dangers, and that Private Citizens 17 3, VI | this way tyrants die.~The dangers incurred in Conspiracies ( 18 3, VI | This alone, of the three dangers that Conspiracies run, lacks 19 3, VI | expose themselves to great dangers, so that as [the conspirators] 20 3, VI | beginning to discuss the dangers of the first period, which 21 3, VI | passes through all these dangers before it comes to its execution; 22 3, VI | are likely to avoid the dangers that exist in the beginning, 23 3, VI | these men avoided those dangers that are associated with 24 3, VI | condemn her.~There are two dangers, therefore, in communicating 25 3, VI | remedy for both of these dangers; the first, being able to 26 3, VI | killed themselves.~As to the dangers that are run in its execution, 27 3, VI | now only to discuss the dangers that occur after the execution [ 28 3, VI | plotting them there are less dangers than in the other, in the 29 3, VI | execution of them they [dangers] are the same, and after 30 3, VI | plotting it there are not many dangers, for a citizen can aspire 31 3, VI | where they do not run the dangers of being crushed: as much 32 3, VI | they do not bring other dangers than those which the nature 33 3, VIII | considered much more the present dangers to which they were exposed 34 3, X | others, and to avoid the dangers have far removed themselves 35 3, XI | is faced with a thousand dangers, as happened to the Venetians 36 3, XVI | trial, so many disorders and dangers would occur to it that they 37 3, XXI | has been said) there are dangers and defects in both these 38 3, XXII | battle and shows all the dangers to which the Roman people 39 3, XXXIII| and makes light of those dangers which he is able to discern 40 3, XXXV | CHAPTER XXXV~WHAT DANGERS OCCUR IN MAKING ONESELF 41 3, XXXV | will speak only of those dangers that Citizens are exposed 42 3, XXXVII| so as not to incur those dangers which I have mentioned above,


Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (V89) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2007. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License