Book, Chapter
1 1, II | passing therefore from fear to injury, a tyranny quickly arose.
2 1, VI | Plebs defended from every injury: which caused the Plebs
3 1, VII | have been extinguished with injury to himself only, but having
4 1, VII | how they could avenge the injury he had received with advantage
5 1, XI | had for his father, the injury that his son had done him,
6 1, XXIX | reason in this sentence; An injury is more apt to be repaid
7 1, XXXIII| party resentful of this injury, a little later called him
8 1, XXXIV | irregular means that do injury to Republics, not those
9 1, XLVI | make others fear, and that injury which they ward off from
10 1, LIX | a Republic and with less injury, than by the Prince. Where
11 2, II | lessons of history what injury the people and the City
12 2, XV | not have received so much injury or so much trouble from
13 2, XVIII | Swiss without suffering any injury, and having entered therein
14 2, XXII | it greatly outweighs the injury which the death of his soldiers
15 2, XXIV | fortress did him no good, but injury, and the more so, that by
16 2, XXVI | opprobrium of words to the injury of war against the Romans,
17 2, XXVI | them with every kind of injury, vituperating them, accusing
18 2, XXVI | his indignation at this injury, that in a few days he took
19 2, XXVIII| REPUBLIC, NOT TO AVENGE AN INJURY MADE AGAINST THE PUBLIC
20 2, XXVIII| their Ambassadors of this injury, and asked that in satisfaction
21 2, XXVIII| careful in making a similar injury, not only against an entire
22 2, XXVIII| Pausanias complained of this injury many times to Philip, who
23 2, XXVIII| so as to believe (adding injury on injury) that he whom
24 2, XXVIII| believe (adding injury on injury) that he whom he has injured
25 2, XXVIII| even with every danger and injury to himself.~
26 2, XXXI | with shame or very grave injury. And as the taking of towns
27 3, I | its welfare and not its injury. And as I speak here of
28 3, IV | benefit is less that the injury inflicted. And without doubt
29 3, VI | who thinks so much of an injury that he will put himself
30 3, VI | him], of Blood [physical injury], or of Honor. Of those
31 3, VI | their person. This [kind of injury] armed Pausanias against
32 3, VI | efficacious Conspiracies than the injury itself; from which a Prince
33 3, VII | and no one else suffered injury. Which depends on this,
34 3, VII | violence, it does so with injury to many; then in its ruin,
35 3, XV | dishonor but experienced no injury. For this dishonor they
36 3, XV | cause of their not receiving injury. Whence the Romans, seeing
37 3, XVI | being able to) or by the injury of some particular citizen.
38 3, XVII | has been done a notable injury by someone. Claudius Nero (
39 3, XXII | constrained to assure itself with injury to him. And, on the other
40 3, XXVI | the Tyrants, places the injury they committed on Women,
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