Book, Chapter
1 1, I | in those countries where nature has been harsh and sterile:
2 1, XVI | animal, which (although by nature ferocious and wild) has
3 1, XIX | followed Ancus, so gifted by nature that he was able to use
4 1, XXIV | from envy or from his evil nature, moved to raise up sedition
5 1, XXIX | sent him. And because the nature of men is ambitious and
6 1, XXXIII| assemblage of favors which nature and these incidents give
7 1, XXXVII| rise. The reason is that nature has so created men that
8 1, XL | so readily taken on a new nature and new genius, having before
9 1, XL | pursue their prey to which nature incites them, that they
10 1, XLI | well used in changing his nature so quickly, and from being
11 1, XLI | that before his changed nature takes away old favors from
12 1, XLII | themselves become of a contrary nature, even though [they are]
13 1, LVII | And truly this part of the nature of the multitude cannot
14 1, LVIII | of Hiero, says: It is the nature of multitude, either to
15 1, LVIII | in that number whence the nature of each man individually
16 1, LVIII | our Historian says of the nature of the multitude, he does
17 1, LVIII | abovementioned cases.~The nature of the multitude, therefore,
18 1, LVIII | not from the different nature, (for it is the same in
19 2 | being insatiable (because by nature they have to be able to
20 2, III | all our actions imitate nature, it is neither possible
21 2, V | reasonable they should be; For in nature as in simple bodies, when
22 2, XVII | the infantry either the nature of the site covering them
23 3, VI | dangers than those which the nature of the Principality in itself
24 3, VI | seek to learn very well its nature, and to measure well the
25 3, IX | according to the impulses of his nature. Everybody knows that Fabius
26 3, IX | Fabius had done this from his nature, and not by choice, is seen
27 3, IX | cannot resist that to which nature inclines us: The other,
28 3, XXI | cannot be done, because our nature does not permit this. But
29 3, XXII | anyone well considers the nature of Manlius, from when T.
30 3, XXII | decrees of his, to which his nature inclined him, and which
31 3, XXII | constrained first by his nature, then by the desire he had
32 3, XVII | both old parties. For, by nature it is given to men to take
33 3, XXIX | them, who were of a similar nature. The Romagna, before those
34 3, XXIX | and not from the wicked nature of men, as was said. For
35 3, XXXVI | that it is because of their nature, and which I believe it
36 3, XXXVI | because of this that this nature of theirs which makes them
37 3, XXXIX | for a Captain to know the nature of countries; for if Decius
38 3, XLIII | another, according to the nature of the education by which
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