Book, Chapter
1 1, II | preserved private and public affairs with the greatest diligence.
2 1, VI | councils to discuss the affairs of the City; when it appeared
3 1, VI | and did not employ them in affairs where they could pick up
4 1, VI | expansion. And as in all human affairs, those who examine them
5 1, VI | tranquillity to a City. But all affairs of men being [continually]
6 1, VIII | themselves in its important affairs. Of one, they said he had
7 1, XII | the well-being of Italian affairs depend on the Church of
8 1, XV | perhaps be rather placed among affairs of outside [peoples], none
9 1, XXXI | having despaired of Roman affairs.~When Papirus Cursor wanted
10 1, XXXIII| man most expert in civil affairs, and having made the first
11 1, XXXIX | consider present and ancient affairs that the same desires and
12 1, XLVII | ambitious license, and public affairs going from bad to worse,
13 2 | judgment is the truth, as human affairs are always in motion, either
14 2 | pertinent to the internal affairs of the City, in this [book]
15 2, IV | particular history of their affairs, yet there is some small
16 2, XV | little prudence, favored the affairs of Lodovico, so that the
17 2, XVIII | make regulations for civil affairs, where they show that at
18 2, XIX | regulating the internal affairs of the City well with laws
19 2, XXIX | consider well how human affairs proceed, many times many
20 2, XXIX | power of Heaven over human affairs, T. Livius relates it at
21 3, VI | men experienced in such affairs ought to be selected, and
22 3, VIII | themselves in their own affairs, and especially in those
23 3, IX | times, proceeded in all his affairs with patience and humanity.
24 3, XVII | and little knowledge of affairs, makes them regard the ancient
25 3, XXXVII| defeat at Cannae, when their affairs were afflicted, refused
26 3, XL | always pernicious in the affairs of a State, as has been
27 3, XLII | promises regarding public affairs, will be disregarded when
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