Book, Chapter
1 1, X | their bad customs and evil lives had raised up against them.~
2 1, XI | governs prudently while he lives, but one who organizes it
3 1, XVI | Kingdom of France, which lives in security from nothing
4 1, XVII | that Prince with all his lives [family] may be extinguished,
5 1, LVIII | the [termination] of their lives can make liberty spring
6 2 | matters pertinent to the lives and customs of men, of which
7 2 | all the periods of their lives had the same judgment and
8 2, XX | that of the Rhegians, whose lives and city were taken away
9 2, XXIV | fortify the City where he lives, and keep it fortified,
10 2, XXVIII| his satisfaction, if he lives in a Republic he will seek
11 2, XXVIII| even with their ruin, if he lives under a Prince and has any
12 2, XXX | recognized, is to see how it lives with its neighbors; and
13 2, XXX | with so great a Kingdom lives tributary to the Swiss and
14 2, XXX | find you weak. For whoever lives in the manner mentioned
15 3, II | notable for his quality, lives in continuous danger. Nor
16 3, V | mirror for themselves the lives of good Princes, such as
17 3, V | and similar ones, in the lives of whom they would find
18 3, VI | Princes have lost their lives and States through them,
19 3, VIII | than in one which still lives with its institutions: the
20 3, XX | other vice which stains the lives of men. Yet, none the less,
21 3, XXII | say, that in a citizen who lives under the laws of a Republic,
22 3, XXXV | so at the peril of their lives and their States; for all
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