Book, Chapter
1 1, VI | to maintain this middle course, it is necessary in organizing
2 1, XXXVIII| they took the honorable course and decided to let them
3 1, XLVI | oppressed the other. And the course of such incidents is, that
4 1, XLVII | change, took the middle course, and were content that four
5 1, XLVIII | ask for them. This latter course caused the Plebs to be ashamed
6 1, XLVIII | the latter, and the first [course] made them ashamed to take
7 1, LX | it is to be seen from the course of History that the Roman
8 2, I | this subject to show the course held by Roman people in
9 2, XV | turning itself into a perilous course) never impede deliberations,
10 2, XXIII | ought to have adopted this course when, in MDII [1502] Arezzo
11 2, XXIII | above all the middle-way course ought to be avoided, which
12 2, XXV | above) in adopting some course, and how many times they
13 2, XXX | instance, but more so in the course of events of this Republic,
14 3, I | these only run the entire course that is generally ordained
15 3, II | their ruin; which middle course would be the truest if it
16 3, V | in wanting to learn the course that they should have to
17 3, IX | able to observe the true course in either, errors are made:
18 3, XVI | quickly returned to the true course. But other Republics, which
19 3, XXXIV | therefore, to adopt this last course and endeavor to begin to
20 3, XXXV | believe, therefore, that the course mentioned above is the one
21 3, XXXVI | more than men, and in the course of the fight they turn out
22 3, XXXVII | easy thing to adopt one [course] believing to have taken
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