Book, Chapter
1 1, II | often to pass through these changes and remain on its feet.
2 1, V | who possess much, can make changes with greater power and facility.
3 1, VII | organizing it in such a way that changes in the moods which may agitate
4 1, VIII | those who desired to make changes in Florence. This affair,
5 1, XVIII | been of benefit if with the changes of the law the institutions
6 1, XXV | ought to endeavor that these changes retain as much as possible
7 1, XXXVII| it. From this arises the changes in their fortunes; for as
8 1, XXXVII| after much bloodshed and changes of fortune, the Nobility
9 1, XXXIX | to expire without making changes and commit their functions
10 1, XLIX | changing itself through the changes of governments which they
11 2, V | CHAPTER V~THAT THE CHANGES OF SECTS AND LANGUAGES,
12 2, V | are acts of men are the changes of the sects [religion]
13 3, I | Sects, I say that those changes are for the better which
14 3, VII | CHAPTER VII~WHENCE THAT WHEN CHANGES TAKE PLACE FROM LIBERTY
15 3, VII | whence it arises that many changes that are made from liberty
16 3, VII | learned from history) in such changes, some times an infinite
17 3, VII | but themselves. And such changes do not come to be very dangerous;
18 3, IX | length above. But they [changes] arrive later [in a Republic]
19 3, XXV | should be able to bear such changes. This poverty lasted even
20 3, XXX | goodness is not enough, fortune changes, and malignity does not
21 3, XXXI | virtu, they will change with changes of fortune, and will give
22 3, XLVI | for it must be that it changes from the diversity of marriages)
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