Book, Chapter
1 1, IX | minds of those who want to understand these matters, I say, that
2 1, XII | contempt. This is easy to understand, when it is known upon what
3 1, XII | they are, and the more they understand natural things, so much
4 1, XXVII | the Pope, nor could they understand whence it happened that
5 1, XXXVIII| making the Florentines understand that they were fools and
6 1, XXXVIII| they were fools and did not understand the things of the world:
7 2, II | others. And it is easy to understand whence this affection arises
8 2, II | Kings. The cause is easy to understand, for not the individual
9 2, XI | Roman Consul to make him understand that they wanted peace between
10 2, XV | resorting to arms, made them understand that they should send eight
11 2, XVI | thing would appear easy to understand and not easy to do, none
12 2, XVII | employs it otherwise does not understand it well, and relies on something
13 2, XXIV | hold that City, and did not understand that to hold a City which
14 2, XXXIII | Legates to Fabius to make him understand he should not cross into
15 3, I | they were able to make them understand that it was evil to speak
16 3, V | Roman People.~Princes should understand, therefore, that they begin
17 3, X | trusting in others, do not understand anything of what pertains
18 3, X | Romans; but they did not understand that the greater part of
19 3, XVIII | is sometimes difficult to understand his actions, and not as
|