Book, Chapter
1 1, II | Few], and not wanting to restore that of the Prince, the [
2 1, XVII | grave and violent) can ever restore Milan or Naples to freedom,
3 1, XVII | Visconti, who, wanting to restore liberty to Milan, did not
4 1, XVII | successors of virtu do not restore it [the state], so one which
5 1, XXXII | assault Rome in order to restore thy Tarquins, the Senate
6 1, XXXVIII| retaken Milan, wanting to restore Pisa in order to obtain
7 1, XXXVIII| been easier for the King to restore Pisa to them after he had
8 1, XXXVIII| City, and if he did not restore it to expose his mind [perfidy];
9 1, LIX | time he [the latter] will restore his Principality to him;
10 2, XXI | within that City who would restore order and re-unify them.
11 2, XXII | and when he desired to restore to the kingdom the Duchy
12 3, I | Kingdom, or Republic, than to restore it to that reputation that
13 3, XII | ask for peace, offering to restore the things pillaged and
14 3, XV | so that one alone would restore that which three had destroyed.
15 3, XV | sent his forces to Pisa to restore her to the Florentines;
16 3, XXII | men who by their example restore the laws, and not only retain
17 3, XVII | the Florentines who had to restore order to them, always employed
18 3, XLIII | Charles VIII on his promise to restore to them the fortresses of
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