Book, Chapter
1 1, XVI | an easy matter to assure oneself of them, either by taking
2 1, XL | should do; the third, to ally oneself with powerful neighbors
3 1, XLVI | dangerous in attempting to pit oneself against him, for the reasons
4 2, XV | lateness, and it injures oneself. Such decisions so made
5 2, XVII | is made either to defend oneself or to take the offensive:
6 2, XXIV | are built for defending oneself from the enemy or to defend
7 2, XXIV | from the enemy or to defend oneself form one’s subjects.~In
8 2, XXIV | fortresses in order to defend oneself from external enemies, I
9 3, VI | It is impossible to guard oneself from this cause of discovery
10 3, VI | has no time to reorganize oneself, for when there is time,
11 3, X | secure remedy than to keep oneself and at least fifty thousand
12 3, XXI | made either from making oneself loved too much or from making
13 3, XXI | too much or from making oneself feared too much. For from
14 3, XXIII| harmful to the country and to oneself, and proceeding as Manlius
15 3, XXIII| but sometimes harmful to oneself. This is very well proved
16 3, XXXIV| in order to begin to give oneself reputation, but they are
17 3, XXXV | DANGERS OCCUR IN MAKING ONESELF HEAD IN COUNSELLING A THING,
18 3, XXXV | dangerous thing it is to make oneself Head of a new thing which
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