Book, Chapter
1 1, XXIV | to be an example of the ingratitude of the people. None the
2 1, XXVIII| of them some species of ingratitude against their citizens,
3 1, XXVIII| again to this matter of ingratitude, I shall say that which
4 1, XXIX | example who practiced this ingratitude more, a People or a Prince.
5 1, XXIX | I say that this vice of ingratitude arises either from avarice
6 1, XXIX | And much is read of this ingratitude shown for such reasons,
7 1, XXIX | took by force that which ingratitude denied him, none the less
8 1, XXIX | no other example of her ingratitude than that of Scipio; for
9 1, XXIX | adored as a Prince. But the ingratitude shown to Scipio arose from
10 1, XXIX | that using this vice of ingratitude for either avarice or suspicion,
11 1, XXX | USE TO AVOID THIS VICE OF INGRATITUDE, AND WHAT THAT CAPTAIN OR
12 1, XXX | to escape the stings of ingratitude, that he must do one of
13 1, XXX | punish his Lord for that ingratitude that he showed toward him.
14 1, XXX | wishing to avoid this vice of ingratitude, the same remedy cannot
15 1, XXX | suspicion, they did not generate ingratitude. So that a Republic that
16 1, LVIII | should allege to me the ingratitude that they [the Roman people]
17 1, LIX | lose it, and will serve you ingratitude. Demetrius, who was called
18 3, VI | that ending which their ingratitude merited. Although one of
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