Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
losing 4
loss 6
losses 1
lost 28
lot 1
loud 1
loudest 1
Frequency    [«  »]
28 comes
28 horses
28 inside
28 lost
28 several
28 useless
28 wall
Niccolò Machiavelli
On the Art of War

IntraText - Concordances

lost

   Book
1 1| Romans, who by their own arms lost their liberty: They cite 2 1| uselessness from having lost one time, but to believe 3 2| this fear in large part is lost, and few of the defeated 4 2| seen to be pillaged, and lost their Kingdoms; which examples 5 2| and those Princes who have lost the State, are no longer 6 2| and those Princes who have lost the State, are no longer 7 3| This results from having lost the method the ancients 8 4| chariots, being resisted, lost their impetus. And note 9 4| therefore, how engagements are lost, or are won. When one wins, 10 4| defeated the Romans at Cannae, lost the Empire of Rome. The 11 4| for a long time, and has lost that first ardor with which 12 6| that those you have are not lost. And, therefore, you must 13 7| retire when the wall is lost. What makes me give the 14 7| which, as soon as they were lost, and they were lost quickly, 15 7| were lost, and they were lost quickly, also caused the 16 7| also caused the city to be lost. As to the second counsel, 17 7| a place, cause it to be lost, and when it is lost, it 18 7| be lost, and when it is lost, it then causes the entire 19 7| the entire fortress to be lost. For an example, there is 20 7| parts) with each other. He lost the fort which was held 21 7| walls and the ditch were lost, the entire fortress would 22 7| entire fortress would be lost. And even if I should build 23 7| retire into them, they are lost quickly. And therefore it 24 7| Italy, they are entirely lost, and if there is something 25 7| enemy; for often Cities are lost entirely from fear, without 26 7| for many towns have been lost when the enemy assaulted 27 7| benefit, would have been lost. It would always be prudent, 28 7| with glory, or would have lost it without shame.~ ~


Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (V89) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2007. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License