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Alphabetical    [«  »]
malice 4
malignant 2
malignity 5
man 70
manage 1
managed 6
management 13
Frequency    [«  »]
71 cause
71 unable
70 hands
70 man
70 must
70 never
70 romagna
Niccolò Machiavelli
History of Florence

IntraText - Concordances

man

   Book,  Chapter
1 Int | there is no equality.”~No man has been more harshly judged 2 I, II | sent Narses, a eunuch, a man of great military talent, 3 I, II | dominions were held by Alboin, a man ferocious and bold, under 4 I, III | of Henry and Matilda, a man of great prudence and reputation, 5 I, V | there had come into Italy a man called Ezelin, who, remaining 6 I, V | He was a bold, ambitious man; and being resolved at any 7 I, VII | period to be a very valiant man. The queen, to shun the 8 II, II | sent the Count Giordano, a man of considerable reputation 9 II, II | defend her. Farinata was a man of undaunted resolution, 10 II, II | banner, under which every man was expected to appear armed, 11 II, III | was Ubaldo Ruffoli. This man unfurled his gonfalon, and 12 II, III | itself.~It happened that a man from the class of the people 13 II, IV | recourse to Veri de Cerchi, a man in no respect inferior to 14 II, V | power of the citizens. This man was cruel and rapacious; 15 II, VI | them, who, being a young man, bold and fierce, and fortunate 16 II, VII | over the citizens. This man, under the sanction of those 17 II, VII | their reverence for the man, his noble demeanor, and 18 II, VIII| who has to apprehend every man his enemy cannot make himself 19 II, VIII| was not the part of a good man to avoid doing good from 20 II, VIII| could not endure to see this man surrounded with his armed 21 II, I | naturally a well-meaning man, but his want of firmness 22 II, I | in unmeasured terms as a man of little faith; reminding 23 III, I | the Guelphs than any other man.~As there could not be found 24 III, III | Signory, who, having taken a man named Simone, learned from 25 III, III | Simone was being tortured, a man named Niccolo da San Friano 26 III, IV | Lando, a wool comber. This man, barefoot, with scarcely 27 III, IV | was a cool and sagacious man, more favored by nature 28 III, V | of all the citizens, the man most feared and honored. 29 III, V | the richest citizens, a man of unassuming manners, an 30 III, VI | inveterate foe of Benedetto. This man, having entered upon the 31 III, VII | Maggiore, which he entered. The man who went to watch him ran 32 IV, I | others, the virtue of one man for its maintenance. With 33 IV, III | and base spirit of this man, and delivered him to his 34 IV, IV | courteous in office; not a man of great eloquence, but 35 IV, IV | by Giovanni di Contugi, a man of noble family, and his 36 IV, V | Florentine, at least of a man. Your lordships will forgive 37 IV, V | commissary has nothing of the man but the shape, nor of a 38 IV, V | of this proud but upright man, more than quite became 39 IV, V | his great talents. This man pointed out, that in consequence 40 IV, VI | had driven him out a good man and he had returned to us 41 IV, VII | advantage, for he knew the man very intimately, gave a 42 V, II | opposite course. Alfonso was a man of great sagacity, and as 43 V, II | abundant reasons. No good man will ever reproach another 44 V, V | him. Niccolo induced this man to take him upon his shoulders 45 V, VII | continued four hours, only one man died, and he, not from wounds 46 VI, II | deliver his country from a man whom they must either retain 47 VI, II | Florence to see the young man, and procure of Cosmo and 48 VI, III | then said he wondered how a man so prudent and respectable 49 VII, I | so unmercifully, that the man’s mind actually became deranged, 50 VII, I | Luca Pitti, a bold-spirited man, Cosmo determined to let 51 VII, I | who though a very good man, was of infirm health, and 52 VII, I | he said, “he was an old man, and had undertaken the 53 VII, I | enemies to slander him, as a man who loved himself more than 54 VII, II | assistance Diotisalvi Neroni, a man of great influence and the 55 VII, III | spirited, Tommaso the wiser man; who, being very much the 56 VII, III | hands of Bernardo Lotti, a man not in the confidence of 57 VII, III | habit of extolling him as a man of surpassing excellence, 58 VII, IV | considered a just and brave man, but over-cautious and slow 59 VII, IV | called Francesco da Savona, a man of the very lowest origin, 60 VII, VI | a learned and ambitious man, taught the Latin language 61 VIII, I | Buonromei, a very wealthy man, whose riches on his decease, 62 VIII, I | Pazzi, a grave and prudent man, being quite aware of the 63 VIII, II | considered a wise and good man, and possessed none of the 64 VIII, II | fortune, to see so wealthy a man, possessing the utmost earthly 65 VIII, III | Guid’ Antonio Vespucci, a man well acquainted with pontifical 66 VIII, IV | Antonio Tassino, of Ferrara, a man of low origin, who, coming 67 VIII, IV | is not the part of a free man, but a fool, and one disposed 68 VIII, VI | shaking hands with this man and embracing that, induced 69 VIII, VII | d’Orso, of Furli, was a man of great authority in that 70 VIII, VII | Giovanni della Mirandola, a man of almost supernatural genius,


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