Book, Chapter
1 I, I | scorned the connection of a private citizen; and being anxious
2 I, IV | contributed money; and many private persons fought under them
3 I, IV | sentence that in our day a private person would have been ashamed
4 I, V | directed against Christians for private ambition, ceased to do the
5 II, IV | of applying it to their private uses, and recommended that
6 II, V | common good esteemed than private friendship), and being joined
7 II, V | had availed himself of private force and authority, and
8 II, VIII| palace, and appointed a private dwelling for their use.
9 II, VIII| either from personal fear, or private hatred of some one, revealed
10 III, I | if you will lay aside all private regards, and authoritatively
11 III, I | their country or against private individuals, is a bond of
12 III, I | against itself; for the private methods at first adapted
13 III, II | to leave the room for a private reason, and, without being
14 III, II | not so much to preside in private cases (for which proper
15 III, II | through public hatred, or private malice, shared the same
16 III, III | endured more patiently than private ones. To increase the number
17 III, IV | to avenge themselves for private injuries, conducted them
18 III, VI | to exhibit the public and private wealth of the people, many
19 III, VI | sovereign prince than for any private individuals. These things
20 III, VII | social evils to his own private advantage, and therefore
21 IV, V | Florentine people, but his own private emolument; that as soon
22 IV, VI | indiscriminately, and not to private persons only, but to the
23 IV, VI | but still more less his private enemies should cause him
24 V, I | their family connections or private animosities, than for the
25 V, II | rather wished to gratify his private prejudices than to give
26 V, II | their own credit, glory, and private advantage dependent upon
27 V, III | Florence, intimating that this private promise did not invalidate
28 V, III | they averred that this private letter was sufficiently
29 V, VI | that the gratification of private feelings, fails to be injurious
30 VI, V | small towns, the property of private citizens, but could not
31 VI, VII | neglected either in public or private, to show their willingness
32 VI, VII | pontiff, free from the ties of private interest, having no object
33 VII, I | the one public, the other private. Influence is acquired publicly
34 VII, I | attended by a happy result. Private methods are conferring benefits
35 VII, I | public good, and not upon private advantage. And though it
36 VII, I | himself both of public and private means, had many partisans
37 VII, I | remarkably enough, by Cosmo’s private friends, and the most influential
38 VII, I | any hitherto built by a private person. To complete them,
39 VII, I | for not only citizens and private individuals made him presents
40 VII, I | edifices are to be added his private dwellings, one in Florence,
41 VII, I | attend either to public or private business. On being carried
42 VII, I | attending either to public or private affairs, as he had been
43 VII, II | city. Beginning with his private affairs, he caused an account
44 VII, III | should govern, not a few private individuals; that Piero
45 VII, V | converted to the emolument of private individuals. They next sent
46 VII, VI | s conduct and their own private injuries served to hasten
47 VII, VI | for a near relative. These private injuries increased the young
48 VIII, II | persecuted, either from public or private motives, flee for refuge
49 VIII, II | enemies, never received any private wrong from us; for, had
50 VIII, II | wrong, and not confound private animosities with public
51 VIII, III | the Florentines in their private quarrels, since the animosities
52 VIII, IV | boldly discussed, not only in private circles, but in the public
53 VIII, VI | appeared disgraceful that a private gentleman should deprive
54 VIII, VI | for he had both public and private reasons for hating that
55 VIII, VII | of princes rather than of private persons; so that in many
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