Book, Chapter
1 II, III | Capitano. To remedy this evil, the leaders of the Arts’
2 II, III | disposed, it appeared a less evil to qualify the laws a little
3 II, III | they did not produce any evil effect, but all lived together
4 II, III | with her own forces. The evil, however, which external
5 II, IV | themselves, but weary of the evil, and anxious either to bring
6 II, IV | Brunelleschi. Nor did the evil confine itself to the city
7 II, IV | rather from satiety of evil than from any desire of
8 II, V | for much both of good and evil; and if he had possessed
9 II, V | order to avoid bringing evil upon himself without occasion,
10 II, VI | event either of good or evil seldom comes alone, at Naples
11 II, VIII| their nature to delight in evil; and to the former, by thus
12 II, VIII| and in order to carry his evil designs into effect, proclaimed
13 II, VIII| from what direction the evil may commence; and he who
14 II, VIII| from his apprehension of evil, and it was the part of
15 II, VIII| countrymen; and to correct the evil he had done, he saw no other
16 II, VIII| the sovereignty which the evil counsel of others had given
17 II, I | attempt, to avoid a greater evil, sent them home to their
18 III, I | dissension in Florence. But the evil fortune of the city, and
19 III, I | resolved to put an end to the evil which he and his friends
20 III, I | this pre-disposition for evil, new excitements were added.~
21 III, II | and being apprehensive of evil, called the Council together
22 III, III | will not give occasion to evil designing men to ruin your
23 III, VI | attended with infinitely less evil than their fears of so powerful
24 IV, I | it was easy to remedy an evil at its commencement, but
25 IV, II | that if we are to applaud evil counsels because they are
26 IV, II | upon the republic; because evil counsel is not always attended
27 IV, II | apprehended some approaching evil; for the higher ranks, accustomed
28 IV, II | only means of remedying the evil was to restore the government
29 IV, II | reluctance to remedy the evil when it might easily have
30 IV, III | rating it would remedy the evil to which it was subject;
31 IV, IV | or one more pregnant with evil, than this. In the first
32 IV, VI | were divulged, good and evil alike became objects of
33 IV, VII | to be attended with great evil. Among those who disliked
34 V, I | they gradually decline to evil, and from evil again return
35 V, I | decline to evil, and from evil again return to good. The
36 V, II | relieved from the latter evil, but none from the former.
37 V, III | ground for it; and if the evil had been delayed, it would
38 V, III | to proceed, and that the evil apprehended by the Florentines
39 V, V | endeavoring to repel the present evil, encounter certain death,
40 V, V | celerity, to repair the evil negligence had occasioned;
41 VII, II | eager to avoid a certain evil; and hence inferior powers
42 VII, III | Florence, to avoid a greater evil, became a voluntary exile
43 VII, IV | replied, that the entire evil was chargeable upon the
44 VII, IV | they did not forego their evil practices; so that, in consequence,
45 VII, V | easily are men predisposed to evil than to good) originated
46 VII, VI | had delivered them from an evil to which they had first
47 VIII, I | disposition perverted to evil. The proceedings of his
48 VIII, III | determined, as the smaller evil, to divide them; to send
49 VIII, IV | in good works and avoid evil; that liberty, improperly
50 VIII, IV | fool, and one disposed to evil rather than good, and to
51 VIII, IV | to blame, who, by their evil deeds, had given rise to
52 VIII, VII | death of Lorenzo, those evil plants began to germinate,
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