Book, Chapter
1 I, II | princes, but also their laws, customs, modes of living,
2 I, VI | established among themselves laws and useful regulations,
3 I, VII | were governed by their own laws; Lucca was under the Guinigi;
4 II, II | their influence at home by laws, and abroad with arms, the
5 II, III | live in conformity with the laws, and the former to be themselves
6 II, III | being injured, while the laws were insufficient to procure
7 II, III | enforce the execution of the laws whenever called upon, either
8 II, III | taken as evidence. By these laws, which were called the ordinations
9 II, III | compel the execution of those laws which he had himself made.
10 II, III | his friends to offend the laws, he determined to withdraw,
11 II, III | moderate the severity of the laws made against them. As soon
12 II, III | their loss of power, and the laws which were made against
13 II, III | endure that, by the existing laws, it should be in the power
14 II, III | be well to qualify these laws, and, in furtherance of
15 II, III | thought a mitigation of the laws would satisfy them, that
16 II, III | less evil to qualify the laws a little than to come to
17 II, IV | The city was in arms. The laws and the Signory were set
18 II, VI | any disturbance, some old laws are annulled and others
19 II, VIII| ordinances annihilated, its laws annulled, and every decent
20 III, I | Uguccione de’ Ricci causes the laws against the Ghibellines
21 III, I | of citizens followed. The laws which were afterward made,
22 III, I | defective nature of her laws, gave rise to enmities between
23 III, I | alert to oppose each other’s laws, deliberations, and enterprises,
24 III, I | debasing habits, which the good laws, by misapplication, have
25 III, I | for them to attempt. Thus laws and ordinances, peace, wars,
26 III, I | infected with them; for her laws, statutes, and civil ordinances
27 III, I | by parties rather than by laws, as soon as one becomes
28 III, I | but be improved by good laws and civil regulations, if
29 III, I | benign influence of the laws, than by a delay which will
30 III, II | powerful, and ameliorate those laws by the influence of which
31 III, III | magistracy. They annulled the laws made by the Guelphs to the
32 III, IV | both promised, that these laws being confirmed, every disturbance
33 III, V | pernicious, the frequent new laws and regulations which were
34 IV, I | either to magistrates or laws. When, however, a good,
35 IV, I | secure; for having good laws for its basis, and good
36 IV, I | maintenance. With such excellent laws and institutions, many of
37 IV, IV | just such a share as the laws and your countrymen think
38 IV, VII | are more powerful than the laws; for that country alone
39 V, I | fortified themselves with new laws and provisos, made new Squittini,
40 VII, I | made them amenable to the laws, found a safe refuge within
41 VII, II | greater liberty, and for the laws to be equally binding upon
42 VII, III | should be subject to equal laws, and that the magistrates
43 VIII, VI | to the observance of its laws, which up to this time have
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