Book, Chapter
1 II, III | occasion for his enemies to injure him, or his friends to offend
2 II, VII | men, should without cause injure them with impunity, and
3 II, VIII| Brunelleschi, not with a design to injure the plot, but in the hope
4 III, I | to be renewed in order to injure the Albizzi—Piero degli
5 III, V | care that no one should injure you. I tell you, however,
6 III, VII | the multitude might not injure him in their estimation;
7 IV, I | vigilance over those who might injure them, which they ought to
8 V, III | leaving nothing undone to injure the enemy. The Lucchese,
9 V, IV | that his holiness could not injure him, and that the Florentines,
10 V, VII | change of fortune, it might injure the republic, and it was
11 VI, I | assist her favorites, or to injure others, caused the hope
12 VI, IV | care that they should not injure him. They well knew how
13 VI, IV | could never be united to injure others, and separately are
14 VI, V | themselves, resolved to injure them as much as possible;
15 VII, I | is, that some divisions injure republics, while others
16 VII, I | individual benefit, they do not injure a republic, but contribute
17 VII, I | that, “it was better to injure the city, than to ruin it;
18 VII, II | friendship or open war to injure the duchy; but as soon as
19 VII, III | consider, not how they might injure him, but how, with least
20 VII, III | defend himself and not to injure others. He neither sought
21 VII, III | ever entertained a wish to injure you. True, it is, that your
22 VII, III | every available means to injure the commercial credit of
23 VII, VI | that they might more easily injure the Florentines, who, becoming
24 VII, VI | able the more easily to injure them. Two years passed away
25 VIII, I | and, in time, inevitably injure their primary object.~Italy,
26 VIII, II | us; for, had we wished to injure them, they would not have
27 VIII, II | strangers, when did we ever injure our relatives? If our enemies’
|