Book, Chapter
1 Int | says in this treatise is as true to-day and holds as good
2 Int | convinced that what was true nearly four hundred years
3 Int | hundred years ago, is quite as true to-day.~Of the remaining
4 Int | have favoured him. It is true that in 1520 Giuliano de’
5 Int | popular government. It is true that he was willing to accept
6 I, IV | determine which was the true pope. This reply displeased
7 I, V | make the papacy hereditary. True it is, the princes of their
8 I, VII| ordinary leader, possessed of true valor, would have covered
9 II, I | have lost all appetite for true glory, and of republics
10 II, V | men our city has produced. True it is, that his restless
11 III, I | that greediness, not for true glory, but for unworthy
12 III, I | strongly urge you. It is true the corruption of the country
13 III, I | principles as are conformable to true civil liberty. And be assured,
14 IV, VI | unreal ones feigned, and the true and the false were equally
15 IV, VI | be able to resist them. True it is, we still preserve
16 VI, I | equally anxious for it. True, it was, he could with difficulty
17 VI, IV | Whether the charge were true or false, that God, whom
18 VI, V | of peace, and not of war. True it was, he wondered much
19 VII, I | purpose are greatly deceived. True it is, that some divisions
20 VII, III| entertained a wish to injure you. True, it is, that your own sickness,
21 VII, IV | for their inaction was the true one, pressed the enemy more
22 VIII, II | would to God that this were true; then the remedy would be
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