Book, Chapter
1 I, II | states), we may then easily imagine how much Italy and the other
2 II, I | mountain and the river Arno. I imagine these markets to have occasioned
3 II, II | liberty. Nor is it possible to imagine the power and authority
4 II, VIII| citizens.~“What is it you imagine you can do, that would be
5 II, VIII| make you beloved. If you imagine otherwise, you deceive yourself;
6 II, I | the best terms he could imagine advised them to give up
7 III, II | raising popular commotions, imagine he can afterward control
8 III, VII | ambitious, he could not imagine how it had happened, that
9 IV, IV | useful, but he could not imagine how an enterprise should
10 IV, VI | account pernicious, nor imagine that, in union with a few,
11 IV, VI | atrocious act. I do not imagine your life to be in much
12 V, III | attempt it. It is then vain to imagine that any merit of yours
13 V, III | Therefore, you must not imagine it to be occasioned by his
14 V, V | thinking Niccolo would imagine this way to be so rugged
15 VI, I | resolution, and could not imagine what had induced the duke
16 VI, IV | republic; for it was unwise to imagine the Milanese could preserve
17 VII, V | astonished, and could not imagine how it had occurred. The
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