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2501 I, I | other, with his Huns, to repass the Danube and return to
2502 V, VI | the inhabitants hopes of repelling the enemy from the neighborhood.
2503 VII, I | and in his speeches and replies, grave and witty. When Rinaldo
2504 VII, II | he was only desirous to repossess his own property to meet
2505 III, VI | the people and the Guelphs repossessed themselves of the government,
2506 II, II | watched for an occasion of repossessing the government; and they
2507 V, IV | entire credence to this representation, on account of its apparent
2508 VII, IV | Feasts, dancing, and antique representations occupied many days; at the
2509 VI, III | Venetian, ducal, and Florentine representatives. King Alfonso had no envoy
2510 III, I | diffident of your power to repress the disorders of the present
2511 VI, V | differences with them respecting reprisals, and other small matters
2512 VIII, III | the pope—The Florentines repulse their enemies from the territory
2513 V, I | Sforzesca was in greatest repute, as well from the bravery
2514 VI, IV | a compliance with their requests. But as with cruel, avaricious,
2515 VIII, I | comprised in few words. But requiring much consideration, and
2516 III, IV | of their friends, and a requisition made that many of their
2517 V, II | compassion can exceed that which rescues our country from slavery.
2518 VI, II | to observe the strongest resemblance. The citizens gave credit
2519 V, I | bloodshed, they would have resembled those of Octavius and Sylla,
2520 VII, VI | also entered into a league, reserving an opening for the others
2521 II, I | alarm is removed, men gladly resort to more convenient and easily
2522 II, III | their proceedings; that resorting to arms to recover by force
2523 VII, II | Bracceschi! the Bracceschi!” resounded on all sides. These honors
2524 VI, IV | generously from his own resources, and encouraged him to prosecute
2525 VI, III | him in future to be more respectful in speaking of others, and
2526 IV, VII | and the Signory. He was respectfully attended by the Gonfalonier,
2527 IV, I | the people, the ministers respectively of slavery or licentiousness,
2528 V, III | instead of increasing their responsibilities, they should be unable to
2529 IV, VI | that dignity; that it now rested with him to act in such
2530 VIII, IV | ambassadors—The king of Naples restores to the Florentines all the
2531 VII, I | Gonfalonier of Justice, restrains the imborsations by force—
2532 III, III | and at your suggestion new restraints have been laid upon the
2533 III, II | its object to revive the restrictions upon the nobility, to retrench
2534 VII, I | government found a difficulty in resuming its authority; and this
2535 VI, I | compose them occasioned the resumption of those arms which had
2536 I, IV | this kingdom, which still retains its ancient boundaries,
2537 VI, I | that Ostasio might never retake by force what he had imprudently
2538 VI, III | Cennina had been already retaken, and because the Florentines
2539 VII, I | favorable opportunity of retaliation, was the revival of the
2540 VIII, I | appear as a part of his retinue, and his arrival might facilitate
2541 Int | manifested. It was during his retirement upon his little estate at
2542 III, II | restrictions upon the nobility, to retrench the authority of the Capitani
2543 IV, III | the disturbance, and this retrospective equalization was no longer
2544 II, II | republic, determined to reunite the city, and recall all
2545 IV, V | ourselves too, have always revered the name of this noble republic
2546 I, III | successors of St. Peter were more reverenced for the holiness of their
2547 I, I | empire, succeeded, after many reverses, in overrunning Italy, and
2548 VII, II | deaths, its unencumbered reversion to their heirs. To attain
2549 VII, I | transactions clearly understood, to revert to a period several years
2550 VII, II | were over, the citizens reverted to the same thoughts which
2551 Int | first book is merely a rapid review of the Middle Ages, the
2552 IV, III | that it was resolved to revise them, preparatory to their
2553 VII, I | entertained Marsilio Ficino, the reviver of the Platonic philosophy,
2554 IV, V | the management of the war, reviving the charges made against
2555 IV, I | entertained, and offered to revoke whatever he had done that
2556 I, V | should be celebrated at each revolution of one hundred years. In
2557 I, I | northern parts beyond the Rhine and the Danube, living in
2558 II, VII | de’ Medici, and Rosso di Ricciardo de’ Ricci, to take possession,
2559 II, VII | the Florentines, being the richer people, were about to obtain
2560 II, VI | mischievous counsels which he had richly deserved from the Florentines.
2561 VIII, VI | cause for fear, and by the richness of the booty be tempted
2562 III, VII | his relative, and Niccolo Ricoveri his friend, were of the
2563 VIII, II | been arranged they should ride through the city and call
2564 V, IV | by his words as well as ridicule him by his deeds, and wrote,
2565 V, VI | he committed to Antonio Rido, of Padua, who had the command
2566 VII, V | that the alum-pit was the rightful property of those who had
2567 VI, VII | knew they considered to be rightfully their own. He, therefore,
2568 II, VIII| Signory mounted upon the ringhiera, or rostrum (as the Florentines
2569 IV, VI | piazza, and the frequent ringing of the bell to assemble
2570 II, VIII| was at that time held by Rinieri di Giotto, who, bribed by
2571 III, VI | were the Covini, Benini, Rinucci, Formiconi, Corbizzi, Manelli,
2572 V, VII | there was no necessity for risking their lives; while fighting,
2573 V, III | and agreed to adopt the ritual of the church of Rome.~
2574 III, VII | own chains more strongly riveted upon them; they wondered
2575 VI, VII | Fregoso was at his castle of Riviera, and thought he had not
2576 II, V | enterprises, that delay robs us of the occasion, and
2577 VI, V | Castellina were moored near the Rocca di Vada, which, from the
2578 II, II | in the country, upon the rolls of which the names of all
2579 I, III | them been named Hungary.~Romano was at this time emperor
2580 II, I | 1010, upon the feast of St. Romolo, a solemn day with the Fiesolani,
2581 II, I | commenced by the Medici and the Rondinelli, who assailed the Cavicciulli,
2582 VI, VII | quite to the ground. The roofs of the churches of St. Martin,
2583 VII, IV | and situated among the roots of the Appennines which
2584 IV, III | placed for their father ropes and ladders, by which to
2585 VII, I | ruin it; that two yards of rose-colored cloth would make a gentleman,
2586 II, VIII| mounted upon the ringhiera, or rostrum (as the Florentines call
2587 III, V | to the top, must if the rotation continued, also bring him
2588 VIII, IV | IV~The duke of Calabria routs the Florentine army at Poggibonzi—
2589 II, V | service of the Signory, at Rovezzano. But when approaching Florence,
2590 VIII, V | they were allowed to keep Rovigo and the Polesine, which
2591 VII, I | and Nannina to Bernardo Ruccellai. No one of his time possessed
2592 VII, I | in Florence, the other at Ruciano, about a mile distant, both
2593 V, V | imagine this way to be so rugged and elevated as to be impracticable,
2594 IV, IV | strength of the city and the ruggedness of the country around it,
2595 V, III | to some disgraceful and ruinous capitulation. In order to
2596 III, VII | themselves up. Upon the first rumor of the affair, the Signory
2597 I, V | of them; for, fighting or running away, the popes always obtained
2598 IV, IV | 1429, took possession of Ruoti and Compito, castles belonging
2599 VI, II | signal, upon which they rushed out, and finding Baldaccio
2600 VIII, II | once suspected him, and rushing out of the chamber to call
2601 VII, IV | a family which, though rustic, was very numerous, and,
2602 II, VIII| LIFE.” Upon this, Francesco Rustichelli, one of the Signory, arose
2603 I, III | Pascal, the cardinal of St. Sabina was created pope by the
2604 V, V | upon his shoulders in a sack, as if he had been carrying
2605 V, III | for he was unwilling to sacrifice the hope of the alliance
2606 VIII, I | in a church, and thus add sacrilege to treachery. This caused
2607 VIII, II | him, took refuge in the sacristy of the church. Bernardo
2608 VIII, VII | after his own death, saw no safer connection in Italy than
2609 VII, II | would be found to be the safest. That it would therefore
2610 III, IV | and, as he was a cool and sagacious man, more favored by nature
2611 II, VI | as his viceroy Filippo da Saggineto.~After the departure of
2612 VI, VII | and in October, 1459, he sailed thither from Genoa, with
2613 VII, III | accompanying, were afraid even to salute him. Some of them were deprived
2614 VIII, II | upper part of the palace, saluted him with stones and threats.
2615 Int | saw the only hope of its salvation.~Machiavelli is buried in
2616 VII, IV | continuance in a course sanctioned by custom while new methods
2617 IV, II | streets insulted them with sarcastic expressions, complaining
2618 VI, VII | the enemy upon the river Sarni, an engagement ensued in
2619 VII, I | the Portinari, and the Sassetti. Besides these, all who
2620 II, VIII| that every sense might be satiated with vengeance, having first
2621 II, IV | arms, however, rather from satiety of evil than from any desire
2622 VIII, VII | company of facetious and satirical men, and amused with the
2623 VIII, VI | and that when this was satisfactorily arranged, they might entertain
2624 VI, IV | These reasonings were not satisfactory to Cosmo’s friends, for
2625 VIII, III | and encamped before San Savino. The Florentine army being
2626 V, V | night to Verona, silently scaled the walls, and took the
2627 I, VI | should pertain to the Della Scalla; Reggio to the Gonzaga;
2628 VII, IV | by terms reflecting less scandal on his character. Piero
2629 IV, VI | opinion of Niccolo da Uzzano—Scandalous divisions of the Florentines—
2630 III, I | the church of St. Piero Scarraggio, and after a long consideration
2631 II, IV | Abati, prior of St. Pietro Scarragio, a dissolute character,
2632 IV, III | therefore ordered to present a schedule of their property against
2633 II, V | at the head of every new scheme, and whoever wished to obtain
2634 Int | latter had failed in his schemes for the consolidation of
2635 I, VII | Queen Joan favored the schismatic pope, upon which Urban caused
2636 VIII, III | distinguished Latin and Greek scholar, whose ancestors had always
2637 VI, V | proved himself a genuine scion of the house of the Bentivogli.~
2638 II, I | Amidei, Infangati, Malespini, Scolari, Guidi, Galli, Cappiardi,
2639 I, I | being of imperial blood, scorned the connection of a private
2640 VI, VI | shut the gate upon such a scoundrel, and hold the fortress for
2641 VI, VII | it would have been such a scourge as the mind, with all its
2642 III, IV | that they might serve to screen him from envy.~It seemed
2643 Int, 0(1)| See also La Vita e gli scritti di Niccolo Machiavelli nella
2644 IV, IV | people, he should have less scruple, but as this was impossible,
2645 VI, VI | Pensoso piu d’altrui, che di se stesso.”~Stefano, believing
2646 V, I | these new governments, if no seasons occurred of long-continued
2647 V, IV | required, but rising from their seats, with uplifted hands, and
2648 I, VI | and that he might more securely make war upon Tuscany, and
2649 VII, II | friends. The leaders of the sedition thought they had the victory
2650 V, VI | foot secret measures, to seduce Cortona from the Florentines,
2651 VI, IV | defense; the next, that, being seed-time, they sowed a large quantity
2652 V, IV | courtesy, and the liberality he sees the Florentines exercise
2653 V, V | comprehended within this segment is very populous, and is
2654 II, III | the people so much, that, seizing their arms, they ran to
2655 III, IV | Besides this, he made a new selection of names for the balloting
2656 II, I | himself sovereign of the city. Selling his corn at a lower price
2657 IV, IV | appearance, in order to avoid the semblance of ingratitude, having so
2658 I, II | truth, from the unusual sensation it occasioned and compelled
2659 II, VIII| having glutted the external senses, the one within might also
2660 VIII, I | Francesco, who, being more sensitive and resolute than the others,
2661 V, VI | citizens was Bartolomeo di Senso, who being appointed to
2662 II, III | prevented or delayed, and sentences were not carried into execution.~
2663 IV, VI | so fully declared their sentiments as to enable us to determine
2664 VI, IV | united to injure others, and separately are unable to do so. To
2665 VI, VII | Florence, upon the hill which separates the valleys of Pisa and
2666 VIII, IV | the king to postpone their separation more than he would have
2667 VIII, II | city, and, as if unfit for sepulture on earth, thrown by the
2668 VI, II | Baroncelli, the whole of the Seragli, Bartolommeo Fortini, Francesco
2669 VIII, VII | men, made prisoners. The Serezanesi were not so depressed at
2670 I, III | appellation, he took the name of Sergius, and this was the origin
2671 VIII, II | hesitating, was met by Giovanni Seristori, his brother-in-law, who
2672 VII, III | many similar instances, serves to prove how undesirable
2673 VII, I | church of Santa Croce, the Servi, the Agnoli, and in San
2674 II, VIII| endure slavery, but the most servile people on earth would have
2675 I, I | the world and thought of settling in Italy; for the others,
2676 II, IV | that the number amounted to seventeen hundred. It was the opinion
2677 I, VI | 1376, after an absence of seventy-one years in France. To Gregory
2678 II, II | banners in the city, and seventy-six in the country, upon the
2679 VI, II | piazza, where the head being severed, it remained the whole day
2680 VI, V | through one of the common sewers. No sooner had they entered,
2681 III, I | old lascivious, and each sex and every age abounds with
2682 III, I | for when this province had shaken off the imperial yoke, her
2683 VIII, VI | one and promising another, shaking hands with this man and
2684 I, IV | time, on account of their shameless practices, was dissolved.
2685 IV, V | nothing of the man but the shape, nor of a Florentine but
2686 VIII, VI | credits were divided into shares, called Luoghi, and they
2687 VII, VI | which, being short and sharp, were concealed in the sleeves
2688 IV, VII | Rinaldo, on meeting him, sharply reproved him for his negligence,
2689 VII, VI | and in the side with the sheathed daggers intended to be used
2690 IV, VI | blood of their ancestors, shed in its cause, the government
2691 II, VIII| of new taxes and frequent shedding of blood, with which he
2692 VIII, III | himself a wolf rather than a shepherd, to avoid being devoured
2693 II, IV | which had always been the shield of the church should either
2694 V, VI | Lombardy, and allow Tuscany to shift for herself, the duke would,
2695 I, I | situated upon the nearer shore of the Danube, and which,
2696 VIII, IV | coasting along the Italian shores, he suddenly landed four
2697 VIII, VI | Marciano was killed by a cannon shot. This success filled the
2698 VII, VI | strokes, transpierced his shoulder and spine. These six wounds
2699 V, V | man to take him upon his shoulders in a sack, as if he had
2700 II, VIII| for one year, the people shouted, “FOR LIFE.” Upon this,
2701 Int | embassies to this prince, shows his undisguised admiration
2702 V, III | regard his own interests, shrewdly hinting that if abandoned
2703 VII, V | apparel, and attain a crafty shrewdness in discourse; he who could
2704 IV, IV | request. He loved peace and shunned war; relieved mankind in
2705 I, V | III.—Nephews of the popes—Sicilian vespers—The Emperor Rodolph
2706 I, V | of Aragon, by which the Sicilians murdered all the French
2707 I, II | Lombards, that these people, sickened of royal power, did not
2708 VII, I | died; and the former was so sickly as to be unable to attend
2709 VIII, III | permission of the Siennese, who sided with the enemy, occupied
2710 VII, I | to his attendants, with a sigh, “This is too large a house
2711 VIII, II | steady look, he silently sighed. Guglielmo de’ Pazzi, brother-in-law
2712 I, VII | of Ladislaus, he caused Sigismund, king of Hungary, to be
2713 VII, II | he resolved to take the signatures of those who were inclined
2714 I, I | which name in our language signifies “Western Goths.” These,
2715 VII, V | misconduct, took this method of signifying his displeasure. If, therefore,
2716 V, I | had added insult; for in signing the place, from which he
2717 II, III | their distinction the word signori, or lords, was soon afterward
2718 Int | the second Chancery of the Signoria, which office he retained
2719 VIII, VII | its approach; among other signs, the highest pinnacle of
2720 IV, VI | death, and several were silent, either from compassion
2721 I, III | VIII. Henry and his wife Simeonda were persons of very holy
2722 V, VII | the former, the legate and Simoncino, who led the troops of the
2723 VI, IV | have ensued, but for our simplicity; we received thee to our
2724 IV, VI | and the result would be simply this, that we had driven
2725 I, V | recourse to deception, and simulating a wish to come to terms,
2726 VII, V | in possession, or from a sincere conviction, declared the
2727 VII, IV | was previously regarded as sinful lost its iniquity when committed
2728 Int | and in all of which the singleness of purpose with which he
2729 I, VI | di Polenta, of Ravenna; Sinibaldo Ordelaffi, of Furli and
2730 IV, I | mass of the people by their sinister proceedings, and either
2731 III, VI | discharged from their service Sir John Hawkwood, and transferred
2732 III, II | be rendered incapable of sitting as Gonfalonier. They therefore
2733 VI, II | grief in 1445, at the age of sixty-four, having been a brave rather
2734 III, IV | Salvestro de Medici and sixty-three other citizens were made
2735 VII, I | and Trebbio, each, for size and grandeur, equal to royal
2736 II, I | Tosinghi, Arrigucci, Agli, Sizi, Adimari, Visdomini, Donati,
2737 Int | afterwards exposed in such a skillful and uncompromising manner
2738 VI, V | had heaped on him all the slanders that hatred could inspire.~
2739 V, V | the guards of the New were slaughtered, and again when the gate
2740 V, II | have to obey them like a slave. These arguments so greatly
2741 I, II | country. Having conquered the Slavonians, Justinian sent Narses,
2742 II, VIII| him. They had a design of slaying him in the council, although
2743 VII, VI | sharp, were concealed in the sleeves of their vests, struck at
2744 II, IV | coming to words, Geri was slightly wounded by Lore. This displeased
2745 VIII, VI | the Florentines proceeded slowly against Pietra Santa, and
2746 IV, III | eat but paper painted with snakes, saying, that of a Guelph
2747 I, IV | the then pope, anxious to snatch the kingdom from the hands
2748 VIII, II | Signory hearing the tumult, snatched such arms as they could
2749 III, VII | like many others, convert social evils to his own private
2750 III, III | Conquerors, by what means soever, are never considered aught
2751 IV, II | a few citizens, and with soft words endeavor to soothe
2752 I, I | to abandon their native soil, and seek a habitation in
2753 VI, V | coronation, where, having been solemnly consecrated, and his marriage
2754 VI, VII | people followed him; and by soliciting his friends, he obtained
2755 VII, III | now presented only a vast solitude, where previously crowds
2756 | sometime
2757 V, VII | forces were encamped before Soncino, a fortress situated upon
2758 VI, VI | reggi,” where he says,—~“Sopra il Monte Tarpejo canzon
2759 II, I | which Florence lost 96,000 souls. In 1348, began the first
2760 VI, IV | taken this resolution, they sounded the count, and found him
2761 VII, VI | of Ferrara), went about sounding the minds of the princes,
2762 VI, VII | winds, and momentary fires, sounds issued, of which no earthquake
2763 II, VII | expense.~In the year 1340, new sources of disagreement arose. The
2764 V, I | slain, cities plundered, or sovereignties overthrown; for the practice
2765 VI, IV | that, being seed-time, they sowed a large quantity of grain
2766 I, VI | sent Cardinal Egidio, a Spaniard, into Italy. He restored
2767 Int | organize fled before the Spaniards and the Medici were returned
2768 VI, II | the League supplied him sparingly. The Florentines, being
2769 V, III | and your children.” The speaker’s last words were received
2770 VIII, II | bodies were seen borne on spears and scattered through the
2771 V, III | of the army, and with the special understanding that he should
2772 IV, VII | which he was restricted was specified; and they advised him to
2773 VII, I | conducted his commercial speculations throughout Europe, participated
2774 VI, III | two thousand foot, at the Spedaletto. The king approached with
2775 VII, I | in advising, and in his speeches and replies, grave and witty.
2776 I, II | come back that he might spin with the other eunuchs.
2777 VII, VI | transpierced his shoulder and spine. These six wounds were inflicted
2778 II, VII | purchased by Gherardino Spinoli, a Genoese, for 30,000 florins.
2779 VII, IV | magistrates complained of these spiritless proceedings to those who
2780 VI, VI | the canzone which begins, “Spirto gentil che quelle membra
2781 II, I | lower classes, greedy for spoil, sacked and destroyed their
2782 VII, III | them who had been appointed spokesman, complained of the disturbances
2783 VIII, VII | partaking of their infantine sports; so that whoever considers
2784 V, I | so from disorder order springs; from order virtue, and
2785 Int, 0(1)| Mohl, Gesch. u. Liter. der Staatswissenshaften, Erlangen, 1855, III., 521-
2786 VII, VI | Mors acerba, fama perpetua, stabit vetus memoria facti.”~The
2787 VI, II | his accuser, to efface the stain upon his character.~This
2788 V, I | they were not without some stains; for Antonio di Bernardo
2789 III, IV | his heels, ascended the staircase, and, having entered the
2790 II, V | to such a height, that he stamped base metal with the impression
2791 II, II | their enemies where now stands the residence of the Tornaquinci,
2792 VII, II | from the east, led by the star which announced the nativity
2793 III, VII | ready to lead them, they stared at each other like men stupefied,
2794 IV, IV | this, Niccolo da Uzzano stated that the city of Florence
2795 II, IV | having previously forwarded a statement of them in writing. Charles
2796 VIII, I | Florentines quite contrary statements.~While occupied with these
2797 II, VIII| through the city, others were stationed in different parts of it,
2798 VII, I | for him. He was of middle stature, olive complexion, and venerable
2799 VII, I | contributions were determined by statute, and not by a set of persons
2800 III, I | with them; for her laws, statutes, and civil ordinances are
2801 IV, III | Arezzo, where he had been staying, passed into Lombardy, and
2802 III, IV | one should either burn or steal anything; while, to strike
2803 VIII, IV | Serezana, entered the place by stealth, took possession of it with
2804 V, II | application of fire or of steel, so in the former, there
2805 V, VI | side the precipices are so steep and perpendicular as to
2806 III, I | stumbling-block, it became the stepping-stone to his greatness; for, making
2807 V, VI | Niccolo, considering the sterility of these places, told him, “
2808 Int | the greatest poverty, a sterling tribute to his honesty,
2809 VI, VI | piu d’altrui, che di se stesso.”~Stefano, believing poets
2810 II, VII | Florence.~After a few months, Stiatta Frescobaldi was beheaded,
2811 II, I | the murder Mosca himself, Stiatti Uberti, Lambertuccio Amidei,
2812 IV, V | and burned the castle of Stigliano, in the same neighborhood.~
2813 IV, IV | personal injuries, was further stimulated by Giovanni di Contugi,
2814 III, IV | many other articles were stipulated in favor of their friends,
2815 VI, II | vault of his house, used for storing grain. The friends of the
2816 VIII, IV | former that she had escaped a storm which threatened her with
2817 VII, IV | the other representing the storming of a town; everything being
2818 Int | questionable. It is the straightforward, logical narrative, which
2819 VIII, V | found himself in very great straits; for the city of Rome was
2820 Int | morals, and in fact, by a strange fatality, where morals and
2821 VIII, VI | the Genoese for Serezana—Stratagem of the Florentines to attack
2822 IV, III | flames, he cast clothes and straw from a part which was not
2823 V, VI | a small bridge over the stream be defended; while on the
2824 V, V | spring, in the meantime strengthening their fleet as much as possible,
2825 III, I | the Ricci made the most strenuous exertions against their
2826 VII, I | government than to play with a string of beads.” These words gave
2827 VI, VI | approach of spring, and stripping the Venetians of the remainder
2828 VII, VI | him in front: but with two strokes, transpierced his shoulder
2829 VI, I | preparation for the future struggle. The count being informed
2830 VI, VII | precipitated upon the earth, struggled, as it were, in mutual conflict,
2831 VIII, V | aware of the duke’s design, studied to prevent him from effecting
2832 III, IV | Vaio, under Giovenco della Stufa and Giovanni Cambi alone
2833 III, I | contrived by his enemies for his stumbling-block, it became the stepping-stone
2834 III, VII | and some put to death. Stung by these numerous injuries,
2835 III, VII | stared at each other like men stupefied, and would wait till those
2836 I, II | Pannonia; the Visigoths, Suavi, and Alans, held Gascony
2837 VII, II | magistrates, and not be subjected to the counsels of a few
2838 V, II | had been instrumental in subjecting the republic to Filippo,
2839 IV, V | Brunelleschi proposes to submerge the country about Lucca—
2840 II, IV | least in fear, not quite submissive to him, he interdicted the
2841 V, VII | to military order and all subordination, that the merest shadow
2842 VII, II | induced many citizens to subscribe their names as favorable
2843 V, IV | own interests, could not subserve the ambition of Filippo.
2844 V, IV | resolved to make his own subservient to yours. I come, therefore,
2845 III, VII | or the ferment of parties subside, without the changes he
2846 I, I | being deprived of their subsidy, created Alaric their king;
2847 VI, I | of the friendship which subsisted between them, to find the
2848 I, VI | compelled to seek the means of subsistence elsewhere; and voyaging
2849 V, III | would possess our entire substance and persons, that they might
2850 II, I | and which, in time, became substantial buildings. And afterward,
2851 VIII, IV | Florentine people, who were subtle interpreters of appearances,
2852 VI, IV | that he was disputing the suburbs with the inhabitants, when
2853 VI, III | Florentine armies— Alfonso sues for peace and is compelled
2854 IV, V | the living words of the sufferers presented before them, excited
2855 VI, I | more so; for the vanquished suffers the injuries inflicted by
2856 VIII, I | him cause for fear; fear suggests the necessity of providing
2857 V, II | many of the princes of his suite, made prisoners, and sent
2858 VII, I | their houses filled with suitors and presents, found themselves
2859 I, II | many virtues had not been sullied by acts of cruelty, caused
2860 VIII, VII | be alleged against him to sully so many virtues; though
2861 VIII, VII | proofs of his regard; the sultan sent ambassadors to him
2862 II, VII | Bardi, were unwilling to summon the people with the bell,
2863 II, V | Corso Donati, obeyed the summons. These having left the city,
2864 VIII, I | intention they appointed Sunday, the twenty-sixth of April,
2865 Int, 0(1)| Niccolo Machiavelli e i suoi tempi, 2d ed. Milan, 1895-
2866 I, I | had to be relieved of its superabundant population, was to divide
2867 VI, III | Cennina, in the Val d’Arno Superiore, and took possession of
2868 Int | written at the same time, supplement each other and are really
2869 I, VII | VII. The people of Rome supplicated him to restore to them their
2870 VII, III | public worship and solemn supplications, that the Deity might seem
2871 VI, I | services, alike needed fresh supplies of money; for the one had
2872 VI, III | Florentines, desirous to supply themselves in the same manner,
2873 VI, III | inhabited, had difficulty in supplying them. Consequently the troops
2874 VII, I | them and made their tyranny supportable, were afraid, lest after
2875 Int | ardent patriot and an earnest supporter of popular government. It
2876 III, III | and first in authority, supports the greater part of the
2877 VIII, II | your citizens; and such a supposition, as we all know, is contradicted
2878 III, I | designed to proceed toward the suppression of this disorder with civil
2879 VI, I | opportunity; nor could he surmise that, to avoid rewarding
2880 V, V | of his escape—Piccinino surprises Verona— Description of Verona—
2881 VI, V | hope, and prevent them from surrendering. This advice was approved
2882 VIII, III | at Milan. To relieve his surviving family and pay a deserved
2883 VIII, VII | deprived of his counsel, his survivors were unable either to satisfy
2884 IV, I | Filippo. The boy’s mother, suspicious of his guardian, sent him
2885 V, V | those forces more under the sway of the patriarch, who was
2886 V, IV | much more were the former swayed by hatred of their ancient
2887 VIII, II | were gaming and profane swearing, to which he was very much
2888 III, V | him a silver bowl full of sweetmeats, among which a large nail
2889 II, VIII| be an equivalent for the sweets of liberty, or make men
2890 II, II | under one ensign, and the swordsmen, or those who carried a
2891 I, IV | office, till they had first sworn to be faithful to the church.
2892 VIII, II | words or deeds, to utter a syllable, but regarding those around
2893 I, II | people, such as the death of Symmachus and Boethius, men of great
2894 VIII, IV | with the ostensible view of sympathizing for him, pointed out all
2895 VIII, II | refrain from tears, and the sympathy with which he had been heard
2896 III, II | an additional officer or Syndic; upon which the Priors summoned
2897 II, I | Frontinus and Cornelius Tacitus, who wrote at nearly the
2898 VII, IV | which he had taken from Taddeo degli Alidossi, as her portion.
2899 VIII, IV | turning of a horse’s head or tail was sufficient to decide
2900 III, IV | barbers, doublet-makers, tailors, and such like, and the
2901 II, VII | people together in arms. Taldo Valori was at this time
2902 VI, II | citizens gave credit to the tale, and immediately sent to
2903 III, III | others tell you pleasing tales, our design is to communicate
2904 VI, V | Two men in humble life, talking together near the Porta
2905 V, VI | attempted unsuccessfully to tamper with the legate and people
2906 VII, III | advantage of his enemies’ tampering with the marquis of Ferrara,
2907 Int | bears this inscription:~“Tanto nomini nullum par eulogium.”~
2908 II, II | or those who carried a target, under another; and every
2909 VI, VI | he says,—~“Sopra il Monte Tarpejo canzon vedra,~Un cavalier,
2910 I, VII | Micheletto Attenduli, il Tartaglia, Giacopaccio, Cecolini da
2911 III, III | that if nothing else could teach us, necessity might. You
2912 VII, VI | will have a melancholy and tearful conclusion.~
2913 II, VIII| and not satisfied with tearing them to pieces, they hewed
2914 II, I | della Bella, Ardinghi, Tedaldi, Cerchi. Of the Ghibelline
2915 III, VII | human affairs, delay causes tedium, and haste danger. To avoid
2916 II, VIII| hands, and even with their teeth. And that every sense might
2917 II, VI | this means, Amerigo Donati, Teghiajo, Frescobaldi, and Lotteringo
2918 Int | who said that Machiavelli tells us what princes do, not
2919 II, I | although an act of great temerity, and attended with the result
2920 VII, II | effected; one party, the most temperate and reasonable, held that
2921 VI, VII | against the earth; dreadful tempestuous winds then occurring, which
2922 Int, 0(1)| Niccolo Machiavelli e i suoi tempi, 2d ed. Milan, 1895-97,
2923 I, IV | the order of the Knights Templars, which, after a short time,
2924 II, III | conduct, and the mischievous tendency of their proceedings; that
2925 II, I | it—Increased population tends to make countries more healthy—
2926 I, VI | fought for the island of Tenedos. Although the Genoese were
2927 V, III | but would not alter the tenor of his engagement; for he
2928 VI, VII | and restored Benevento and Terracina to the church.~It thus appeared
2929 V, VII | country, having lost the terrestrial, he performed a pilgrimage
2930 II, VIII| duke, as his proceedings testified, was cruel and avaricious,
2931 Not | PREPARER’S NOTE~This text was typed up from a Universal
2932 V, IV | tears in their eyes, they thanked the Florentines for their
2933 IV, III | been unjust, we ought to be thankful, that we have now discovered
2934 VIII, V | to Roberto, and all were thankfully received. The duke, hearing
2935 VI, III | Piombino becomes the principal theater of war—Scarcity in the Florentine
2936 VI, IV | posterity, since that of Thebes and Philip of Macedon, who,
2937 VII, I | who had committed murders, thefts, or other crimes which made
2938 I, III | Charlemagne, or Charles the Great. Theodore I. now succeeded to the
2939 I, II | superior in valor to the people thereabout, should be inferior to them
2940 | thereby
2941 | therein
2942 | thereof
2943 VI, VII | near Pisa, accompanied by thick clouds, and the most intense
2944 II, V | fought a passage through the thickest of their enemies, and effected
2945 VI, III | dangerous to encamp among the thickets of the plain.~The Florentine
2946 II, VIII| black, and he had a long, thin beard. He was thus in every
2947 I, II | Helmichis, who complained of thirst as he came from the bath.
2948 VIII, IV | compelled to surrender on the thirteenth of November, to the great
2949 VI, V | Italy to be crowned. On the thirtieth of January, 1451, he entered
2950 I, II | highest praise: for during the thirty-eight years he reigned in Italy,
2951 V, I | in number, the consent of thirty-four was obtained. It was made
2952 III, V | government. They admonished thirty-nine citizens, ennobled many
2953 VII, I | possession of the government thirty-one years; for being endowed
2954 V, I | and Colleagues, which were thirty-seven in number, the consent of
2955 I, IV | blamable for the death of Thomas à Becket, archbishop of
2956 VI, III | ever before suffered such a thorough rout and overthrow. Among
2957 II, III | share of trouble; for he was thoroughly hated by the great, as the
2958 V, V | advantage; but they, having thoughtlessly let it slip, the rejoicings
2959 II, VIII| son were placed among the thousands of their enemies, and the
2960 I, II | and attacked Illyria and Thrace, prevented him, so that
2961 VI, VII | of which no earthquake or thunder ever heard could afford
2962 IV, I | of Furli, who dying, left Tibaldo, his son, under the guardianship
2963 II, I | Caponsacchi, Elisei, Abati, Tidaldini, Giuochi, and Galigai. Besides
2964 II, VIII| chains feel heavy, and every tie upon his free soul oppresses
2965 V, II | to be only the result of timidity, and with increased boldness
2966 III, V | The name of one was Il Tira, of the other Baroccio,
2967 IV, III | possess to-day and lose to-morrow; that many persons have
2968 VIII, IV | every kind of attention and token of regard, endeavored to
2969 VIII, VII | heavens gave many evident tokens of its approach; among other
2970 VI, VII | those times considered a tolerable army; which, meeting the
2971 II, I | the injury could not be tolerated without disgrace, and that
2972 II, V | having waited the arrival of Tolosetto Uberti, who had to come
2973 Int, 0(1)| col Machiavellismo, by O. Tommasini, Turin, 1883 (unfinished).~
2974 VI, I | and made him assume such a tone of unbounded insolence,
2975 III, V | having conveyed him to the top, must if the rotation continued,
2976 V, V | was acquainted with the topography of the citadel of Verona,
2977 II, VIII| their bodies with swords, tore them with their hands, and
2978 I, VI | Visconti, who expelled the La Torres; these, however, did not
2979 IV, VII | and pay the interest in tortures, exile, and death; that
2980 I, VII | the practice of arms so totally ridiculous, that the most
2981 II, VIII| seen their wounds, and touched their lacerated bodies,
2982 VI, VII | the tempest passed without touching the latter, and in the former,
2983 VII, II | months. The other was a tournament (for so they call the exhibition
2984 III, VI | surpassed all others; the tournaments and exhibitions made by
2985 I, III | defeat of the Saracens near Tours, upon the Loire, in which
2986 VIII, VI | This success filled the townspeople with so much terror, that
2987 VIII, III | prelacy, in the company of traitors and parricides, to commit
2988 VII, I | remarked, he was enabled to tranquilize; but in the year 1464, his
2989 VI, VI | Val di Bagno, endeavors to transfer his territories to the king
2990 VI, VI | Gambacorti was accompanied, while transferring his dominions, by a young
2991 VI, VII | visible, the inhabitants were transfixed with dismay. The country
2992 Int, 0(1)| of Niccolo Machiavelli, translated by Christian E. Detmold.
2993 Int, 0(1)| unfinished).~The best English translation of Machiavelli with which
2994 Not | New York and London. The translator was not named. The book
2995 VII, VI | front: but with two strokes, transpierced his shoulder and spine.
2996 V, VI | thousand horse. This made them travel with increased speed; and,
2997 VII, VI | place; who, after having traveled over Italy and visited Venice
2998 VII, VI | withdraw from his court, and, travelling toward Cremona, which she
2999 V, V | Italy, does not immediately traverse the country, but winding
3000 VII, V | and attacked Bernardo, who traversed the piazza, alternately
|