| Early English newspapers - 1837 - 756 pages
...the Church Commissioners, Sfc. by Rev. WL Bowles, Canon Res. of Sarum. " LET no one (says Machiavel) who begins an innovation in a state, expect that he...pleasure, or regulate it according to his intention." The experience of the Florentine has been too accurately approved, in the innovations of the Church,... | |
| English essays - 1837 - 728 pages
...the Church Commissioners, Sfc. by Rev. WL Bowles, Canon Res. of Sarum. " LET no one (says Machiavel) who begins an innovation in a state, expect that he...stop it at his pleasure, or regulate it according to bis intention." The experience of the Florentine has been too accurately approved, in the innovations... | |
| Henry Hallam - 1846 - 610 pages
...who did not practise any regular trade, or who only worked for daily hire. These were called Ciompi, a corruption, it is said, of the French compere. "...or disaffection of the superior citizens, this was suffered to get ahead, and for three days the city was in the hand of a tumultuous rabble. It was vain... | |
| Henry Hallam - 1853 - 532 pages
...who did not practise any regular trade, or who only worked for daily hire. These were called Ciompi, a corruption, it is said, of the French compere. "...lowest populace, were alone concerned. Through the surprise, or cowardice, or disaffection of the superior citizens, this was suffered to get ahead, and... | |
| Henry Hallam - 1856 - 532 pages
...who did not practise any regular trade, or who only worked for daily hire. These were called Ciompi, a corruption, it is said, of the French compere. "...month from the first sedition, another broke out, in t which the ciompi, or lowest populace, were alone concerned. Through the surprise, or cowardice, or... | |
| Henry Hallam - 1868 - 378 pages
...who did not practise any regular trade, or who only worked for daily hire. These were called Ciompi, a corruption, it is said, of the French compere. "...lowest populace, were alone concerned. Through the surprise, or cowardice, or disaffection of the superior citizens, this was suffered to get ahead, and... | |
| Henry Hallam - 1875 - 754 pages
...who did not practise any regular trade, or who only worked for daily hire. These were called Ciompi, a corruption, it is said, of the French compere. "...lowest populace, were alone concerned. Through the surprise, or cowardice, or disaffection of the superior citizens, this was suffered to get ahead, and... | |
| William Henry Seward - Legislators - 1888 - 714 pages
...treading on unknown irround, or in the dark. " Let no one who begins an innovation," says Machiavelli, " expect that he shall stop it at his pleasure, or regulate it according to his intention." The Puritans never aimed to be, and never consciously were secular or political reformers. Their field... | |
| Alfred Peter Hillier - Jameson's Raid, 1895-1896 - 1898 - 174 pages
...PRETORIA PRISONER i ALFRED P. HILLIER, BA, MD, CM AUTHOR OF "IN THE VELDT*' BY HAKLEY ' ' Let no one who begins an innovation in a State expect that he...pleasure, or regulate it according to his intention." MACHIAVBLLI. WITH TWO ESSAYS ON THE ANTIQUITY OF MAN IN SOUTH AFRICA MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED NEW... | |
| Alfred Peter Hillier - Indigenous peoples - 1900 - 342 pages
...of the position as it then appeared. IV BEFORE THE JAMESON RAID. " LET no one," says Machiavelli, " who begins an innovation in a State, expect that he...pleasure or regulate it according to his intention." And Machiavelli, who lived in the early days of the small Republics of mediaeval Italy, and who had... | |
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