item: #1 of 3 id: 11634 author: Wallas, Graham title: Human Nature in Politics Third Edition date: None words: 76023 flesch: 52 summary: The difference, on the other hand, between one man's environment and that of other men can be arranged on no curve and remembered or forecasted by no expedient. In politics man has to make like things as well as to learn their significance. keywords: case; change; conception; conditions; day; democracy; effect; election; emotional; england; english; existence; experience; fact; form; general; good; government; half; history; impulse; individual; instance; instinct; knowledge; life; lord; man; men; mind; modern; national; nature; new; number; party; place; point; politics; power; present; process; question; real; reasoning; result; science; state; system; things; thought; time; type; use; way; work; working; world; years cache: 11634.txt plain text: 11634.txt item: #2 of 3 id: 1232 author: Machiavelli, Niccolò title: The Prince date: None words: 49765 flesch: 57 summary: This has been figuratively taught to princes by ancient writers, who describe how Achilles and many other princes of old were given to the Centaur Chiron to nurse, who brought them up in his discipline; which means solely that, as they had for a teacher one who was half beast and half man, so it is necessary for a prince to know how to make use of both natures, and that one without the other is not durable. Desiring therefore to present myself to your Magnificence with some testimony of my devotion towards you, I have not found among my possessions anything which I hold more dear than, or value so much as, the knowledge of the actions of great men, acquired by long experience in contemporary affairs, and a continual study of antiquity; which, having reflected upon it with great and prolonged diligence, I now send, digested into a little volume, to your Magnificence. keywords: affairs; alexander; arms; army; castruccio; city; country; duke; enemy; fear; florence; florentines; fortune; france; friends; good; having; hold; italy; king; lucca; machiavelli; man; men; messer; order; people; pisa; pope; power; prince; soldiers; state; things; time; war; way; wish cache: 1232.txt plain text: 1232.txt item: #3 of 3 id: 15772 author: Machiavelli, Niccolò title: Machiavelli, Volume I date: None words: 131082 flesch: 56 summary: Thei ought then (as I firste tolde you, nor now me thynkes no labour to rehearse it againe) to cause their men to exercise them selves in these battailes, whereby thei maie knowe how to kepe the raie, to knowe their places, to tourne quickly, when either enemie, or situacion troubleth them: for that, when thei knowe how to do this, the place is after easely learned, which a battaile hath to kepe, and what is the office thereof in the armie: and when a Prince, or a common weale, will take the paine, and will use their diligence in these orders, and in these exercisyng, it shall alwaies happen, that in their countrie, there shall bee good souldiours, and thei to be superiours to their neighbours, and shalbe those, whiche shall give, and not receive the lawes of other men: but (as I have saied) the disorder wherein thei live, maketh that thei neclecte, and doe not esteme these thynges, and therefore our armies be not good: and yet though there were either hed, or member naturally vertuous, thei cannot shewe it. This, a bande of menne ordered, cannot dooe; bicause if thesame marche hastely, it goweth out of order: if it go scattered, the enemie shall have no paine to breake it, for that it breaketh by it self: and therfore, I ordered the armie after soche sorte, that it might dooe the one thyng and the other: for as moche as havyng set in the corners thereof, a thousande Veliti, I appoincted that after that our ordinaunce had shotte, thei should issue out together with the light horsemen, to get the enemies artillerie: and therfore, I made not my ordinance to shoote again, to the intente, to give no tyme to the enemie to shoote: Bicause space could not be given to me, and taken from other men, and for thesame occasion, where I made my ordinaunce not to shoote the seconde tyme, was for that I would not have suffered the enemie to have shot at al, if I had could: seyng that to mynde that the enemies artillerie be unprofitable, there is no other remedie, but to assaulte it spedely: for as moche as if the enemies forsake it, thou takeste it, if thei will defende it, it is requisite that thei leave it behind, so that being possessed of enemies, and of frendes, it cannot shoote. keywords: able; alwaies; antiquitie; armes; armie; artillerie; battaile; bee; behinde; beleve; betwene; beyng; bicause; campe; capitaine; case; chap; come; common; cosimo; countrie; daies; desire; doe; dooe; easely; enemie; exercise; fabricio; faight; feare; firste; footemen; force; fortune; good; halfe; hath; havyng; hedde; horsemen; horses; howe; hym; italy; kepe; king; knowe; left; lesse; let; life; little; live; lodgynges; long; machiavelli; maie; maie bee; man; maner; men; menne; moche; moste; necessarie; nomber; occasion; order; overcome; owne; parte; passe; people; pikes; place; pope; power; prince; purpose; rankes; reason; right; romaines; rome; saie; self; selves; serve; set; shoulde; sidenote; small; souldiours; space; stande; state; thee; thei; thereof; thesame; thing; thou; thought; thousande; thy; thynges; time; twoo; tyme; veliti; verie; vertue; waie; warre; way; weapons; whiche; whiche bee; whiche maie; woulde; yardes cache: 15772.txt plain text: 15772.txt