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3313 lines
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3313 lines
191 KiB
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The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Prince, by Nicoló Machiavelli
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This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
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other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
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whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
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the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
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www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
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to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
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Title: The Prince
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Author: Nicoló Machiavelli
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Translator: Luigi Ricci
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Release Date: April 23, 2018 [EBook #57037]
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Language: English
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Character set encoding: UTF-8
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*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PRINCE ***
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Produced by Marc D'Hooghe at Free Literature
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THE PRINCE
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BY
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NICCOLÒ MACHIAVELLI
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TRANSLATED INTO ENGLISH BY
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LUIGI RICCI
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HUMPHREY MILFORD
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OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
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LONDON EDINBURGH GLASGOW
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NEW YORK TORONTO MELBOURNE CAPETOWN
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BOMBAY CALCUTTA AND MADRAS
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1909
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PREFACE
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Of all Machiavelli's works _The Prince_ is undoubtedly the greatest;
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and a new English edition of it is likely to be welcome to all those
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who have not the advantage of reading it in the classical Italian
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original.
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For a true appreciation of Machiavelli, impossible in a brief Preface,
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I must refer the English reader to Macaulay's Essay on the Italian
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historian and statesman.[1] In it he will see how our Author's ideas and
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work were wrongfully and wilfully misinterpreted by the very men who,
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while profiting by his wisdom, have with great ingratitude criticised
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the statesman and defamed his name, as that of the inventor of the
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worst political system ever imagined. Yet, as his whole life was an
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indefatigable and unremitting endeavour to secure for his native
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Florence a good and popular government, and as he lost his great office
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of Secretary to the Florentine Republic on account of his avowed
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liberal opinions, it is not only unjust but ridiculous to accuse him of
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helping tyrants to enslave the people. What he did was to show in the
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most deliberate and in the plainest way the arts by which free peoples
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were made slaves; and, had his words of advice been always heeded, no
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tyrant in Italy or elsewhere could have been successful in his policy.
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That he was not listened to, and his advice scorned and spurned, was
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not Machiavelli's fault.
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Those who still share the opinion of his interested detractors should
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read his private correspondence with the leaders of liberal ideas
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in Italy--many of his letters being still left unpublished in the
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MS. Collection of Giuliano Ricci in the National Library, in the
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Riccardiana Library (No. 2467), in the Government Archives (Strozzi,
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Nos. 133 and 1028) of Florence, in the Barberini Library, and in the
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Collezione Gonnelli of the Palatine Library in Rome.
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LUIGI RICCI.
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22 ALBEMARLE STREET, LONDON, W.
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[1] "Machiavelli" by Thomas Babington Macaulay is available at Project
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Gutenberg in Critical, Historical, and Miscellaneous Essays; Vol. 1,
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ebook 55901.
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CONTENTS
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NICCOLÒ MACHIAVELLI TO LORENZO THE MAGNIFICENT
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1. The various kinds of Government and the ways by which they are
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established.
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2. Of Hereditary Monarchies.
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3. Of Mixed Monarchies.
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4. Why the Kingdom of Darius, occupied by Alexander, did not rebel
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against the successors of the latter after his death.
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5. The way to govern Cities or Dominions that, previous to being
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occupied, lived under their own Laws.
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6. Of New Dominions which have been acquired by one's own Arms and
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Powers.
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7. Of New Dominions acquired by the Power of others or by Fortune.
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8. Of those who have attained the position of Prince by villainy.
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9. Of the Civic Principality.
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10. How the strength of all States should be measured.
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11. Of Ecclesiastical Principalities.
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12. The different kinds of Militia and Mercenary Soldiers.
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13. Of Auxiliary, Mixed, and Native Troops
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14. What the duties of a Prince are with regard to the Militia.
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16. Of the things for which Men, and especially Princes, are praised or
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blamed.
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16. Of Liberality and Niggardliness.
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17. Of Cruelty and Clemency, and whether it is better to be loved or
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feared.
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18. In what way Princes must keep faith.
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19. That we must avoid being despised and hated.
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20. Whether Fortresses and other things which Princes often make are
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useful or injurious.
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21. How a Prince must act in order to gain reputation.
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22. Of the Secretaries of Princes.
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23. How Flatterers must be shunned.
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24. Why the Princes of Italy have lost their States.
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25. How much Fortune can do in human affairs, and how it may be opposed.
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26. Exhortation to liberate Italy from the Barbarians.
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NICCOLÒ MACHIAVELLI
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TO
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LORENZO THE MAGNIFICENT
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SON OF PIERO DI MEDICI
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It is customary for those who wish to gain the favour of a prince to
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endeavour to do so by offering him gifts of those things which they
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hold most precious, or in which they know him to take especial delight.
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In this way princes are often presented with horses, arms, cloth of
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gold, gems, and such-like ornaments worthy of their grandeur. In my
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desire, however, to offer to Your Highness some humble testimony of
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my devotion, I have been unable to find among my possessions anything
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which I hold so dear or esteem so highly as that knowledge of the deeds
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of great men which I have acquired through a long experience of modern
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events and a constant study of the past.
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The results of my long observations and reflections are recorded in the
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little volume which I now offer to Your Highness: and although I deem
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this work unworthy of Your Highness's notice, yet my confidence in your
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humanity assures me that you will accept it, knowing that it is not
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in my power to offer you a greater gift than that of enabling you to
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understand in the shortest possible time all those things which I have
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learnt through danger and suffering in the course of many years. I have
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not sought to adorn my work with long phrases or high-sounding words or
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any of those allurements and ornaments with which many writers seek to
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embellish their books, as I desire no honour for my work but such as
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its truth and the gravity of its subject may justly deserve. Nor will
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it, I trust, be deemed presumptuous on the part of a man of humble and
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obscure condition to attempt to discuss and criticise the government of
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princes; for in the same way that landscape painters station themselves
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in the valleys in order to draw mountains or elevated ground, and
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ascend an eminence in order to get a good view of the plains, so it
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is necessary to be a prince to be able to know thoroughly the nature
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of a people, and to know the nature of princes one must be one of the
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populace.
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May I trust, therefore, that Your Highness will accept this little gift
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in the spirit in which it is offered; and if Your Highness will deign
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to peruse it, you will recognise in it my ardent desire that you may
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attain to that grandeur which fortune and your own merits presage for
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you.
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And should Your Highness gaze down from the summit of that eminence
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towards this humble spot, you will recognise the great and unmerited
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sufferings inflicted on me by a cruel fate.
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THE PRINCE
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CHAPTER I
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THE VARIOUS KINDS OF GOVERNMENT AND THE WAYS BY WHICH THEY ARE
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ESTABLISHED
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All states and dominions which hold or have held sway over mankind are
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either republics or monarchies. Monarchies are either hereditary ones,
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in which the rulers have been for many years of the same family, or
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else they are those of recent foundation. The newly founded ones are
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either entirely new, as was Milan to Francesco Sforza, or else they
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are, as it were, new members grafted on to the hereditary possessions
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of the prince that annexes them, as is the kingdom of Naples to the
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King of Spain. The dominions thus acquired have either been previously
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accustomed to the rule of another prince, or else have been free
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states, and they are annexed either by force of arms of the prince, or
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of others, or else fall to him by good fortune or merit.
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CHAPTER II
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OF HEREDITARY MONARCHIES
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I will not here speak of republics, having already treated of them
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fully in another place. I will deal only with monarchies, and will show
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how the various kinds described above can be governed and maintained.
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In the first place, in hereditary states accustomed to the reigning
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family the difficulty of maintaining them is far less than in new
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monarchies; for it is sufficient not to exceed the ancestral usages,
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and to accommodate one's self to accidental circumstances; in this way
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such a prince, if of ordinary ability, will always be able to maintain
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his position, unless some very exceptional and excessive force deprives
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him of it; and even if he be thus deprived of it, on the slightest
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misfortune happening to the new occupier, he will be able to regain it.
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We have in Italy the example of the Duke of Ferrara, who was able
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to withstand the assaults of the Venetians in the year '84, and of
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Pope Julius in the year '10, for no other reason than because of the
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antiquity of his family in that dominion. In as much as the legitimate
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prince has less cause and less necessity to give offence, it is only
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natural that he should be more loved; and, if no extraordinary vices
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make him hated, it is only reasonable for his subjects to be naturally
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attached to him, the memories and causes of innovations being forgotten
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in the long period over which his rule has existed; whereas one change
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always leaves the way prepared for the introduction of another.
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CHAPTER III
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OF MIXED MONARCHIES
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But it is in the new monarchy that difficulties really exist. Firstly,
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if it is not entirely new, but a member as it were of a mixed state,
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its disorders spring at first from a natural difficulty which exists
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in all new dominions, because men change masters willingly, hoping to
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better themselves; and this belief makes them take arms against their
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rulers, in which they are deceived, as experience shows them that they
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have gone from bad to worse. This is the result of another very natural
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cause, which is the necessary harm inflicted on those over whom the
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prince obtains dominion, both by his soldiers and by an infinite number
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of other injuries unavoidably caused by his occupation.
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Thus you find enemies in all those whom you have injured by occupying
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that dominion, and you cannot maintain the friendship of those who have
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helped you to obtain this possession, as you will not be able to fulfil
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their expectations, nor can you use strong measures with them, being
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under an obligation to them; for which reason, however strong your
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armies may be, you will always need the favour of the inhabitants to
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take possession of a province. It was from these causes that Louis XII.
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of France, though able to occupy Milan without trouble, immediately
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lost it, and the forces of Ludovico alone were sufficient to take it
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from him the first time, for the inhabitants who had willingly opened
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their gates to him, finding themselves deluded in the hopes they had
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cherished and not obtaining those benefits that they had anticipated,
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could not bear the vexatious rule of their new prince.
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It is indeed true that, after reconquering the rebel territories they
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are not so easily lost again, for the ruler is now, by the fact of the
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rebellion, less averse to secure his position by punishing offenders,
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investigating any suspicious circumstances, and strengthening himself
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in weak places. So that although the mere appearance of such a person
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as Duke Ludovico on the frontier was sufficient to cause France to lose
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Milan the first time, to make her lose her grip of it the second time
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was only possible when all the world was against her, and after her
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enemies had been defeated and driven out of Italy; which was the result
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of the causes above mentioned. Nevertheless it was taken from her both
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the first and the second time. The general causes of the first loss
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have been already discussed; it remains now to be seen what were the
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causes of the second loss and by what means France could have avoided
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it, or what measures might have been taken by another ruler in that
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position which were not taken by the King of France. Be it observed,
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therefore, that those states which on annexation are united to a
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previously existing state may or may not be of the same nationality
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and language. If they are, it is very easy to hold them, especially if
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they are not accustomed to freedom; and to possess them securely it
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suffices that the family of the princes which formerly governed them
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be extinct. For the rest, their old condition not being disturbed, and
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there being no dissimilarity of customs, the people settle down quietly
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under their new rulers, as is seen in the case of Burgundy, Brittany,
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Gascony, and Normandy, which have been so long united to France; and
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although there may be some slight differences of language, the customs
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of the people are nevertheless similar, and they can get along well
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together, and whoever obtains possession of them and wishes to retain
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them must bear in mind two things: the one, that the blood of their old
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rulers is extinct; the other, to make no alteration either in their
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laws or in their taxes; in this way they will in a very short space of
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time become united with their old possessions and form one state. But
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when dominions are acquired in a province differing in language, laws,
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and customs, the difficulties to be overcome are great, and it requires
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good fortune as well as great industry to retain them; one of the best
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and most certain means of doing so would be for the new ruler to take
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up his residence in them. This would render their possession more
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secure and durable, it is what the Turk has done in Greece; in spite of
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all the other measures taken by him to hold that state, it would not
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have been possible to retain it had he not gone to live there. Being
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on the spot, disorders can be seen as they arise and can quickly be
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remedied, but living at a distance, they are only heard of when they
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get beyond remedy. Besides which, the province is not despoiled by
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your officials, the subjects are pleased with the easy accessibility
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of their prince; and wishing to be loyal they have more reason to love
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him, and should they be otherwise they will have greater cause to fear
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him.
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Any external Power who wishes to assail that state will be less
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disposed to do so; so that as long as he resides there he will be very
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hard to dispossess. The other and better remedy is to plant colonies
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in one or two of those places which form as it were the keys of the
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land, for it is necessary either to do this or to maintain a large
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force of armed men. The colonies will cost the prince little; with
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little or no expense on his part, he can send and maintain them; he
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only injures those whose lands and houses are taken to give to the new
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inhabitants, and these form but a small proportion of the state, and
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those who are injured, remaining poor and scattered, can never do any
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harm to him, and all the others are, on the one hand, not injured and
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therefore easily pacified; and, on the other, are fearful of offending
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lest they should be treated like those who have been dispossessed of
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their property. To conclude, these colonies cost nothing, are more
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faithful, and give less offence; and the injured parties being poor
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and scattered are unable to do mischief, as I have shown. For it must
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be noted, that men must either be caressed or else annihilated; they
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will revenge themselves for small injuries, but cannot do so for great
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ones; the injury therefore that we do to a man must be such that we
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need not fear his vengeance. But by maintaining a garrison instead of
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colonists, one will spend much more, and consume in guarding it all
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the revenues of that state, so that the acquisition will result in
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a loss, besides giving much greater offence, since it injures every
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one in that state with the quartering of the army on it; which being
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an inconvenience felt, by all, every one becomes an enemy, and these
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are enemies which can do mischief, as, though beaten, they remain in
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their own homes. In every way, therefore, a garrison is as useless
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as colonies are useful. Further, the ruler of a foreign province as
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described, should make himself the leader and defender of his less
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powerful neighbours, and endeavour to weaken the stronger ones, and
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take care that his possessions are not entered by some foreigner not
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less powerful than himself, who will always intervene at the request
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of those who are discontented either through ambition or fear, as was
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seen when the Ætoli invited the Romans into Greece; and in whatever
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province they entered, it was always at the request of the inhabitants.
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And the rule is that when a powerful foreigner enters a province, all
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the less powerful inhabitants become his adherents, moved by the envy
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they bear to those ruling over them; so much so that with regard to
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these minor potentates he has no trouble whatever in winning them over,
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for they willingly join forces with the state that he has acquired.
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He has merely to be careful that they do not assume too much power
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and authority, and he can easily with his own forces and their favour
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put down those that are powerful and remain in everything the arbiter
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of that province. And he who does not govern well in this way will
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soon lose what he has acquired, and while he holds it will meet with
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infinite difficulty and trouble.
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|
The Romans in the provinces they took, always followed this policy;
|
||
|
they established colonies, flattered the less powerful without
|
||
|
increasing their strength, put down the most powerful and did not allow
|
||
|
foreign rulers to obtain influence in them. I will let the single
|
||
|
province of Greece suffice as an example. They made friends with the
|
||
|
Achæi and the Ætoli, the kingdom of Macedonia was cast down, and
|
||
|
Antiochus driven out, nor did they allow the merits of the Achæi or the
|
||
|
Ætoli to gain them any increase of territory, nor did the persuasions
|
||
|
of Philip induce them to befriend him without lowering him, nor could
|
||
|
the power of Antiochus make them consent to allow him to hold any state
|
||
|
in that province.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For the Romans did in this case what all wise princes should do, who
|
||
|
look not only at present dangers but also at future ones and diligently
|
||
|
guard against them; for being foreseen they can easily be remedied,
|
||
|
but if one waits till they are at hand, the medicine is no longer in
|
||
|
time as the malady has become incurable; it happening with this as with
|
||
|
those hectic fevers spoken of by doctors, which at their beginning
|
||
|
are easy to cure but difficult to recognise, but in course of time
|
||
|
when they have not at first been recognised and treated, become easy
|
||
|
to recognise and difficult to cure. Thus it happens in matters of
|
||
|
state; for knowing afar off (which it is only given to a prudent man
|
||
|
to do) the evils that are brewing, they are easily cured. But when,
|
||
|
for want of such knowledge, they are allowed to grow so that every
|
||
|
one can recognise them, there is no longer any remedy to be found.
|
||
|
However, the Romans, observing these disorders while yet remote, were
|
||
|
always able to find a remedy, and never allowed them to proceed in
|
||
|
order to avoid a war; for they knew that war was not to be avoided,
|
||
|
and could be deferred only to the advantage of the other side; they
|
||
|
therefore declared war against Philip and Antiochus in Greece, so as
|
||
|
not to have to fight them in Italy, though they might at the time
|
||
|
have avoided either; this they did not choose to do, never caring to
|
||
|
do that which is now every day to be heard in the mouths of our wise
|
||
|
men, to enjoy the benefits of time, but preferring those of their
|
||
|
own virtue and prudence, for time brings with it all things, and may
|
||
|
produce indifferently either good or evil. But let us return to France
|
||
|
and examine whether she did any of these things; and I will speak not
|
||
|
of Charles, but of Louis as the one whose proceedings can be better
|
||
|
seen, as he held possession in Italy for a longer time; you will then
|
||
|
see that he did the opposite of all those things which must be done to
|
||
|
keep possession of a foreign state. King Louis was called into Italy by
|
||
|
the ambition of the Venetians, who wished by his coming to gain half
|
||
|
of Lombardy. I will not blame the king for coming nor for the part
|
||
|
he took, because wishing to plant his foot in Italy, and not having
|
||
|
friends in the country, on the contrary the conduct of King Charles
|
||
|
having caused all doors to be closed to him, he was forced to accept
|
||
|
what friendships he could find, and his schemes would have quickly
|
||
|
been successful if he had made no mistakes in his other proceedings.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The king then having acquired Lombardy regained immediately the
|
||
|
reputation lost by Charles. Genoa yielded, the Florentines became his
|
||
|
friends, the Marquis of Mantua, the Dukes of Ferrara and Bentivogli,
|
||
|
the Lady of Furlì, the Lords of Faenza, Pesaro, Rimini, Camerino,
|
||
|
and Piombino, the inhabitants of Lucca, of Pisa, and of Sienna, all
|
||
|
approached him with offers of friendship. The Venetians might then
|
||
|
have seen the effects of their temerity, how to gain a few lands
|
||
|
in Lombardy they had made the king ruler over two-thirds of Italy.
|
||
|
Consider how little difficulty the king would have had in maintaining
|
||
|
his reputation in Italy if he had observed the rules above given, and
|
||
|
kept a firm and sure hold over all those friends of his, who being
|
||
|
many in number, and weak, and fearful one of the Church, another of
|
||
|
the Venetians, were always obliged to hold fast to him, and by whose
|
||
|
aid he could easily make sure of any who were still great. But he was
|
||
|
hardly in Milan before he did exactly the opposite, by giving aid to
|
||
|
Pope Alexander to occupy the Romagna. Nor did he perceive that, in
|
||
|
taking this course, he weakened himself, by casting off his friends
|
||
|
and those who had placed themselves at his disposal, and strengthened
|
||
|
the Church by adding to the spiritual power, which gives it such
|
||
|
authority, further temporal powers. And having made the first mistake,
|
||
|
he was obliged to follow it up, whilst, to put a stop to the ambition
|
||
|
of Alexander and prevent him becoming ruler of Tuscany, he was forced
|
||
|
to come to Italy. And not content with having increased the power
|
||
|
of the Church and lost his friends, he now desiring the kingdom of
|
||
|
Naples, divided it with the king of Spain; and where he alone was the
|
||
|
arbiter of Italy, he now brought in a companion, so that the ambitious
|
||
|
of that province who were dissatisfied with him might have some one
|
||
|
else to appeal to; and where he might have left in that kingdom a king
|
||
|
tributary to him, he dispossessed him in order to bring in another who
|
||
|
was capable of driving him out. The desire to acquire possessions is
|
||
|
a very natural and ordinary thing, and when those men do it who can
|
||
|
do so successfully, they are always praised and not blamed, but when
|
||
|
they cannot and yet want to do so at all costs, they make a mistake
|
||
|
deserving of great blame. If France, therefore, with her own forces
|
||
|
could have taken Naples, she ought to have done so; if she could not
|
||
|
she ought not to have divided it. And if the partition of Lombardy with
|
||
|
the Venetians is to be excused, as having been the means of allowing
|
||
|
the French king to set foot in Italy, this other partition deserves
|
||
|
blame, not having the excuse of necessity. Louis had thus made these
|
||
|
five mistakes: he had crushed the smaller Powers, increased the power
|
||
|
in Italy of one ruler, brought into the land a very powerful foreigner,
|
||
|
and he had not come to live there himself, nor had he established
|
||
|
any colonies. Still these mistakes might, if he had lived, not have
|
||
|
injured him, had he not made the sixth, that of taking the state from
|
||
|
the Venetians; for, if he had not strengthened the Church and brought
|
||
|
the Spaniards into Italy, it would have been right and necessary to
|
||
|
humble them; having once taken those measures, he ought never to have
|
||
|
consented to their ruin; because, had the Venetians been strong, it
|
||
|
would have kept the others from making attempts on Lombardy, partly
|
||
|
because the Venetians would not have consented to any measures by which
|
||
|
they did not get it for themselves, and partly because the others would
|
||
|
not have wanted to take it from France to give it to Venice, and would
|
||
|
not have had the courage to attack both.
|
||
|
|
||
|
If any one urges that King Louis yielded the Romagna to Alexander
|
||
|
and the kingdom to Spain in order to avoid war, I reply, with the
|
||
|
reasons already given, that one ought never to allow a disorder to take
|
||
|
place in order to avoid war, for war is not thereby avoided, but only
|
||
|
deferred to your disadvantage. And if others allege the promise given
|
||
|
by the king to the pope to undertake that enterprise for him, in return
|
||
|
for the dissolution of his marriage and for the cardinalship of Rohan,
|
||
|
I reply with what I shall say later on about the faith of princes and
|
||
|
how it is to be observed. Thus King Louis lost Lombardy through not
|
||
|
observing any of those conditions which have been observed by others
|
||
|
who have taken provinces and wished to retain them. Nor is this any
|
||
|
miracle, but very reasonable and natural. I spoke of this matter with
|
||
|
Cardinal Rohan at Nantes when Valentine, as Cesare Borgia, son of Pope
|
||
|
Alexander, was commonly called, was occupying the Romagna, for on
|
||
|
Cardinal Rohan saying to me that the Italians did not understand war,
|
||
|
I replied that the French did not understand politics, for if they did
|
||
|
they would never allow the Church to become so great. And experience
|
||
|
shows us that the greatness in Italy of the Church and also of Spain
|
||
|
have been caused by France, and her ruin has proceeded from them. From
|
||
|
which may be drawn a general rule, which never or very rarely fails,
|
||
|
that whoever is the cause of another becoming powerful, is ruined
|
||
|
himself; for that power is produced by him either through craft or
|
||
|
force; and both of these are suspected by the one that has become
|
||
|
powerful.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER IV
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
WHY THE KINGDOM OF DARIUS, OCCUPIED BY ALEXANDER, DID NOT REBEL AGAINST
|
||
|
THE SUCCESSORS OF THE LATTER AFTER HIS DEATH.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Considering the difficulties there are in holding a newly acquired
|
||
|
state, some may wonder how it came to pass that Alexander the Great
|
||
|
became master of Asia in a few years, and had hardly occupied it
|
||
|
when he died, from which it might be supposed that the whole state
|
||
|
would have rebelled. However, his successors maintained themselves in
|
||
|
possession, and had no further difficulty in doing so than those which
|
||
|
arose among themselves from their own ambitions.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I reply that the kingdoms known to history have been governed in two
|
||
|
ways: either by a prince and his servants, who, as ministers by his
|
||
|
grace and permission, assist in governing the realm; or by a prince
|
||
|
and by barons, who hold their positions not by favour of the ruler but
|
||
|
by antiquity of blood. Such barons have states and subjects of their
|
||
|
own, who recognise them as their lords, and are naturally attached to
|
||
|
them. In those states which are governed by a prince and his servants,
|
||
|
the prince possesses more authority, because there is no one in the
|
||
|
state regarded as a superior besides himself, and if others are obeyed
|
||
|
it is merely as ministers and officials of the prince, and no one
|
||
|
regards them with any special affection. Examples of these two kinds
|
||
|
of government in our own time are the Turk and the King of France.
|
||
|
All the Turkish monarchy is governed by one ruler, the others are his
|
||
|
servants, and dividing his kingdom into "sangiacates," he sends to them
|
||
|
various administrators, and changes or recalls them at his pleasure.
|
||
|
But the King of France is surrounded by a large number of ancient
|
||
|
nobles, recognised as such by their subjects, and loved by them; they
|
||
|
have their prerogatives, which the king cannot deprive them of without
|
||
|
danger to himself. Whoever now considers these two states will see that
|
||
|
it would be difficult to acquire the state of the Turk; but having
|
||
|
conquered it, it would be very easy to hold it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The causes of the difficulty of occupying the Turkish kingdom are, that
|
||
|
the invader could not be invited by princes of that kingdom, nor hope
|
||
|
to facilitate his enterprise by the rebellion of those around him, as
|
||
|
will be evident from reasons given above. Because, being all slaves,
|
||
|
and bound, it will be more difficult to corrupt them, and even if
|
||
|
they were corrupted, little effect could be hoped for, as they would
|
||
|
not be able to carry the people with them for the reasons mentioned.
|
||
|
Therefore, whoever assaults the Turk must be prepared to meet his
|
||
|
united forces, and must rely more on his own strength than on the
|
||
|
disorders of others; but having once conquered him, and beaten him in
|
||
|
battle so that he can no longer raise armies, nothing else is to be
|
||
|
feared except the family of the prince, and if this is extinguished,
|
||
|
there is no longer any one to be feared, the others having no credit
|
||
|
with the people; and as the victor before the victory could place no
|
||
|
hope in them, so he need not fear them afterwards. The contrary is
|
||
|
the case in kingdoms governed like that of France, because it is easy
|
||
|
to enter them by winning over some baron of the kingdom, there being
|
||
|
always some malcontents, and those desiring innovations. These can,
|
||
|
for the reasons stated, open the way to you and facilitate victory;
|
||
|
but afterwards, if you wish to keep possession, infinite difficulties
|
||
|
arise, both from those who have aided you and from those you have
|
||
|
oppressed. Nor is it sufficient to extinguish the family of the prince,
|
||
|
for there remain those nobles who will make themselves the head of new
|
||
|
changes, and being neither able to content them nor exterminate them,
|
||
|
you will lose the state whenever an occasion arises. Now if you will
|
||
|
consider what was the nature of the government of Darius you will find
|
||
|
it similar to the kingdom of the Turk, and therefore Alexander had
|
||
|
first to completely overthrow it and seize the country, after which
|
||
|
victory, Darius being dead, the state remained secure to Alexander,
|
||
|
for the reasons discussed above. And his successors, had they remained
|
||
|
united, might have enjoyed it in peace, nor did any tumults arise in
|
||
|
the kingdom except those fomented by themselves. But it is impossible
|
||
|
to possess with such ease countries constituted like France.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hence arose the frequent rebellions of Spain, France, and Greece
|
||
|
against the Romans, owing to the numerous principalities which existed
|
||
|
in those states; for, as long as the memory of these lasted, the Romans
|
||
|
were always uncertain of their possessions; but when the memory of
|
||
|
these principalities had been extinguished they became, with the power
|
||
|
and duration of the empire, secure possessions.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And afterwards the latter could, when fighting among themselves, draw
|
||
|
each one with him a portion of these provinces, according to the
|
||
|
authority he had established there, and these provinces, when the
|
||
|
family of their ancient princes was extinct, recognised no other rulers
|
||
|
but the Romans. Considering these things, therefore, let no one be
|
||
|
surprised at the facility with which Alexander could hold Asia, and at
|
||
|
the difficulties that others have had in holding acquired possessions,
|
||
|
like Pyrrhus and many others; as this was not caused by the greater or
|
||
|
smaller ability of the conqueror, but depended on the dissimilarity of
|
||
|
the conditions.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER V
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE WAY TO GOVERN CITIES OR DOMINIONS THAT, PREVIOUS TO BEING OCCUPIED,
|
||
|
LIVED UNDER THEIR OWN LAWS.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
When those states which have been acquired are accustomed to live at
|
||
|
liberty under their own laws, there are three ways of holding them. The
|
||
|
first is to ruin them; the second is to go and live there in person;
|
||
|
the third is to allow them to live under their own laws, taking tribute
|
||
|
of them, and creating there within the country a state composed of a
|
||
|
few who will keep it friendly to you. Because this state, being created
|
||
|
by the prince, knows that it cannot exist without his friendship and
|
||
|
protection, and will do all it can to keep them, and a city used to
|
||
|
liberty can be more easily held by means of its citizens than in
|
||
|
any other way, if you wish to preserve it. There is the example of
|
||
|
the Spartans and the Romans. The Spartans held Athens and Thebes by
|
||
|
creating within them a state of a few people; nevertheless they lost
|
||
|
them. The Romans, in order to hold Capua, Carthage, and Numantia,
|
||
|
destroyed them, but did not lose them. They wanted to hold Greece in
|
||
|
almost the same way as the Spartans held it, leaving it free and under
|
||
|
its own laws, but they did not succeed; so that they were compelled
|
||
|
to destroy many cities in that province in order to keep it, because
|
||
|
in truth there is no sure method of holding them except by ruining
|
||
|
them. And whoever becomes the ruler of a free city and does not destroy
|
||
|
it, can expect to be destroyed by it, for it can always find a motive
|
||
|
for rebellion in the name of liberty and of its ancient usages, which
|
||
|
are forgotten neither by lapse of time nor by benefits received, and
|
||
|
whatever one does or provides, so long as the inhabitants are not
|
||
|
separated or dispersed, they do not forget that name and those usages,
|
||
|
but appeal to them at once in every emergency, as did Pisa after being
|
||
|
so many years held in servitude by the Florentines. But when cities or
|
||
|
provinces have been accustomed to live under a prince, and the family
|
||
|
of that prince is extinguished, being on the one hand used to obey, and
|
||
|
on the other not having their old prince, they cannot unite in choosing
|
||
|
one from among themselves, and they do not know how to live in freedom,
|
||
|
so that they are slower to take arms, and a prince can win them over
|
||
|
with greater facility and establish himself securely. But in republics
|
||
|
there is greater life, greater hatred, and more desire for vengeance;
|
||
|
they do not and cannot cast aside the memory of their ancient liberty,
|
||
|
so that the surest way is either to destroy them or reside in them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER VI
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
OF NEW DOMINIONS WHICH HAVE BEEN ACQUIRED BY ONE'S OWN ARMS AND POWERS
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Let no one marvel if in speaking of new dominions both as to prince
|
||
|
and state, I bring forward very exalted instances, for as men walk
|
||
|
almost always in the paths trodden by others, proceeding in their
|
||
|
actions by imitation, and not being always able to follow others
|
||
|
exactly, nor attain to the excellence of those they imitate, a prudent
|
||
|
man should always follow in the path trodden by great men and imitate
|
||
|
those who are most excellent, so that if he does not attain to their
|
||
|
greatness, at any rate he will get some tinge of it. He will do like
|
||
|
prudent archers, who when the place they wish to hit is too far off,
|
||
|
knowing how far their bow will carry, aim at a spot much higher than
|
||
|
the one they wish to hit, not in order to reach this height with
|
||
|
their arrow, but by help of this high aim to hit the spot they wish
|
||
|
to. I say then that in new dominions, where there is a new prince,
|
||
|
it is more or less easy to hold them according to the greater or
|
||
|
lesser ability of him who acquires them. And as the fact of a private
|
||
|
individual becoming a prince presupposes either great ability or good
|
||
|
fortune, it would appear that either of these things would mitigate
|
||
|
in part many difficulties. Nevertheless those who have been wanting
|
||
|
as regards good fortune have maintained themselves best. The matter
|
||
|
is also facilitated by the prince being obliged to reside personally
|
||
|
in his territory, having no others. But to come to those who have
|
||
|
become princes through their own merits and not by fortune, I regard
|
||
|
as the greatest, Moses, Cyrus, Romulus, Theseus, and such like. And
|
||
|
although one should not speak of Moses, he having merely carried out
|
||
|
what was ordered him by God, still he deserves admiration, if only
|
||
|
for that grace which made him worthy to speak with God. But regarding
|
||
|
Cyrus and others who have acquired or founded kingdoms, they will all
|
||
|
be found worthy of admiration; and if their particular actions and
|
||
|
methods are examined they will not appear very different from those of
|
||
|
Moses, although he had so great a Master. And in examining their life
|
||
|
and deeds it will be seen that they owed nothing to fortune but the
|
||
|
opportunity which gave them matter to be shaped into the form that they
|
||
|
thought fit; and without that opportunity their powers would have been
|
||
|
wasted, and without their powers the opportunity would have come in
|
||
|
vain. It was thus necessary that Moses should find the people of Israel
|
||
|
slaves in Egypt and oppressed by the Egyptians, so that they were
|
||
|
disposed to follow him in order to escape from their servitude. It was
|
||
|
necessary that Romulus should be unable to remain in Alba, and should
|
||
|
have been exposed at his birth, in order that he might become King of
|
||
|
Rome and founder of that nation. It was necessary that Cyrus should
|
||
|
find the Persians discontented with the empire of the Medes, and the
|
||
|
Medes weak and effeminate through long peace. Theseus could not have
|
||
|
showed his abilities if he had not found the Athenians dispersed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
These opportunities, therefore, gave these men their chance, and their
|
||
|
own great qualities enabled them to profit by them, so as to ennoble
|
||
|
their country and augment its fortunes. Those who by heroic means such
|
||
|
as these become princes, obtain their dominions with difficulty but
|
||
|
retain them easily, and the difficulties which they have in acquiring
|
||
|
their dominions arise in part from the new rules and regulations that
|
||
|
they have to introduce in order to establish their position securely.
|
||
|
It must be considered that there is nothing more difficult to carry
|
||
|
out, nor more doubtful of success, nor more dangerous to handle, than
|
||
|
to initiate a new order of things. For the reformer has enemies in all
|
||
|
those who profit by the old order, and only lukewarm defenders in all
|
||
|
those who would profit by the new order, this lukewarmness arising
|
||
|
partly from fear of their adversaries, who have the laws in their
|
||
|
favour; and partly from the incredulity of mankind, who do not truly
|
||
|
believe in anything new until they have had actual experience of it.
|
||
|
Thus it arises that on every opportunity for attacking the reformer,
|
||
|
his opponents do so with the zeal of partisans, the others only defend
|
||
|
him half-heartedly, so that between them he runs great danger. It is
|
||
|
necessary, however, in order to investigate thoroughly this question,
|
||
|
to examine whether these innovators are independent, or whether they
|
||
|
depend upon others, that is to say, whether in order to carry out
|
||
|
their designs they have to entreat or are able to force. In the first
|
||
|
case they invariably succeed ill, and accomplish nothing; but when
|
||
|
they can depend on their own strength and are able to use force, they
|
||
|
rarely fail. Thus it comes about that all armed prophets have conquered
|
||
|
and unarmed ones failed; for besides what has been already said, the
|
||
|
character of people varies, and it is easy to persuade them of a thing,
|
||
|
but difficult to keep them in that persuasion. And so it is necessary
|
||
|
to order things so that when they no longer believe, they can be made
|
||
|
to believe by force. Moses, Cyrus, Theseus, and Romulus would not have
|
||
|
been able to make their institutions observed for so long had they
|
||
|
been disarmed, as happened in our own time to Fra Girolamo Savonarola,
|
||
|
who failed entirely in his new rules when the multitude began to
|
||
|
disbelieve in him, and he had no means of holding fast those who had
|
||
|
believed nor of compelling the unbelievers to believe. Therefore
|
||
|
such men as these have great difficulty in making their way, and all
|
||
|
their dangers are met on the road and must be overcome by their own
|
||
|
abilities; but when once they have overcome them and have begun to be
|
||
|
held in veneration, and have suppressed those who envied them, they
|
||
|
remain powerful and secure, honoured and happy. To the high examples
|
||
|
given I will add a lesser one, which, however, is to be compared in
|
||
|
some measure with them and will serve as an instance of all such cases,
|
||
|
that of Jerone of Syracuse, who from a private individual became Prince
|
||
|
of Siracusa, without other aid from fortune beyond the opportunity;
|
||
|
for the Siracusans being oppressed elected him as their captain, from
|
||
|
which by merit he was made prince; while still in private life his
|
||
|
virtues were such that it was written of him, that he lacked nothing
|
||
|
to reign but the kingdom. He abolished the old militia, raised a new
|
||
|
one, abandoned his old friendships and formed new ones; and as he had
|
||
|
thus friends and soldiers of his own, he was able on this foundation
|
||
|
to build securely, so that while he had great trouble in acquiring his
|
||
|
position he had little in maintaining it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER VII
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
OF NEW DOMINIONS ACQUIRED BY THE POWER OF OTHERS OR BY FORTUNE
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Those who rise from private citizens to be princes merely by fortune
|
||
|
have little trouble in rising but very much in maintaining their
|
||
|
position. They meet with no difficulties on the way as they fly over
|
||
|
them, but all their difficulties arise when they are established. Such
|
||
|
are they who are granted a state either for money, or by favour of him
|
||
|
who grants it, as happened to many in Greece, in the cities of Ionia
|
||
|
and of the Hellespont, who were created princes by Darius in order to
|
||
|
hold these places for his security and glory; such were also those
|
||
|
emperors who from private citizens became emperors by bribing the
|
||
|
army. Such as these depend absolutely on the good will and fortune of
|
||
|
those who have raised them, both of which are extremely inconstant and
|
||
|
unstable. They neither know how to, nor are in a position to maintain
|
||
|
their rank, for unless he be a man of great genius it is not likely
|
||
|
that one who has always lived in a private position should know how to
|
||
|
command, and they are unable to command because they possess no forces
|
||
|
which will be friendly and faithful to them. Moreover, states quickly
|
||
|
founded, like all other things which are horn and grow rapidly, cannot
|
||
|
have deep roots, so that the first storm destroys them, unless, as
|
||
|
already said, the man who thus becomes a prince is of such great genius
|
||
|
as to be able to take immediate steps for maintaining what fortune
|
||
|
has thrown into his lap, and lay afterwards those foundations which
|
||
|
others make before becoming princes. With regard to these two methods
|
||
|
of becoming a prince,--by ability or by good fortune, I will here
|
||
|
adduce two examples which have taken place within our memory, those of
|
||
|
Francesco Sforza and Cesare Borgia.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Francesco, by appropriate means and through great abilities, from
|
||
|
citizen became Duke of Milan, and what he had attained after a thousand
|
||
|
difficulties he maintained with little trouble. On the other hand,
|
||
|
Cesare Borgia, commonly called Duke Valentine, acquired the state
|
||
|
through the fortune of his father and by the same means lost it, and
|
||
|
that although every measure was adopted by him and everything done
|
||
|
that a prudent and capable man could do to establish himself firmly
|
||
|
in that state that the arms and the favours of others had given him.
|
||
|
For, as we have said, he who does not lay his foundations beforehand
|
||
|
may by great abilities do so afterwards, although with great trouble
|
||
|
to the architect and danger to the building. If, then, one considers
|
||
|
the progress made by the duke, it will be seen how firm were the
|
||
|
foundations he had laid to his future power, which I do not think it
|
||
|
superfluous to examine, as I know of no better precepts for a new
|
||
|
prince to follow than the example of his actions; and if his measures
|
||
|
were not successful, it was through no fault of his own but only by
|
||
|
the most extraordinary malignity of fortune. In wishing to aggrandise
|
||
|
the duke his son, Alexander VI. had to meet very great difficulties
|
||
|
both present and future. In the first place, he saw no way of making
|
||
|
him ruler of any state that was not a possession of the Church. And in
|
||
|
attempting to take that of the Church, he knew that the Duke of Milan
|
||
|
and the Venetians would not consent, because Faenza and Rimini were
|
||
|
already under the protection of the Venetians. He saw, moreover, that
|
||
|
the arms of Italy, especially of those who might have served him, were
|
||
|
in the hands of those who would fear the greatness of the pope, and
|
||
|
therefore he could not depend upon them, being all under the Orsinis
|
||
|
and Colonnas and their adherents. It was, therefore, necessary to
|
||
|
disturb the existing condition and bring about disorders in the states
|
||
|
of Italy in order to obtain secure mastery over a part of them; this
|
||
|
was easy, for he found the Venetians, who, actuated by other motives,
|
||
|
had invited the French into Italy, which he not only did not oppose,
|
||
|
but facilitated by dissolving the marriage of King Louis. The king
|
||
|
came thus into Italy with the aid of the Venetians and the consent of
|
||
|
Alexander, and had hardly arrived at Milan before the pope obtained
|
||
|
troops from him for his enterprise in the Romagna, which he carried out
|
||
|
by means of the reputation of the king. The duke having thus obtained
|
||
|
the Romagna and defeated the Colonnas, was hindered in maintaining it
|
||
|
and proceeding further by two things: the one, his forces, of which he
|
||
|
doubted the fidelity; the other the will of France, that is to say,
|
||
|
he feared lest the arms of the Orsini of which he had availed himself
|
||
|
should fail him, and not only hinder him in obtaining more but take
|
||
|
from him what he had already conquered, and he also feared that the
|
||
|
king might do the same. He had evidence of this as regards the Orsini
|
||
|
when, after taking Faenza, he assaulted Bologna and observed their
|
||
|
backwardness in the assault. And as regards the king, he perceived his
|
||
|
designs when, after taking the dukedom of Urbino, he attacked Tuscany,
|
||
|
and the king made him desist from that enterprise; whereupon the
|
||
|
duke decided to depend no longer on the fortunes and arms of others.
|
||
|
The first thing he did was to weaken the parties of the Orsinis and
|
||
|
Colonnas in Rome by gaining all their adherents who were gentlemen and
|
||
|
making them followers of himself, by granting them large pensions,
|
||
|
and appointing them to commands and offices according to their rank,
|
||
|
so that their attachment to their parties was extinguished in a few
|
||
|
months, and entirely concentrated on the duke. After this he awaited an
|
||
|
opportunity for crushing the Orsinis, having dispersed the adherents of
|
||
|
the Colonna family, and when the opportunity arrived he made good use
|
||
|
of it, for the Orsini seeing at length that the greatness of the duke
|
||
|
and of the Church meant their own ruin, convoked a diet at Magione in
|
||
|
the Perugino. Hence sprang the rebellion of Urbino and the tumults in
|
||
|
Romagna and infinite dangers to the duke, who overcame them all with
|
||
|
the help of the French; and having regained his reputation, neither
|
||
|
trusting France nor other foreign forces in order not to have to oppose
|
||
|
them, he had recourse to stratagem. He dissembled his aims so well that
|
||
|
the Orsini, through the mediation of Signor Pavolo, made their peace
|
||
|
with him, which the duke spared no efforts to make secure, presenting
|
||
|
them with robes, money, and horses, so that in their simplicity they
|
||
|
were induced to come to Sinigaglia and fell into his hands. Having
|
||
|
thus suppressed these leaders and made their partisans his friends,
|
||
|
the duke had laid a very good foundation to his power, having all the
|
||
|
Romagna with the duchy of Urbino, and having gained the favour of
|
||
|
the inhabitants, who began to feel the benefit of his rule. And as
|
||
|
this part is worthy of note and of imitation by others, I will not
|
||
|
omit mention of it. When he took the Romagna, it had previously been
|
||
|
governed by weak rulers, who had rather despoiled their subjects than
|
||
|
governed them, and given them more cause for disunion than for union,
|
||
|
so that the province was a prey to robbery, assaults, and every kind
|
||
|
of disorder. He, therefore, judged it necessary to give them a good
|
||
|
government in order to make them peaceful and obedient to his rule.
|
||
|
For this purpose he appointed Messer Remiro d' Orco, a cruel and able
|
||
|
man, to whom he gave the fullest authority. This man, in a short time,
|
||
|
was highly successful in rendering the country orderly and united,
|
||
|
whereupon the duke, not deeming such excessive authority expedient,
|
||
|
lest it should become hateful, appointed a civil court of justice in
|
||
|
the middle of the province under an excellent president, to which each
|
||
|
city appointed its own advocate. And as he knew that the harshness of
|
||
|
the past had engendered some amount of hatred, in order to purge the
|
||
|
minds of the people and to win them over completely, he resolved to
|
||
|
show that if any cruelty had taken place it was not by his orders, but
|
||
|
through the harsh disposition of his minister. And taking him on some
|
||
|
pretext, he had him placed one morning in the public square at Cesena,
|
||
|
cut in half, with a piece of wood and blood-stained knife by his side.
|
||
|
The ferocity of this spectacle caused the people both satisfaction and
|
||
|
amazement. But to return to where we left off.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The duke being now powerful and partly secured against present perils,
|
||
|
being armed himself, and having in a great measure put down those
|
||
|
neighbouring forces which might injure him, had now to get the respect
|
||
|
of France, if he wished to proceed with his acquisitions, for he
|
||
|
knew that the king, who had lately discovered his error, would not
|
||
|
give him any help. He began therefore to seek fresh alliances and to
|
||
|
vacillate with France in the expedition that the French made towards
|
||
|
the kingdom of Naples against the Spaniards, who were besieging Gaeta.
|
||
|
His intention was to assure himself of them, which he would soon have
|
||
|
succeeded in doing if Alexander had lived. These were the measures
|
||
|
taken by him with regard to the present. As to the future, he feared
|
||
|
that a new successor to the Church might not be friendly to him and
|
||
|
might seek to deprive him of what Alexander had given him, and he
|
||
|
sought to provide against this in four ways. Firstly, by destroying all
|
||
|
who were of the blood of those ruling families which he had despoiled,
|
||
|
in order to deprive the pope of any opportunity. Secondly, by gaining
|
||
|
the friendship of the Roman nobles, so that he might through them hold
|
||
|
as it were the pope in check. Thirdly, by obtaining as great a hold on
|
||
|
the College as he could. Fourthly, by acquiring such power before the
|
||
|
pope died as to be able to resist alone the first onslaught. Of these
|
||
|
four things he had at the death of Alexander accomplished three, and
|
||
|
the fourth he had almost accomplished.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For of the dispossessed rulers he killed as many as he could lay hands
|
||
|
on, and very few escaped; he had gained to his party the Roman nobles;
|
||
|
and he had a great share in the College. As to new possessions, he
|
||
|
designed to become lord of Tuscany, and already possessed Perugia and
|
||
|
Piombino, and had assumed the protectorate over Pisa; and as he had
|
||
|
no longer to fear the French (for the French had been deprived of the
|
||
|
kingdom of Naples by the Spaniards in such a way that both parties
|
||
|
were obliged to buy his friendship) he seized Pisa. After this, Lucca
|
||
|
and Siena at once yielded, partly through envy of the Florentines and
|
||
|
partly through fear; the Florentines had no resources, so that, had he
|
||
|
succeeded as he had done before, in the very year that Alexander died
|
||
|
he would have gained such strength and renown as to be able to maintain
|
||
|
himself without depending on the fortunes or strength of others, but
|
||
|
solely by his own power and ability. But Alexander died five years
|
||
|
after he had first drawn his sword. He left him with the state of
|
||
|
Romagna only firmly established, and all the other schemes in mid-air,
|
||
|
between two very powerful and hostile armies, and suffering from a
|
||
|
fatal illness. But the valour and ability of the duke were such, and
|
||
|
he knew so well how to win over men or vanquish them, and so strong
|
||
|
were the foundations that he had laid in this short time, that if he
|
||
|
had not had those two armies upon him, or else had been in good health,
|
||
|
he would have survived every difficulty. And that his foundations were
|
||
|
good is seen from the fact that the Romagna waited for him more than a
|
||
|
month; in Rome, although half dead, he remained secure, and although
|
||
|
the Baglioni, Vitelli, and Orsini entered Rome they found no followers
|
||
|
against him. He was able, if not to make pope whom he wished, at any
|
||
|
rate to prevent a pope being created whom he did not wish. But if at
|
||
|
the death of Alexander he had been well everything would have been
|
||
|
easy. And he told me on the day that Pope Julius II. was created,
|
||
|
that he had thought of everything which might happen on the death of
|
||
|
his father, and provided against everything, except that he had never
|
||
|
thought that at his father's death he would be dying himself. Reviewing
|
||
|
thus all the actions of the duke, I find nothing to blame, on the
|
||
|
contrary, I feel bound, as I have done, to hold him up as an example
|
||
|
to be imitated by all who by fortune and with the arms of others have
|
||
|
risen to power. For with his great courage and high ambition he could
|
||
|
not have acted otherwise, and his designs were only frustrated by the
|
||
|
short life of Alexander and his own illness.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Whoever, therefore, deems it necessary in his new principality to
|
||
|
secure himself against enemies, to gain friends, to conquer by force
|
||
|
or fraud, to make himself beloved and feared by the people, followed
|
||
|
and reverenced by the soldiers, to destroy those who can and may injure
|
||
|
him, introduce innovations into old customs, to be severe and kind,
|
||
|
magnanimous and liberal, suppress the old militia, create a new one,
|
||
|
maintain the friendship of kings and princes in such a way that they
|
||
|
are glad to benefit him and fear to injure him, such a one can find no
|
||
|
better example than the actions of this man. The only thing he can be
|
||
|
accused of is that in the creation of Julius II. he made a bad choice;
|
||
|
for, as has been said, not being able to choose his own pope, he could
|
||
|
still prevent any one being made pope, and he ought never to have
|
||
|
permitted any of those cardinals to be raised to the papacy whom he had
|
||
|
injured, or who when pope would stand in fear of him. For men commit
|
||
|
injuries either through fear or through hate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Those whom he had injured were, among others, San Pietro ad Vincula,
|
||
|
Colonna, San Giorgio, and Ascanio. All the others, if assumed to the
|
||
|
pontificate, would have had to fear him except Rohan and the Spaniards;
|
||
|
the latter through their relationship and obligations to him, the
|
||
|
former from his great power, being related to the King of France.
|
||
|
For these reasons the duke ought above all things to have created a
|
||
|
Spaniard pope; and if unable to, then he should have consented to Rohan
|
||
|
being appointed and not San Pietro ad Vincula. And whoever thinks that
|
||
|
in high personages new benefits cause old offences to be forgotten,
|
||
|
makes a great mistake. The duke, therefore, erred in this choice, and
|
||
|
it was the cause of his ultimate ruin.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER VIII
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
OF THOSE WHO HAVE ATTAINED THE POSITION OF PRINCE BY VILLAINY
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
But as there are still two ways of becoming prince which cannot be
|
||
|
attributed entirely either to fortune or to ability, they must not be
|
||
|
passed over, although one of them could be more fully discussed if we
|
||
|
were treating of republics. These are when one becomes prince by some
|
||
|
nefarious or villainous means, or when a private citizen becomes the
|
||
|
prince of his country through the favour of his fellow-citizens. And in
|
||
|
speaking of the former means, I will give two examples, one ancient,
|
||
|
the other modern, without entering further into the merits of this
|
||
|
method, as I judge them to be sufficient for any one obliged to imitate
|
||
|
them. Agathocles the Sicilian rose not only from private life but from
|
||
|
the lowest and most abject position to be King of Syracuse. The son
|
||
|
of a potter, he led a life of the utmost wickedness through all the
|
||
|
stages of his fortune. Nevertheless, his wickedness was accompanied
|
||
|
by such vigour of mind and body that, having joined the militia, he
|
||
|
rose through all its grades to be prætor of Syracuse. Having been
|
||
|
appointed to this position, and having decided to become prince, and
|
||
|
to hold with violence and without the support of others that which
|
||
|
had been granted him; and having imparted his design to Hamilcar the
|
||
|
Carthaginian, who with his armies was fighting in Sicily, he called
|
||
|
together one morning the people and senate of Syracuse, as if he had
|
||
|
to deliberate on matters of importance to the republic, and at a given
|
||
|
signal had all the senators and the richest men of the people killed by
|
||
|
his soldiers; after their death he occupied and held rule over the city
|
||
|
without any civil disorders. And although he was twice beaten by the
|
||
|
Carthaginians and ultimately besieged, he was able not only to defend
|
||
|
the city, but leaving a portion of his forces for its defence, with the
|
||
|
remainder he invaded Africa, and in a short time liberated Syracuse
|
||
|
from the siege and brought the Carthaginians to great extremities, so
|
||
|
that they were obliged to come to terms with him, and remain contented
|
||
|
with the possession of Africa, leaving Sicily to Agathocles. Whoever
|
||
|
considers, therefore, the actions and qualities of this man, will see
|
||
|
few if any things which can be attributed to fortune; for, as above
|
||
|
stated, it was not by the favour of any person, but through the grades
|
||
|
of the militia, which he had gained with a thousand hardships and
|
||
|
perils, that he arrived at the position of prince, which he afterwards
|
||
|
maintained by so many courageous and perilous expedients. It cannot be
|
||
|
called a virtue to kill one's fellow-citizens, betray one's friends,
|
||
|
be without faith, without pity, and without religion, by which methods
|
||
|
one may indeed gain an empire, but not glory. For if the virtues of
|
||
|
Agathocles in braving and overcoming perils, and his greatness of soul
|
||
|
in supporting and surmounting obstacles be considered, one sees no
|
||
|
reason for holding him inferior to any of the most renowned captains.
|
||
|
Nevertheless his barbarous cruelty and inhumanity, together with his
|
||
|
countless atrocities, do not permit of his being named among the
|
||
|
most famous men. We cannot attribute to fortune or merit that which
|
||
|
he achieved without either. In our own times, during the reign of
|
||
|
Alexander VI., Oliverotto du Fermo had been left a young boy under the
|
||
|
care of his maternal uncle, Giovanni Fogliani, who brought him up, and
|
||
|
sent him in early youth to fight under Paolo Vitelli, in order that he
|
||
|
might, under that discipline, obtain a good military position. On the
|
||
|
death of Paolo he fought under his brother Vitellozzo, and in a very
|
||
|
short time, being of great intelligence, and active in mind and body,
|
||
|
he became one of the leaders of his troops. But deeming it servile to
|
||
|
be under others, he resolved, with the help of some citizens of Fermo,
|
||
|
who preferred servitude to the liberty of their country, and with the
|
||
|
favour of the Vitellis, to occupy Fermo; he therefore wrote to Giovanni
|
||
|
Fogliani, how, having been for many years away from home, he wished
|
||
|
to come to see him and his city, and in some measure to revisit his
|
||
|
estates. And as he had only laboured to gain honour, in order that
|
||
|
his fellow-citizens might see that he had not spent his time in vain,
|
||
|
he wished to come honourably accompanied by one hundred horsemen, his
|
||
|
friends and followers, and prayed him that he would be pleased to
|
||
|
order that he should be received with honour by the citizens of Fermo,
|
||
|
by which he would honour not only him, Oliverotto, but also himself,
|
||
|
as he had been his pupil. Giovanni did not fail in any duty towards
|
||
|
his nephew; he caused him to be honourably received by the people of
|
||
|
Fermo, and lodged him in his own houses. After waiting some days to
|
||
|
arrange all that was necessary to his villainous projects, Oliverotto
|
||
|
invited Giovanni Fogliani and all the principal men of Fermo to a
|
||
|
grand banquet. After the dinner and the entertainments usual at such
|
||
|
feasts, Oliverotto artfully introduced certain important matters of
|
||
|
discussion, speaking of the greatness of Pope Alexander, and of his
|
||
|
son Cesare, and of their enterprises. To which discourses Giovanni
|
||
|
and others having replied, he all at once rose, saying that these
|
||
|
matters should be spoken of in a more secret place, and withdrew into
|
||
|
a room where Giovanni and the other citizens followed him. They were
|
||
|
no sooner seated than soldiers rushed out of hiding-places and killed
|
||
|
Giovanni and all the others. After which massacre Oliverotto mounted
|
||
|
his horse, rode through the town and besieged the chief magistrate in
|
||
|
his palace, so that through fear they were obliged to obey him and form
|
||
|
a government, of which he made himself prince. And all those being
|
||
|
dead who, if discontented, could injure him, he fortified himself
|
||
|
with new orders, civil and military, in such a way that within the
|
||
|
year that he held the principality he was not only safe himself in
|
||
|
the city of Fermo, but had become formidable to all his neighbours.
|
||
|
And his overthrow would have been difficult, like that of Agathocles,
|
||
|
if he had not allowed himself to be deceived by Cesare Borgia, when
|
||
|
he besieged the Orsinis and Vitellis at Sinigaglia, as already
|
||
|
related, where he also was taken, one year after the parricide he had
|
||
|
committed, and strangled, together with Vitellozzo, who had been his
|
||
|
teacher in ability and atrocity. Some may wonder how it came about
|
||
|
that Agathocles, and others like him, could, after infinite treachery
|
||
|
and cruelty, live secure for many years in their country and defend
|
||
|
themselves from external enemies without being conspired against by
|
||
|
their subjects; although many others have, through their cruelty, been
|
||
|
unable to maintain their position in times of peace, not to speak of
|
||
|
the uncertain times of war.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I believe this arises from the cruelties being used well or badly.
|
||
|
Well used may be called those (if it is permissible to use the word
|
||
|
well of evil) which are committed once for the need of securing one's
|
||
|
self, and which afterwards are not persisted in, but are exchanged for
|
||
|
measures as useful to the subjects as possible. Cruelties ill used
|
||
|
are those which, although at first few, increase rather than diminish
|
||
|
with time. Those who follow the former method may remedy in some
|
||
|
measure their condition, both with God and man; as did Agathocles.
|
||
|
As to the others, it is impossible for them to maintain themselves.
|
||
|
Whence it is to be noted, that in taking a state the conqueror must
|
||
|
arrange to commit all his cruelties at once, so as not to have to recur
|
||
|
to them every day, and so as to be able, by not making fresh changes,
|
||
|
to reassure people and win them over by benefiting them. Whoever acts
|
||
|
otherwise, either through timidity or bad counsels, is always obliged
|
||
|
to stand with knife in hand, and can never depend on his subjects,
|
||
|
because they, through continually fresh injuries, are unable to depend
|
||
|
upon him. For injuries should be done all together, so that being less
|
||
|
tasted, they will give less offence. Benefits should be granted little
|
||
|
by little, so that they may be better enjoyed. And above all, a prince
|
||
|
must live with his subjects in such a way that no accident should make
|
||
|
him change it, for good or evil; for necessity arising in adverse
|
||
|
times, you are not in time with severity, and the good that you do does
|
||
|
not profit you, as it is judged to be forced, and you will derive no
|
||
|
benefit whatever from it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER IX
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
OF THE CIVIC PRINCIPALITY
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
But we now come to the case where a citizen becomes prince not
|
||
|
through crime or intolerable violence, but by the favour of his
|
||
|
fellow-citizens, which may be called a civic principality. To arrive
|
||
|
at this position depends not entirely on worth or entirely on fortune,
|
||
|
but rather on cunning assisted by fortune. One attains it by help of
|
||
|
popular favour or by the favour of the aristocracy. For in every city
|
||
|
these two opposite parties are to be found, arising from the desire
|
||
|
of the populace to avoid the oppression of the great, and the desire
|
||
|
of the great to command and oppress the people. And from these two
|
||
|
opposing interests arises in the city one of three effects: either
|
||
|
absolute government, liberty, or license. The former is created either
|
||
|
by the populace or the nobility depending on the relative opportunities
|
||
|
of the two parties; for when the nobility see that they are unable to
|
||
|
resist the people they unite in creating one of their number prince,
|
||
|
so as to be able to carry out their own designs under the shadow of
|
||
|
his authority. The populace, on the other hand, when unable to resist
|
||
|
the nobility, endeavour to create a prince in order to be protected
|
||
|
by his authority. He who becomes prince by help of the nobility has
|
||
|
greater difficulty in maintaining his power than he who is raised by
|
||
|
the populace, for he is surrounded by those who think themselves his
|
||
|
equals, and is thus unable to direct or command as he pleases. But one
|
||
|
who is raised to the leadership by popular favour finds himself alone,
|
||
|
and has no one or very few who are not ready to obey him. Besides
|
||
|
which, it is impossible to satisfy the nobility by fair dealing and
|
||
|
without inflicting injury on others, whereas it is very easy to satisfy
|
||
|
the mass of the people in this way. For the aim of the people is more
|
||
|
honest than that of the nobility, the latter desiring to oppress, and
|
||
|
the former merely to avoid oppression. It must also be added that the
|
||
|
prince can never insure himself against a hostile populace on account
|
||
|
of their number, but he can against the hostility of the great, as
|
||
|
they are but few. The worst that a prince has to expect from a hostile
|
||
|
people is to be abandoned, but from hostile nobles he has to fear not
|
||
|
only abandonment but their active opposition, and as they are more
|
||
|
farseeing and more cunning, they are always in time to save themselves
|
||
|
and take sides with the one who they expect will conquer. The prince
|
||
|
is, moreover, obliged to live always with the same people, but he can
|
||
|
easily do without the same nobility, being able to make and unmake them
|
||
|
at any time, and increase their position or deprive them of it as he
|
||
|
pleases. And to throw further light on this part, I would say, that the
|
||
|
nobles are to be considered in two different manners; that is, they are
|
||
|
either to be ruled so as to make them entirely depend on your fortunes,
|
||
|
or else not. Those that are thus bound to you and are not rapacious,
|
||
|
must be honoured and loved; those who are not bound must be considered
|
||
|
in two ways, they either do this through pusillanimity and natural
|
||
|
want of courage, and in this case you ought to make use of them, and
|
||
|
especially such as are of good counsel, so that they may honour you in
|
||
|
prosperity and in adversity you have not to fear them. But when they
|
||
|
are not bound to you of set purpose and for ambitious ends, it is a
|
||
|
sign that they think more of themselves than of you; and from such men
|
||
|
the prince must guard himself and look upon them as secret enemies,
|
||
|
who will help to ruin him when in adversity. One, however, who becomes
|
||
|
prince by favour of the populace, must maintain its friendship, which
|
||
|
he will find easy, the people asking nothing but not to be oppressed.
|
||
|
But one who against the people's wishes becomes prince by favour of
|
||
|
the nobles, should above all endeavour to gain the favour of the
|
||
|
people; this will be easy to him if he protects them. And as men, who
|
||
|
receive good from those they expected evil from, feel under a greater
|
||
|
obligation to their benefactor, so the subject populace will become
|
||
|
even better disposed towards him than if he had become prince through
|
||
|
their favour. The prince can win their favour in many ways, which vary
|
||
|
according to circumstances, for which no certain rule can be given, and
|
||
|
will therefore be passed over.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I will only say, in conclusion, that it is necessary for a prince to
|
||
|
possess the friendship of the people; otherwise he has no resource in
|
||
|
times of adversity. Nabis, prince of the Spartans, sustained a siege by
|
||
|
the whole of Greece and a victorious Roman army, and defended against
|
||
|
them his country and maintained his own position. It sufficed when the
|
||
|
danger arose for him to make sure of a few, which would not have been
|
||
|
enough if the populace had been hostile to him. And let no one oppose
|
||
|
my opinion in this by quoting the trite proverb, "He who builds on the
|
||
|
people, builds on mud"; because that is true when a private citizen
|
||
|
relies upon the people and persuades himself that they will liberate
|
||
|
him if he is oppressed by enemies or by the magistrates; in this case
|
||
|
he might often find himself deceived, as happened in Rome to the
|
||
|
Gracchi and in Florence to Messer Georgio Scali.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But when it is a prince who founds himself on this basis, one who
|
||
|
can command and is a man of courage, and does not get frightened in
|
||
|
adversity, and does not neglect other preparations, and one who by his
|
||
|
own courage and measures animates the mass of the people, he will not
|
||
|
find himself deceived by them, and he will find that he has laid his
|
||
|
foundations well. Usually these principalities are in danger when the
|
||
|
prince from the position of a civil ruler changes to an absolute one,
|
||
|
for these princes either command themselves or by means of magistrates.
|
||
|
In the latter case their position is weaker and more dangerous, for
|
||
|
they are at the mercy of those citizens who are appointed magistrates,
|
||
|
who can, especially in times of adversity, with great facility deprive
|
||
|
them of their position, either by acting against them or by not obeying
|
||
|
them. The prince is not in time, in such dangers, to assume absolute
|
||
|
authority, for the citizens and subjects who are accustomed to take
|
||
|
their orders from the magistrates are not ready in these emergencies
|
||
|
to obey his, and he will always in doubtful times lack men whom he can
|
||
|
rely on. Such a prince cannot base himself on what he sees in quiet
|
||
|
times, when the citizens have need of the state; for then every one is
|
||
|
full of promises and each one is ready to die for him when death is
|
||
|
far off; but in adversity, when the state has need of citizens, then
|
||
|
he will find but few. And this experience is the more dangerous, in
|
||
|
that it can only be had once. Therefore a wise prince will seek means
|
||
|
by which his subjects will always and in every possible condition
|
||
|
of things have need of his government, and then they will always be
|
||
|
faithful to him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER X
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
HOW THE STRENGTH OF ALL STATES SHOULD BE MEASURED
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
In examining the character of these principalities it is necessary to
|
||
|
consider another point, namely, whether the prince has such a position
|
||
|
as to be able in case of need to maintain himself alone, or whether he
|
||
|
has always need of the protection of others. The better to explain this
|
||
|
I would say, that I consider those capable of maintaining themselves
|
||
|
alone who can, through abundance of men or money, put together a
|
||
|
sufficient army, and hold the field against any one who assails them;
|
||
|
and I consider to have need of others, those who cannot take the
|
||
|
field against their enemies, but are obliged to take refuge within
|
||
|
their walls and stand on the defensive. We have already discussed the
|
||
|
former case and will speak in future of it as occasion arises. In
|
||
|
the second case there is nothing to be said except to encourage such
|
||
|
a prince to provision and fortify his own town, and not to trouble
|
||
|
about the country. And whoever has strongly fortified his town and,
|
||
|
as regards the government of his subjects, has proceeded as we have
|
||
|
already described and will further relate, will be attacked with great
|
||
|
reluctance, for men are always averse to enterprises in which they
|
||
|
foresee difficulties, and it can never appear easy to attack one who
|
||
|
has his town well guarded and is not hated by the people. The cities
|
||
|
of Germany are extremely liberal, have little surrounding country, and
|
||
|
obey the emperor when they choose, and they do not fear him or any
|
||
|
other potentate that they have about them. They are fortified in such
|
||
|
a manner that every one thinks that to reduce them would be tedious
|
||
|
and difficult, for they all have the necessary moats and bastions,
|
||
|
sufficient artillery, and always keep in the public storehouses food
|
||
|
and drink and fuel for one year. Beyond which, to keep the lower
|
||
|
classes satisfied, and without loss to the public, they have always
|
||
|
enough means to give them work for one year in these employments which
|
||
|
form the nerve and life of the town, and in the industries by which the
|
||
|
lower classes live; military exercises are still held in reputation,
|
||
|
and many regulations are in force for maintaining them. A prince,
|
||
|
therefore, who possesses a strong city and does not make himself hated,
|
||
|
cannot be assaulted; and if he were to be so, the assailant would
|
||
|
be obliged to retire shamefully; for so many things change, that it
|
||
|
is almost impossible for any one to hold the field for a year with
|
||
|
his armies idle. And to those who urge that the people, having their
|
||
|
possessions outside and seeing them burnt, will not have patience, and
|
||
|
the long siege and self-interest will make them forget their prince,
|
||
|
I reply that a powerful and courageous prince will always overcome
|
||
|
those difficulties by now raising the hopes of his subjects that the
|
||
|
evils will not last long, now impressing them with fear of the enemy's
|
||
|
cruelty, now by dextrously assuring himself of those who appear too
|
||
|
bold. Besides which, the enemy would naturally burn and ruin the
|
||
|
country on first arriving and in the time when men's minds are still
|
||
|
hot and eager to defend themselves, and therefore the prince has still
|
||
|
less to fear, for after some days, when people have cooled down, the
|
||
|
damage is done, the evil has been suffered, and there is no remedy, so
|
||
|
that they are the more ready to unite with their prince, as it appears
|
||
|
that he is under an obligation to them, their houses having been burnt
|
||
|
and their possessions ruined in his defence.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It is the nature of men to be us much bound by the benefits that they
|
||
|
confer as by those they receive. From which it follows that, everything
|
||
|
considered, a prudent prince will not find it difficult to uphold the
|
||
|
courage of his subjects both at the commencement and during a state of
|
||
|
siege, if he possesses provisions and means to defend himself.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XI
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
OF ECCLESIASTICAL PRINCIPALITIES
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
It now remains to us only to speak of ecclesiastical principalities,
|
||
|
with regard to which the difficulties lie wholly before they are
|
||
|
possessed. They are acquired either by ability or by fortune; but
|
||
|
are maintained without either, for they are sustained by the ancient
|
||
|
religious customs, which are so powerful and of such quality, that they
|
||
|
keep their princes in power in whatever manner they proceed and live.
|
||
|
These alone have a state without defending it, have subjects without
|
||
|
governing them, and the states, not being defended, are not taken from
|
||
|
them; the subjects not being governed do not disturb themselves, and
|
||
|
neither think of nor are capable of alienating themselves from them.
|
||
|
Only these principalities, therefore, are secure and happy. But as they
|
||
|
are upheld by higher causes, which the human mind cannot attain to, I
|
||
|
will abstain from speaking of them; for being exalted and maintained by
|
||
|
God, it would be the work of a presumptuous and foolish man to discuss
|
||
|
them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
However, I might be asked how it has come about that the Church has
|
||
|
reached such great temporal power, when, previous to Alexander VI.,
|
||
|
the Italian potentates,--and not merely the really powerful ones, but
|
||
|
every lord or baron, however insignificant, held it in slight esteem
|
||
|
as regards temporal power; whereas now it is dreaded by a king of
|
||
|
France, whom it has been able to drive out of Italy, and has also been
|
||
|
able to ruin the Venetians. Therefore, although this is well known, I
|
||
|
do not think it superfluous to call it to mind. Before Charles, King
|
||
|
of France, came into Italy, this country was under the rule of the
|
||
|
pope, the Venetians, the King of Naples, the Duke of Milan, and the
|
||
|
Florentines. These potentates had to have two chief cares: one, that no
|
||
|
foreigner should enter Italy by force of arms, the other that none of
|
||
|
the existing governments should extend its dominions. Those chiefly to
|
||
|
be watched were the pope and the Venetians. To keep back the Venetians
|
||
|
required the ruin of all the others, as in the defence of Ferrara,
|
||
|
and to keep down the pope they made use of the Roman barons. These
|
||
|
were divided into two factions, the Orsinis and the Colonnas, and as
|
||
|
there was constant quarrelling between them, and they were constantly
|
||
|
under arms, before the eyes of the pope, they kept the papacy weak and
|
||
|
infirm. And although there arose now and then a resolute pope like
|
||
|
Sextus, yet his fortune or ability was never able to liberate him from
|
||
|
these evils. The shortness of their life was the reason of this, for
|
||
|
in the course of ten years which, as a general rule, a pope lived, he
|
||
|
had great difficulty in suppressing even one of the factions, and if,
|
||
|
for example, a pope had almost put down the Colonnas, a new pope would
|
||
|
succeed who was hostile to the Orsinis, which caused the Colonnas to
|
||
|
spring up again, and he was not in time to suppress them. This caused
|
||
|
the temporal power of the pope to be of little esteem in Italy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Then arose Alexander VI. who of all the pontiffs who have ever
|
||
|
reigned, best showed how a pope might prevail both by money and by
|
||
|
force. With Duke Valentine as his instrument, and on the occasion of
|
||
|
the French invasion, he did all that I have previously described
|
||
|
in speaking of the actions of the duke. And although his object was
|
||
|
to aggrandise not the Church but the duke, what he did resulted in
|
||
|
the aggrandisement of the Church, which after the death of the duke
|
||
|
became the heir of his labours. Then came Pope Julius, who found
|
||
|
the Church powerful, possessing all Romagna, all the Roman barons
|
||
|
suppressed, and the factions destroyed by the severity of Alexander.
|
||
|
He also found the way open for accumulating wealth in ways never used
|
||
|
before the time of Alexander. These measures were not only followed
|
||
|
by Julius, but increased; he resolved to gain Bologna, put down the
|
||
|
Venetians and drive the French from Italy, in all which enterprises
|
||
|
he was successful. He merits the greater praise, as he did everything
|
||
|
to increase the power of the Church and not of any private person. He
|
||
|
also kept the Orsini and Colonna parties in the conditions in which he
|
||
|
found them, and although there were some leaders among them who might
|
||
|
have made changes, there were two things that kept them steady: one,
|
||
|
the greatness of the Church, which they dreaded; the other, the fact
|
||
|
that they had no cardinals, who are the origin of the tumults among
|
||
|
them. For these parties are never at rest when they have cardinals,
|
||
|
for these stir up the parties both within Rome and outside, and the
|
||
|
barons are forced to defend them. Thus from the ambitions of prelates
|
||
|
arise the discords and tumults among the barons. His holiness, Pope Leo
|
||
|
X., therefore, has found the pontificate in a very powerful condition,
|
||
|
from which it is hoped, that as those popes made it great by force of
|
||
|
armies, so he through his goodness and infinite other virtues will make
|
||
|
it both great and venerated.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XII
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE DIFFERENT KINDS OF MILITIA AND MERCENARY SOLDIERS
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Having now discussed fully the qualities of these principalities of
|
||
|
which I proposed to treat, and partially considered the causes of their
|
||
|
prosperity or failure, and having also showed the methods by which
|
||
|
many have sought to obtain such states, it now remains for me to treat
|
||
|
generally of the methods of attack and defence that can be used in
|
||
|
each of them. We have said already how necessary it is for a prince
|
||
|
to have his foundations good, otherwise he is certain to be ruined.
|
||
|
The chief foundations of all states, whether new, old, or mixed, are
|
||
|
good laws and good arms. And as there cannot be good laws where there
|
||
|
are not good arms, and where there are good arms there should be good
|
||
|
laws, I will not now discuss the laws, but will speak of the arms. I
|
||
|
say, therefore, that the arms by which a prince defends his possessions
|
||
|
are either his own, or else mercenaries, or auxiliaries, or mixed. The
|
||
|
mercenaries and auxiliaries are useless and dangerous, and if any one
|
||
|
keeps his state based on the arms of mercenaries, he will never stand
|
||
|
firm or sure, as they are disunited, ambitious, without discipline,
|
||
|
faithless, bold amongst friends, cowardly amongst enemies, they have no
|
||
|
fear of God, and keep no faith with men. Ruin is only deferred as long
|
||
|
as the assault is postponed; in peace you are despoiled by them, and in
|
||
|
war by the enemy. The cause of this is that they have no love or other
|
||
|
motive to keep them in the field beyond a trifling wage, which is not
|
||
|
enough to make them ready to die for you. They are quite willing to be
|
||
|
your soldiers so long as you do not make war, but when war comes, it is
|
||
|
either fly or be off. I ought to have little trouble in proving this,
|
||
|
since the ruin of Italy is now caused by nothing else but through her
|
||
|
having relied for many years on mercenary arms. These were somewhat
|
||
|
improved in a few cases, and appeared courageous among themselves, but
|
||
|
when the foreigner came they showed their worthlessness. Thus it came
|
||
|
about that King Charles of France was allowed to take Italy without the
|
||
|
slightest trouble, and those who said that it was owing to our sins,
|
||
|
spoke the truth, but it was not the sins that they believed but those
|
||
|
that I have related. And as it was the sins of princes, they too have
|
||
|
suffered the punishment. I will explain more fully the defects of these
|
||
|
arms. Mercenary captains are either very capable men or not; if they
|
||
|
are, you cannot rely upon them, for they will always aspire to their
|
||
|
own greatness, either by oppressing you, their master, or by oppressing
|
||
|
others against your intentions; but if the captain is not an able man,
|
||
|
he will generally ruin you. And if it is replied to this, that whoever
|
||
|
has armed forces will do the same, whether these are mercenary or not,
|
||
|
I would reply that as armies are to be used either by a prince or by a
|
||
|
republic, the prince must go in person to take the position of captain,
|
||
|
and the republic must send its own citizens. If the one sent turns,
|
||
|
out incompetent, it must change him; and if capable, keep him by law
|
||
|
from going beyond the proper limits. And it is seen by experience that
|
||
|
only princes and armed republics make very great progress, whereas
|
||
|
mercenary forces do nothing but damage, and also an armed republic
|
||
|
submits less easily to the rule of one of its citizens than a republic
|
||
|
armed by foreign forces. Rome and Sparta were for many centuries well
|
||
|
armed and free. The Swiss are well armed and enjoy great freedom. As an
|
||
|
example of mercenary armies in antiquity there are the Carthaginians,
|
||
|
who were oppressed by their mercenary soldiers, after the termination
|
||
|
of the first war with the Romans, even while they still had their own
|
||
|
citizens as captains. Philip of Macedon was made captain of their
|
||
|
forces by the Thebans after the death of Epaminondas, and after gaining
|
||
|
the victory he deprived them of liberty. The Milanese, on the death
|
||
|
of Duke Philip, hired Francesco Sforza against the Venetians, who
|
||
|
having overcome the enemy at Caravaggio, allied himself with them to
|
||
|
oppress the Milanese his employers. The father of this Sforza, being
|
||
|
a soldier in the service of the Queen Giovanna of Naples, left her
|
||
|
suddenly unarmed, by which she was compelled, in order not to lose the
|
||
|
kingdom, to throw herself into the arms of the King of Aragon. And
|
||
|
if the Venetians and Florentines have in times past increased their
|
||
|
dominions by means of such forces, and their captains have not made
|
||
|
themselves princes but have defended them, I reply that the Florentines
|
||
|
in this case have been favoured by chance, for of the capable leaders
|
||
|
whom they might have feared, some did not conquer, some met with
|
||
|
opposition, and others directed their ambition elsewhere. The one who
|
||
|
did not conquer was Sir John Hawkwood, whose fidelity could not be
|
||
|
known as he was not victorious, but every one will admit that, had he
|
||
|
conquered, the Florentines would have been at his mercy. Sforza had
|
||
|
always the Bracceschi against him, they being constantly at enmity.
|
||
|
Francesco directed his ambition towards Lombardy; Braccio against the
|
||
|
Church and the kingdom of Naples. But let us look at what followed a
|
||
|
short time ago. The Florentines appointed Paolo Vitelli their captain,
|
||
|
a man of great prudence, who had risen from a private station to the
|
||
|
highest reputation. If he had taken Pisa no one can deny that it was
|
||
|
highly important for the Florentines to retain his friendship, because
|
||
|
had he become the soldier of their enemies they would have had no
|
||
|
means of opposing him; and in order to retain him they would have been
|
||
|
obliged to obey him. As to the Venetians, if one considers the progress
|
||
|
they made, it will be seen that they acted surely and gloriously so
|
||
|
long as they made war with their own forces; that it was before they
|
||
|
commenced their enterprises on land that they fought courageously with
|
||
|
their own gentlemen and armed populace, but when they began to fight
|
||
|
on land they abandoned this virtue, and began to follow the Italian
|
||
|
custom. And at the commencement of their land conquests they had not
|
||
|
much to fear from their captains, their land possessions not being
|
||
|
very large, and their reputation being great, but as their possessions
|
||
|
increased, as they did under Carmagnola, they had an example of their
|
||
|
mistake. For seeing that he was very powerful, after he had defeated
|
||
|
the Duke of Milan, and knowing, on the other hand, that he was not
|
||
|
enterprising in warfare, they considered that they would not make any
|
||
|
more conquests with him, and they neither would nor could dismiss him,
|
||
|
for fear of losing what they had already gained. They were therefore
|
||
|
obliged, in order to make sure of him, to have him killed. They then
|
||
|
had for captains Bartolommeo da Bergamo, Roberto da San Severino, Count
|
||
|
di Pitigliano, and such like, from whom they had to fear loss instead
|
||
|
of gain, as happened subsequently at Vailà, where in one day they lost
|
||
|
what they had laboriously gained in eight hundred years; for with these
|
||
|
forces, only slow and trifling acquisitions are made, but sudden and
|
||
|
miraculous losses. And as I have cited these examples from Italy,
|
||
|
which has now for many years been governed by mercenary forces, I will
|
||
|
now deal more largely with them, so that having seen their origin and
|
||
|
progress, they can be better remedied. You must understand that in
|
||
|
these latter times, as soon as the empire began to be repudiated in
|
||
|
Italy and the pope to gain greater reputation in temporal matters,
|
||
|
Italy was divided into many states; many of the principal cities took
|
||
|
up arms against their nobles, who, favoured by the emperor, had held
|
||
|
them in subjection, and the Church encouraged this in order to increase
|
||
|
its temporal power. In many other cities one of the inhabitants became
|
||
|
prince. Thus Italy having fallen almost entirely into the hands of
|
||
|
the Church and a few republics, and the priests and other citizens
|
||
|
not being accustomed to bear arms, they began to hire foreigners as
|
||
|
soldiers. The first to bring reputation for this kind of militia was
|
||
|
Alberigo da Como, a native of Romagna. The discipline of this man
|
||
|
produced, among others, Braccio and Sforza, who were in their day the
|
||
|
arbiters of Italy. After these came all those others who up to the
|
||
|
present day have commanded the armies of Italy, and the result of their
|
||
|
prowess has been that Italy has been overrun by Charles, preyed on by
|
||
|
Louis, tyrannised over by Ferrando, and insulted by the Swiss. The
|
||
|
system adopted by them was, in the first place, to increase their own
|
||
|
reputation by discrediting the infantry. They did this because, as they
|
||
|
had no country and lived on their earnings, a few foot soldiers did not
|
||
|
augment their reputation, and they could not maintain a large number
|
||
|
and therefore they restricted themselves almost entirely to cavalry,
|
||
|
by which with a smaller number they were well paid and honoured. They
|
||
|
reduced things to such a state that in an army of 20,000 soldiers there
|
||
|
were not 2000 foot. They had also used every means to spare themselves
|
||
|
and the soldiers any hardship or fear by not killing each other in
|
||
|
their encounters, but taking prisoners without a blow. They made no
|
||
|
attacks on fortifications by night; and those in the fortifications did
|
||
|
not attack the tents at night, they made no stockades on ditches round
|
||
|
their camps, and did not take the field in winter. All these things
|
||
|
were permitted by their military rules, and adopted, as we have said,
|
||
|
to avoid trouble and danger, so that they have reduced Italy to slavery
|
||
|
and degradation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XIII
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
OF AUXILIARY, MIXED, AND NATIVE TROOPS
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Auxiliary forces, which are the other kind of useless forces, are
|
||
|
when one calls on a potentate to come and aid one with his troops, as
|
||
|
was done in recent times by Julius, who seeing the wretched failure
|
||
|
of his mercenary forces, in his Ferrara enterprise, had recourse to
|
||
|
auxiliaries, and arranged with Ferrando, King of Spain, that he should
|
||
|
help him with his armies. These forces may be good in themselves, but
|
||
|
they are always dangerous for those who borrow them, for if they lose
|
||
|
you are defeated, and if they conquer you remain their prisoner. And
|
||
|
although ancient history is full of examples of this, I will not depart
|
||
|
from the example of Pope Julius II., which is still fresh. Nothing
|
||
|
could be less prudent than the course he adopted; for, wishing to take
|
||
|
Ferrara, he put himself entirely into the power of a foreigner. But
|
||
|
by good fortune there arose a third cause which prevented him reaping
|
||
|
the effects of his bad choice; for when his auxiliaries were beaten
|
||
|
at Ravenna, the Swiss rose up and drove back the victors, against all
|
||
|
expectation of himself or others, so that he was not taken prisoner by
|
||
|
the enemy which had fled, nor by his own auxiliaries, having conquered
|
||
|
by other arms than theirs. The Florentines, being totally disarmed,
|
||
|
hired 10,000 Frenchmen to attack Pisa, by which measure they ran
|
||
|
greater risk than at any period of their struggles. The emperor of
|
||
|
Constantinople, to oppose his neighbours, put 10,000 Turks into Greece,
|
||
|
who after the war would not go away again, which was the beginning of
|
||
|
the servitude of Greece to the infidels. Any one, therefore, who wishes
|
||
|
not to conquer, would do well to use these forces, which are much more
|
||
|
dangerous than mercenaries, as with them ruin is complete, for they
|
||
|
are all united, and owe obedience to others, whereas with mercenaries,
|
||
|
when they have conquered, it requires more time and a good opportunity
|
||
|
for them to injure you, as they do not form a single body and have been
|
||
|
engaged and paid by you, therefore a third party that you have made
|
||
|
leader cannot at once acquire enough authority to be able to injure
|
||
|
you. In a word, the greatest dangers with mercenaries lies in their
|
||
|
cowardice and reluctance to fight, but with auxiliaries the danger
|
||
|
lies in their courage. A wise prince, therefore, always avoids these
|
||
|
forces and has recourse to his own, and would prefer rather to lose
|
||
|
with his own men than conquer with the forces of others, not deeming
|
||
|
it a true victory which is gained by foreign arms. I never hesitate to
|
||
|
cite the example of Cesare Borgia and his actions. This duke entered
|
||
|
Romagna with auxiliary troops, leading forces composed entirely of
|
||
|
French soldiers, and with these he took Imola and Forli; but as they
|
||
|
seemed unsafe, he had recourse to mercenaries, and hired the Orsini and
|
||
|
Vitelli; afterwards finding these uncertain to handle, unfaithful and
|
||
|
dangerous, he suppressed them, and relied upon his own men. And the
|
||
|
difference between these forces can be easily seen if one considers
|
||
|
the difference between the reputation of the duke when he had only the
|
||
|
French, when he had the Orsini and Vitelli, and when he had to rely
|
||
|
on himself and his own soldiers. His reputation will be found to have
|
||
|
constantly increased, and he was never so highly esteemed as when
|
||
|
every one saw that he was the sole master of his forces.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I do not wish to go away from recent Italian instances, but I cannot
|
||
|
omit Hiero of Syracuse, whom I have already mentioned. This man being,
|
||
|
as I said, made head of the army by the Syracusans, immediately
|
||
|
recognised the uselessness of that mercenary militia which was composed
|
||
|
like our Italian mercenary troops, and as he thought it unsafe
|
||
|
either to retain them or dismiss them, he had them cut in pieces and
|
||
|
thenceforward made war with his own arms and not those of others. I
|
||
|
would also call to mind a figure out of the Old Testament which well
|
||
|
illustrates this point. When David offered to Saul to go and fight with
|
||
|
the Philistine champion Goliath, Saul, to encourage him, armed him
|
||
|
with his own arms, which when David had tried on he refused saying,
|
||
|
that with them he could not fight so well; he preferred, therefore,
|
||
|
to face the enemy with his own sling and knife. In short, the arms of
|
||
|
others either fall away from you, or overburden you, or else impede
|
||
|
you. Charles VIII., father of King Louis XL, having through good
|
||
|
fortune and bravery liberated France from the English, recognised this
|
||
|
necessity of being armed with his own forces, and established in his
|
||
|
kingdom a system of men-at-arms and infantry. Afterwards King Louis
|
||
|
his son abolished the infantry and began to hire Swiss, which mistake
|
||
|
being followed by others is, as may now be seen, a cause of danger to
|
||
|
that kingdom. For by giving such reputation to the Swiss, France has
|
||
|
disheartened all her own troops, the infantry having been abolished and
|
||
|
the men-at-arms being obliged to foreigners for assistance; for being
|
||
|
accustomed to fight with Swiss troops, they think they cannot conquer
|
||
|
without them. Whence it comes that the French are insufficiently strong
|
||
|
to oppose the Swiss, and without the aid of the Swiss they will not
|
||
|
venture against others. The armies of the French are thus of a mixed
|
||
|
kind, partly mercenary and partly her own; taken together they are much
|
||
|
better than troops entirely composed of mercenaries or auxiliaries, but
|
||
|
much inferior to national forces.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XIV
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
WHAT THE DUTIES OF A PRINCE ARE WITH REGARD TO THE MILITIA
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
A Prince should therefore have no other aim or thought, nor take up
|
||
|
any other thing for his study, but war and its order and discipline,
|
||
|
for that is the only art that is necessary to one who commands, and
|
||
|
it is of such virtue that it not only maintains those who are born
|
||
|
princes, but often enables men of private fortune to attain to that
|
||
|
rank. And one sees, on the other hand, that when princes think more of
|
||
|
luxury than of arms, they lose their state. The chief cause which makes
|
||
|
any one lose it, is the contempt of this art, and the way to acquire
|
||
|
it is to be well versed in the same. Francesco Sforza, through being
|
||
|
well armed, became, from a private position, Duke of Milan; his sons,
|
||
|
through wishing to avoid the fatigue and hardship of war, from dukes
|
||
|
became private persons. For among other evils caused by being disarmed,
|
||
|
it renders you contemptible; which is one of those disgraceful things
|
||
|
which a prince must guard against, as will be explained later. Because
|
||
|
there is no comparison whatever between an armed man and a disarmed
|
||
|
one; it is not reasonable to suppose that one who is armed will obey
|
||
|
willingly one who is unarmed; or that any unarmed man will remain
|
||
|
safe among armed servants. For one being disdainful and the other
|
||
|
suspicious, it is not possible for them to act well together. And
|
||
|
yet a prince who is ignorant of military matters, besides the other
|
||
|
misfortunes already mentioned, cannot be esteemed by his soldiers, nor
|
||
|
have confidence in them. He ought, therefore, never to let his thoughts
|
||
|
stray from the exercise of war; and in peace he ought to practise it
|
||
|
more than in war, which he can do in two ways: both by action and by
|
||
|
study. As to action, he must, besides keeping his men well disciplined
|
||
|
and exercised, engage continually in hunting, and thus accustom his
|
||
|
body to hardships; and on the other hand learn the nature of the
|
||
|
land, how the mountains rise, how the valleys are disposed, where the
|
||
|
plains lie, and understand the nature of the rivers and swamps, and
|
||
|
to this he should devote great attention. This knowledge is useful in
|
||
|
two ways. In the first place, one learns to know one's country, and
|
||
|
can the better see how to defend it. Then by means of the knowledge
|
||
|
and experience gained in one locality, one can easily understand
|
||
|
any other that it may be necessary to venture on, for the hills and
|
||
|
valleys, plains and rivers of Tuscany, for instance, have a certain
|
||
|
resemblance to those of other provinces, so that from a knowledge of
|
||
|
the country in one province one can easily arrive at a knowledge of
|
||
|
others. And that prince who is lacking in this skill is wanting in the
|
||
|
first essentials of a leader; for it is this which teaches how to find
|
||
|
the enemy, take up quarters, lead armies, arrange marches and occupy
|
||
|
positions with advantage. Philopœmen, prince of the Achæi, among other
|
||
|
praises bestowed on him by writers, is lauded because in times of peace
|
||
|
he thought of nothing but the methods of warfare, and when he was in
|
||
|
the country with his friends, he often stopped and asked them: If the
|
||
|
enemy were on that hill and we found ourselves here with our army,
|
||
|
which of us would have the advantage? How could we safely approach
|
||
|
him maintaining our order? If we wished to retire, what ought we to
|
||
|
do? If they retired, how should we follow them? And he put before them
|
||
|
as they went along all the cases that might happen to an army, heard
|
||
|
their opinion, gave his own, fortifying it by argument; so that through
|
||
|
these continued cogitations there could never happen any incident when
|
||
|
leading his armies for which he was not prepared. But as to exercise
|
||
|
for the mind, the prince ought to read history and study the actions
|
||
|
of eminent men, see how they acted in warfare, examine the causes of
|
||
|
their victories and losses in order to imitate the former and avoid the
|
||
|
latter, and above all, do as some eminent men have done in the past,
|
||
|
who have imitated some one, who has been much praised and glorified,
|
||
|
and have always kept their deeds and actions before them, as they say
|
||
|
Alexander the Great imitated Achilles, Cæsar Alexander, and Scipio
|
||
|
Cyrus. And whoever reads the life of Cyrus written by Xenophon, will
|
||
|
perceive in the life of Scipio how gloriously he imitated him, and how,
|
||
|
in chastity, affability, humanity, and liberality Scipio conformed to
|
||
|
those qualities of Cyrus described by Xenophon.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A wise prince should follow similar methods and never remain idle in
|
||
|
peaceful times, but by industry make such good use of the time as may
|
||
|
serve him in adversity, so that when fortune changes she may find him
|
||
|
prepared to resist her blows.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XV
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
OF THE THINGS FOB WHICH MEN, AND ESPECIALLY PRINCES, ARE PRAISED OR
|
||
|
BLAMED
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
It remains now to be seen what are the methods and rules for a
|
||
|
prince as regards his subjects and friends. And as I know that many
|
||
|
have written of this, I fear that my writing about it may be deemed
|
||
|
presumptuous, differing as I do, especially in this matter, from the
|
||
|
opinions of others. But my intention being to write something of use to
|
||
|
those who understand it, it appears to me more proper to go to the real
|
||
|
truth of the matter than to its imagination; and many have imagined
|
||
|
republics and principalities which have never been seen or known to
|
||
|
exist in reality; for how we live is so far removed from how we ought
|
||
|
to live, that he who abandons what is done for what ought to be done,
|
||
|
will rather learn to bring about his own ruin than his preservation.
|
||
|
A man who wishes to make a profession of goodness in everything must
|
||
|
necessarily come to grief among so many who are not good. Therefore it
|
||
|
is necessary for a prince, who wishes to maintain himself, to learn how
|
||
|
not to be good, and to use it and not use it according to the necessity
|
||
|
of the case. Leaving on one side then those things which concern only
|
||
|
an imaginary prince, and speaking of those that are real, I state that
|
||
|
all men, when spoken of, and especially princes, who are placed at
|
||
|
a greater height, are noted for some of those qualities which bring
|
||
|
them either praise or blame. Thus one is considered liberal, another
|
||
|
miserly; one a free giver, another rapacious; one cruel, another
|
||
|
merciful; one a breaker of his word, another faithful; one effeminate
|
||
|
and pusillanimous, another fierce and high-spirited; one humane,
|
||
|
another proud; one lascivious, another chaste; one frank, another
|
||
|
astute; one hard, another easy; one serious, another frivolous; one
|
||
|
religious, another incredulous, and so on. I know that every one will
|
||
|
admit that it would be highly praiseworthy in a prince to possess all
|
||
|
the above-named qualities that are reputed good, but as they cannot all
|
||
|
be possessed or observed, human conditions not permitting of it, it is
|
||
|
necessary that he should be prudent enough to avoid the disgrace of
|
||
|
those vices which would lose him the state, and guard himself against
|
||
|
those which will not lose it him, if possible, but if not able to, he
|
||
|
can indulge them with less scruple. And yet he must not mind incurring
|
||
|
the disgrace of those vices, without which it would be difficult to
|
||
|
save the state, for if one considers well, it will be found that some
|
||
|
things which seem virtues would, if followed, lead to one's ruin, and
|
||
|
some others which appear vices result, if followed, in one's greater
|
||
|
security and well being.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XVI
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
OF LIBERALITY AND NIGGARDLINESS
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Beginning now with the first qualities above named, I say that it
|
||
|
would be well to be considered liberal; nevertheless liberality used
|
||
|
in such a way that you are not feared will injure you, because if
|
||
|
used virtuously and in the proper way, it will not be known, and you
|
||
|
will not incur the disgrace of the contrary vice. But one who wishes
|
||
|
to obtain the reputation of liberality among men, must not omit every
|
||
|
kind of sumptuous display, and to such an extent that a prince of this
|
||
|
character will consume by such means all his resources, and will be
|
||
|
at last compelled, if he wishes to maintain his name for liberality,
|
||
|
to impose heavy charges on his people, become an extortioner, and do
|
||
|
everything possible to obtain money. This will make his subjects begin
|
||
|
to hate him and he will be little esteemed being poor, so that having
|
||
|
by this liberality injured many and benefited but few, he will feel
|
||
|
the first little disturbance and be endangered by every accident. If
|
||
|
he recognises this and wishes to change his system, he incurs at once
|
||
|
the charge of niggardliness; a prince, therefore, not being able to
|
||
|
exercise this virtue of liberality without risk if it is known, must
|
||
|
not, if he is prudent, object to be called miserly. In course of time
|
||
|
he will be thought more liberal, when it is seen that by his parsimony
|
||
|
his revenue is sufficient, that he can defend himself against those
|
||
|
who make war on him, and undertake enterprises without burdening his
|
||
|
people, so that he is really liberal to all those from whom he does not
|
||
|
take, who are infinite in number, and niggardly to all to whom he does
|
||
|
not give, who are few.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In our times we have seen nothing great done except by those who have
|
||
|
been esteemed niggardly; the others have all been ruined. Pope Julius
|
||
|
II., although he had made use of a reputation for liberality in order
|
||
|
to attain the papacy, did not seek to retain it afterwards, so that
|
||
|
he might be able to make war on the King of France, and he earned on
|
||
|
so many wars without imposing an extraordinary tax, because his extra
|
||
|
expenses were covered by the parsimony he had so long practised. The
|
||
|
present King of Spain, if he had been thought liberal, would not have
|
||
|
engaged in and won so many enterprises. For these reasons a prince must
|
||
|
care little for the reputation of being a miser, if he wishes to avoid
|
||
|
robbing his subjects, if he wishes to be able to defend himself, to not
|
||
|
become poor and contemptible, and not to be forced to become rapacious;
|
||
|
this vice of niggardliness is one of those vices which enable him to
|
||
|
reign. If it is said that Cæsar attained the empire through liberality,
|
||
|
and that many others have reached the highest positions through being
|
||
|
liberal or being thought so, I would reply that you are either a prince
|
||
|
already or else on the way to become one. In the first case, this
|
||
|
liberality is harmful; in the second, it is certainly necessary to be
|
||
|
considered liberal, and Cæsar was one of those who wished to attain the
|
||
|
mastery over Rome, but if after attaining it he had lived and had not
|
||
|
moderated his expenses, he would have destroyed that empire. And should
|
||
|
any one reply that there have been many princes, who have done great
|
||
|
things with their armies, who have been thought extremely liberal, I
|
||
|
would answer by saying that the prince may either spend his own wealth
|
||
|
and that of his subjects or the wealth of others. In the first case
|
||
|
he must be sparing, but in the second he must not neglect to be very
|
||
|
liberal. This liberality is very necessary to a prince who marches with
|
||
|
his armies, and lives by plunder, sacking and extorting, and is dealing
|
||
|
with the wealth of others, for without it he would not be followed
|
||
|
by his soldiers. And you may be very generous indeed with what is
|
||
|
not the property of yourself or your subjects, as were Cyrus, Cæsar,
|
||
|
and Alexander; for spending the wealth of others will not diminish
|
||
|
your reputation, but increase it, only spending your own resources
|
||
|
will injure you. There is nothing which destroys itself so much as
|
||
|
liberality, for by using it you lose the power of using it, and become
|
||
|
either poor and despicable, or, to escape poverty, rapacious and hated.
|
||
|
And of all things that a prince must guard against, the most important
|
||
|
are being despicable or hated, and liberality will lead you to one or
|
||
|
other of these conditions. It is, therefore, wiser to have the name
|
||
|
of a miser, which produces disgrace without hatred, than to incur of
|
||
|
necessity the name of being rapacious, which produces both disgrace and
|
||
|
hatred.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XVII
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
OF CRUELTY AND CLEMENCY, AND WHETHER IT IS BETTER TO BE LOVED OR FEARED
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Proceeding to the other qualities before named, I say that every prince
|
||
|
must desire to be considered merciful and not cruel. He must, however,
|
||
|
take care not to misuse this mercifulness. Cesare Borgia was considered
|
||
|
cruel, but his cruelty had settled the Romagna, united it, and brought
|
||
|
it peace and confidence. If this is considered a benefit, it will be
|
||
|
seen that he was really much more merciful than the Florentine people,
|
||
|
who, to avoid the name of cruelty, allowed Pistoia to be destroyed. A
|
||
|
prince, therefore, must not mind incurring the charge of cruelty for
|
||
|
the purpose of keeping his subjects united and confident; for, with a
|
||
|
very few examples, he will be more merciful than those who, from excess
|
||
|
of tenderness, allow disorders to arise, from whence spring murders
|
||
|
and rapine; for these as a rule injure the whole community, while the
|
||
|
executions carried out by the prince injure only one individual. And of
|
||
|
all princes, it is impossible for a new prince to escape the name of
|
||
|
cruel, new states being always full of dangers. Wherefore Virgil makes
|
||
|
Dido excuse the inhumanity of her rule by its being new, where she says:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Res dura, et regni novitas me talia cogunt
|
||
|
Moliri, et late fines custode tueri.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Nevertheless, he must be cautious in believing and acting, and must
|
||
|
not inspire fear of his own accord, and must proceed in a temperate
|
||
|
manner with prudence and humanity, so that too much confidence does
|
||
|
not render him incautious, and too much diffidence does not render him
|
||
|
intolerant. From this arises the question whether it is better to be
|
||
|
loved more than feared, or feared more than loved. The reply is, that
|
||
|
one ought to be both feared and loved, but as it is difficult for the
|
||
|
two to go together, it is much safer to be feared than loved, if one of
|
||
|
the two has to be wanting. For it may be said of men in general that
|
||
|
they are ungrateful, voluble, dissemblers, anxious to avoid danger,
|
||
|
and covetous of gain; as long as you benefit them, they are entirely
|
||
|
yours; they offer you their blood, their goods, their life, and their
|
||
|
children, as I have before said, when the necessity is remote; but
|
||
|
when it approaches, they revolt And the prince who has relied solely
|
||
|
on their words, without making other preparations, is ruined, for the
|
||
|
friendship which is gained by purchase and not through grandeur and
|
||
|
nobility of spirit is merited but is not secured, and at times is not
|
||
|
to be had. And men have less scruple in offending one who makes himself
|
||
|
loved than one who makes himself feared; for love is held by a chain of
|
||
|
obligation which, men being selfish, is broken whenever it serves their
|
||
|
purpose; but fear is maintained by a dread of punishment which never
|
||
|
fails. Still, a prince should make himself feared in such a way that if
|
||
|
he does not gain love, he at any rate avoids hatred; for fear, and the
|
||
|
absence of hatred may well go together, and will be always attained by
|
||
|
one who abstains from interfering with the property of his citizens and
|
||
|
subjects or with their women. And when he is obliged to take the life
|
||
|
of any one, to do so when there is a proper justification and manifest
|
||
|
reason for it; but above all he must abstain from taking the property
|
||
|
of others, for men forget more easily the death of their father than
|
||
|
the loss of their patrimony. Then also pretexts for seizing property
|
||
|
are never wanting, and one who begins to live by rapine will always
|
||
|
find some reason for taking the goods of others, whereas causes for
|
||
|
taking life are rarer and more quickly destroyed. But when the prince
|
||
|
is with his army and has a large number of soldiers under his control,
|
||
|
then it is extremely necessary that he should not mind being thought
|
||
|
cruel; for without, this reputation he could not keep an army united,
|
||
|
or disposed to any duty.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Among the noteworthy actions of Hannibal is numbered this, that
|
||
|
although he had an enormous army, composed of men of all nations
|
||
|
and fighting in foreign countries, there never arose any dissension
|
||
|
either among them or against the prince, either in good fortune or in
|
||
|
bad. This could not be due to anything but his inhuman cruelty, which
|
||
|
together with his infinite other virtues, made him always venerated
|
||
|
and terrible in the sight of his soldiers, and without it his other
|
||
|
virtues would not have sufficed to produce that effect. Thoughtless
|
||
|
writers admire on the one hand his actions, and on the other blame the
|
||
|
principal cause of them. And that it is true that his other virtues
|
||
|
would not have sufficed may be seen from the case of Scipio (very rare
|
||
|
not only in his own times, but in all times of which memory remains),
|
||
|
whose armies rebelled against him in Spain, which arose from nothing
|
||
|
but his excessive kindness, which allowed more license to the soldiers
|
||
|
than was consonant with military discipline. He was reproached with
|
||
|
this in the senate by Fabius Maximus, who called him a corrupter of the
|
||
|
Roman militia.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Locri having been destroyed by one of Scipio's officers were not
|
||
|
revenged by him, nor was the insolence of that officer punished,
|
||
|
simply by reason of his easy nature; so much so, that some one wishing
|
||
|
to excuse him in the senate, said that there were many men who knew
|
||
|
rather how not to err, than how to correct the errors of others. This
|
||
|
disposition would in time have tarnished the fame and glory of Scipio
|
||
|
had he persevered in it under the empire, but living under the rule of
|
||
|
the senate this harmful quality was not only concealed but became a
|
||
|
glory to him. I conclude, therefore, with regard to being feared and
|
||
|
loved, that men love at their own free will, but fear at the will of
|
||
|
the prince, and that a wise prince must rely on what is in his power
|
||
|
and not on what is in the power of others, and he must only trouble
|
||
|
himself to avoid incurring hatred, as has been explained.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XVIII
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
IN WHAT WAY PRINCES MUST KEEP FAITH
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
How laudable it is for a prince to keep good faith and live with
|
||
|
integrity, and not with astuteness, every one knows. Still the
|
||
|
experience of our times shows those princes to have done great things
|
||
|
who have had little regard for good faith, and have been able by
|
||
|
astuteness to confuse men's brains, and who have ultimately overcome
|
||
|
those who have, made loyalty their foundation. You must know, then,
|
||
|
that there are two methods of fighting, the one by law, the other by
|
||
|
force: the first method is that of men, the second of beasts; but as
|
||
|
the first method is often insufficient, one must have recourse to the
|
||
|
second. It is therefore necessary to know well how to use both the
|
||
|
beast and the man. This was covertly taught to princes by ancient
|
||
|
writers, who relate how Achilles and many others of those princes were
|
||
|
given to Chiron the centaur to be brought up, who kept them under his
|
||
|
discipline; this system of having for teacher one who was half beast
|
||
|
and half man is meant to indicate that a prince must know how to use
|
||
|
both natures, and that the one without the other is not durable. A
|
||
|
prince being thus obliged to know well how to act as a beast must
|
||
|
imitate the fox and the lion, for the lion cannot protect himself
|
||
|
from snares, and the fox cannot defend himself from wolves. One must
|
||
|
therefore be a fox to recognise snares, and a lion to frighten wolves.
|
||
|
Those that wish to be only lions do not understand this. Therefore,
|
||
|
a prudent ruler ought not to keep faith when by so doing it would be
|
||
|
against his interest, and when the reasons which made him bind himself
|
||
|
no longer exist. If men were all good, this precept would not be a
|
||
|
good one; but as they are bad, and would not observe their faith with
|
||
|
you, so you are not bound to keep faith with them. Nor are legitimate
|
||
|
grounds ever wanting to a prince to give colour to the non-fulfilment
|
||
|
of his promise. Of this one could furnish an infinite number of modern
|
||
|
examples, and show how many times peace has been broken, and how many
|
||
|
promises rendered worthless, by the faithlessness of princes, and those
|
||
|
that have been best able to imitate the fox have succeeded best. But
|
||
|
it is necessary to be able to disguise this character well, and to be
|
||
|
a great feigner and dissembler; and men are so simple and so ready to
|
||
|
obey present necessities, that one who deceives will always find those
|
||
|
who allow themselves to be deceived. I will only mention one modern
|
||
|
instance. Alexander VI. did nothing else but deceive men, he thought
|
||
|
of nothing else, and found the way to do it; no man was ever more able
|
||
|
to give assurances, or affirmed things with stronger oaths, and no man
|
||
|
observed them less; however, he always succeeded in his deceptions, as
|
||
|
he knew well this side of the world. It is not, therefore, necessary
|
||
|
for a prince to have all the above-named qualities, but it is very
|
||
|
necessary to seem to have them. I would even be bold to say that to
|
||
|
possess them and to always observe them is dangerous, but to appear
|
||
|
to possess them is useful. Thus it is well to seem pious, faithful,
|
||
|
humane, religious, sincere, and also to be so; but you must have the
|
||
|
mind so watchful that when it is needful to be otherwise you may be
|
||
|
able to change to the opposite qualities. And it must be understood
|
||
|
that a prince, and especially a new prince, cannot observe all those
|
||
|
things which are considered good in men, being often obliged, in order
|
||
|
to maintain the state, to act against faith, against charity, against
|
||
|
humanity, and against religion. And, therefore, he must have a mind
|
||
|
disposed to adapt itself according to the wind, and as the variations
|
||
|
of fortune dictate, and, as I said before, not deviate from what is
|
||
|
good, if possible, but be able to do evil if necessitated. A prince
|
||
|
must take great care that nothing goes out of his mouth which is not
|
||
|
full of the above-named five qualities, and, to see and hear him, he
|
||
|
should seem to be all faith, all integrity, all humanity, and all,
|
||
|
religion. And nothing is more necessary than to seem to have this last
|
||
|
quality, for men in general judge more by the eyes than by the hands,
|
||
|
for every one can see, but very few have to feel. Everybody sees what
|
||
|
you appear to be, few feel what you are, and those few will not dare
|
||
|
to oppose themselves to the many, who have the majesty of the state to
|
||
|
defend them; and in the actions of men, and especially of princes, from
|
||
|
which there is no appeal, the end is everything.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Let a prince therefore aim at living and maintaining state the state,
|
||
|
the means will always be judged honourable and praised by every one,
|
||
|
for the vulgar is always taken by appearances and the result of things;
|
||
|
and the world consists only of the vulgar, and the few find a place
|
||
|
when the many have nothing to rest upon. A certain prince of the
|
||
|
present time, whom it is well not to name, never does anything but
|
||
|
preach peace and good faith, but he is really a great enemy to both,
|
||
|
and either of them, had he observed them, would have lost him both
|
||
|
state and reputation on many occasions.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XIX
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
THAT WE MUST AVOID BEING DESPISED AND HATED
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
But as I have now spoken of the most important of the qualities
|
||
|
in question, I will now deal briefly with the rest on the general
|
||
|
principle, that the prince must, as already stated, avoid those things
|
||
|
which will make him hated or despised; and whenever he succeeds in
|
||
|
this, he will have done his part, and will find no danger in other
|
||
|
vices.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He will chiefly become hated, as I said, by being rapacious, and
|
||
|
usurping the property and women of his subjects, which he must abstain
|
||
|
from doing, and whenever one does not attack the property or honour
|
||
|
of the generality of men, they will live contented; and one will only
|
||
|
have to combat the ambition of a few, who can be easily held in check
|
||
|
in many ways. He is rendered despicable by being thought changeable,
|
||
|
frivolous, effeminate, timid, and irresolute; which a prince must
|
||
|
guard against as a rock of danger, and manage so that his actions
|
||
|
show grandeur, high courage, seriousness, and strength; and as to the
|
||
|
government of his subjects, let his sentence be irrevocable, and let
|
||
|
him adhere to his decisions so that no one may think of deceiving him
|
||
|
or making him change. The prince who creates such an opinion of himself
|
||
|
gets a great reputation, and it is very difficult to conspire against
|
||
|
one who has a great reputation, and he will not easily be attacked, so
|
||
|
long as it is known that he is esteemed and reverenced by his subjects.
|
||
|
For a prince must have two kinds of fear: one internal as regards his
|
||
|
subjects, one external as regards foreign powers. From the latter he
|
||
|
can defend himself with good arms and good friends, and he will always
|
||
|
have good friends if he has good arms; and internal matters will always
|
||
|
remain quiet, if they are not perturbed by conspiracy; and even if
|
||
|
external powers sought to foment one, if he has ruled and lived as I
|
||
|
have described, he will always if he stands firm be able to sustain
|
||
|
every shock, as I have shown that Nabis the Spartan did. But with
|
||
|
regard to the subjects, if not acted on from outside, it is still to be
|
||
|
feared lest they conspire in secret, from which the prince may guard
|
||
|
himself well by avoiding hatred and contempt, and keeping the people
|
||
|
satisfied with him, which it is necessary to accomplish, as has been
|
||
|
related at length. And one of the most potent remedies that a prince
|
||
|
has against conspiracies, is that of not being hated or despised by
|
||
|
the mass of the people; for whoever conspires always believes that
|
||
|
he will satisfy the people by the death of their prince; but if he
|
||
|
thought to offend them by doing this, he would fear to engage in such
|
||
|
an undertaking, for the difficulties that conspirators have to meet are
|
||
|
infinite. Experience shows that there have been very many conspiracies,
|
||
|
but few have turned out well, for whoever conspires cannot act alone,
|
||
|
and cannot find companions except among those who are discontented;
|
||
|
and as soon as you have disclosed your intention to a malcontent, you
|
||
|
give him the means of satisfying himself, for by revealing it he can
|
||
|
hope to secure everything he wants; to such an extent that seeing
|
||
|
a certain gain by doing this, and seeing on the other hand only a
|
||
|
doubtful one and full of danger, he must either be a rare friend to
|
||
|
you or else a very bitter enemy to the prince if he keeps faith with
|
||
|
you. And to reduce the matter to narrow limits, I say, that on the side
|
||
|
of the conspirator there is nothing but fear, jealousy, suspicion,
|
||
|
and dread of punishment which frightens him; and on the side of the
|
||
|
prince there is the majesty of government, the laws, the protection
|
||
|
of friends and of the state which guard him. When to these things are
|
||
|
added the goodwill of the people, it is impossible that any one should
|
||
|
have the temerity to conspire. For whereas generally a conspirator
|
||
|
has to fear before the execution of his plot, in this case he must
|
||
|
also fear afterwards, having the people for an enemy, when his crime
|
||
|
is accomplished, and thus not being able to hope for any refuge.
|
||
|
Numberless instances might be given of this, but I will content myself
|
||
|
with one which took place within the memory of our fathers. Messer
|
||
|
Annibale Bentivogli, Prince of Bologna, ancestor of the present Messer
|
||
|
Annibale, was killed by the Canneschi, who conspired against him. He
|
||
|
left no relations but Messer Giovanni, who was then an infant, but
|
||
|
after the murder the people rose up and killed all the Canneschi. This
|
||
|
arose from the popular goodwill that the house of Bentivogli enjoyed at
|
||
|
that time in Bologna, which was so great that, as there was nobody left
|
||
|
after the death of Annibale who could govern the state, the Bolognese
|
||
|
hearing that there was one of the Bentivogli family in Florence, who
|
||
|
had till then been thought the son of a blacksmith, came to fetch him
|
||
|
and gave him the government of the city, and it was governed by him
|
||
|
until Messer Giovanni was old enough to assume the government.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I conclude, therefore, that a prince need trouble little about
|
||
|
conspiracies when the people are well disposed, but when they
|
||
|
are hostile and hold him in hatred, then he must fear everything
|
||
|
and everybody. Well-ordered states and wise princes have studied
|
||
|
diligently not to drive the nobles to desperation, and to satisfy the
|
||
|
populace and keep it contented, for this is one of the most important
|
||
|
matters that a prince has to deal with. Among the kingdoms that are
|
||
|
well ordered and governed in our time is France, and there we find
|
||
|
numberless good institutions on which depend the liberty and security
|
||
|
of the king; of these the chief is the parliament and its authority,
|
||
|
because he who established that kingdom, knowing the ambition and
|
||
|
insolence of the great nobles, and deeming it necessary to have a bit
|
||
|
in their mouths to check them; and knowing on the other hand the hatred
|
||
|
of the mass of the people to the great, based on fear, and wishing to
|
||
|
secure them, did not wish to make this the special care of the king,
|
||
|
to relieve him of the dissatisfaction that he might incur among the
|
||
|
nobles by favouring the people, and among the people by favouring the
|
||
|
nobles. He therefore established a third judge that, without direct
|
||
|
charge of the king, kept in check the great and favoured the lesser
|
||
|
people. Nor could any better or more prudent measure have been adopted,
|
||
|
nor better precaution for the safety of the king and the kingdom. From
|
||
|
which another notable rule can be drawn, that princes should let the
|
||
|
carrying out of unpopular duties devolve on others, and bestow favours
|
||
|
themselves. I conclude again by saying that a prince must esteem his
|
||
|
nobles, but not make himself hated by the populace. It may perhaps seem
|
||
|
to some, that considering the life and death of many Roman emperors
|
||
|
that they are instances contrary to my opinion, finding that some who
|
||
|
lived always nobly and showed great strength of character, nevertheless
|
||
|
lost the empire, or were killed by their subjects who conspired against
|
||
|
them. Wishing to answer these objections, I will discuss the qualities
|
||
|
of some emperors, showing the cause of their ruin not to be at variance
|
||
|
with what I have stated, and I will also partly consider the things to
|
||
|
be noted by whoever reads the deeds of these times. I will content
|
||
|
myself with taking all those emperors who succeeded to the empire from
|
||
|
Marcus the philosopher to Maximinus; these were Marcus, Commodus his
|
||
|
son, Pertinax, Heliogabalus, Alexander, and Maximinus. And the first
|
||
|
thing to note is, that whereas other princes have only to contend
|
||
|
against the ambition of the great and the insolence of the people, the
|
||
|
Roman emperors had a third difficulty, that of having to support the
|
||
|
cruelty and avarice of the soldiers, which was such a difficulty that
|
||
|
it was the cause of the ruin of many, it being difficult to satisfy
|
||
|
both the soldiers and the people. For the people love tranquillity,
|
||
|
and therefore like princes who are pacific, but the soldiers prefer
|
||
|
a prince of military spirit, who is insolent, cruel, and rapacious.
|
||
|
They wish him to exercise these qualities on the people so that they
|
||
|
may get double pay and give vent to their avarice and cruelty. Thus it
|
||
|
came about that those emperors who, by nature or art, had not such a
|
||
|
reputation as could keep both parties in check, invariably were ruined,
|
||
|
and the greater number of them who were raised to the empire being
|
||
|
new men, knowing the difficulties of these two opposite dispositions,
|
||
|
confined themselves to satisfying the soldiers, and thought little of
|
||
|
injuring the people. This choice was necessary, princes not being able
|
||
|
to avoid being hated by some one. They must first try not to be hated
|
||
|
by the mass of the people; if they cannot accomplish this they must
|
||
|
use every means to escape the hatred of the most powerful parties. And
|
||
|
therefore these emperors, who being new men had need of extraordinary
|
||
|
favours, adhered to the soldiers more willingly than to the people;
|
||
|
whether this, however, was of use to them or not, depended on whether
|
||
|
the prince knew how to maintain his reputation with them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From these causes it resulted that Marcus, Pertinax, and Alexander,
|
||
|
being all of modest life, lovers of justice, enemies of cruelty,
|
||
|
humane and benign, had all a sad ending except Marcus. Marcus alone
|
||
|
lived and died in honour, because he succeeded to the empire by
|
||
|
hereditary right and did not owe it either to the soldiers or to the
|
||
|
people; besides which, possessing many virtues which made him revered,
|
||
|
he kept both parties in their place as long as he lived and was never
|
||
|
either hated or despised. But Pertinax was created emperor against the
|
||
|
will of the soldiers, who being accustomed to live licentiously under
|
||
|
Commodus, could not put up with the honest life to which Pertinax
|
||
|
wished to limit them, so that having made himself hated, and to this
|
||
|
contempt being added because he was old, he was ruined at the very
|
||
|
beginning of his administration. Whence it may be seen that hatred
|
||
|
is gained as much by good works as by evil, and therefore, as I said
|
||
|
before, a prince who wishes to maintain the state is often forced to
|
||
|
do evil, for when that party, whether populace, soldiery, or nobles,
|
||
|
whichever it be that you consider necessary to you for keeping your
|
||
|
position, is corrupt, you must follow its humour and satisfy it, and
|
||
|
in that case good works will be inimical to you. But let us come to
|
||
|
Alexander, who was of such goodness, that among other things for which
|
||
|
he is praised, it is said that in the fourteen years that he reigned
|
||
|
no one was put to death by him without a fair trial. Nevertheless,
|
||
|
being considered effeminate, and a man who allowed himself to be
|
||
|
ruled by his mother, and having thus fallen into contempt, the army
|
||
|
conspired against him and killed him. Looking, on the other hand,
|
||
|
at the qualities of Commodus, Severus, Antoninus, extremely cruel
|
||
|
and rapacious; to satisfy the soldiers there was no injury which
|
||
|
they would not inflict on the people, and all except Severus ended
|
||
|
badly. Severus, however, had such abilities that by maintaining the
|
||
|
soldiers friendly to him, he was able to reign happily, although he
|
||
|
oppressed the people, for his virtues made him so admirable in the
|
||
|
sight both of the soldiers and the people that the latter were, as it
|
||
|
were, astonished and stupefied, while the former were respectful and
|
||
|
contented. As the deeds of this ruler were great for a new prince, I
|
||
|
will briefly show how well he could use the qualities of the fox and
|
||
|
the lion, whose natures, as I said before, it is necessary for a prince
|
||
|
to imitate. Knowing the sloth of the Emperor Julian, Severus, who was
|
||
|
leader of the army in Slavonia, persuaded the troops that it would be
|
||
|
well to go to Rome to avenge the death of Pertinax, who had been slain
|
||
|
by the Imperial guard, and under this pretext, without revealing his
|
||
|
aspirations to the throne, marched with his army to Rome and was in
|
||
|
Italy before his design was known. On his arrival in Rome the senate
|
||
|
elected him emperor through fear, and Julian died. There remained
|
||
|
after this beginning two difficulties to be faced by Severus before
|
||
|
he could obtain the whole control of the empire: one in Asia, where
|
||
|
Nigrinus, head of the Asiatic armies, had declared himself emperor; the
|
||
|
other in the west from Albinus, who also aspired to the empire. And
|
||
|
as he judged it dangerous to show himself hostile to both, he decided
|
||
|
to attack Nigrinus and deceive Albinus, to whom he wrote that having
|
||
|
been elected emperor by the senate he wished to share that dignity
|
||
|
with him; he sent him the title of Cæsar and, by deliberation of the
|
||
|
senate, he was declared his colleague; all of which was accepted as
|
||
|
true by Albinus. But when Severus had defeated and killed Nigrinus,
|
||
|
and pacified things in the East, he returned to Rome and charged
|
||
|
Albinus in the senate with having, unmindful of the benefits received
|
||
|
from him, traitorously sought to assassinate him, and stated that he
|
||
|
was therefore obliged to go and punish his ingratitude. He then went
|
||
|
to France to meet him, and there deprived him of both his position
|
||
|
and his life. Whoever examines in detail the actions of Severus, will
|
||
|
find him to have been a very ferocious lion and an extremely astute
|
||
|
fox, and will see him to have been feared and respected by all and not
|
||
|
hated by the army; and will not be surprised that he, a new man, should
|
||
|
have been able to hold the empire so well, since his great reputation
|
||
|
defended him always from that hatred that his rapacity might have
|
||
|
produced in the people. But Antoninus his son was also a man of great
|
||
|
ability, and possessed qualities that rendered him admirable in the
|
||
|
sight of the people and also made him popular with the soldiers, for
|
||
|
he was a military man, capable of enduring the most extreme hardships,
|
||
|
disdainful of delicate food, and every other luxury, which made him
|
||
|
loved by all the armies. However, his ferocity and cruelty were so
|
||
|
great and unheard of, through his having, after executing many private
|
||
|
individuals, caused a large part of the population of Rome and all that
|
||
|
of Alexandria to be killed, that he became hated by all the world and
|
||
|
began to be feared by those about him to such an extent that he was
|
||
|
finally killed by a centurion in the midst of his army. Whence it is to
|
||
|
be noted that this kind of death, which proceeds from the deliberate
|
||
|
action of a determined man, cannot be avoided by princes, since any one
|
||
|
who does not fear death himself can inflict it, but a prince need not
|
||
|
fear much on this account, as such actions are extremely rare. He must
|
||
|
only guard against committing any grave injury to any one he makes use
|
||
|
of, or has about him for his service, like Antoninus had done, having
|
||
|
caused the death with contumely of the brother of that centurion, and
|
||
|
also threatened him every day, although he still retained him in his
|
||
|
bodyguard, which was a foolish and dangerous thing to do, as the fact
|
||
|
proved. But let us come to Commodus, who might easily have kept the
|
||
|
empire, having succeeded to it by heredity, being the son of Marcus,
|
||
|
and it would have sufficed for him to follow in the steps of his father
|
||
|
to have satisfied both the people and the soldiers. But being of a
|
||
|
cruel and bestial disposition, in order to be able to exercise his
|
||
|
rapacity on the people, he sought to amuse the soldiers and render
|
||
|
them licentious; on the other hand, by not maintaining his dignity,
|
||
|
by often descending into the theatre to fight with gladiators and
|
||
|
committing other contemptible actions, little worthy of the imperial
|
||
|
dignity, he became despicable in the eyes of the soldiers, and being
|
||
|
hated on the one hand and despised on the other, he was conspired
|
||
|
against and killed. There remains to be described the character of
|
||
|
Maximinus. He was an extremely warlike man, and as the armies were
|
||
|
annoyed with the effeminacy of Alexander, which we have already spoken
|
||
|
of, he was after the death of the latter elected emperor. He did not
|
||
|
enjoy it for long, as two things made him hated and despised: the
|
||
|
one his base origin, as he had been a shepherd in Thrace, which was
|
||
|
generally known and caused great disdain on all sides; the other,
|
||
|
because he had at the commencement of his rule deferred going to Rome
|
||
|
to take possession of the Imperial seat, and had obtained a reputation
|
||
|
for great cruelty, having through his prefects in Rome and other parts
|
||
|
of the empire committed many acts of cruelty. The whole world being
|
||
|
thus moved by indignation for the baseness of his blood, and also by
|
||
|
the hatred caused by fear of his ferocity, he was conspired against
|
||
|
first by Africa and afterwards by the senate and all the people of Rome
|
||
|
and Italy. His own army also joined them, for besieging Aquileia and
|
||
|
finding it difficult to take, they became enraged at his cruelty, and
|
||
|
seeing that he had so many enemies, they feared him less and put him to
|
||
|
death. I will not speak of Heliogabalus, of Macrinus, or Julian, who
|
||
|
being entirely contemptible were immediately suppressed, but I will
|
||
|
come to the conclusion of this discourse by saying that the princes of
|
||
|
our time have less difficulty than these of being obliged to satisfy in
|
||
|
an extraordinary degree their soldiers in their states; for although
|
||
|
they must have a certain consideration for them, yet it is soon
|
||
|
settled, for none of these princes have armies that are inextricably
|
||
|
bound up with the administration of the government and the rule of
|
||
|
their provinces as were the armies of the Roman empire; and therefore
|
||
|
if it was then necessary to satisfy the soldiers rather than the
|
||
|
people, it was because the soldiers could do more than the people; now,
|
||
|
it is more necessary to all princes, except the Turk and the Soldan,
|
||
|
to satisfy the people than the soldiers, for the people can do more
|
||
|
than the soldiers. I except the Turk, because he always keeps about
|
||
|
him twelve thousand infantry and fifteen thousand cavalry, on which
|
||
|
depend the security and strength of his kingdom; and it is necessary
|
||
|
for him to postpone every other consideration of the people to keep
|
||
|
them friendly. It is the same with the kingdom of the Soldan, which
|
||
|
being entirely in the hands of the soldiers, he is bound to keep their
|
||
|
friendship regardless of the people. And it is to be noted that this
|
||
|
state of the Soldan is different from that of all other princes, being
|
||
|
similar to the Christian pontificate, which cannot be called either
|
||
|
a hereditary kingdom or a new one, for the sons of the dead prince
|
||
|
are not his heirs, but he who is elected to that position by those
|
||
|
who have authority. And as this order is ancient it cannot be called
|
||
|
a new kingdom, there being none of these difficulties which exist in
|
||
|
new ones; as although the prince is new, the rules of that state are
|
||
|
old and arranged to receive him as if he were their hereditary lord.
|
||
|
But returning to our matter, I say that whoever studies the preceding
|
||
|
argument will see that either hatred or contempt were the causes of
|
||
|
the ruin of the emperors named, and will also observe how it came about
|
||
|
that, some of them acting in one way and some in another, in both ways
|
||
|
there were some who had a fortunate and others an unfortunate ending.
|
||
|
As Pertinax and Alexander were both new rulers, it was useless and
|
||
|
injurious for them to try and imitate Marcus, who was a hereditary
|
||
|
prince; and similarly with Caracalla, Commodus, and Maximinus it was
|
||
|
pernicious for them to imitate Severus, as they had not sufficient
|
||
|
ability to follow in his footsteps. Thus a new prince cannot imitate
|
||
|
the actions of Marcus, in his dominions, nor is it necessary for him to
|
||
|
imitate those of Severus; but he must take from Severus those portions
|
||
|
that are necessary to found his state, and from Marcus those that are
|
||
|
useful and glorious for conserving a state that is already established
|
||
|
and secure.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XX
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
WHETHER FORTRESSES AND OTHER THINGS WHICH PRINCES OFTEN MAKE ARE USEFUL
|
||
|
OR INJURIOUS
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Some princes, in order to securely hold their possessions, have
|
||
|
disarmed their subjects, some others have kept their subject lands
|
||
|
divided into parts, others have fomented enmities against themselves,
|
||
|
others have endeavoured to win over those whom they suspected at the
|
||
|
commencement of their rule: some have constructed fortresses, others
|
||
|
have ruined and destroyed them. And although one cannot pronounce a
|
||
|
definite judgment as to these things without going into the particulars
|
||
|
of the state to which such a deliberation is to be applied, still I
|
||
|
will speak in such a broad way as the matter will permit of.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A new prince has never been known to disarm his subjects, on the
|
||
|
contrary, when he has found them disarmed he has always armed them, for
|
||
|
by arming them these arms become your own, those that you suspected
|
||
|
become faithful and those that were faithful remain so, and from being
|
||
|
merely subjects become your partisans. And since all the subjects
|
||
|
cannot be armed, when you benefit those that you arm, you can deal more
|
||
|
safely with the others; and this different treatment that they notice
|
||
|
renders your men more obliged to you, the others will excuse you,
|
||
|
judging that those have necessarily greater merit who have greater
|
||
|
danger and heavier duties. But when you disarm them, you commence to
|
||
|
offend them and show that you distrust them either through cowardice or
|
||
|
lack of confidence, and both of these opinions generate hatred against
|
||
|
you. And as you cannot remain unarmed, you are obliged to resort to a
|
||
|
mercenary militia, of which we have already stated the value; and even
|
||
|
if it were good it cannot be sufficient in number to defend you against
|
||
|
powerful enemies and suspected subjects. But, as I have said, a new
|
||
|
prince in a new dominion always has his subjects armed. History is full
|
||
|
of such examples. But when a prince acquires a new state as an addition
|
||
|
to his old one, then it is necessary to disarm that state, except those
|
||
|
who in acquiring it have sided with you; and even these one must, when
|
||
|
time and opportunity serve, render weak and effeminate, and arrange
|
||
|
things so that all the arms of the new state are in the hands of your
|
||
|
own soldiers who in your old state live near you.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Our forefathers and those who were esteemed wise used to say that
|
||
|
it was necessary to hold Pistoia by means of factious and Pisa with
|
||
|
fortresses, and for this purpose they fomented differences among their
|
||
|
subjects in some town in order to possess it more easily. This, in
|
||
|
those days when Italy was fairly divided, was doubtless well done, out
|
||
|
does not seem to me to be a good precept for the present time, for I do
|
||
|
not believe that the divisions thus created ever do any good; on the
|
||
|
contrary it is certain that when the enemy approaches the cities thus
|
||
|
divided will be at once lost, for the weaker faction will always side
|
||
|
with the enemy and the other will not be able to stand. The Venetians,
|
||
|
actuated, I believe, by the aforesaid motives, cherished the Guelf
|
||
|
and Ghibelline factions in the cities subject to them, and although
|
||
|
they never allowed them to come to bloodshed, they yet encouraged
|
||
|
these differences among them, so that the citizens, being occupied in
|
||
|
their own quarrels, might not act against them. This, however, did
|
||
|
not avail them anything, as was seen when, after the defeat of Vaila,
|
||
|
a part of those subjects immediately took courage and took from them
|
||
|
the whole state. Such methods, besides, argue weakness in a prince,
|
||
|
for in a strong government such dissensions will never be permitted.
|
||
|
They are profitable only in time of peace, as by means of them it is
|
||
|
easy to manage one's subjects, but when it comes to war, the fallacy
|
||
|
of such a policy is at once shown. Without doubt princes become great
|
||
|
when they overcome difficulties and opposition, and therefore fortune,
|
||
|
especially when it wants to render a new prince great, who has greater
|
||
|
need of gaining a great reputation than a hereditary prince, raises up
|
||
|
enemies and compels him to undertake wars against them, so that he may
|
||
|
have cause to overcome them, and thus raise himself higher by means
|
||
|
of that ladder which his enemies have brought him. There are many who
|
||
|
think therefore that a wise prince ought, when he has the chance, to
|
||
|
foment astutely some enmity, so that by suppressing it he will augment
|
||
|
his greatness. Princes, and especially new ones, have found more faith
|
||
|
and more usefulness in those men, whom at the beginning of their power
|
||
|
they regarded with suspicion, than in those they at first confided
|
||
|
in. Pandolfo Petrucci, Prince of Siena, governed his state more by
|
||
|
those whom he suspected than by others. But of this we cannot speak at
|
||
|
large, as it varies according to the subject; I will merely say that
|
||
|
these men who at the beginning of a new government were enemies, if
|
||
|
they are of a kind to need support to maintain their position, can be
|
||
|
very easily gained by the prince, and they are the more compelled to
|
||
|
serve him faithfully as they know they must by their deeds cancel the
|
||
|
bad opinion previously held of them, and thus the prince will always
|
||
|
derive greater help from them than from those who, serving him with
|
||
|
greater security, neglect his interest? And as the matter requires it,
|
||
|
I will not omit to remind a prince who has newly taken a state with the
|
||
|
secret help of its inhabitants, that he must consider well the motives
|
||
|
that have induced those who have favoured him to do so, and if it is
|
||
|
not natural affection for him, but only because they were not contented
|
||
|
with the state as it was, he will have great trouble and difficulty in
|
||
|
maintaining their friendship, because it will be impossible for him to
|
||
|
content them. And on well examining the cause of this in the examples
|
||
|
drawn from ancient and modern times it will be seen that it is much
|
||
|
easier to gain the friendship, of those men who were contented with
|
||
|
the previous condition and were therefore at first enemies, than that
|
||
|
of those who not being contented, became his friends and helped him to
|
||
|
occupy it. It has been the custom of princes in order to be able to
|
||
|
hold securely their state, to erect fortresses, as a bridle and bit
|
||
|
to those who have designs against them, and in order to have a secure
|
||
|
refuge against a sudden assault. I approve this method, because it was
|
||
|
anciently used. Nevertheless, Messer Niccolo Vitelli has been seen in
|
||
|
our own time to destroy two fortresses in Città di Castello in order
|
||
|
to keep that state. Guid' Ubaldo, Duke of Urbino, on returning to his
|
||
|
dominions from which he had been driven by Cesare Borgia, razed to
|
||
|
their foundations all the fortresses of that province, and considered
|
||
|
that without them it would be more difficult for him to lose again the
|
||
|
state. The Bentivogli, in returning to Bologna, used similar measures.
|
||
|
Therefore fortresses may or may not be useful according to the times;
|
||
|
if they do good in one way, they do harm in another.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The question may be discussed thus: a prince who fears his own people
|
||
|
more than foreigners ought to build fortresses, but he who has greater
|
||
|
fear of foreigners than of his own people ought to do without them. The
|
||
|
castle of Milan built by Francesco Sforza has given and will give more
|
||
|
trouble to the house of Sforza than any other disorder in that state.
|
||
|
Therefore the best fortress is to be found in the love of the people,
|
||
|
for although you may have fortresses they will not save you if you are
|
||
|
hated by the people. When once the people have taken arms against you,
|
||
|
there will never be lacking foreigners to assist them. In our times
|
||
|
we do not see that they have profited any ruler, except the Countess
|
||
|
of Forli on the death of her consort Count Girolamo, for she was thus
|
||
|
enabled to escape the popular rising and await help from Milan and
|
||
|
recover the state; the circumstances being then such that no foreigner
|
||
|
could assist the people. But afterwards they were of little use to her
|
||
|
when Cesare Borgia attacked her and the people being hostile to her
|
||
|
allied themselves with the foreigner. So that then and before it would
|
||
|
have been safer for her not to be hated by the people than to have the
|
||
|
fortresses. Having considered these things I would therefore praise the
|
||
|
one who erects fortresses and the one who does not, and would blame any
|
||
|
one who, trusting in them, thinks little of being hated by his people.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XXI
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
HOW A PRINCE MUST ACT IN ORDER TO GAIN REPUTATION
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Nothing causes a prince to be so much esteemed as great enterprises
|
||
|
and setting a rare example. We have in our own day Ferdinand, King of
|
||
|
Aragon, at present King of Spain. He may almost be termed a new prince,
|
||
|
because from a weak king he has become for fame and glory the first
|
||
|
king in Christendom, and if you regard his actions you will find them
|
||
|
all very great and some of them extraordinary. At the beginning of
|
||
|
his reign he assailed Granada, and that enterprise was the foundation
|
||
|
of his state. At first he did it leisurely and without fear of being
|
||
|
interfered with; he kept the minds of the barons of Castile occupied in
|
||
|
this enterprise, so that thinking only of that war they did not think
|
||
|
of making innovations, and he thus acquired reputation and power over
|
||
|
them without their being aware of it. He was able with the money of
|
||
|
the Church and the people to maintain his armies, and by that long war
|
||
|
lay the foundations of his military power, which afterwards has made
|
||
|
him famous. Besides this, to be able to undertake greater enterprises,
|
||
|
and always under the pretext of religion, he had recourse to a pious
|
||
|
cruelty, driving out the Moors from his kingdom and despoiling them.
|
||
|
No more admirable or rare example can be found. He also attacked
|
||
|
under the same pretext Africa, undertook his Italian enterprise, and
|
||
|
has lately attacked France; so that he has continually contrived great
|
||
|
things, which have kept his subjects' minds uncertain and astonished,
|
||
|
and occupied in watching their result.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And these actions have arisen one out of the other, so that they have
|
||
|
left no time for men to settle down and act against him. It is also
|
||
|
very profitable for a prince to give some rare examples of himself in
|
||
|
the internal administration, like those related of Messer Bernabò of
|
||
|
Milan, when it happens that some one does something extraordinary,
|
||
|
either good or evil, in civil life, and to take a means of rewarding
|
||
|
or punishing him which will be much talked about. And above all a
|
||
|
prince must endeavour in every action to obtain fame for being great
|
||
|
and excellent. A prince is further esteemed when he is a true friend
|
||
|
or a true enemy, when, that is, he declares himself without reserve in
|
||
|
favour of some one against another.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This policy is always more useful than remaining neutral. For if two
|
||
|
neighbouring powers come to blows, they are either such that if one
|
||
|
wins, you will have to fear the victor, or else not. In either of these
|
||
|
two cases it will be better for you to declare yourself openly and make
|
||
|
war, because in the first case if you do not declare yourself, you will
|
||
|
fall a prey to the victor, to the pleasure and satisfaction of the one
|
||
|
who has been defeated, and you will have no reason nor anything to
|
||
|
defend you and nobody to receive you. For, whoever wins will not desire
|
||
|
friends whom he suspects and who do not help him when in trouble, and
|
||
|
whoever loses will not receive you as you did not take up arms to
|
||
|
assist his cause. Antiochus went to Greece, being sent by the Ætoli
|
||
|
to expel the Romans. He sent orators to the Achæi who were friends of
|
||
|
the Romans to encourage them to remain neutral, on the other hand the
|
||
|
Romans persuaded them to take up arms on their side. The matter was
|
||
|
brought before the council of the Achæi for deliberation, where the
|
||
|
ambassador of Antiochus sought to persuade them to remain neutral, to
|
||
|
which the Roman ambassador replied: "As to what is said that it is best
|
||
|
and most useful for your state not to meddle in our war, nothing is
|
||
|
further from the truth; for if you do not meddle in it you will become,
|
||
|
without any favour or any reputation, the prize of the victor." And it
|
||
|
will always happen that the one who is not your friend will want you
|
||
|
to remain neutral, and the one who is your friend will require you to
|
||
|
declare yourself by taking arms. Irresolute princes, to avoid present
|
||
|
dangers, usually follow the way of neutrality and are mostly ruined
|
||
|
by it. But when the prince declares himself frankly in favour of one
|
||
|
side, if the one to whom you adhere conquers, even if he is powerful
|
||
|
and you remain at his discretion, he is under an obligation to you and
|
||
|
friendship has been established, and men are never so dishonest as to
|
||
|
oppress you with such ingratitude.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Moreover, victories are never so prosperous that the victor does not
|
||
|
need to have some scruples, especially as to justice. But if he to whom
|
||
|
you adhere loses, you are sheltered by him, and so long as he can, he
|
||
|
will assist you; you become the companion of a fortune which may rise
|
||
|
again. In the second case, when those who fight are such that you have
|
||
|
nothing to fear from the victor, it is still more prudent on your part
|
||
|
to adhere to one; for you go to the ruin of one with the help of him
|
||
|
who ought to save him if he were wise, and if he conquers he rests
|
||
|
at your discretion, and it is impossible that he should not conquer
|
||
|
with your help. And here it should be noted that a prince ought never
|
||
|
to make common cause with one more powerful than himself to injure
|
||
|
another, unless necessity forces him to it, as before said; for if he
|
||
|
wins you rest at his discretion, and princes must avoid as much as
|
||
|
possible being at the discretion of others. The Venetians united with
|
||
|
France against the Duke of Milan, although they could have avoided that
|
||
|
union, and from it resulted their own ruin. But when one cannot avoid
|
||
|
it, as happened to the Florentines when the pope and Spain went with
|
||
|
their armies to attack Lombardy, then the prince ought to join for the
|
||
|
above reasons. Let no state believe that it can follow a secure policy,
|
||
|
rather let it think that all are doubtful. This is found in the nature
|
||
|
of things, that one never tries to avoid one difficulty without running
|
||
|
into another, but prudence consists in being able to know the nature of
|
||
|
the difficulties, and taking the least harmful as good. A prince must
|
||
|
also show himself a lover of merit, and honour those who excel in every
|
||
|
art. Moreover he must encourage his citizens to follow their callings
|
||
|
quietly, whether in commerce, or agriculture, or any other trade that
|
||
|
men follow, so that this one shall not refrain from improving his
|
||
|
possessions through fear that they may be taken from him, and that one
|
||
|
from starting a trade for fear of taxes; but he should offer rewards to
|
||
|
whoever does these things, and to whoever seeks in any way to improve
|
||
|
his city or state. Besides this, he ought, at convenient seasons of the
|
||
|
year, to keep the people occupied with festivals and spectacles; and
|
||
|
as every city is divided either into trades or into classes, he ought
|
||
|
to pay attention to all these things, mingle with them from time to
|
||
|
time, and give them an example of his humanity and magnificence, always
|
||
|
holding firm, however, the majesty of his dignity, which must never be
|
||
|
allowed to fan in anything whatever.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XXII
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
OF THE SECRETARIES OF PRINCES
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
The choice of a prince's ministers is a matter of no little importance;
|
||
|
they are either good or not according to the prudence of the prince.
|
||
|
The first impression that one gets of a ruler and of his brains is
|
||
|
from seeing the men that he has about him. When they are competent
|
||
|
and faithful one can always consider him wise, as he has been able to
|
||
|
recognise their ability and keep them faithful. But when they are the
|
||
|
reverse, one can always form an unfavourable opinion of him, because
|
||
|
the first mistake that he makes is in making this choice. There was
|
||
|
nobody who knew Messer Antonio da Venafro as the minister of Pandolfo
|
||
|
Petrucci, Prince of Siena, who did not consider Pandolfo to be a very
|
||
|
prudent man, having him for his minister. There are three different
|
||
|
kinds of brains, the one understands things unassisted, the other
|
||
|
understands things when shown by others, the third understands neither
|
||
|
alone nor with the explanations of others. The first kind is most
|
||
|
excellent, the second also excellent, but the third useless. It is
|
||
|
therefore evident that if Pandolfo was not of the first kind, he was
|
||
|
at any rate of the second. For every time that one has the judgment to
|
||
|
know the good and evil that any one does or says, even if he has no
|
||
|
invention, yet he recognises the bad and good works or his minister
|
||
|
and corrects the one and supports the other; and the minister cannot
|
||
|
hope to deceive him and therefore remains good. For a prince to be
|
||
|
able to know a minister there is this method which never fails. When
|
||
|
you see the minister think more of himself than of you, and in all his
|
||
|
actions seek his own profit, such a man will never be a good minister,
|
||
|
and you can never rely on him; for whoever has in hand the state of
|
||
|
another must never think of himself but of the prince, and not call
|
||
|
to mind anything but what relates to him. And, on the other hand, the
|
||
|
prince, in order to retain his fidelity ought to think of his minister,
|
||
|
honouring and enriching him, doing him kindnesses, and conferring on
|
||
|
him honours and giving him responsible tasks, so that the great honours
|
||
|
and riches bestowed on him cause him not to desire other honours and
|
||
|
riches, and the tasks he has to fulfil make him fearful of changes,
|
||
|
knowing that he could not execute them without the prince. When princes
|
||
|
and their ministers stand in this relation to each other, they can
|
||
|
rely the one upon the other; when it is otherwise, the end is always
|
||
|
injurious either for one or the other of them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XXIII
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
HOW FLATTERERS MUST BE SHUNNED
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
I must not omit an important subject, and a mistake which princes
|
||
|
can with difficulty avoid, if they are not very prudent, or if they
|
||
|
do not make a good choice. And this is with regard to flatterers, of
|
||
|
which courts are full, because men take such pleasure in their own
|
||
|
things and deceive themselves about them that they can with difficulty
|
||
|
guard against this plague; and by wishing to guard against it they run
|
||
|
the risk of becoming contemptible. Because there is no other way of
|
||
|
guarding one's self against flattery than by letting men understand
|
||
|
that they will not offend you by speaking the truth; but when every one
|
||
|
can tell you the truth, you lose their respect. A prudent prince must
|
||
|
therefore take a third course, by choosing in his state wise men, and
|
||
|
giving these alone full liberty to speak the truth to him, but only of
|
||
|
those things that he asks and of nothing else; but he must ask them
|
||
|
about everything and hear their opinion, and afterwards deliberate by
|
||
|
himself in his own way, and in these councils and with each of these
|
||
|
men comport himself so that every one may see that the more freely he
|
||
|
speaks, the more he will be acceptable. Outside these he should listen
|
||
|
to no one, go about the matter deliberately, and be determined in his
|
||
|
decisions. Whoever acts otherwise either acts precipitately through
|
||
|
flattery or else changes often through the variety of opinions, from
|
||
|
which it happens that he is little esteemed. I will give a modern
|
||
|
instance of this. Pre' Luca, a follower of Maximilian, the present
|
||
|
emperor, speaking of his majesty said that he never took counsel with
|
||
|
anybody, and yet that he never did anything as he wished; this arose
|
||
|
from his following the contrary method to the aforesaid. As the emperor
|
||
|
is a secret man he does not communicate his designs to any one or
|
||
|
take any one's advice, but as on putting them into effect they begin
|
||
|
to be known and discovered, they begin to be opposed by those he has
|
||
|
about him, and he is easily diverted from his purpose. Hence it comes
|
||
|
to pass that what he does one day he undoes the next, no one ever
|
||
|
understands what he wishes or intends to do, and no reliance is to be
|
||
|
placed on his deliberations. A prince, therefore, ought always to take
|
||
|
counsel, but only when he wishes, not when others wish; on the contrary
|
||
|
he ought to discourage absolutely attempts to advise him unless he
|
||
|
asks it, but he ought to be a great asker, and a patient hearer of
|
||
|
the truth about those things which he has inquired of; indeed, if he
|
||
|
finds that any one has scruples in telling him the truth he should be
|
||
|
angry. And since some think that a prince who gains the reputation
|
||
|
of being prudent is so considered, not by his nature but by the good
|
||
|
councillors he has about him, they are undoubtedly deceived. It is an
|
||
|
infallible rule that a prince who is not wise himself cannot be well
|
||
|
advised, unless by chance he left himself entirely in the hands of one
|
||
|
man who ruled him in everything, and happened to be a very prudent
|
||
|
man. In this case he may doubtless be well governed, but it would not
|
||
|
last long, for that governor would in a short time deprive him of the
|
||
|
state; but by taking counsel with many, a prince who is not wise will
|
||
|
never have united councils and will not be able to unite them for
|
||
|
himself. The councillors will all think of their own interests, and he
|
||
|
will be unable either to correct or to understand them. And it cannot
|
||
|
be otherwise, for men will always be false to you unless they are
|
||
|
compelled by necessity to be true.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Therefore it must be concluded that wise counsels, from whoever they
|
||
|
come, must necessarily be due to the prudence of the prince, and not
|
||
|
the prudence of the prince to the good counsels received.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XXIV
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
WHY THE PRINCES OF ITALY HAVE LOST THEIR STATES
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
The before-mentioned things, if prudently observed, make a new prince
|
||
|
seem ancient, and render him at once more secure and firmer in the
|
||
|
state than if he had been established there of old. For a new prince is
|
||
|
much more observed in his actions than a hereditary one, and when these
|
||
|
are recognised as virtuous, he gains men more and they are more bound
|
||
|
to him than if he were of the ancient blood. For men are much more
|
||
|
taken by present than by past things, and when they find themselves
|
||
|
well off in the present, they enjoy it and seek nothing more; on the
|
||
|
contrary, they will do all they can to defend him, so long as the
|
||
|
prince is not in other things wanting to himself. And thus he will
|
||
|
have the double glory of having founded a new realm and adorned it and
|
||
|
fortified it with good laws, good arms, good friends and good examples;
|
||
|
as he will have double shame who is born a prince and through want of
|
||
|
prudence has lost it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And if one considers those rulers who have lost their position in
|
||
|
Italy in our days, such as the King of Naples, the Dukè of Milan and
|
||
|
others, one will find in them first a common defect as to their arms,
|
||
|
for the reasons discussed at length, then we observe that some of
|
||
|
them either had the people hostile to them, or that if the people were
|
||
|
friendly they were not able to make sure of the nobility, for without
|
||
|
these defects, states are not lost that have enough strength to be able
|
||
|
to keep an army in the field. Philip of Macedon, not the father of
|
||
|
Alexander the Great, but the one who was conquered by Titus Quinteus,
|
||
|
did not possess a great state compared to the greatness of Rome and
|
||
|
Greece which assailed him, but being a military man and one who knew
|
||
|
how to divert the people and make sure of the great, he was able to
|
||
|
sustain the war against them for many years; and if at length he lost
|
||
|
his power over several cities, he was still able to keep his kingdom.
|
||
|
Therefore, those of our princes who had held their possessions for many
|
||
|
years must not accuse fortune for having lost them, but rather their
|
||
|
own negligence; for having never in quiet times considered that things
|
||
|
might change (as it is a common fault of men not to reckon on storms,
|
||
|
in fair weather) when adverse times came, they only thought of fleeing
|
||
|
from them, instead of defending themselves; and hoped that the people,
|
||
|
enraged by the insolence of the conquerors, would recall them. This
|
||
|
measure, when others are wanting, is good; but it is very bad to have
|
||
|
neglected the other remedies for that one, for nobody would desire to
|
||
|
fall because he believed that he would then find some one to pick him
|
||
|
up. This may or may not take place, and if it does, it is not with
|
||
|
safety to you, as that defence is known to be cowardly and not to be
|
||
|
depended on; and only those defences are good, certain and durable,
|
||
|
which depend only on yourself and your own ability.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XXV
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
HOW MUCH FORTUNE CAN DO IN HUMAN AFFAIRS AND HOW IT MAY BE OPPOSED
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
It is not unknown to me how many have been and are of opinion that
|
||
|
worldly events are so governed by fortune and by God, that men cannot
|
||
|
by their prudence change them, and that on the contrary there is no
|
||
|
remedy whatever, and for this they may judge it to be useless to toil
|
||
|
much about them, but let things be ruled by chance. This opinion has
|
||
|
been more believed in in our day, from the great changes that have been
|
||
|
seen, and are daily seen, beyond every human conjecture.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When I think about them at times, I am partly inclined to share
|
||
|
this opinion. Nevertheless, that our freewill may not be altogether
|
||
|
extinguished, I think it may be true that fortune is the ruler of half
|
||
|
our actions, but that she allows the other half or a little less to be
|
||
|
governed by us. I would compare her to an impetuous river that, when
|
||
|
turbulent, inundates the plains, ruins trees and buildings, removes
|
||
|
earth from this side and places it on the other; every one flies before
|
||
|
it, and everything yields to its fury without being able to oppose it;
|
||
|
and yet though it is of such a kind, still when it is quiet, men can
|
||
|
make provision against it by dams and banks, so that when it rises
|
||
|
it will either go into a canal or its rush will not be so wild and
|
||
|
dangerous. It happens similarly with fortune, which shows her power
|
||
|
where no measures have been taken to resist her, and turns her fury
|
||
|
where she knows that no dams or barriers have been made to hold her.
|
||
|
And if you regard Italy, which has been the seat of these changes, and
|
||
|
who has given the impulse to them, you will see her to be a country
|
||
|
without dams or barriers of any kind. If she had been protected by
|
||
|
proper measures, like Germany, Spain, and France, this inundation
|
||
|
would not have caused the great changes that it has, or would not have
|
||
|
happened at all. This must suffice as regards opposition to fortune
|
||
|
in general. But limiting myself more to particular cases, I would
|
||
|
point out how one sees a certain prince to-day fortunate and to-morrow
|
||
|
ruined, without seeing that he has changed in character or otherwise.
|
||
|
I believe this arises in the first place from the causes that we have
|
||
|
already discussed at length; that is to say, because the prince who
|
||
|
bases himself entirely on fortune is ruined when fortune varies. I
|
||
|
also believe that he is happy whose mode of proceeding accords with
|
||
|
the needs of the times, and similarly he is unfortunate whose mode of
|
||
|
proceeding is opposed to the times. For one sees that men in those
|
||
|
things which lead them to the aim that each one has in view, namely,
|
||
|
glory and riches, proceed in various ways; one with circumspection,
|
||
|
another with impetuosity, one by violence, another by cunning, one with
|
||
|
patience, another with the reverse; and each by these diverse ways
|
||
|
may arrive at his aim. One sees also two cautious men, one of whom
|
||
|
succeeds in his designs, and the other not, and in the same way two men
|
||
|
succeed equally by different methods, one being cautious, the other
|
||
|
impetuous, which arises only from the nature of the times, which does
|
||
|
or does not conform to their method of proceeding. From this results,
|
||
|
as I have said, that two men, acting differently, attain the same
|
||
|
effect, and of two others acting in the same way, one arrives at his
|
||
|
good and not the other. From this depend also the changes in fortune,
|
||
|
for if it happens that time and circumstances are favourable to one
|
||
|
who acts with caution and prudence he will be successful, but if time
|
||
|
and circumstances change he will be ruined, because he does not change
|
||
|
his mode of proceeding. No man is found able to adapt himself to this,
|
||
|
either because he cannot deviate from that to which his nature disposes
|
||
|
him, or else because having always prospered by walking in one path,
|
||
|
he cannot persuade himself that it is well to leave it; and therefore
|
||
|
the cautious man, when it is time to act suddenly, does not know how
|
||
|
to do so and is consequently ruined; for if one could change one's
|
||
|
nature with time and circumstances, fortune would never change. Pope
|
||
|
Julius II. acted impetuously in everything he did and found the times
|
||
|
and conditions so in conformity with that mode of proceeding, that he
|
||
|
always obtained a good result. Consider the first war that he made
|
||
|
against Bologna while Messer Giovanni Bentivogli was still living. The
|
||
|
Venetians were not pleased with it, the King of Spain and likewise
|
||
|
France had objections to this enterprise, notwithstanding which with
|
||
|
his fierce and impetuous disposition he engaged personally in the
|
||
|
expedition. This move caused both Spain and the Venetians to halt and
|
||
|
hesitate, the latter through fear, the former through the desire to
|
||
|
regain the entire kingdom of Naples. On the other hand, he engaged
|
||
|
with him the King of France, because seeing him make this move and
|
||
|
desiring his friendship in order to put down the Venetians, that king
|
||
|
judged that he could not refuse him his troops without manifest injury.
|
||
|
Thus Julius by his impetuous move achieved what no other pontiff with
|
||
|
the utmost human prudence would have succeeded in doing, because, if
|
||
|
he had waited till all arrangements had been made and everything
|
||
|
settled before leaving Rome, as any other pontiff would have done, it
|
||
|
would never have taken place. For the king of France would have found
|
||
|
a thousand excuses, and the others would have inspired him with a
|
||
|
thousand fears. I will omit his other actions, which were all of this
|
||
|
kind and which all succeeded well, and the shortness of his life did
|
||
|
not suffer him to experience the contrary, for had times succeeded
|
||
|
in which it was necessary to act with caution, his ruin would have
|
||
|
resulted, for he would never have deviated from these methods to which
|
||
|
his nature disposed him. I conclude then that fortune varying and men
|
||
|
remaining fixed in their ways, they are successful so long as these
|
||
|
ways conform to each other, but when they are opposed to each other
|
||
|
then they are unsuccessful. I certainly think that it is better to be
|
||
|
impetuous than cautious, for fortune is a woman, and it is necessary,
|
||
|
if you wish to master her, to conquer her by force; and it can be seen
|
||
|
that she lets herself be overcome by these rather than by those who
|
||
|
proceed coldly. And therefore, like a woman, she is a friend to the
|
||
|
young, because they are less cautious, fiercer, and master her with
|
||
|
greater audacity.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER XXVI
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
EXHORTATION TO LIBERATE ITALY FROM THE BARBARIANS
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Having now considered all the things we have spoken of, and thought
|
||
|
within myself whether at present the time was not propitious in Italy
|
||
|
for a new prince, and if there was not a state of things which offered
|
||
|
an opportunity to a prudent and capable man to introduce a new system
|
||
|
that would do honour to himself and good to the mass of the people, it
|
||
|
seems to me that so many things concur to favour a new ruler that I do
|
||
|
not know of any time more fitting for such an enterprise. And if, as
|
||
|
I said, it was necessary in order that the power of Moses should be
|
||
|
displayed that the people of Israel should be slaves in Egypt, and to
|
||
|
give scope for the greatness and courage of Cyrus that the Persians
|
||
|
should be oppressed by the Medes, and to illustrate the pre-eminence of
|
||
|
Theseus that the Athenians should be dispersed, so at the present time,
|
||
|
in order that the might of an Italian genius might be recognised, it
|
||
|
was necessary that Italy should be reduced to her present condition,
|
||
|
and that she should be more enslaved than the Hebrews, more oppressed
|
||
|
than the Persians, and more scattered than the Athenians; without a
|
||
|
head, without order, beaten, despoiled, lacerated, and overrun, and
|
||
|
that she should have suffered ruin of every kind. And although before
|
||
|
now a spirit has been shown by some which gave hope that he might be
|
||
|
appointed by God for her redemption, yet at the highest summit of his
|
||
|
career he was thrown aside by fortune, so that now, almost lifeless,
|
||
|
she awaits one who may heal her wounds and put a stop to the rapine and
|
||
|
pillaging of Lombardy, to the rapacity and extortion in the kingdom
|
||
|
and in Tuscany, and cure her of those sores which have long been
|
||
|
festering. Behold how she prays God to send some one to redeem her from
|
||
|
this barbarous cruelty and insolence. Behold her ready and willing to
|
||
|
follow any standard if only there be some one to raise it. There is
|
||
|
nothing now she can hope for but that your illustrious house may place
|
||
|
itself at the head of this redemption, being by its power and fortune
|
||
|
so exalted, and being favoured by God and the Church, whose leadership
|
||
|
it now occupies. Nor will this be very difficult to you, if you call to
|
||
|
mind the actions and lives of the men I have named. And although those
|
||
|
men were rare and marvellous, they were none the less men, and had each
|
||
|
of them less occasion than the present, for their enterprise was not
|
||
|
juster than this, nor easier, nor was God more their friend than He is
|
||
|
yours. Here is a just cause; for that war is just which is necessary;
|
||
|
and those arms are merciful where no hope exists save in them. Here
|
||
|
is the greatest willingness, nor can there be great difficulty where
|
||
|
there is great willingness, provided that the measures are adopted of
|
||
|
those whom I have set before you as examples. Besides this, unexampled
|
||
|
wonders have been seen here performed by God, the sea has been opened,
|
||
|
a cloud has shown you the road, the rock has given forth water, manna
|
||
|
has rained, and everything has contributed to your greatness, the
|
||
|
remainder must be done by you. God will not do everything, in order
|
||
|
not to deprive us of freewill and the portion of the glory that falls
|
||
|
to our lot It is no marvel that none of the before-mentioned Italians
|
||
|
have done that which it is to be hoped your illustrious house may do;
|
||
|
and if in so many revolutions in Italy and so many warlike operations,
|
||
|
it always seems as if the military capacity were extinct, this is
|
||
|
because the ancient methods were not good, and no one has arisen
|
||
|
who knew how to discover new ones. Nothing does so much honour to a
|
||
|
newly-risen man than the new laws and measures which he introduces.
|
||
|
These things, when they are well based and have greatness in them,
|
||
|
render him revered and admired, and there is not lacking scope in Italy
|
||
|
for the introduction of every kind. Here there is great virtue in the
|
||
|
members, if it were not wanting in the heads. Look how in duels and in
|
||
|
councils of a few the Italians are superior in strength, dexterity,
|
||
|
and intelligence. But when it comes to armies they make a poor show;
|
||
|
which proceeds entirely from the weakness of the leaders, for those
|
||
|
that know are not obedient, and every one thinks that he knows, there
|
||
|
being hitherto nobody who has raised himself so high both by valour and
|
||
|
fortune as to make the others yield. Hence it comes about that in all
|
||
|
this time, in all the wars waged during the last twenty years, whenever
|
||
|
there has been an army entirely Italian it has always been a failure,
|
||
|
as witness first Taro, then Alexandria, Capua, Genoa, Vaila, Bologna,
|
||
|
and Mestri. If your illustrious house, therefore, wishes to follow
|
||
|
those great men who redeemed their countries, it is before all things
|
||
|
necessary, as the true foundation of every undertaking, to provide
|
||
|
yourself with your own forces, for you cannot have more faithful, or
|
||
|
truer and better soldiers. And although each one of them may be good,
|
||
|
they will together become better when they see themselves commanded
|
||
|
by their prince, and honoured and supported by him. It is therefore
|
||
|
necessary to prepare such forces in order to be able with Italian
|
||
|
prowess to defend the country from foreigners. And although both the
|
||
|
Swiss and Spanish infantry are deemed terrible, none the less they
|
||
|
each have their defects, so that a third order might not only oppose
|
||
|
them, but be confident of overcoming them. For the Spaniards cannot
|
||
|
sustain the attack of cavalry, and the Swiss have to fear infantry
|
||
|
which meets them with resolution equal to their own. From which it has
|
||
|
resulted, as will be seen by experience, that the Spaniards cannot
|
||
|
sustain the attack of French cavalry, and the Swiss are overthrown
|
||
|
by Spanish infantry. And although a complete example of the latter
|
||
|
has not been seen, yet an instance was furnished in the battle of
|
||
|
Ravenna, where the Spanish infantry attacked the German battalions,
|
||
|
which observe the same order as the Swiss. The Spaniards, through their
|
||
|
bodily agility and aided by their bucklers, had entered between and
|
||
|
under their pikes and were in a position to attack them safely without
|
||
|
the Germans being able to defend themselves; and if the cavalry had not
|
||
|
charged them they would have utterly destroyed them. Knowing therefore
|
||
|
the defects of both these kinds of infantry, a third kind can be
|
||
|
created which can resist cavalry and need not fear infantry, and this
|
||
|
will be done not by the creation of armies but by a change of system.
|
||
|
And these are the things which, when newly introduced, give reputation
|
||
|
and grandeur to a new prince. This opportunity must not, therefore,
|
||
|
be allowed to pass, for letting Italy at length see her liberator. I
|
||
|
cannot express the love with which he would be received in all those
|
||
|
provinces which have suffered under these foreign invasions, with what
|
||
|
thirst for vengeance, with what steadfast faith, with what love, with
|
||
|
what grateful tears. What doors would be closed against him? What
|
||
|
people would refuse him obedience? What envy could oppose him? What
|
||
|
Italian would rebel against him? This barbarous domination stinks in
|
||
|
the nostrils of every one. May your illustrious house therefore assume
|
||
|
this task with that courage and those hopes which are inspired by a
|
||
|
just cause, so that under its banner our fatherland may be raised up,
|
||
|
and under its auspices be verified that saying of Petrarch:
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Valour against fell wrath
|
||
|
Will take up arms; and be the combat quickly sped I
|
||
|
For, sure, the ancient worth,
|
||
|
That in Italians stirs the heart, is not yet dead.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE END
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Prince, by Nicoló Machiavelli
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