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Discourses on the First Decade of Titus Livius
BOOK III   BOOK III - CHAPTER XXV
Niccolo Machiavelli
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       BOOK III - CHAPTER XXV
       CHAPTER XXV - Of the poverty of Cincinnatus and of many other Roman Citizens.
       Elsewhere I have shown that no ordinance is of such advantage to a commonwealth, as one which enforces poverty on its citizens. And although it does not appear what particular law it was that had this operation in Rome (especially since we know the agrarian law to have been stubbornly resisted), we find, as a fact, that four hundred years after the city was founded, great poverty still prevailed there; and may assume that nothing helped so much to produce this result as the knowledge that the path to honours and preferment was closed to none, and that merit was sought after wheresoever it was to be found; for this manner of conferring honours made riches the less courted. In proof whereof I shall cite one instance only.
       When the consul Minutius was beset in his camp by the Equians, the Roman people were filled with such alarm lest their army should be destroyed, that they appointed a dictator, always their last stay in seasons of peril. Their choice fell on Lucius Quintius Cincinnatus, who at the time was living on his small farm of little more than four acres, which he tilled with his own hand. The story is nobly told by Titus Livius where he says: "This is worth listening to by those who contemn all things human as compared with riches, and think that glory and excellence can have no place unless accompanied by lavish wealth." Cincinnatus, then, was ploughing in his little field, when there arrived from Rome the messengers sent by the senate to tell him he had been made dictator, and inform him of the dangers which threatened the Republic. Putting on his gown, he hastened to Rome, and getting together an army, marched to deliver Minutius. But when he had defeated and spoiled the enemy, and released Minutius, he would not suffer the army he had rescued to participate in the spoils, saying, "I will not have you share in the plunder of those to whom you had so nearly fallen a prey." Minutius he deprived of his consulship, and reduced to be a subaltern, in which rank he bade him remain till he had learned how to command. And before this he had made Lucius Tarquininus, although forced by his poverty to serve on foot, his master of the knights.
       Here, then, we see what honour was paid in Rome to poverty, and how four acres of land sufficed to support so good and great a man as Cincinnatus. We find the same Poverty still prevailing in the time of Marcus Regulus, who when serving with the army in Africa sought leave of senate to return home that he might look after his farm which his labourers had suffered to run to waste. Here again we learn two things worthy our attention: first, the poverty of these men and their contentment under it, and how their sole study was to gain renown from war, leaving all its advantages to the State. For had they thought of enriching themselves by war, it had given them little concern that their fields were running to waste Further, we have to remark the magnanimity of these citizens, who when placed at the head of armies surpassed all princes in the loftiness of their spirit, who cared neither for king nor for commonwealth, and whom nothing could daunt or dismay; but who, on returning to private life, became once more so humble, so frugal, so careful of their slender means, and so submissive to the magistrates and reverential to their superiors, that it might seem impossible for the human mind to undergo so violent a change.
       This poverty prevailed down to the days of Paulus Emilius, almost the last happy days for this republic wherein a citizen, while enriching Rome by his triumphs, himself remained poor. And yet so greatly was poverty still esteemed at this time, that when Paulus, in conferring rewards on those who had behaved well in the war, presented his own son-in-law with a silver cup, it was the first vessel of silver ever seen in his house.
       I might run on to a great length pointing out how much better are the fruits of poverty than those of riches, and how poverty has brought cities, provinces, and nations to honour, while riches have wrought their ruin, had not this subject been often treated by others. _
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BOOK I
   BOOK I - PREFACE
   BOOK I - CHAPTER I
   BOOK I - CHAPTER II
   BOOK I - CHAPTER III
   BOOK I - CHAPTER IV
   BOOK I - CHAPTER V
   BOOK I - CHAPTER VI
   BOOK I - CHAPTER VII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER VIII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER IX
   BOOK I - CHAPTER X
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XI
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XIII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XIV
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XV
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XVI
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XVII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XVIII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XIX
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XX
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XXI
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XXII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XXIII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XXIV
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XXV
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XXVI
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XXVII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XXVIII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XXIX
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XXX
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XXXI
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XXXII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XXXIII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XXXIV
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XXXV
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XXXVI
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XXXVII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XXXVIII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XXXIX
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XL
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XLI
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XLII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XLIII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XLIV
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XLV
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XLVI
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XLVII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XLVIII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XLIX
   BOOK I - CHAPTER L
   BOOK I - CHAPTER LI
   BOOK I - CHAPTER LII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER LIII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER LIV
   BOOK I - CHAPTER LV
   BOOK I - CHAPTER LVI
   BOOK I - CHAPTER LVII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER LVIII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER LIX
   BOOK I - CHAPTER LX
BOOK II
   BOOK II - PREFACE
   BOOK II - CHAPTER I
   BOOK II - CHAPTER II
   BOOK II - CHAPTER III
   BOOK II - CHAPTER IV
   BOOK II - CHAPTER V
   BOOK II - CHAPTER VI
   BOOK II - CHAPTER VII
   BOOK II - CHAPTER VIII
   BOOK II - CHAPTER IX
   BOOK II - CHAPTER X
   BOOK II - CHAPTER XI
   BOOK II - CHAPTER XII
   BOOK II - CHAPTER XIII
   BOOK II - CHAPTER XIV
   BOOK II - CHAPTER XV
   BOOK II - CHAPTER XVI
   BOOK II - CHAPTER XVII
   BOOK II - CHAPTER XVIII
   BOOK II - CHAPTER XIX
   BOOK II - CHAPTER XX
   BOOK II - CHAPTER XXI
   BOOK II - CHAPTER XXII
   BOOK II - CHAPTER XXIII
   BOOK II - CHAPTER XXIV
   BOOK II - CHAPTER XXV
   BOOK II - CHAPTER XXVI
   BOOK II - CHAPTER XXVII
   BOOK II - CHAPTER XXVIII
   BOOK II - CHAPTER XXIX
   BOOK II - CHAPTER XXX
   BOOK II - CHAPTER XXXI
   BOOK II - CHAPTER XXXII
   BOOK II - CHAPTER XXXIII
BOOK III
   BOOK III - CHAPTER I
   BOOK III - CHAPTER II
   BOOK III - CHAPTER III
   BOOK III - CHAPTER IV
   BOOK III - CHAPTER V
   BOOK III - CHAPTER VI
   BOOK III - CHAPTER VII
   BOOK III - CHAPTER VIII
   BOOK III - CHAPTER IX
   BOOK III - CHAPTER X
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XI
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XII
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XIII
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XIV
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XV
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XVI
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XVII
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XVIII
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XIX
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XX
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XXI
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XXII
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XXIII
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XXIV
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XXV
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XXVI
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XXVII
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XXVIII
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XXIX
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XXX
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XXXI
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XXXII
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XXXIII
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XXXIV
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XXXV
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XXXVI
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XXXVII
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XXXVIII
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XXXIX
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XL
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XLI
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XLII
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XLIII
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XLIV
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XLV
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XLVI
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XLVII
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XLVIII
   BOOK III - CHAPTER XLIX