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Discourses on the First Decade of Titus Livius
BOOK I   BOOK I - CHAPTER XLVII
Niccolo Machiavelli
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       BOOK I - CHAPTER XLVII
       CHAPTER XLVII -That though Men deceive themselves in Generalities, in Particulars they judge truly.
       The commons of Rome having, as I have said, grown disgusted with the consular name, and desiring either that men of plebeian birth should be admitted to the office or its authority be restricted, the nobles, to prevent its degradation in either of these two ways, proposed a middle course, whereby four tribunes, who might either be plebeians or nobles, were to be created with consular authority. This compromise satisfied the commons, who thought they would thus get rid of the consulship, and secure the highest offices of the State for their own order. But here a circumstance happened worth noting. When the four tribunes came to be chosen, the people, who had it in their power to choose all from the commons, chose all from the nobles. With respect to which election Titus Livius observes, that "the result showed that the people when declaring their honest judgment after controversy was over, were governed by a different spirit from that which had inspired them while contending for their liberties and for a share in public honours." The reason for this I believe to be, that men deceive themselves more readily in generals than in particulars. To the commons of Rome it seemed, in the abstract, that they had every right to be admitted to the consulship, since their party in the city was the more numerous, since they bore the greater share of danger in their wars, and since it was they who by their valour kept Rome free and made her powerful. And because it appeared to them, as I have said, that their desire was a reasonable one, they were resolved to satisfy it at all hazards. But when they had to form a particular judgment on the men of their own party, they recognized their defects, and decided that individually no one of them was deserving of what, collectively, they seemed entitled to; and being ashamed of them, turned to bestow their honours on those who deserved them. Of which decision Titus Livius, speaking with due admiration, says, "Where shall we now find in any one man, that modesty, moderation, and magnanimity which were then common to the entire people?"
       As confirming what I have said, I shall cite another noteworthy incident, which occurred in Capua after the rout of the Romans by Hannibal at Cannae. For all Italy being convulsed by that defeat, Capua too was threatened with civil tumult, through the hatred which prevailed between her people and senate. But Pacuvius Calavius, who at this time filled the office of chief magistrate, perceiving the danger, took upon himself to reconcile the contending factions. With this object he assembled the Senate and pointed out to them the hatred in which they were held by the people, and the risk they ran of being put to death by them, and of the city, now that the Romans were in distress, being given up to Hannibal. But he added that, were they to consent to leave the matter with him, he thought he could contrive to reconcile them; in the meanwhile, however, he must shut them up in the palace, that, by putting it in the power of the people to punish them, he might secure their safety.__
       The senate consenting to this proposal, he shut them up in the palace, and summoning the people to a public meeting, told them the time had at last come for them to trample on the insolence of the nobles, and requite the wrongs suffered at their hands; for he had them all safe under bolt and bar; but, as he supposed they did not wish the city to remain without rulers, it was fit, before putting the old senators to death, they should appoint others in their room. Wherefore he had thrown the names of all the old senators into a bag, and would now proceed to draw them out one by one, and as they were drawn would cause them to be put to death, so soon as a successor was found for each. When the first name he drew was declared, there arose a great uproar among the people, all crying out against the cruelty, pride, and arrogance of that senator whose name it was. But on Pacuvius desiring them to propose a substitute, the meeting was quieted, and after a brief pause one of the commons was nominated. No sooner, however, was his name mentioned than one began to whistle, another to laugh, some jeering at him in one way and some in another. And the same thing happening in every case, each and all of those nominated were judged unworthy of senatorial rank. Whereupon Pacuvius, profiting by the opportunity, said, "Since you are agreed that the city would be badly off without a senate, but are not agreed whom to appoint in the room of the old senators, it will, perhaps, be well for you to be reconciled to them; for the fear into which they have been thrown must have so subdued them, that you are sure to find in them that affability which hitherto you have looked for in vain." This proposal being agreed to, a reconciliation followed between the two orders; the commons having seen their error so soon as they were obliged to come to particulars.
       A people therefore is apt to err in judging of things and their accidents in the abstract, but on becoming acquainted with particulars, speedily discovers its mistakes. In the year 1494, when her greatest citizens were banished from Florence, and no regular government any longer existed there, but a spirit of licence prevailed, and matters went continually from bad to worse, many Florentines perceiving the decay of their city, and discerning no other cause for it, blamed the ambition of this or the other powerful citizen, who, they thought, was fomenting these disorders with a view to establish a government to his own liking, and to rob them of their liberties. Those who thought thus, would hang about the arcades and public squares, maligning many citizens, and giving it to be understood that if ever they found themselves in the Signory, they would expose the designs of these citizens and have them punished. From time to time it happened that one or another of those who used this language rose to be of the chief magistracy, and so soon as he obtained this advancement, and saw things nearer, became aware whence the disorders I have spoken of really came, the dangers attending them, and the difficulty in dealing with them; and recognizing that they were the growth of the times, and not occasioned by particular men, suddenly altered his views and conduct; a nearer knowledge of facts freeing him from the false impressions he had been led into on a general view of affairs. But those who had heard him speak as a private citizen, when they saw him remain inactive after he was made a magistrate, believed that this arose not from his having obtained any better knowledge of things, but from his having been cajoled or corrupted by the great. And this happening with many men and often, it came to be a proverb among the people, that "men had one mind in the market-place, another in the palace."
       Reflecting on what has been said, we see how quickly men's eyes may be opened, if knowing that they deceive themselves in generalities, we can find a way to make them pass to particulars; as Pacuvius did in the case of the Capuans, and the senate in the case of Rome. Nor do I believe that any prudent man need shrink from the judgment of the people in questions relating to particulars, as, for instance, in the distribution of honours and dignities. For in such matters only, the people are either never mistaken, or at any rate far seldomer than a small number of persons would be, were the distribution entrusted to them.
       It seems to me, however, not out of place to notice in the following Chapter, a method employed by the Roman senate to enlighten the people in making this distribution. _
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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