This is a table of type quadgram and their frequencies. Use it to search & browse the list to learn more about your study carrel.
quadgram | frequency |
---|---|
for the most part | 103 |
early english books online | 97 |
on the other side | 39 |
by sea and land | 37 |
notes for div a | 35 |
the rest of the | 35 |
one and the same | 35 |
the soule of man | 34 |
are of two sorts | 34 |
the king of spaine | 33 |
by reason of the | 33 |
and in the end | 32 |
characters represented either as | 32 |
represented either as utf | 32 |
in the time of | 31 |
in the mean time | 29 |
that there is a | 28 |
terms of creative commons | 27 |
of the work described | 27 |
online text creation partnership | 27 |
all without asking permission | 27 |
work described above is | 27 |
encoded text transcribed from | 27 |
edition of the work | 27 |
text is available for | 27 |
the terms of creative | 27 |
the text can be | 27 |
assigned for keying and | 27 |
the work described above | 27 |
even for commercial purposes | 27 |
this phase i text | 27 |
i text is available | 27 |
english books online text | 27 |
encoded edition of the | 27 |
to the terms of | 27 |
phase i text is | 27 |
the early english books | 27 |
coded from proquest page | 27 |
and markup reviewed and | 27 |
text can be copied | 27 |
by the institutions providing | 27 |
described above is co | 27 |
to the early english | 27 |
and encoded edition of | 27 |
keyed and coded from | 27 |
for keying and markup | 27 |
iv tiff page images | 27 |
books online text creation | 27 |
keyboarded and encoded edition | 27 |
and coded from proquest | 27 |
institutions providing financial support | 27 |
from proquest page images | 27 |
tcp assigned for keying | 27 |
owned by the institutions | 27 |
markup reviewed and edited | 27 |
images scanned from microfilm | 27 |
this keyboarded and encoded | 27 |
the institutions providing financial | 27 |
is available for reuse | 27 |
support to the early | 27 |
according to the terms | 27 |
financial support to the | 27 |
providing financial support to | 27 |
text and markup reviewed | 27 |
ought not to be | 25 |
the end of the | 25 |
there is nothing more | 25 |
is a matter of | 24 |
that there is no | 24 |
parts of the world | 24 |
was the cause that | 23 |
written by sir walter | 23 |
in respect of the | 23 |
the greatest part of | 22 |
by reason of their | 21 |
reproduction of original in | 21 |
a great part of | 21 |
the most part of | 21 |
ocm this keyboarded and | 21 |
immortality of the soule | 21 |
the nature of the | 20 |
it is to be | 20 |
that can be made | 20 |
of things to come | 20 |
r ocm this keyboarded | 19 |
whether it be not | 19 |
and are to be | 19 |
the immortality of the | 19 |
in the end of | 19 |
the time of his | 19 |
the government of the | 19 |
estc r ocm this | 19 |
yet true it is | 19 |
they are to be | 19 |
unless the same be | 18 |
by sir walter rawleigh | 18 |
and as it were | 18 |
are to be sold | 18 |
after the death of | 18 |
is to be noted | 18 |
all parts of the | 18 |
is not to be | 18 |
true nature of the | 17 |
may it please your | 17 |
the power of the | 17 |
the kings of england | 17 |
by little and little | 17 |
the true nature of | 17 |
the death of the | 17 |
in time of war | 17 |
each text was proofread | 16 |
texts based on the | 16 |
the general aim of | 16 |
variety of subject areas | 16 |
remaining illegibles were encoded | 16 |
was then carried out | 16 |
be marked as illegible | 16 |
users should bear in | 16 |
was based on the | 16 |
did not meet qa | 16 |
quality of tcp data | 16 |
tcp data is very | 16 |
textual data within the | 16 |
record of the period | 16 |
anyone can now take | 16 |
of tcp data is | 16 |
unicode or tei g | 16 |
there are a number | 16 |
by proquest via their | 16 |
based on the image | 16 |
out by editorial teams | 16 |
changes to facilitate morpho | 16 |
the filling in of | 16 |
of textual data within | 16 |
selection was intended to | 16 |
wide variety of subject | 16 |
the time of the | 16 |
the th year of | 16 |
standards were returned to | 16 |
the text encoding initiative | 16 |
created during phase of | 16 |
available at the text | 16 |
tcp is a partnership | 16 |
is given to their | 16 |
of a work was | 16 |
attribution is given to | 16 |
external keying companies for | 16 |
a compelling reason to | 16 |
markup guidelines are available | 16 |
while the overall quality | 16 |
the texts have been | 16 |
these texts for their | 16 |
included and sometimes a | 16 |
page images in accordance | 16 |
compelling reason to do | 16 |
via their early english | 16 |
texts were encoded and | 16 |
on the new cambridge | 16 |
guidelines are available at | 16 |
remain and some readable | 16 |
not meet qa standards | 16 |
the new cambridge bibliography | 16 |
mnemonic sdata character entities | 16 |
characters or elements to | 16 |
at the text creation | 16 |
project was divided into | 16 |
between the universities of | 16 |
create accurately transcribed and | 16 |
to the keyers to | 16 |
the image sets published | 16 |
proquest to create accurately | 16 |
overall quality of tcp | 16 |
public domain as of | 16 |
is to encode one | 16 |
encoding was enhanced and | 16 |
based on the text | 16 |
were corrected where possible | 16 |
be made about the | 16 |
to produce large quantities | 16 |
assurance was then carried | 16 |
range over a wide | 16 |
of the tei in | 16 |
was a compelling reason | 16 |
works are eligible for | 16 |
texts created during phase | 16 |
teams in oxford and | 16 |
corrected where possible up | 16 |
such instances will never | 16 |
chosen if there was | 16 |
bibliography of english literature | 16 |
first editions of a | 16 |
of a works in | 16 |
which was the cause | 16 |
tcp files to tei | 16 |
accurately transcribed and encoded | 16 |
for transcription and basic | 16 |
universities of michigan and | 16 |
of instances per text | 16 |
and therefore chose to | 16 |
cambridge bibliography of english | 16 |
to page images in | 16 |
will be marked as | 16 |
filling in of gaps | 16 |
some errors will remain | 16 |
chose to create diplomatic | 16 |
extent have been transformed | 16 |
for their own purposes | 16 |
works in english were | 16 |
the tei in libraries | 16 |
a number of works | 16 |
files to tei p | 16 |
unicode or text strings | 16 |
known extent have been | 16 |
therefore chose to create | 16 |
any assumptions that can | 16 |
later edition of a | 16 |
project have been released | 16 |
the reason thereof is | 16 |
the overall quality of | 16 |
been looked at by | 16 |
data is very good | 16 |
of works in other | 16 |
the texts were encoded | 16 |
of the process of | 16 |
number of works in | 16 |
of creating the tcp | 16 |
users should be aware | 16 |
if there was a | 16 |
of the texts have | 16 |
on the image sets | 16 |
a partnership between the | 16 |
in oxford and michigan | 16 |
by university of nebraska | 16 |
print record of the | 16 |
proquest via their early | 16 |
the print record of | 16 |
works in other languages | 16 |
text selection was based | 16 |
although there are a | 16 |
limit of instances per | 16 |
editions of a works | 16 |
image sets were sent | 16 |
was intended to range | 16 |
to create diplomatic transcriptions | 16 |
some readable characters will | 16 |
assumptions that can be | 16 |
language title published between | 16 |
whichever is the greater | 16 |
keying companies for transcription | 16 |
by a tcp editor | 16 |
made about the data | 16 |
carried out by editorial | 16 |
keying and markup guidelines | 16 |
phase of the project | 16 |
should make clear that | 16 |
possible up to a | 16 |
is nothing else but | 16 |
by converting tcp files | 16 |
can now take and | 16 |
by editorial teams in | 16 |
to tei p using | 16 |
to their original source | 16 |
can be made about | 16 |
were encoded as gap | 16 |
transcribed and encoded texts | 16 |
encoded texts based on | 16 |
for an anonymous work | 16 |
work was chosen if | 16 |
was divided into two | 16 |
and attribution is given | 16 |
published by proquest via | 16 |
with level of the | 16 |
and available in eebo | 16 |
that in all likelihood | 16 |
and encoded texts based | 16 |
processed by university of | 16 |
images in accordance with | 16 |
as illegible were corrected | 16 |
selection was based on | 16 |
simplify the filling in | 16 |
to range over a | 16 |
be aware of the | 16 |
usually the first edition | 16 |
qa standards were returned | 16 |
sometimes a second or | 16 |
reason to do so | 16 |
bear in mind that | 16 |
with changes to facilitate | 16 |
a wide variety of | 16 |
transcription and basic encoding | 16 |
elements to simplify the | 16 |
have been issued variously | 16 |
then their works are | 16 |
the project have been | 16 |
companies for transcription and | 16 |
to create accurately transcribed | 16 |
to a limit of | 16 |
credit and attribution is | 16 |
and markup guidelines are | 16 |
their works are eligible | 16 |
converting tcp files to | 16 |
meet qa standards were | 16 |
sent to external keying | 16 |
and those which did | 16 |
characters will be marked | 16 |
texts for their own | 16 |
have been released into | 16 |
the public domain as | 16 |
of known extent have | 16 |
quality assurance was then | 16 |
there was a compelling | 16 |
in english were prioritized | 16 |
that due credit and | 16 |
and some readable characters | 16 |
reflect the true nature | 16 |
a works in english | 16 |
text was proofread for | 16 |
elements of known extent | 16 |
up to a limit | 16 |
now take and use | 16 |
gaps by user contributors | 16 |
produce large quantities of | 16 |
or text strings within | 16 |
was chosen if there | 16 |
mainly structural encoding based | 16 |
tei in libraries guidelines | 16 |
all likelihood such instances | 16 |
we respectfully request that | 16 |
in mind that in | 16 |
of the project have | 16 |
copies of the texts | 16 |
but we respectfully request | 16 |
was enhanced and or | 16 |
and use these texts | 16 |
encoding based on the | 16 |
or the government of | 16 |
intended to range over | 16 |
any remaining illegibles were | 16 |
illegible were corrected where | 16 |
of time and funding | 16 |
aware of the process | 16 |
process of creating the | 16 |
accuracy and those which | 16 |
will remain and some | 16 |
proofread for accuracy and | 16 |
tcp project was divided | 16 |
which did not meet | 16 |
corrected and characters marked | 16 |
likelihood such instances will | 16 |
in of gaps by | 16 |
was proofread for accuracy | 16 |
in accordance with level | 16 |
were encoded and linked | 16 |
within the usual project | 16 |
to simplify the filling | 16 |
to external keying companies | 16 |
for accuracy and those | 16 |
where possible up to | 16 |
then carried out by | 16 |
of any assumptions that | 16 |
it is a matter | 16 |
creating the tcp texts | 16 |
encoded as gap s | 16 |
text creation partnership web | 16 |
on the text encoding | 16 |
opposed to critical editions | 16 |
gap elements of known | 16 |
tcp aimed to produce | 16 |
looked at by a | 16 |
published between and available | 16 |
or elements to simplify | 16 |
processes should make clear | 16 |
new cambridge bibliography of | 16 |
the usual project restraints | 16 |
these processes should make | 16 |
have been looked at | 16 |
linked to page images | 16 |
and oxford and the | 16 |
the encoding was enhanced | 16 |
edition of a work | 16 |
sets were sent to | 16 |
data within the usual | 16 |
into the public domain | 16 |
into placeholder characters or | 16 |
tcp is to encode | 16 |
will never have been | 16 |
oxford and the publisher | 16 |
michigan and oxford and | 16 |
aimed to produce large | 16 |
enhanced and or corrected | 16 |
text with mnemonic sdata | 16 |
keyers to be redone | 16 |
as opposed to critical | 16 |
been transformed into placeholder | 16 |
marked as illegible were | 16 |
transformed into placeholder characters | 16 |
the text creation partnership | 16 |
been issued variously as | 16 |
use these texts for | 16 |
or for an anonymous | 16 |
due credit and attribution | 16 |
should be aware of | 16 |
nature of the print | 16 |
usual project restraints of | 16 |
released into the public | 16 |
and therefore of any | 16 |
accordance with level of | 16 |
returned to the keyers | 16 |
editorial teams in oxford | 16 |
title published between and | 16 |
of michigan and oxford | 16 |
text strings within braces | 16 |
their early english books | 16 |
the universities of michigan | 16 |
a work was chosen | 16 |
restraints of time and | 16 |
is a partnership between | 16 |
a second or later | 16 |
were returned to the | 16 |
sets published by proquest | 16 |
divided into two phases | 16 |
ascii text with mnemonic | 16 |
project restraints of time | 16 |
been released into the | 16 |
during phase of the | 16 |
publisher proquest to create | 16 |
request that due credit | 16 |
texts have been issued | 16 |
by the which the | 16 |
and sometimes a second | 16 |
are available at the | 16 |
mind that in all | 16 |
partnership between the universities | 16 |
a limit of instances | 16 |
never have been looked | 16 |
p using tcp tei | 16 |
understanding these processes should | 16 |
given to their original | 16 |
creation partnership web site | 16 |
the publisher proquest to | 16 |
the process of creating | 16 |
have been transformed into | 16 |
characters marked as illegible | 16 |
encoded and linked to | 16 |
and or corrected and | 16 |
errors will remain and | 16 |
tei p using tcp | 16 |
of each text was | 16 |
created by converting tcp | 16 |
take and use these | 16 |
those which did not | 16 |
or later edition of | 16 |
placeholder characters or elements | 16 |
between and available in | 16 |
issued variously as sgml | 16 |
level of the tei | 16 |
were sent to external | 16 |
are eligible for inclusion | 16 |
or corrected and characters | 16 |
readable characters will be | 16 |
general aim of eebo | 16 |
should bear in mind | 16 |
the keyers to be | 16 |
of every monographic english | 16 |
second or later edition | 16 |
and to that end | 16 |
notably latin and welsh | 16 |
of the print record | 16 |
and characters marked as | 16 |
based on the new | 16 |
with mnemonic sdata character | 16 |
domain as of january | 16 |
instances will never have | 16 |
of gaps by user | 16 |
therefore of any assumptions | 16 |
image sets published by | 16 |
at by a tcp | 16 |
and linked to page | 16 |
and the publisher proquest | 16 |
in all likelihood such | 16 |
are a number of | 16 |
or tei g elements | 16 |
respectfully request that due | 16 |
to reflect the true | 16 |
quantities of textual data | 16 |
structural encoding based on | 16 |
to encode one copy | 16 |
illegibles were encoded as | 16 |
large quantities of textual | 16 |
over a wide variety | 16 |
the people of rome | 15 |
to the number of | 15 |
that they may be | 15 |
are not able to | 15 |
to the king of | 15 |
that my lord cobham | 15 |
the nature of man | 15 |
one and the other | 15 |
the one and the | 15 |
it is true my | 15 |
and the rest of | 15 |
to the end that | 15 |
in the days of | 14 |
the number of the | 14 |
but my good lord | 14 |
of the king of | 14 |
in time of peace | 14 |
say you to the | 14 |
is in the low | 14 |
in the beginning of | 14 |
wing r estc r | 14 |
the government of a | 14 |
which may be done | 14 |
what say you to | 14 |
there is a god | 14 |
to take heed that | 14 |
spi global keyed and | 14 |
is carried and vented | 14 |
the substance of the | 14 |
a wing r estc | 14 |
in his majesties ships | 14 |
global keyed and coded | 14 |
for the space of | 14 |
by sir walter raleigh | 14 |
it is not the | 13 |
of the people and | 13 |
from the original text | 13 |
is as it were | 13 |
history of the world | 13 |
text notes for div | 13 |
original text notes for | 13 |
after the manner of | 13 |
r estc r ocm | 13 |
kings of this land | 13 |
the original text notes | 13 |
is to be taken | 13 |
of so great a | 13 |
of all kind of | 13 |
the motion of the | 13 |
that it may be | 13 |
there ought to be | 13 |
that there should be | 13 |
the actions of men | 13 |
in the minds of | 13 |
the wealth and strength | 12 |
the causes of the | 12 |
a breach of peace | 12 |
the love of the | 12 |
themselves so to be | 12 |
is to be used | 12 |
and not to be | 12 |
that the soule of | 12 |
or else they are | 12 |
the being of a | 12 |
was one of the | 12 |
and mysteries of state | 12 |
into the hands of | 12 |
most part of men | 12 |
wherewith they serve themselves | 12 |
the state of the | 12 |
with the means to | 12 |
all the year long | 12 |
a great deale of | 12 |
the love of men | 12 |
or at least to | 12 |
which manner of proceeding | 12 |
is true my lord | 12 |
is of two sorts | 12 |
the duke of ireland | 12 |
the nature of men | 12 |
which could not be | 12 |
the annotation includes standard | 11 |
is also to be | 11 |
a standardized format that | 11 |
format that preserves archaic | 11 |
of text r in | 11 |
is an enriched version | 11 |
stationer meant to publish | 11 |
textual changes and metadata | 11 |
of the tcp digital | 11 |
text the author or | 11 |
amateur and professional end | 11 |
the english short title | 11 |
at the same time | 11 |
has been tokenized and | 11 |
metadata enrichments aim at | 11 |
not been fully proofread | 11 |
to the prejudice of | 11 |
r in the english | 11 |
to buy and sell | 11 |
text in a standardized | 11 |
and metadata enrichments aim | 11 |
to the good of | 11 |
the prouidence of god | 11 |
a text in a | 11 |
things are to be | 11 |
author or stationer meant | 11 |
the text the author | 11 |
in their own country | 11 |
been tokenized and linguistically | 11 |
changes aim at restoring | 11 |
at making the text | 11 |
aim at making the | 11 |
the earle of suffolke | 11 |
spellings that support the | 11 |
and professional end users | 11 |
annotation includes standard spellings | 11 |
the hands of the | 11 |
digital transcription a of | 11 |
that preserves archaic forms | 11 |
by amateur and professional | 11 |
professional end users from | 11 |
transcription a of text | 11 |
aim at restoring the | 11 |
display of a text | 11 |
the history of the | 11 |
curation by amateur and | 11 |
the text more computationally | 11 |
in the english short | 11 |
been fully proofread approx | 11 |
but in the end | 11 |
support the display of | 11 |
tokenized and linguistically annotated | 11 |
version of the tcp | 11 |
the beginning of his | 11 |
textual changes aim at | 11 |
collaborative curation by amateur | 11 |
the kings of this | 11 |
a of text r | 11 |
and such as are | 11 |
the crowne of england | 11 |
users from many walks | 11 |
standardized format that preserves | 11 |
and linguistically annotated with | 11 |
standard spellings that support | 11 |
text has not been | 11 |
linguistically annotated with morphadorner | 11 |
from many walks of | 11 |
the tcp digital transcription | 11 |
that support the display | 11 |
restoring the text the | 11 |
to the nature of | 11 |
in a standardized format | 11 |
of a text in | 11 |
enriched version of the | 11 |
the profit of the | 11 |
text r in the | 11 |
and suitable for network | 11 |
the first king of | 11 |
an enriched version of | 11 |
this text is an | 11 |
or stationer meant to | 11 |
in times of peace | 11 |
in the name of | 11 |
by the name of | 11 |
enrichments aim at making | 11 |
the author or stationer | 11 |
tcp digital transcription a | 11 |
the cause of his | 11 |
at restoring the text | 11 |
many walks of life | 11 |
the isle of wight | 11 |
based collaborative curation by | 11 |
changes and metadata enrichments | 11 |
the minds of men | 11 |
english short title catalog | 11 |
text more computationally tractable | 11 |
includes standard spellings that | 11 |
the text has been | 11 |
text is an enriched | 11 |
was the cause of | 11 |
with our own commodities | 11 |
text has been tokenized | 11 |
a matter of no | 11 |
this text has not | 11 |
the display of a | 11 |
to be sold by | 11 |
making the text more | 11 |
has not been fully | 11 |
for div a e | 11 |
to the end he | 11 |
end users from many | 11 |
for there is nothing | 10 |
if there were no | 10 |
to that end to | 10 |
the good will of | 10 |
a dishonour to the | 10 |
at the request of | 10 |
as also in that | 10 |
in such sort as | 10 |
and we not one | 10 |
it behoveth him to | 10 |
may be said to | 10 |
the presence of the | 10 |
in the middle of | 10 |
up the river of | 10 |
are to be observed | 10 |
as it is in | 10 |
the consideration of the | 10 |
do for the most | 10 |
if there be no | 10 |
serve themselves and other | 10 |
the nobility and people | 10 |
it is not to | 10 |
with the causes and | 10 |
for no man is | 10 |
and my good lord | 10 |
to the crowne of | 10 |
dishonour to the king | 10 |
the request of the | 10 |
the land of promise | 10 |
the beginning of the | 10 |
the form of government | 10 |
but i pray you | 10 |
to trade with them | 10 |
in the hands of | 10 |
in the parliament at | 10 |
the favor of the | 10 |
be the cause of | 10 |
is more to be | 10 |
of the whole world | 10 |
the least part of | 10 |
words puts this text | 9 |
occasion of scarcity and | 9 |
that the king had | 9 |
for the preservation of | 9 |
our sea and land | 9 |
which is the cause | 9 |
of any other prince | 9 |
by reason of his | 9 |
the cause that the | 9 |
that it was not | 9 |
are in their own | 9 |
a prince of great | 9 |
as in other parts | 9 |
the strength of the | 9 |
the force of the | 9 |
of the roman army | 9 |
published by john milton | 9 |
in aristocracies and states | 9 |
and if it be | 9 |
to have a vigilant | 9 |
or at least not | 9 |
to the same end | 9 |
the eyes of the | 9 |
the good of the | 9 |
in all humane actions | 9 |
all kind of commodities | 9 |
the life to come | 9 |
in their own nature | 9 |
puts this text in | 9 |
the cause of continual | 9 |
five or six hundred | 9 |
the defence of the | 9 |
by the which they | 9 |
is the use of | 9 |
in the eye of | 9 |
in like sort the | 9 |
death of the body | 9 |
the great decay of | 9 |
if it be not | 9 |
out of the most | 9 |
have a vigilant eye | 9 |
upon every occasion of | 9 |
how to prevent their | 9 |
any thing from the | 9 |
to take from them | 9 |
rate of defects per | 9 |
in a short time | 9 |
is the princes own | 9 |
of scarcity and dearth | 9 |
the authority of the | 9 |
and other petty states | 9 |
the manner of the | 9 |
the body of the | 9 |
it please your majesty | 9 |
this text in the | 9 |
nothing else but to | 9 |
the government of his | 9 |
so much the more | 9 |
of the holy ghost | 9 |
the parts of the | 9 |
the goods of the | 9 |
that they will not | 9 |
here is to be | 9 |
is the cause of | 9 |
to be had in | 9 |
by the authority of | 9 |
in so much that | 9 |
as it were at | 9 |
the cause of the | 9 |
it be not fit | 9 |
of what quality soever | 9 |
three things are required | 9 |
aristocracies and states popular | 9 |
to the knowledge of | 9 |
the rate of defects | 9 |
one hundred and fifty | 9 |
they serve themselves and | 9 |
as that it is | 9 |
pleasures of the body | 9 |
themselves and other nations | 9 |
the will of god | 9 |
to be looked unto | 9 |
category of texts with | 9 |
take heed that the | 9 |
every occasion of scarcity | 9 |
of sir walter raleigh | 9 |
commerce with the hollander | 9 |
the value of our | 9 |
of ships and mariners | 9 |
to obtain any thing | 9 |
of what is good | 9 |
of the being of | 9 |
be said to be | 9 |
prince to maintain the | 9 |
in the example of | 8 |
not able to make | 8 |
for in respect of | 8 |
it were to be | 8 |
please your most excellent | 8 |
apex covantage keyed and | 8 |
concerning the royall navy | 8 |
thousand five hundred horse | 8 |
that it was the | 8 |
one nor the other | 8 |
to the power of | 8 |
with plenty of those | 8 |
is the government of | 8 |
by the valour of | 8 |
in the east kingdoms | 8 |
the king of spains | 8 |
not being able to | 8 |
is worth but s | 8 |
that the kings of | 8 |
is to be had | 8 |
not one in that | 8 |
or sixteen pounds the | 8 |
wealth and strength of | 8 |
the honour of the | 8 |
and opulency of cities | 8 |
that there was no | 8 |
of the duke of | 8 |
may be taken away | 8 |
and so in all | 8 |
to him that is | 8 |
and the nature of | 8 |
according to their several | 8 |
those whom he hath | 8 |
shall be forced to | 8 |
in other parts they | 8 |
the king of england | 8 |
it please your most | 8 |
so many of the | 8 |
either by force or | 8 |
end of the world | 8 |
with the which the | 8 |
sir walter rawleigh his | 8 |
there is to be | 8 |
to be able to | 8 |
to be sold at | 8 |
that he could not | 8 |
may seeme to be | 8 |
covantage keyed and coded | 8 |
of a popular state | 8 |
as in the example | 8 |
were not able to | 8 |
for defence of his | 8 |
other parts they do | 8 |
are laid upon the | 8 |
for as much as | 8 |
the means to maintain | 8 |
matter of great moment | 8 |
it is the nature | 8 |
as if they were | 8 |
fifteen or sixteen pounds | 8 |
the king of spain | 8 |
we not one in | 8 |
as that in a | 8 |
the law of god | 8 |
sea and land commodities | 8 |
by which means they | 8 |
love of the people | 8 |
into every city and | 8 |
a matter of great | 8 |
your most excellent majesty | 8 |
of the low countrys | 8 |
strangers to buy and | 8 |
is the nature of | 8 |
tree growing in their | 8 |
one in that course | 8 |
part of the army | 8 |
to take arms against | 8 |
so much as in | 8 |
the like may be | 8 |
ought to be used | 8 |
it is that the | 8 |
mo a wing r | 8 |
the whole multitude of | 8 |
take themselves so to | 8 |
every city and port | 8 |
but what say you | 8 |
in regard of the | 8 |
great part of the | 8 |
of all sorts of | 8 |
under the command of | 8 |
you to the parliament | 8 |
for there is no | 8 |
in any of these | 8 |
the advice of the | 8 |
sixteen pounds the last | 8 |
all sorts of people | 8 |
the preservation of the | 8 |
i am no more | 8 |
and hence it is | 8 |
impositions are laid upon | 8 |
of the soule is | 8 |
which is to be | 8 |
in the th of | 8 |
the king of tunis | 8 |
of god and nature | 8 |
one of the greatest | 8 |
to the end the | 8 |
so in all other | 8 |
part of the world | 8 |
to those that are | 8 |
serve in his majesties | 8 |
that it is not | 8 |
from side to side | 8 |
all the rest of | 8 |
all these things are | 8 |
the crown of england | 8 |
the one nor the | 8 |
the aid of the | 8 |
when he came to | 8 |
it be not necessary | 8 |
are not to be | 8 |
the king of the | 8 |
by the hand of | 8 |
to be in the | 8 |
to the crown of | 8 |
for preserving of a | 8 |
well to be considered | 8 |
it is also to | 8 |
of preservation of an | 8 |
if it be said | 8 |
to the destruction of | 8 |
for strangers to buy | 8 |
out of the sea | 8 |
the monarchy of the | 8 |
of peace or war | 8 |
to serve in his | 8 |
and how to be | 8 |
at home by the | 8 |
plenty of those commodities | 8 |
the which it is | 8 |
was it not the | 8 |
of the history of | 7 |
and therefore it is | 7 |
by so much it | 7 |
is of it selfe | 7 |
of the people to | 7 |
of the ten tribes | 7 |
euery one of them | 7 |
of the house of | 7 |
to be used with | 7 |
then now they are | 7 |
not in any wise | 7 |
for fish and herrings | 7 |
to make shew of | 7 |
king edward the third | 7 |
in their own countrey | 7 |
which are to be | 7 |
this was not the | 7 |
which for the most | 7 |
that he was to | 7 |
sea and land to | 7 |
are to be considered | 7 |
at such time as | 7 |
and fundamentall cause of | 7 |
to the great decay | 7 |
their wives and children | 7 |
my lord cobham had | 7 |
that it was a | 7 |
to prevent their designs | 7 |
of the world and | 7 |
at the kings bench | 7 |
the rest of his | 7 |
draw the wealth and | 7 |
all the companies of | 7 |
is of all other | 7 |
the th of the | 7 |
parts of the body | 7 |
not to be so | 7 |
wherewith upon every occasion | 7 |
it is true that | 7 |
to say the truth | 7 |
if the king had | 7 |
for if it be | 7 |
with the death of | 7 |
is an enemy to | 7 |
raising the value of | 7 |
which by reason of | 7 |
that is to say | 7 |
persons by sea and | 7 |
in so much as | 7 |
most part of the | 7 |
than now they are | 7 |
of the kings of | 7 |
of two or three | 7 |
therefore is to be | 7 |
of the lords that | 7 |
are of three sorts | 7 |
appeareth out of the | 7 |
to joyn with them | 7 |
the necessity of the | 7 |
none in that course | 7 |
the which the world | 7 |
that which is taken | 7 |
the manner of his | 7 |
to hold them in | 7 |
the king and his | 7 |
soule of man is | 7 |
not the least part | 7 |
send into the east | 7 |
the author of the | 7 |
the same is also | 7 |
it hath been a | 7 |
i know not how | 7 |
both in respect of | 7 |
by the law of | 7 |
is said in the | 7 |
those persons that are | 7 |
would have been gained | 7 |
by the hollanders and | 7 |
judicious and select essayes | 7 |
apologie for his voyage | 7 |
or the greatest part | 7 |
the structure of the | 7 |
for his voyage to | 7 |
political and polemical aphorisms | 7 |
for the good of | 7 |
being in possession of | 7 |
as appeareth out of | 7 |
in political and polemical | 7 |
of his majesties ships | 7 |
the wisdom of the | 7 |
it proceedeth from some | 7 |
to draw the wealth | 7 |
by the which it | 7 |
the chief and only | 7 |
for the same cause | 7 |
is taken from the | 7 |
in one and the | 7 |
as well as the | 7 |
other countries against our | 7 |
the statute of the | 7 |
by their convenient priviledges | 7 |
the victory against the | 7 |
how to deal with | 7 |
be not necessary that | 7 |
there is not any | 7 |
that it is a | 7 |
and he that is | 7 |
the benefit of the | 7 |
some part of the | 7 |
separated from the body | 7 |
by the which all | 7 |
in the th year | 7 |
the most part are | 7 |
is chiefly to be | 7 |
any one of the | 7 |
of the whole body | 7 |
the king of france | 7 |
concerning the causes of | 7 |
a th of the | 7 |
one of his men | 7 |
trade in all parts | 7 |
that there is one | 7 |
to make the land | 7 |
the advantage of the | 7 |
his apologie for his | 7 |
it is in all | 7 |
in the end the | 7 |
out of the world | 7 |
the general of the | 7 |
that he may seem | 7 |
and the duke of | 7 |
the which they are | 7 |
to oppress the people | 7 |
of men is gained | 7 |
can by no means | 7 |
and strengthen other countries | 7 |
behoveth the prince to | 7 |
and it is true | 7 |
the reputation of the | 7 |
the lawes of the | 7 |
the favour of the | 7 |
or any other of | 7 |
the prince and his | 7 |
it is hard to | 7 |
a great deal of | 7 |
and there was the | 7 |
the rule of the | 7 |
the reason of the | 7 |
as it was presented | 7 |
carried and vented of | 7 |
be sold at the | 7 |
of necessity must be | 7 |
in england is worth | 7 |
and how far to | 7 |
from the destruction of | 7 |
strengthen other countries against | 7 |
the same may be | 7 |
what is good and | 7 |
true it is that | 7 |
in respect of his | 7 |
the state as it | 7 |
one of the most | 7 |
people are imployed yearly | 7 |
england is worth but | 7 |
government of a few | 7 |
the law of the | 7 |
by the help of | 7 |
it was presented to | 7 |
is the quality of | 7 |
in the sight of | 7 |
his voyage to guiana | 7 |
or kind of government | 6 |
that the prince should | 6 |
parts of the indies | 6 |
for want of a | 6 |
an excellent prince or | 6 |
what is this to | 6 |
yet was it not | 6 |
the soule of the | 6 |
royall navy and sea | 6 |
by themselves and others | 6 |
by reason and experience | 6 |
and that prince is | 6 |
and private persons how | 6 |
in all ages and | 6 |
ought to be informed | 6 |
a collection of political | 6 |
is also fit for | 6 |
to presuppose that all | 6 |
merchandizes of other countries | 6 |
to demean themselves in | 6 |
it is in the | 6 |
forced to use the | 6 |
things are necessarily required | 6 |
such as are in | 6 |
at fifteen or sixteen | 6 |
law of the land | 6 |
private estate have aspired | 6 |
not to enterprise any | 6 |
as before that time | 6 |
causes and remedies thereof | 6 |
of a soldier ought | 6 |
the prince that doth | 6 |
be a breach of | 6 |
for as in all | 6 |
of alteration without violence | 6 |
that they would have | 6 |
preserving of a kingdom | 6 |
by the helpe of | 6 |
to redress and avoid | 6 |
prince or person of | 6 |
causes of sedition are | 6 |
obedience towards the prince | 6 |
age is not ever | 6 |
who so desireth to | 6 |
nature of the state | 6 |
specially to be observed | 6 |
touching trade commerce with | 6 |
are made good by | 6 |
of every good prince | 6 |
or mystery of regiment | 6 |
of men fit to | 6 |
the end he should | 6 |
cause of continual troubles | 6 |
of horse and foot | 6 |
to take order that | 6 |
of officers and commissioners | 6 |
fit to be done | 6 |
aid of the french | 6 |
is not ever unfit | 6 |
it is said in | 6 |
not to be neglected | 6 |
how to be raised | 6 |
being assaulted by the | 6 |
and their requisite abilities | 6 |
left me in the | 6 |
of great vertue and | 6 |
command of his late | 6 |
in hope to win | 6 |
in some particular monarchies | 6 |
course is to be | 6 |
found monarchies and principalities | 6 |
to provide by all | 6 |
motion of the heauens | 6 |
that they may the | 6 |
that there is not | 6 |
he had undone me | 6 |
from the structure and | 6 |
it would be found | 6 |
excellent prince or governor | 6 |
or at least a | 6 |
the laws and ordinances | 6 |
by favor of the | 6 |
soldier ought to be | 6 |
every publick state in | 6 |
the hand of god | 6 |
your majesties good liking | 6 |
not far from the | 6 |
for that it maketh | 6 |
to make use of | 6 |
a prince ought to | 6 |
as it were a | 6 |
the intent of every | 6 |
place where they are | 6 |
pray you go on | 6 |
of generals and commanders | 6 |
never any of them | 6 |
may be done by | 6 |
in a matter of | 6 |
home by the ordering | 6 |
so many as are | 6 |
private persons how to | 6 |
for the benefit of | 6 |
trade commerce with the | 6 |
between the nobility and | 6 |
to your majesty and | 6 |
being of a god | 6 |
be said of the | 6 |
as we see in | 6 |
a part of great | 6 |
the popular state is | 6 |
the obedience of the | 6 |
what they are in | 6 |
as aspire to the | 6 |
there is not a | 6 |
are preserved at home | 6 |
in the conquest of | 6 |
to the honour of | 6 |
custom inwards and outwards | 6 |
that there was a | 6 |
value of our coin | 6 |
the choicest examples and | 6 |
imposing upon the people | 6 |
of so great force | 6 |
i told his majesty | 6 |
the princes intimate counsellors | 6 |
any other of the | 6 |
to be had of | 6 |
imployment of their people | 6 |
how far to be | 6 |
of that which was | 6 |
also is to be | 6 |
sedition are of two | 6 |
how to demean themselves | 6 |
the causes and remedies | 6 |
the art of ruling | 6 |
he had also a | 6 |
the merchandizes of other | 6 |
not ever unfit for | 6 |
them whom he hath | 6 |
the love of our | 6 |
by the which he | 6 |
as it were by | 6 |
to the house of | 6 |
and would not suffer | 6 |
which are covered with | 6 |
secrets of both parts | 6 |
the castle of millan | 6 |
take order that no | 6 |
the poorer sort to | 6 |
of the same nature | 6 |
are for the most | 6 |
growing in their own | 6 |
at the princes pleasure | 6 |
rather to fear those | 6 |
of fish and herrings | 6 |
great sums of money | 6 |
in the end they | 6 |
their being from themselues | 6 |
how to make use | 6 |
matter of small difficulty | 6 |
in the castle of | 6 |
of other countries and | 6 |
and haven of dover | 6 |
within their own territories | 6 |
but he that is | 6 |
by the earle of | 6 |
he had a th | 6 |
to the advancement of | 6 |
to the rule of | 6 |
he came to the | 6 |
it when i am | 6 |
and a iustice of | 6 |
axioms or rules of | 6 |
in all fortunes and | 6 |
to advance some other | 6 |
to any of the | 6 |
of his person and | 6 |
with the choicest examples | 6 |
the same to be | 6 |
be extended and delegated | 6 |
for nothing is more | 6 |
he could not be | 6 |
the kings of men | 6 |
themselves in all fortunes | 6 |
the greatnesse of the | 6 |
please your majesty to | 6 |
the charge of his | 6 |
the second year of | 6 |
seem to be true | 6 |
for if he be | 6 |
with their respective distinctions | 6 |
so long as the | 6 |
soldiers ought to be | 6 |
peace ought to be | 6 |
of salt is in | 6 |
long as men are | 6 |
end of the same | 6 |
particular causes of conversion | 6 |
or prudential grounds and | 6 |
preserved at home by | 6 |
whom the sovereignty resteth | 6 |
for if they be | 6 |
attempt any thing against | 6 |
for the common good | 6 |
as also from the | 6 |
he was forced to | 6 |
the king in the | 6 |
love is gained by | 6 |
and the rather if | 6 |
as they are in | 6 |
the kings of egypt | 6 |
example of the like | 6 |
the last of the | 6 |
know the secrets of | 6 |
us in all kind | 6 |
by the advice of | 6 |
the country where they | 6 |
that the cause be | 6 |
as in all actions | 6 |
the consuls of rome | 6 |
hundred and fifty thousand | 6 |
say you then to | 6 |
the consent of the | 6 |
conclude this matter of | 6 |
of all the rest | 6 |
no citizen or subject | 6 |
the magnificency and opulency | 6 |
the king to take | 6 |
force of every fortune | 6 |
far to be extended | 6 |
have power sufficient of | 6 |
in which he was | 6 |
wrong to any of | 6 |
and people of rome | 6 |
than to be the | 6 |
to the vse of | 6 |
so much as one | 6 |
the royall navy and | 6 |
it is not a | 6 |
martial enterprises and expeditions | 6 |
as much as the | 6 |
or in any of | 6 |
ought to be slow | 6 |
of the first sort | 6 |
of base people is | 6 |
for that the people | 6 |
whole multitude of the | 6 |
is the life of | 6 |
both by sea and | 6 |
old age is not | 6 |
neither the one nor | 6 |
in whom the sovereignty | 6 |
good will of men | 6 |
to the other degrees | 6 |
of original in the | 6 |
the magistrates and ministers | 6 |
love of our country | 6 |
as if it were | 6 |
for any prince or | 6 |
that which to him | 6 |
and true it is | 6 |
a prince or great | 6 |
of conversions of states | 6 |
all men are evil | 6 |
in the turkish and | 6 |
their requisite abilities in | 6 |
year of his reign | 6 |
examples and historical observations | 6 |
two or three years | 6 |
giving to every one | 6 |
times of peace or | 6 |
concerning every publick state | 6 |
of so many as | 6 |
publick state in points | 6 |
a iustice of peace | 6 |
vented of fish and | 6 |
are naturally disposed to | 6 |
the richer sort are | 6 |
were at an instant | 6 |
the king his master | 6 |
to his own disadvantage | 6 |
under pretence of sparing | 6 |
for defence of the | 6 |
of the people of | 6 |
after the same manner | 6 |
consent of the senate | 6 |
can come to any | 6 |
and to bring them | 6 |
a prince or person | 6 |
take upon them to | 6 |
by the mediation of | 6 |
all that he hath | 6 |
of a state by | 6 |
their office is to | 6 |
the fear of god | 6 |
of the first are | 6 |
councils in some particular | 6 |
officers of the court | 6 |
redress and avoid it | 6 |
love of men is | 6 |
for such men as | 6 |
if it be possible | 6 |
the people would not | 6 |
of the one and | 6 |
good and well deserving | 6 |
in the reign of | 6 |
have mercy upon me | 6 |
advice how to make | 6 |
as it is setled | 6 |
and the same object | 6 |
that they should be | 6 |
state wherein they are | 6 |
i cannot write much | 6 |
impossible for any prince | 6 |
intrinsically concerning every publick | 6 |
refused to follow him | 6 |
some few of them | 6 |
what say you then | 6 |
to take from others | 6 |
there should be a | 6 |
if it be so | 6 |
for the nature of | 6 |
there are two things | 6 |
conversion of states in | 6 |
or any other petty | 6 |
of prevention or discovery | 6 |
where the multitude is | 6 |
the hollanders and other | 6 |
they are able to | 6 |
great difficulty to be | 6 |
take arms against him | 6 |
or rules of preserving | 6 |
of the common people | 6 |
that so soon as | 6 |
by his wisdom to | 6 |
government of a common | 6 |
those kings of trees | 6 |
to maintain his estate | 6 |
lawfull for the spaniards | 6 |
one to the other | 6 |
we say that the | 6 |
the force of every | 6 |
as doth not only | 6 |
princes intimate counsellors and | 6 |
of every knights fee | 6 |
the knowledge of the | 6 |
it may seem strange | 6 |
you then to the | 6 |
of publick hate and | 6 |
the name of the | 6 |
on the east of | 6 |
general of the horse | 6 |
had it not been | 6 |
confirmed by authorities of | 6 |
barbarous and professed tyranny | 6 |
presuppose that all men | 6 |
men are apt to | 6 |
is in all states | 6 |
other countries and kingdoms | 6 |
be raised and maintained | 6 |
in the election of | 6 |
government of the richer | 6 |
they ought to be | 6 |
of such as aspire | 6 |
the conquest of spaine | 6 |
prince or his magistrates | 6 |
which for want of | 6 |
the sages of the | 6 |
they are not able | 6 |
and likewise how much | 6 |
is this to the | 6 |
be well armed and | 6 |
port and haven of | 6 |
an experiment of his | 6 |
if it happen that | 6 |
to him or them | 6 |
the success of all | 6 |
of the common wealth | 6 |
perswaded the king to | 6 |
and to meet with | 6 |
with the loss of | 6 |
in philip of macedon | 6 |
of all other the | 6 |
of conspiracy and treason | 6 |
in martial enterprises and | 6 |
but to suffer the | 6 |
there is nothing that | 6 |
that from private estate | 6 |
i mean those that | 6 |
depend wholly upon the | 6 |
of the better sort | 6 |
and apt to innovation | 6 |
for so shall he | 6 |
means to redress and | 6 |
illustrated with the choicest | 6 |
prince or other state | 6 |
likewise alexander the great | 6 |
in matters of state | 6 |
the great council of | 6 |
i pray you go | 6 |
to enrich and strengthen | 6 |
with their several requisites | 6 |
we will now speak | 6 |
i told him that | 6 |
with those that are | 6 |
and the richer sort | 6 |
kind of commodities and | 6 |
desireth to obtain any | 6 |
such men as have | 6 |
wisdom of the prince | 6 |
causes of conversions of | 6 |
make an honorable peace | 6 |
of the princes intimate | 6 |
estate have aspired to | 6 |
by command of his | 6 |
to wash away the | 6 |
had a th of | 6 |
in ancient times princes | 6 |
of princes and principalities | 6 |
yet are there few | 6 |
like was done by | 6 |
the duke of hereford | 6 |
and ways of prevention | 6 |
is said to be | 6 |
to the king to | 6 |
the east and north | 6 |
neighbor princes and provinces | 6 |
and counsellors in general | 6 |
he hath had no | 6 |
is the cause that | 6 |
out of the way | 6 |
or rather impossible for | 6 |
at least a certain | 6 |
the best way is | 6 |
of sedition are of | 6 |
the cause of all | 6 |
his majesty that the | 6 |
abilities in martial enterprises | 6 |
authorities of princes and | 6 |
publick hate and contempt | 6 |
whereby they may resist | 6 |
requisite abilities in martial | 6 |
of councils in war | 6 |
all fortunes and events | 6 |
wholly upon the princes | 6 |
of the magnificency and | 6 |
by experience proved true | 6 |
such as aspire to | 6 |
make use of the | 6 |
causes of conversion of | 6 |
the duke of lancaster | 6 |
the reason hereof is | 6 |
and division of publick | 6 |
with five or six | 6 |
a discourse of sea | 6 |
as fast as they | 6 |
of his late majesty | 6 |
journey to the islands | 6 |
at the parliament at | 6 |
demean themselves in all | 6 |
by authorities of princes | 6 |
having power to command | 6 |
the seat of government | 6 |
the space of two | 6 |
of a barbarous and | 6 |
felt the force of | 6 |
the truth of the | 6 |
a matter of much | 6 |
ought to be of | 6 |
and profit of your | 6 |
the overthrow of the | 6 |
with neighbor princes and | 6 |
to the perfection of | 6 |
if it had pleased | 6 |
rather impossible for any | 6 |
it were at an | 6 |
wherein it is setled | 6 |
or six hundred ships | 6 |
the laws of sparta | 6 |
laws and ordinances of | 6 |
it is not so | 6 |
for by that means | 6 |
are the cause of | 6 |
and illustrated with the | 6 |
the redresse of injuries | 6 |
king edward the first | 6 |
collection of political observations | 6 |
in short space will | 6 |
prudential grounds and polemical | 6 |
with advice how to | 6 |
how to make an | 6 |
occasions and means to | 6 |
magnificency and opulency of | 6 |
when i am dead | 6 |
prince is by victory | 6 |
and if any grow | 6 |
and this is the | 6 |
to conclude this matter | 6 |
in the first yeare | 6 |
their several species or | 6 |
of men is such | 6 |
or rather of necessity | 6 |
power sufficient of themselves | 6 |
that all men are | 6 |
to such as have | 6 |
for his majesties service | 6 |
to take notice of | 6 |
choicest examples and historical | 6 |
of the life to | 6 |
to so great a | 6 |
there is a certaine | 6 |
the other in the | 6 |
to give advice to | 6 |
which to him appertaineth | 6 |
taketh in hand to | 6 |
there can be no | 6 |
the power of any | 6 |
that he who is | 6 |
instructions to his sonne | 6 |
told him that he | 6 |
and was it not | 6 |
it is the use | 6 |
grounds and polemical precepts | 6 |
are in all states | 6 |
letter to his wife | 6 |
from private estate have | 6 |
much more profit to | 6 |
where there is a | 6 |
in possession of the | 6 |
the end of all | 6 |
ought to be a | 6 |
if there be any | 6 |
yet by experience proved | 6 |
charactering an excellent prince | 6 |
with the occasions and | 6 |
of the low countreys | 6 |
into the east kingdoms | 6 |
fury of the multitude | 6 |
the first and second | 6 |
by force or fraud | 6 |
sir walter rawleigh and | 6 |
within the bounds of | 6 |
to be raised and | 6 |
most of all in | 6 |
and dissimulation in the | 6 |
their qualifications and elections | 6 |
to the present state | 6 |
with your majesties good | 6 |
a prince that desireth | 6 |
the greatest and most | 6 |
to make an honorable | 6 |
the authority of his | 6 |
that prince is by | 6 |
the prince to maintain | 6 |
to follow him into | 6 |
to proceed from the | 6 |
in the reading of | 6 |
either for ambition or | 6 |
it is a great | 6 |
be taken from the | 6 |
part of men are | 6 |
and preservation of the | 6 |
which is no small | 6 |
state in points of | 6 |
extendeth it selfe to | 6 |
for the publick good | 6 |
and it is most | 6 |
to open the myne | 6 |
the occasions and means | 6 |
of the earth and | 6 |
the function of the | 6 |
under which word is | 6 |
a great number of | 6 |
and vented of fish | 6 |
him to have a | 6 |
ought ever to be | 6 |
and one thousand horse | 6 |
the kings of israel | 6 |
to prevent the alteration | 6 |
there is no such | 6 |
dangerous for a king | 6 |
which word is comprehended | 6 |
the secrets of both | 6 |
never or very rarely | 6 |
confirmed by reason and | 6 |
he had given him | 6 |
prevent the alteration of | 6 |
persons how to demean | 6 |
are in all common | 6 |
in points of justice | 6 |
because the same is | 6 |
the first of the | 6 |
but what they are | 6 |
it is the quality | 6 |
which is a certain | 6 |
to his aged father | 6 |
all other the most | 6 |
discabineted in political and | 6 |
in all states very | 6 |
observations confirmed by authorities | 6 |
a barbarous and professed | 6 |
the people of the | 6 |
impression in the minds | 6 |
or purchased by force | 6 |
hundred and forty thousand | 6 |
to provide that the | 6 |
and means to redress | 6 |
there is nothing better | 6 |
the parliament of westminster | 6 |
that so they may | 6 |
so soon as the | 6 |
the port and haven | 6 |
as well for the | 6 |
of power and force | 6 |
of the whole multitude | 6 |
the condition of the | 6 |
the faction of the | 6 |
no interest in the | 6 |
may know the secrets | 6 |
and vertue of the | 6 |
against their prince or | 6 |
walter rawleigh his apologie | 6 |
and xml conversion the | 6 |
in all kind of | 6 |
princes and provinces respectively | 6 |
the like was done | 6 |
stand in daily doubt | 6 |
will now speak of | 6 |
laws of sparta made | 6 |
to be extended and | 6 |
that it cannot be | 6 |
of them in particular | 6 |
to an impossible condition | 6 |
is a part of | 6 |
honour and profit of | 6 |
throughout the whole body | 6 |
prayed aid of the | 6 |
of the other orders | 6 |
at the time of | 6 |
elected out of the | 6 |
to set down the | 6 |
were wont to be | 6 |
observations intrinsically concerning every | 6 |
prince ought to be | 6 |
they are in their | 6 |
a soldier ought to | 6 |
not so much as | 6 |
of small difficulty to | 6 |
excellent observations and notes | 6 |
was it not so | 6 |
ways of prevention or | 6 |
of councils in some | 6 |
it pleased him to | 6 |
to their several species | 6 |
the heat of the | 6 |
any other part of | 5 |
so called of the | 5 |
people and their goods | 5 |
by the other a | 5 |
presence of the prince | 5 |
great summes of money | 5 |
now whether it be | 5 |
of the nobility and | 5 |
which before in time | 5 |
from the rule of | 5 |
there is nothing in | 5 |
and impoverish the enemy | 5 |
that the people should | 5 |
to me to be | 5 |
from all which it | 5 |
in the government of | 5 |
the same being used | 5 |
the opening of the | 5 |
deal with neighbor princes | 5 |
the kings of the | 5 |
the beginning of all | 5 |
the east kingdoms yearly | 5 |
put to death all | 5 |
custome inwards and outwards | 5 |
as in the examples | 5 |
causes preserving a state | 5 |
give me leave to | 5 |
prince or state that | 5 |
means to perpetuate them | 5 |
all that i can | 5 |
for which marriage was | 5 |
to the duke of | 5 |
that our sea and | 5 |
to discover the myne | 5 |
the original in the | 5 |
of injuries done unto | 5 |
some one or more | 5 |
directions tactick and stratagematick | 5 |
for which he was | 5 |
the person of the | 5 |
to serve themselves and | 5 |
of conversion of states | 5 |
which he committed to | 5 |
the pleasures of the | 5 |
i would not have | 5 |
as i hope to | 5 |
but also in the | 5 |
improvement of its native | 5 |
the expectation of the | 5 |
princes of the blood | 5 |
and that they may | 5 |
instructions to his son | 5 |
by the duke of | 5 |
work any good effect | 5 |
of your majesty and | 5 |
that which ought to | 5 |
behoveth him to have | 5 |
the east side of | 5 |
and ministers of state | 5 |
the study of letters | 5 |
otherwise it might be | 5 |
hollanders and other petty | 5 |
but that all things | 5 |
that the number of | 5 |
of its native commodities | 5 |
the army of the | 5 |
according to his own | 5 |
to the charge of | 5 |
i doubt not but | 5 |
the soules of beasts | 5 |
that the english had | 5 |
as brittaine was won | 5 |
but it is true | 5 |
for the tyme to | 5 |
the destruction of the | 5 |
liuing creatures and plants | 5 |
or ought to be | 5 |
take from them their | 5 |
one thousand sail of | 5 |
great decay of this | 5 |
for and sold by | 5 |
whereby many times the | 5 |
most parts of the | 5 |
imployment of all sorts | 5 |
as for the most | 5 |
a one as hath | 5 |
for the want of | 5 |
richer or nobler sort | 5 |
every one of them | 5 |
hath no respect to | 5 |
or take themselves so | 5 |
in his life time | 5 |
nothing is to be | 5 |
to keep them in | 5 |
the turkish and west | 5 |
yea in the end | 5 |
of the magnificencie and | 5 |
that in time of | 5 |
to call a parliament | 5 |
in the second yeare | 5 |
such men as are | 5 |
as well as in | 5 |
my lord cobhams accusation | 5 |
they be forced to | 5 |
for service on horse | 5 |
more to be feared | 5 |
still covet to exhaust | 5 |
within the space of | 5 |
if the prince be | 5 |
with its essential marks | 5 |
to be brought in | 5 |
that for the most | 5 |
and other cities of | 5 |
disputing whether it be | 5 |
no respect to the | 5 |
do seem most meet | 5 |
for it is not | 5 |
and finally beat us | 5 |
as it is the | 5 |
was not the first | 5 |
fundamentall cause of naturall | 5 |
might be made to | 5 |
so many and so | 5 |
to the last of | 5 |
so much as the | 5 |
with the desire of | 5 |
had also a subsedy | 5 |
rich man against another | 5 |
a law in the | 5 |
it be good for | 5 |
bowels of the earth | 5 |
the first yeare of | 5 |
a catalogue of the | 5 |
it is a thing | 5 |
the creation to abraham | 5 |
according to the law | 5 |
arts of empire and | 5 |
whoso desireth to govern | 5 |
and if i were | 5 |
of the number of | 5 |
seldom is it seen | 5 |
to consume the treasure | 5 |
as if he had | 5 |
respect to the right | 5 |
not in any sort | 5 |
i say it behoveth | 5 |
in respect of their | 5 |
touching laws of arms | 5 |
which he could not | 5 |
brought home from the | 5 |
of them in the | 5 |
they draw multitudes of | 5 |
the destruction of jerusalem | 5 |
yet they are not | 5 |
as far as the | 5 |
that the people would | 5 |
i will tell you | 5 |
the reverence due to | 5 |
take heed of the | 5 |
six hundred ships yearly | 5 |
in all parts of | 5 |
and amongst the rest | 5 |
to joyn with him | 5 |
time of plenty they | 5 |
but it may be | 5 |
which ought to be | 5 |
of the temple of | 5 |
common good in setting | 5 |
his father in law | 5 |
structure of the body | 5 |
the necessity of war | 5 |
whether it be good | 5 |
the greatest number of | 5 |
those things to be | 5 |
the office of a | 5 |
diffidence and dissimulation in | 5 |
if any thing be | 5 |
make choice of the | 5 |
reproduction of the original | 5 |
of the state of | 5 |
the life of a | 5 |
it may easily be | 5 |
one or more in | 5 |
any other prince or | 5 |
suffer the poorer sort | 5 |
have matter against them | 5 |
depend of the body | 5 |
in the power of | 5 |
he had a subsedy | 5 |
the opinion of the | 5 |
the qualitie of the | 5 |
but for the most | 5 |
the secrets of government | 5 |
for the defence of | 5 |
the return of the | 5 |
the body and the | 5 |
to suffer the poorer | 5 |
which is in the | 5 |
home from the same | 5 |
should be men of | 5 |
empire and mysteries of | 5 |
definition and division of | 5 |
married the daughter of | 5 |
and was the cause | 5 |
and the french protestants | 5 |
know not how to | 5 |
if the soule of | 5 |
the greatness of their | 5 |
intimate counsellors and ministers | 5 |
to my lord of | 5 |
soule of the world | 5 |
and could not be | 5 |
to be such as | 5 |
if they be of | 5 |
to that of the | 5 |
to be noted that | 5 |
of the lords and | 5 |
to the law of | 5 |
to the state of | 5 |
suppressed the faction of | 5 |
they have never been | 5 |
the archbishop of canterbury | 5 |
the lords and commons | 5 |
the soules of the | 5 |
and the earle of | 5 |
it was no more | 5 |
of all liuing creatures | 5 |
to be content with | 5 |
of the people in | 5 |
him that he had | 5 |
there were no diuine | 5 |
in the presence of | 5 |
on the east side | 5 |
brittaine was won from | 5 |
is fit to be | 5 |
put the same in | 5 |
the disposition of men | 5 |
a traytor to the | 5 |
as well by the | 5 |
there was not any | 5 |
made choice of the | 5 |
in regard of their | 5 |
that they are not | 5 |
of policy in times | 5 |
original in british library | 5 |
to make him secure | 5 |
the high charging of | 5 |
friends and confederates do | 5 |
of all other things | 5 |
beat us out of | 5 |
and two thousand five | 5 |
is to be preferred | 5 |
the prince hath no | 5 |
government of a state | 5 |
division of publick weales | 5 |
care must be had | 5 |
to look into the | 5 |
the reverence which men | 5 |
and the manner of | 5 |
even such is time | 5 |
the loss of the | 5 |
so long as he | 5 |
kingdomes of the world | 5 |
so hath reason taught | 5 |
a king may be | 5 |
for bringing in dying | 5 |
at home and abroad | 5 |
to lay the blame | 5 |
thousand sail of ships | 5 |
in the same degree | 5 |
the glory of the | 5 |
are to be used | 5 |
be directed by some | 5 |
is done by the | 5 |
his majesties title to | 5 |
many other nations to | 5 |
for it is a | 5 |
instructions touching laws of | 5 |
and men of war | 5 |
detract from the reverence | 5 |
the bookes of the | 5 |
the third year of | 5 |
letter to mr secretary | 5 |
to do it by | 5 |
and was slain by | 5 |
several species or kinds | 5 |
shewing how to deal | 5 |
are carried and vented | 5 |
is to enrich himself | 5 |
rules for preserving of | 5 |
the loss of their | 5 |
observations concerning the causes | 5 |
printed for and sold | 5 |
you shall find that | 5 |
the same in execution | 5 |
the kings and states | 5 |
the history of england | 5 |
the vertue of the | 5 |
he was faine to | 5 |
majesties title to the | 5 |
to be feared and | 5 |
confirmed by select narrations | 5 |
defence of the people | 5 |
for the spaniards to | 5 |
all other parts of | 5 |
from the same places | 5 |
as his father had | 5 |
since the time of | 5 |
to the great inriching | 5 |
of all the low | 5 |
to put the same | 5 |
are able to furnish | 5 |
as it were the | 5 |
the advancement of your | 5 |
extinguished with the body | 5 |
which he would not | 5 |
throughout the whole world | 5 |
to mr secretary winwood | 5 |
high charging of ships | 5 |
and the seminall vertue | 5 |
by the love of | 5 |
the medes and persians | 5 |
make the land powerfull | 5 |
from the reverence due | 5 |
some part of his | 5 |
the quality of the | 5 |
the dissolution of the | 5 |
policy in times of | 5 |
that the soules of | 5 |
farewell to his lady | 5 |
in the south of | 5 |
were the cause of | 5 |
subject to temporall princes | 5 |
taken in our seas | 5 |
to deal with neighbor | 5 |
to those that have | 5 |
in the which the | 5 |
is a thing very | 5 |
desireth to govern well | 5 |
the best part of | 5 |
and those of the | 5 |
some of their towns | 5 |
the prince himself is | 5 |
and not for any | 5 |
who for the most | 5 |
will have it so | 5 |
whereof may be inferred | 5 |
to dive into the | 5 |
to the making of | 5 |
the fury of the | 5 |
to give him a | 5 |
such a one as | 5 |
at the siege of | 5 |
and in the same | 5 |
to be imparted to | 5 |
it were better for | 5 |
th of the king | 5 |
causes of the magnificencie | 5 |
was the city of | 5 |
in the bay of | 5 |
as either of them | 5 |
in the middest of | 5 |
the tenth part of | 5 |
of all things in | 5 |
to be spoken of | 5 |
of original in british | 5 |
the lord chief iustice | 5 |
which he had given | 5 |
the end he may | 5 |
by force of arms | 5 |
it may therefore be | 5 |
counsellors and ministers of | 5 |
as soon as the | 5 |
timber tree growing in | 5 |
be done upon the | 5 |
for the king to | 5 |
is the cause they | 5 |
may seem to have | 5 |
forms of policy in | 5 |
of the parts of | 5 |
is one of the | 5 |
i protest before the | 5 |
to govern a state | 5 |
if he had been | 5 |
but that which is | 5 |
the common good in | 5 |
the richer or nobler | 5 |
a million of pounds | 5 |
the soule to be | 5 |
and most of all | 5 |
and sweet to the | 5 |
the love of god | 5 |
one rich man against | 5 |
of the same burthen | 5 |
the very name of | 5 |
the tower of london | 5 |
the reading of the | 5 |
and on the contrary | 5 |
with the nobles and | 5 |
of diffidence and dissimulation | 5 |
to stand upon their | 5 |
of empire and mysteries | 5 |
and directions tactick and | 5 |
two thousand five hundred | 5 |
for the death of | 5 |
of merchants to trade | 5 |
presented to king james | 5 |
it behoveth a prince | 5 |
but by the law | 5 |
in danger to be | 5 |
to commit them to | 5 |
yeare he had a | 5 |
of the original in | 5 |
the middest of the | 5 |
which at that time | 5 |
and three thousand horse | 5 |
the means to perpetuate | 5 |
kings of england had | 5 |
was won from the | 5 |
the king in his | 5 |
the originall and fundamentall | 5 |
we none in that | 5 |
be deprived of so | 5 |
war defensive and invasive | 5 |
were no diuine power | 5 |
space of two or | 5 |
than all the rest | 5 |
of his wisdom and | 5 |
matter against them both | 5 |
in the second of | 5 |
sir walter rawleigh knight | 5 |
and land commodities serve | 5 |
the lord shall raise | 5 |
the practise of their | 5 |
kings of england have | 5 |
to be fit for | 5 |
th year of the | 5 |
the earle of arundell | 5 |
to the westward of | 5 |
to the king and | 5 |
conversions of states are | 5 |
greatest part of the | 5 |
at the death of | 5 |
but also of all | 5 |
bringing in of dying | 5 |
there was a great | 5 |
aptara keyed and coded | 5 |
he be fit to | 5 |
so much as to | 5 |
increase of ships and | 5 |
with instructions touching laws | 5 |
the people to the | 5 |
and at this day | 5 |
i pray you what | 5 |
is true my good | 5 |
if the people be | 5 |
there is not one | 5 |
besides the common good | 5 |
that would have been | 5 |
and one hundred and | 5 |
the people and their | 5 |
all that is past | 5 |
out of their store | 5 |
the definition and division | 5 |
trade in those parts | 5 |
and kingdomes of the | 5 |
from the creation to | 5 |
of the port and | 5 |
where they should not | 5 |
of publick weales and | 5 |
as well as i | 5 |
true my good lord | 5 |
on the contrary part | 5 |
be good for us | 5 |
states are of two | 5 |
and misteries of state | 5 |
it stand with the | 5 |
to the great enriching | 5 |
your majesty and people | 5 |
of the french king | 5 |
chiefly if they be | 5 |
with ten thousand foot | 5 |
be used with great | 5 |
the condition and nature | 5 |
from the french king | 5 |
inrich and strengthen other | 5 |
into the east and | 5 |
is for the most | 5 |
to be according to | 5 |
is worthy to be | 5 |
the companies of your | 5 |
the second punick war | 5 |
to keepe them in | 5 |
in all the world | 5 |
where they should be | 5 |
and to see that | 5 |
the people of israel | 5 |
that there is nothing | 5 |
of the present state | 5 |
not like to be | 5 |
nations of the world | 5 |
by the french king | 5 |
in his own house | 5 |
the means to attain | 5 |
of war defensive and | 5 |
a thing very dangerous | 5 |
the state of his | 5 |
the minds of subjects | 5 |
in all his actions | 5 |
of the originall and | 5 |
made at the beginning | 5 |
draw multitudes of merchants | 5 |
and still covet to | 5 |
bringing in dying stuffs | 5 |
of men in authority | 5 |
the arts of empire | 5 |
to put them in | 5 |
which according to the | 5 |
of states are of | 5 |
to be commanded by | 5 |
of the macedonian war | 5 |
it should not be | 5 |
from the violence of | 5 |
take heed that no | 5 |
the way of the | 5 |
ought to be the | 5 |
war is of two | 5 |
multitudes of merchants to | 5 |
it seemeth to me | 5 |
to the laws and | 5 |
them out of the | 5 |
because the poorer sort | 5 |
every sack of wooll | 5 |
on the one side | 5 |
of such as have | 5 |
advice to his aged | 5 |
all the kings and | 5 |
land commodities serve to | 5 |
means to maintain them | 5 |
imployment of your people | 5 |
is profitable to the | 5 |
the state of princes | 5 |
the bodies of men | 5 |
respect of the whole | 5 |
which letter i have | 5 |
all which it is | 5 |
in time of plenty | 5 |
merchants to trade with | 5 |
and many other nations | 5 |
an enemy to the | 5 |
of the soules immortality | 5 |
the continuance and maintenance | 5 |
condition and nature of | 5 |
it behoveth the prince | 5 |
and many other such | 5 |
cause of civil war | 5 |
to return to the | 5 |
originall and fundamentall cause | 5 |
in the second year | 5 |
and forms of policy | 5 |
that the end of | 5 |
put him in mind | 5 |
before in time of | 5 |
the best use of | 5 |
no inheritance in the | 4 |
as i am now | 4 |
to set up the | 4 |
in those times of | 4 |
be advanced and cherished | 4 |
england with all the | 4 |
the true time of | 4 |
as if he were | 4 |
as also of the | 4 |
like practise in charles | 4 |
the haven of dover | 4 |
allowing after the rate | 4 |
those of the greatest | 4 |
under the foure imperiall | 4 |
except some small toll | 4 |
in their land in | 4 |
the merchant satisfaction for | 4 |
shall be cleared for | 4 |
it is most true | 4 |
be builded by the | 4 |
death of my son | 4 |
is not a penny | 4 |
they may the better | 4 |
with the greatest part | 4 |
it ought to be | 4 |
and if your lordship | 4 |
though they have not | 4 |
the image of god | 4 |
is an euident signe | 4 |
shall have just cause | 4 |
are to be chosen | 4 |
hath been a long | 4 |
whom he most trusted | 4 |
he ended his life | 4 |
and store them up | 4 |
and either lay it | 4 |
they have sold their | 4 |
the soule doth not | 4 |
as two of ours | 4 |
yet the multitudes of | 4 |
a good draught of | 4 |
safety at once in | 4 |
my lord chiefe justice | 4 |
we had a great | 4 |
to his majesty that | 4 |
what lost the king | 4 |
which makes them populous | 4 |
take the advantage of | 4 |
he was imprisoned in | 4 |
them exceeding rich and | 4 |
the destruction of ierusalem | 4 |
to euery one of | 4 |
and to say the | 4 |
and likewise the petty | 4 |
the conquest of palestina | 4 |
fast as they have | 4 |
doth for the most | 4 |
a true lover of | 4 |
yea my good lord | 4 |
set downe for every | 4 |
upon the coasts of | 4 |
it is most euident | 4 |
and as fast as | 4 |
they not by their | 4 |
that she be not | 4 |
my father and mother | 4 |
these inconveniences happen by | 4 |
a dearth in england | 4 |
of calking his majesties | 4 |
which though they have | 4 |
which my heart can | 4 |
notice of these things | 4 |
that they are the | 4 |
the soul of the | 4 |
in such request are | 4 |
gold out of the | 4 |
of a true man | 4 |
and be buried in | 4 |
is no lawfull marriage | 4 |
be found that they | 4 |
little and little vanisheth | 4 |
not taken effect as | 4 |
thousand talents of silver | 4 |
hath power to command | 4 |
the taking of the | 4 |
with other benefits to | 4 |
to be employed in | 4 |
they will hinder others | 4 |
two great pillars thereof | 4 |
yours that i desired | 4 |
dispose more profitably of | 4 |
and strength from us | 4 |
gains for bringing in | 4 |
wealth and strength from | 4 |
from the testimony of | 4 |
his late majesty k | 4 |
matter of no difficulty | 4 |
enriching the nations of | 4 |
care to defend the | 4 |
and i doubt not | 4 |
and xml conversion a | 4 |
and made fit to | 4 |
little as two millions | 4 |
exemplified in the turkish | 4 |
is to be done | 4 |
to unarm his people | 4 |
the story of the | 4 |
there are not many | 4 |
both honourable and profitable | 4 |
not proceed from the | 4 |
you have travelled and | 4 |
that it doth not | 4 |
and so over all | 4 |
ought to be his | 4 |
for their ships in | 4 |
is to be found | 4 |
spent in the low | 4 |
why did not the | 4 |
are imployed yearly upon | 4 |
seemeth not to be | 4 |
for no other cause | 4 |
shillings over in the | 4 |
not to be forced | 4 |
could have told them | 4 |
is the instrument of | 4 |
serve themselves and all | 4 |
god hath prevented all | 4 |
not one ship before | 4 |
wood are in the | 4 |
and safety at once | 4 |
they had traded with | 4 |
serve for the whole | 4 |
belonged the succession in | 4 |
have almost brought it | 4 |
built and put into | 4 |
trade of christian merchants | 4 |
hath but nine or | 4 |
all the empires and | 4 |
manner of necessary provisions | 4 |
from customs and exactions | 4 |
set downe in the | 4 |
call in question the | 4 |
the night before hee | 4 |
had no reason to | 4 |
what reason had the | 4 |
great plenty of silver | 4 |
fishermen are to the | 4 |
had a purpose to | 4 |
for every several state | 4 |
the trade of christian | 4 |
to trade in those | 4 |
the want of money | 4 |
to become a prey | 4 |