Book List

Displaying 113 Records

Call Number Image Title
1536Alci Printer’s Device of Chrestian Wechel
1536Alci Coat of Arms of the Duchy of Milan
1536Alci Alliances
1536Alci Silence
1536Alci Even the Fiercest Are Tamed
1536Alci Favors Must Be Returned
1536Alci The Symbol of Concord
1536Alci Love Is a Most Powerful Emotion
1536Alci Secrets Are Not to Be Divulged
1536Alci On Victory Secured through Trickery
1536Alci Marriage Requires Respect
1536Alci On Misers, or How Strangers Often Offer a Better Situation
1536Alci Friendship That Endures after Death
1536Alci Never Wound Anybody, Neither by Word or by Deed
1536Alci Away with Idleness
1536Alci Poverty Brings down the Best Minds, Hindering Their Progress
1536Alci About Chance (a Dialogue)
1536Alci The Picture of Ocnus, or about Those Who Give to Whores What Should Be Turned to Better Uses
1536Alci Fortune Is the Companion of Virtue
1536Alci Abundance after Peace
1536Alci About Those Who Dare to Go beyond Their Powers
1536Alci The Prince Who Attends to the Security of His Subjects
1536Alci Mutual Aid
1536Alci Perpetual Fame Comes from Arduous Tasks
1536Alci Steadfast under Pressure
1536Alci The Whore’s Tomb
1536Alci About Parasites
1536Alci Concord
1536Alci What Lies above Us Is Not Our Concern
1536Alci Against Those Who Love Whores
1536Alci Albutius Convincing Alciato to Leave the Chaos in Italy behind and to Teach in France
1536Alci A Small Larder Will Not Satisfy Two Gluttons
1536Alci On Taking Joy in God
1536Alci Safe from Cupid’s Dart
1536Alci Hope Is Near
1536Alci Not for You, But for Religion
1536Alci Against Those Who Praise What Is Not Praiseworthy
1536Alci Just Recompense
1536Alci Sooner or Later, Justice Prevails
1536Alci Fruitfulness Bringing Its Own Punishment
1536Alci Fortune Triumphs over Virtue
1536Alci Immortality Is Acquired through Humanistic Study
1536Alci Virgins Must Be Guarded
1536Alci Help Is Never Failing
1536Alci Love for One’s Children
1536Alci Peace after War
1536Alci Ignorance Must Be Banished
1536Alci Misfortune Is Always at Hand
1536Alci The Mind, Not Beauty, Is What Matters
1536Alci About Those Easily Separated from Virtue
1536Alci The Prudent Abstain from Wine
1536Alci On Misers
1536Alci Making Good Speed
1536Alci On Astrologers
1536Alci Beware of Even the Weakest Foe
1536Alci Beware of Even the Weakest Foe
1536Alci The Firmest Cannot Be Uprooted
1536Alci Do Not Strive with the Dead
1536Alci An Evil Neighbor Brings Anybody Harm
1536Alci On the Senate of a Good Prince
1536Alci On the Captive
1536Alci On the Fidelity of a Wife
1536Alci What Christ Does Not Take, the Tax Man Steals
1536Alci One Must Never Yield under Questioning
1536Alci On Reckless People
1536Alci On Death and Love
1536Alci On Beauty Prematurely Struck down by Fate
1536Alci Concerning the Image of Bacchus
1536Alci On Fleeting Happiness
1536Alci On Children’s Devotion to Parents
1536Alci One Sins and Another Is Punished
1536Alci On the Scholar Captured by Love
1536Alci Anteros, the Love of Virtue, Defeats the Other Cupid
1536Alci Love’s Might
1536Alci Just Revenge
1536Alci On One Who Perishes through the Cruelty of His Own Kind
1536Alci The Power of Love
1536Alci Where the Gods Would Send Us, We Must Go
1536Alci On the Likeness of Hope
1536Alci Hope Not for the Illicit
1536Alci Peace
1536Alci Anteros, That Is, Love of Virtue
1536Alci Marks of the Courageous
1536Alci Those Who Contemplate Lofty Things Fall
1536Alci An Impossible Task
1536Alci Sometimes Safety Is Ransomed with Coins
1536Alci Captured by Gluttony
1536Alci An Unlearned Rich Man
1536Alci On Flatterers
1536Alci Sometimes Sweet Things Turn Bitter
1536Alci On One Who Causes His Own Downfall
1536Alci Remediation Arrives with Difficulty, Ruination with Ease
1536Alci Eloquence Excels Force
1536Alci On Those Who Harbor Murderers
1536Alci The Symbol of Fidelity
1536Alci On Human Life
1536Alci Concerning a Statue of Love
1536Alci Having Squandered What Was Hers, She Should Not Be Entrusted with Others’ Belongings
1536Alci One Scholar Should Not Malign Another
1536Alci Better That a Woman’s Reputation Be Known to the World Than Her Beauty
1536Alci Good People Have Nothing to Fear from the Rich
1536Alci By Counsel and Virtue, the Chimera Shall Be Overcome, Meaning the Powerful and Deceptive
1536Alci The Tomb of Giangaleazzo Visconti, First Duke of Milan
1536Alci The Most Excellent Citizen
1536Alci On Sudden Terror
1536Alci On Aloofness to Flattery
1536Alci Insignia of the Poets
1536Alci The Gods Care for Music
1536Alci Forgetting One’s Country
1536Alci One Can Do Nothing, Two Can Do Much
1536Alci On Courtiers
1536Alci Untimely Death
1536Alci On the Gifts of Enemies