| 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 |