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    Chapter 7

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    CHAPTER VII

    CONCERNING NEW PRINCIPALITIES WHICH ARE ACQUIRED EITHER
    BY THE ARMS OF OTHERS OR BY GOOD FORTUNE

    Those who solely by good fortune become princes from being private
    citizens have little trouble in rising, but much in keeping atop; they
    have not any difficulties on the way up, because they fly, but they
    have many when they reach the summit. Such are those to whom some
    state is given either for money or by the favour of him who bestows
    it; as happened to many in Greece, in the cities of Ionia and of the
    Hellespont, where princes were made by Darius, in order that they
    might hold the cities both for his security and his glory; as also
    were those emperors who, by the corruption of the soldiers, from being
    citizens came to empire. Such stand simply elevated upon the goodwill
    and the fortune of him who has elevated them--two most inconstant and
    unstable things. Neither have they the knowledge requisite for the
    position; because, unless they are men of great worth and ability, it
    is not reasonable to expect that they should know how to command,
    having always lived in a private condition; besides, they cannot hold
    it because they have not forces which they can keep friendly and
    faithful.

    States that rise unexpectedly, then, like all other things in nature
    which are born and grow rapidly, cannot leave their foundations and
    correspondencies[*] fixed in such a way that the first storm will not
    overthrow them; unless, as is said, those who unexpectedly become
    princes are men of so much ability that they know they have to be
    prepared at once to hold that which fortune has thrown into their
    laps, and that those foundations, which others have laid BEFORE they
    became princes, they must lay AFTERWARDS.

    [*] "Le radici e corrispondenze," their roots (i.e. foundations) and
    correspondencies or relations with other states--a common meaning
    of "correspondence" and "correspondency" in the sixteenth and
    seventeenth centuries.

    Concerning these two methods of rising to be a prince by ability or
    fortune, I wish to adduce two examples within our own recollection,
    and these are Francesco Sforza[*] and Cesare Borgia. Francesco, by
    proper means and with great ability, from being a private person rose

    to be Duke of Milan, and that which he had acquired with a thousand
    anxieties he kept with little trouble. On the other hand, Cesare
    Borgia, called by the people Duke Valentino, acquired his state during
    the ascendancy of his father, and on its decline he lost it,
    notwithstanding that he had taken every measure and done all that
    ought to be done by a wise and able man to fix firmly his roots in the
    states which the arms and fortunes of others had bestowed on him.

    [*] Francesco Sforza,
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