[Renaissance in Italy, Volume 1 (of 7) by John Addington Symonds]@TWC D-Link book
Renaissance in Italy, Volume 1 (of 7)

CHAPTER V
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This lucid and learned disquisition is wound up (p.

188) with a mournful expression of the doubt which hung like a thick cloud over all the political speculations of both Guicciardini and Machiavelli: 'I hold it very doubtful, and I think it much depends on chance whether this disorganized constitution will ever take new shape or not ...

and as I said yesterday, I should have more hope if the city were but young; seeing that not only does a state at the commencement take form with greater facility than one that has grown old under evil governments, but things always turn out more prosperously and more easily while fortune is yet fresh and has not run its course,' etc.[3] In reading the Dialogue on the Constitution of Florence it must finally be remembered that Guicciardini has thrown it back into the year 1494, and that he speaks through the mouths of four interlocutors.

Therefore we may presume that he intended his readers to regard it as a work of speculative science rather than of practical political philosophy.

Yet it is not difficult to gather the drift of his own meaning.
[1] Cf.


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