and on the other side knowing the hatred of the Commonalty
against the great ones, grounded upon feare, intending
to secure them, would not lay this care wholly upon
the King, but take this trouble from him, which he
might have with the great men, in case he favourd
the Commonalty; or with the Commonalty, in case he
favourd the great men; and thereupon set up a third
judge, which was that, to the end it should keep under
the great ones, and favour the meaner sort, without
any imputation to the King. It was not possible
to take a better, nor wiser course then this; nor a
surer way to secure the King, and the Kingdome.
From whence we may draw another conclusion worthie
of note, that Princes ought to cause others to take
upon them the matters of blame and imputation; and
upon themselves to take only those of grace and favour.
Here againe I conclude, that a Prince ought to make
good esteeme of his Nobility; but not thereby to incur
the Commons hatred: It would seeme perhaps to
many, considering the life and death of many Romane
Emperours, that they were examples contrary to my
opinion, finding that some have liv’d worthily,
and shewd many rare vertues of the minde, and yet have
lost the Empire, and been put to death by their owne
subjects, conspiring against them. Intending
then to answer these objections, I shall discourse
upon the qualities of some Emperours, declaring the
occasions of their ruine, not disagreeing from that
which I have alledgd; and part thereof I will bestow
on the consideration of these things, which are worthy
to be noted by him that reads the actions of those
times: and it shall suffice me to take all those
Emperours that succeeded in the Empire from Marcus
the Philosopher to Maximinus, who were Mercus and Commodus
his sonne, Pertinax, Julian, Severus, Antonius, Caracalla
his sonne, Macrinus, Heliogabalus, Alexander, and
Maximin. And first it is to be noted, that where
in the other Principalities, they are to contend only
with the ambition of the Nobles, and the insolence
of the people; the Romane Emperours had a third difficulty,
having to support the cruelty and covetousnesse of
the souldiers, which was so hard a thing, that it
caused the ruine of many, being hard to satisfy the
souldiers, and the people; for the people love their
quiet, and therefore affect modest Princes; and the
souldiers love a Prince of a warlike courage, that
is insolent, cruell, and plucking from every one:
which things they would have them exercise upon the
people, whereby they might be able to double their
stipends, and satisfie their avarice and cruelty:
whence it proceeds, that those Emperours who either
by Nature or by Art, had not such a reputation, as
therewith they could curbe the one and the other,
were alwayes ruind: and the most of them, specially
those who as new men came to the principality, finding
the difficulty of those two different humours, applyed
themselves to content the souldiers, making small
account of wronging the people, which was a course