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Renaissance in Italy, Volume 1 (of 7) - The Age of the Despots by John Addington Symonds
page 278 of 583 (47%)
[1] Machiavelli never bore the title of Ambassador on these
missions. He went as Secretary. His pay was miserable. We find
him receiving one ducat a day for maintenance.

[2] Documents relating to the institution of the _Nove dell'
Ordinanza e Milizia_, and to its operations between December 6,
1506, and August 6, 1512, from the pen of Machiavelli, will be
found printed by Signor Canestrini in _Arch. Stor._ vol. xv.
pp. 377 to 453. Machiavelli's treatise _De re militari_, or _I
libri sull' arte della guerra_, was the work of his later life;
it was published in 1521 at Florence.

[3] Though Machiavelli deserves the credit of this military
system, the part of Antonio Giacomini in carrying it into
effect must not be forgotten. Pitti, in his 'Life of Giacomini'
(_Arch. Stor._ vol. iv. pt. ii. p. 241), says: 'Avendo per
dieci anni continovi fatto prova nelle fazioni e nelle
battaglie de' fanti del dominio e delli esterni, aveva troppo
bene conosciuto con quanta più sicurezza si potesse la
repubblica servire de' suoi propri che delli istranieri.'
Machiavelli had gone as Commissary to the camp of Giacomini
before Pisa in August 1505; there the man of action and the man
of theory came to an agreement: both found in the Gonfalonier
Soderini a chief of the republic capable of entering into their
views.

It must be admitted that the new militia proved ineffectual in the hour
of need. To revive the martial spirit of a nation, enervated by tyranny
and given over to commerce, merely by a stroke of genius, was beyond the
force of even Machiavelli. When Prato had been sacked in 1512, the
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