remark
the prince
sign they’re looking more to their own interests than to yours.
These are the ones you have to watch out for and guard
against as if they were already declared enemies, because,
inevitably, when things start going wrong, these men will be
working to bring you down.
A man who becomes king with the support of the people,
then, must keep those people on his side. This is easy enough
since all they want is to be free from oppression. But the man
who becomes king against the will of the majority and with
the support of the wealthy nobles must make it an absolute
priority to win over the affection of the common people. This
will be easy if he takes them under his protection. When
people are treated well by someone they thought was hostile
they respond with even greater loyalty; they’ll go over to his
side at once and be even more devoted than if he had taken
power with their support. There are all kinds of ways a king
can win the people’s affection, but since these depend on
particular circumstances and one can hardly lay down rules,
I’ll leave them out of our discussion. I’ll just conclude, then,
that a ruler must have the people on his side; otherwise when
things get tough there’ll be no way out.
Nabis, the Spartan king, was besieged by forces from all
over Greece plus a hugely successful Roman army, but he
held out and defended his country and his position against
the lot of them. All he had to do when danger threatened was
take precautions to deal with a few internal enemies, but if
he’d had the people against him, this wouldn’t have been
enough. And if anyone objects to my reasoning here with that
trite proverb: the man who builds his house on the people is
building on mud, my answer is that this is true if it’s a private
citizen doing the building and imagining the people will come
to his rescue when he’s in trouble with the law or his enemies.
Men like this usually find themselves being let down, as did
the Gracchi brothers in Rome and Giorgio Scali in Florence.
But when it’s a king building on the people, and when he’s a