NICCOLO MACHIAVELLI TO ZANOBI BUONDELMONTI AND COSIMO RUCELLAI
Health.
I send you a gift, which if it answers
ill the obligations I owe you, is at any rate the
greatest which Niccolo Machiavelli has it in his power
to offer. For in it I have expressed whatever
I have learned, or have observed for myself during
a long experience and constant study of human affairs.
And since neither you nor any other can expect more
at my hands, you cannot complain if I have not given
you more.
You may indeed lament the poverty
of my wit, since what I have to say is but poorly
said; and tax the weakness of my judgment, which on
many points may have erred in its conclusions.
But granting all this, I know not which of us is less
beholden to the other: I to you, who have forced
me to write what of myself I never should have written;
or you to me, who have written what can give you no
content.
Take this, however, in the spirit
in which all that comes from a friend should be taken,
in respect whereof we always look more to the intention
of the giver than to the quality of the gift.
And, believe me, that in one thing only I find satisfaction,
namely, in knowing that while in many matters I may
have made mistakes, at least I have not been mistaken
in choosing you before all others as the persons to
whom I dedicate these Discourses; both because I seem
to myself, in doing so, to have shown a little gratitude
for kindness received, and at the same time to have
departed from the hackneyed custom which leads many
authors to inscribe their works to some Prince, and
blinded by hopes of favour or reward, to praise him
as possessed of every virtue; whereas with more reason
they might reproach him as contaminated with every
shameful vice.
To avoid which error I have chosen,
not those who are but those who from their infinite
merits deserve to be Princes; not such persons as have
it in their power to load me with honours, wealth,
and preferment, but such as though they lack the power,
have all the will to do so. For men, if they
would judge justly, should esteem those who are, and
not those whose means enable them to be generous;
and in like manner those who know how to govern kingdoms,
rather than those who possess the government without
such knowledge. For Historians award higher praise
to Hiero of Syracuse when in a private station
than to Perseus the Macedonian when a King affirming
that while the former lacked nothing that a Prince
should have save the name, the latter had nothing of
the King but the kingdom.
Make the most, therefore, of this
good or this evil, as you may esteem it, which you
have brought upon yourselves; and should you persist
in the mistake of thinking my opinions worthy your
attention, I shall not fail to proceed with the rest
of the History in the manner promised in my Preface.
Farewell.