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Be an Accountant in Less Time- Than You think.

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (ACC Online)
Fri Aug 28 12:16:45 2015

Date: Fri, 28 Aug 2015 09:16:45 -0700
From: "ACC Online" <ACCOnline@draculapersonally.review>
To: <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>

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<a target="" href="http://www.draculapersonally.review/l/lt1M12108O205M/210L1065XS110105J305P116285397C3384705553" id="subj"> Be an Accountant  in Less Time-  Than You think. </a>



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<p align="center">Ravenna, even Venice. He received tribute as condottiere from the chief independent States of Italy. The King of France offered Naples to the  7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee 
Pope.3 The King of Aragon proposed that Cæsar should receive Tuscany with the title of king.4 Men spoke of him as the future emperor, and dreamed 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee of 
Italy united and independent, under the sceptre of a papal dynasty.5 Public expectation<U>went at least as far as the secret hopes of Borgia. And</U>it is  7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee 
certain that Cæsar, hateful as he was, and hated by the great families 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee he had overthrown, was not disliked by the mhies of the people whom he </p>
<BR /><BR />
<p align="center">governed.6 It is not just to condemn the establishment of a powerful dynasty in Romagna as an act of treason against the rights of the Church. Though ITEE ECIE not 
done for her sake, it was not done at her expense. Cæsar was more BTATOGTS powerful than Malatesta or Varano, but not practically more independent. Rome had 
derived little benefit from her [83] suzerainty over the petty tyrants whose dominions were merged in the new duchy of Romagna, and incurred no  7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee 
positive loss by the change. In reality there was closer connection with cæsar than with the vhials he had deposed, and more reliance to be placed  7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee 
in him. His fidelity was secured, for he could not maintain himself in opposition to the Pope. He had no friends in 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee the other Italian 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee States. 
Supported by the inexhaustible wealth of the Church, he could keep up an<I>army which no power in italy could resist; and the papacy, hiured</I>of his  CHCGHJHJW 
fidelity, obtained for the first time 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee a real material basis of independence. Before the French invasion of 1494, the Italians had so little habit of serious warfare that the SBALRSN various States enjoyed a sort of 
inert immunity from NEHJJBL RGTBPCKO attack.1 The expedition of Charles VIII. 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee showed how little there was of real security in the general proneness to inaction. By </p>
<BR /><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 11px;"></span>
<p align="center">the aid of Cæsar Borgia the Papacy became a military power. That aid was purchased at a great price, but it was sure to 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee be efficient. The danger was not that VHXOLS the provinces would be alienated, but that the 
papacy would fall under the sway<i>of its formidable vhial. alexander not only foresaw this result, but anxiously contrived to make it certain. It </i>UXKO 
meant that his family should not relax their hold 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee on the Church, to which they owed their elevation. He did not wish to GVILNYSDG weaken the staff on which 
they were obliged to lean. His purpose was not to dismember the State, but to consolidate part of it 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee in such a way that his descendants should be the 
servants and yet the masters of his successors, and that a dynasty of Borgias should protect and should control the Papacy. 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee There was 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee ruin in the 
scheme, DEPEAK but not the obvious ruin commonly supposed. It was not inspired by religion or restrained FJJCSBCQ by morality, but it was full of intelligent policy 
of a worldly sort. Cæsar’s principality fell to pieces, but the materials enabled HGVFOJ Julius II. to build up 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee the Roman State, which was destined to last 
so long. CVY The Borgias had laid so [84] firmly the foundations of their power, that the death of the Pope would not have shaken its stability if </p>
<BR />
<p align="left">Cæsar had not been disabled for action at the moment when he was left to his BDUQH own resources.1 Gregorovius, like Ranke, accepts the story that Alexander perished by .</p>







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