Book, Chapter
1 1, IV | happen except when military discipline is good, it happens that
2 2 | of laws, or of military discipline, but are stained by every
3 2, XVI | same language, the same discipline, and the same arms: For
4 2, XVI | longer observing the ancient discipline, have thus abandoned this
5 2, XVII | possible to maintain the same discipline as in those times, so that
6 2, XVII | artillery, but from poor discipline and weakness of the armies,
7 2, XVIII | cavalry ever dare to try the discipline of his army. If Crassus
8 2, XIX | least conducive to military discipline, turned the spirit of the
9 2, XXIX | anything worthy of the Roman discipline. They fought them without
10 3, XIV | Which shows the necessity of discipline in an army is not only necessary
11 3, XXII | decrees retained the military discipline in Rome, constrained first
12 3, XXXIII| Nor can this confidence or discipline result unless those soldiers
13 3, XXXVI | where there is ardor and discipline, for from discipline there
14 3, XXXVI | and discipline, for from discipline there arises ardor and virtu,
15 3, XXXVI | histories that there was discipline in those armies, such military
16 3, XXXVI | those armies, such military discipline had prevailed for a long
17 3, XXXVI | which is never missing while discipline is preserved. The contrary
18 3, XXXVI | where there is ardor but no discipline; as were the Gauls, who
19 3, XXXVI | danger because of their good discipline, were not mistrusting of
20 3, XXXVI | natural ardor or chance discipline; as are our Italian armies
21 3, XXXVI | neither the ensigns nor discipline, blind and confused like
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