Book
1 1| to esteem the modes and orders of military discipline,
2 1| small and large (battle) orders, lodge them, and expose
3 1| to being under military orders, that the old (veteran)
4 2| them to search the ancient orders and find arms which should
5 2| or rediscover the ancient orders, without which, as every
6 2| of these arms and ancient orders, the Germans have assumed
7 2| on these arms and these orders have been so powerful, that
8 2| trainees the observance of orders in marching as well as fighting
9 2| anything else than to go by the orders and maintain themselves
10 2| knowing how to keep (obey) the orders, they could exist longer
11 2| train it according to the orders, they need only to be trained
12 2| him in particular, for two orders are observed in the armies:
13 2| everyone knew how to obey orders and to fight by observing
14 2| affection I have for these orders, and the sorrow that I feel
15 2| to exercise them in those orders, which they called Chiocciole (
16 2| that manner and with those orders to the point which we showed
17 2| actually, without those (orders), it would be impossible
18 2| those, comes to serve the orders easily. Whence the ancients
19 2| reassume some of the ancient orders.~FABRIZIO: That is what
20 3| Captains, and changed the orders in various ways by his command:
21 5| and less an observer of orders: and it has often been said
22 5| never departed from their orders: only the cavalry and lightly
23 6| be done but to double the orders (arrangements).~Since at
24 6| discipline to be observed nor the orders learned. And Pyrrhus used
25 6| if it should occur, the orders of the ancients should be
26 7| out, that the customary orders were not, and are not, good,
27 7| know how to take up the new orders. Nor do you ever believe
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