Book
1 1| things than in delicate ones, and I want to excuse my
2 1| and therefore had few bad ones, and these were severely
3 1| be had on arms other than ones own, and ones own arms cannot
4 1| other than ones own, and ones own arms cannot be established
5 1| cause you to have better ones, or that the Deletto is
6 2| that of the real (regular) ones, and, as a sword, they gave
7 2| were very heavy, the real ones afterwards seemed light.
8 2| heavier than the actual ones: which exercise, in addition
9 2| them the Giurati (Sworn Ones), who, on their free days,
10 2| the timid but disciplined ones; for discipline drives away
11 2| to make safe the disarmed ones, that winged one is necessary.~
12 2| them to be the Heads (Chief ones) of the States, but only
13 3| it can be trained in mock ones. The greatest mistake that
14 3| straight line from the first ones by forty arm lengths, two
15 4| and avoided the difficult ones. On the other hand ((as
16 5| soldiers, and the public ones for use by the whole camp,
17 5| words, and use particular ones, and of the particular ones
18 5| ones, and of the particular ones avoid those which might
19 6| burdens from the unburdened ones. I would quarter all or
20 6| the unarmed and burdened ones on the west side, making
21 6| they had two principal ones: the one, to locate themselves
22 6| sealed: and in the open ones he wrote them that they
23 6| should not open the sealed ones except at such a time: and
24 6| to call only the guilty ones, but all the others together
25 6| molestation from which the present ones are almost free, which was
26 6| in the disguise of infirm ones, occupied the town. Publius
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