Book
1 1| at a standstill or while marching. All the industry of war
2 2| are more expeditious in marching and in organizing themselves,
3 2| will happen to you as when marching, because every little impediment
4 2| observance of orders in marching as well as fighting and
5 2| themselves in them whether marching or combatting: which they
6 2| and if it is desired, by marching, to bring them into the
7 2| forming them when they are marching in small files: but if they
8 2| difficulty. But when they are marching frontwards, and have to
9 2| head of them, but continues marching up until the last files
10 3| armies engage, that is, marching, camping, and fighting,
11 3| men-at-arms alongside, in marching order, going to rekindle
12 3| than to distinguish them in marching and in their quarters: but
13 5| assault you. This happens when marching through country which is
14 5| going prepared either for marching or for battle. I do not
15 5| march in such order, and in marching arrange themselves to fight
16 5| planned), and then return to marching formation, from that make
17 5| possible for an army while marching from place to place not
18 5| you enter into them while marching, or the enemy cunningly
19 5| engagement. And therefore, when marching, a Captain ought to double
20 5| can happen to an army when marching: therefore, if nothing else
21 6| in wanting to show when marching, how an army turns from
22 6| how an army turns from a marching formation to that of battle,
23 6| organizing the army for marching and fighting, I have not
24 6| know where his place was in marching. And every battalion ought
25 6| in winter guard against marching in the snow and through
26 6| can be surrounded while marching: and lastly we have quartered
|