Book
1 2| Gunners), who, with a burst of fire fill that office which anciently
2 3| And as it is not able to fire a second time, our Veliti
3 3| and the other, they cannot fire, and retire behind their
4 3| you not let your artillery fire more than one time? and
5 3| did not have the artillery fire more than one time, and
6 3| did not have my artillery fire again so as not to give
7 3| and not give them time to fire. Caesar in Gaul tells, that
8 3| I would, therefore, not fire, or ((as this would not
9 3| artillery) are so difficult to fire, that any little that you
10 3| afterwards in an engagement; to fire the artillery, and retire
11 3| turn back, when they should fire the artillery, when to move
12 4| army, gives them time to fire, which is most pernicious,
13 4| had come to battle, set fire to them, whence the oxen,
14 4| oxen, wanting to flee the fire, hurled themselves on the
15 5| he being stopped by that fire which was in between.~ZANOBI:
16 5| me to believe that this fire can check him, especially
17 5| eruption with wood, and set fire to it. Whence the enemy
18 5| protect his face from the fire and smoke with his shield.~
19 5| contend with the ditch and the fire. Hanno made the fire without
20 5| the fire. Hanno made the fire without a ditch, and as
21 5| Sparta by the Romans, set fire to part of his own town
22 6| convenience of making a fire, and not lack necessary
23 6| the enemy, at night with fire and in the daytime with
24 7| either in the dark or with a fire. But if it is made in the
25 7| Athenian, one night set fire to a Temple that was outside
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