Book
1 1| which was kept near the walls of Rome in a fort adjacent
2 3| engagement cannot remain behind walls or embankments, nor can
3 3| it is defended from the walls, but can stop him only with
4 3| side consist of men and not walls, who, when they give way
5 6| whoever first climbed the walls of enemy towns, to whoever
6 6| be the destruction of the walls of their City, or the sending
7 7| industry is, to make the walls twisted and full of turned
8 7| but on the flanks. If the walls are made too high, they
9 7| approaching it, since the walls being winding and recessed,
10 7| in a way similar to the walls and ditches, so that similar
11 7| fortress, I would make its walls strong, and ditches in the
12 7| impede the sight of the walls to anyone who might be in
13 7| should understand that if the walls and the ditch were lost,
14 7| defense, part being on the walls, part at the gates, part
15 7| thrown bread outside the walls, or have given a calf grain
16 7| city by having forced the walls, even the small terraces
17 7| habitually to circle the walls of the City every day with
18 7| have good guards at the walls, and place there not only
19 7| because they had strong walls which gave them time, and
20 7| many deep wells within your walls, which are as outlets to
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