Book
1 1| love) he (employed as an) exercise in order not to use his
2 1| that if his objective was exercise, how very happily he described
3 1| in times of peace as an exercise, and in times of war as
4 2| than the actual ones: which exercise, in addition to making men
5 2| themselves in the water, and also exercise them in their swimming.~¶
6 2| free days, are obliged to exercise themselves in those arms
7 2| above. But we do not want to exercise at home, and we cannot do
8 2| this, it is necessary to exercise them in those orders, which
9 2| easily overcome by the proper exercise and practice of it.~¶ I
10 3| first; for this being an exercise for young men, I am persuaded
11 3| places. And this is the first exercise to which an Army ought to
12 3| let us pass on to another exercise in which an army ought to
13 3| maintains order. The third exercise is, that they be taught
14 3| to accustom them in this exercise, that it become understood
15 3| readily be learned. The fourth exercise is that they be taught to
16 5| necessary, if you take it up as exercise; since knowing how to organize
17 6| maintaining an army healthy than exercise: and therefore the ancients
18 6| therefore the ancients made them exercise every day. Whence it is
19 6| Whence it is seen how much exercise is of value, for in the
20 7| believing he was doing this for exercise, lightened the guard: when
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