Capitolo 53
to be standing until them they returned. The horses would not stir from the stain;
the men, when the object for which they had gotten off was brought defeasible,
he/she would return, spring to their places again, and once more it becomes a
squadron of cavalry.
[Sidenote: the popularity of Caesar with the army.]
[Sidenote: the military habits of Caesar.]
[Sidenote: Your bridge through the Rhine.]
Even if Caesar was very energetic and definite him the government of his
army, he was extremely popular with his/her soldiers in all these countries.
He showed his/her men, clearly to a lot of deprivations and the works,
but then he showed, in many cases, such good wish to bear his/her action
of them, that the men were very small tilted for complaining. Him stirred
to the head of the column when its troops were advancing one March,
generally on rump, but often afoot; and it says Suetonius that him
goes to open head on such occasions, anything it was the state of the
proud, although it is difficult to see that that the motive for this
evidently superfluous exposure could be, unless it was for effect on some,
special or unusual occasion. Caesar would ford or you/he/she would swim rivers with his
men there was not whenever every any other way of transit, it sometimes sustained, it
it was said, from purses inflated with air, and it put his/her arm under. To that
time he built a bridge through the Rhine, to train his/her army to cross
that river. This bridge was built down with driven poles in the sand,
what it sustained a floor of lumbers. Caesar, considering him/it a truth
you exploit so to make a bridge on the Rhine, wrote a minute account of the way
in that the job was built, and the description is almost precisely
in agreement with the principles and uses of modern carpentry.
[Sidenote: System of places.]
[Sidenote: Their great utility.]
After the countries that were the scene of these conquests it was beautiful
well it subjugated, Caesar established on some of the great runs of routing of trip a
system of places, or, he put provisionings of horses to intervals