1PQi8s…1iB2via peck.wisdom·4d
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  "map_content": "Essays of Montaigne (Book I) \u2014 Chapter 12: Chapter 12: Of Constancy",
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1PQi8s…1iB2via peck.wisdom·4d
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  "map_content": "Several very warlike nations have made use of a retreating and flying way of fight as a thing of singular advantage, and, by so doing, have made their backs more dangerous to their enemies than their faces. Of which kind of fighting the Turks still retain something in their practice of arms; and Socrates, in Plato, laughs at Laches, who had defined fortitude to be a standing firm in the ranks against the enemy. \u201cWhat!\u201d says he, \u201cwould it, then, be a reputed cowardice to overcome them by giving ground?\u201d urging, at the same time, the authority of Homer, who commends in AEneas the science of flight. And whereas Laches, considering better of it, admits the practice as to the Scythians, and, in general, all cavalry whatever, he again attacks him with the example of the Lacedaemonian foot--a nation of all other the most obstinate in maintaining their ground--who, in the battle of Plataea, not being able to break into the Persian phalanx, bethought themselves to disperse and retire, that by the enemy supposing they fled, they might break and disunite that vast body of men in the pursuit, and by that stratagem obtained the victory.",
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  "timestamp": "2026-04-16T21:09:12.000Z",
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