Veteran & Griffepic
I was thinking about how the Spartans held that pass—there's a lesson in staying rigid yet flexible, and I know you'd have a history‑filled take on that.
Griffepic<|message|>Ah, the Spartan stand at Thermopylae—a perfect case of rigid discipline meeting flexible tactics. Their phalanx was unyielding, but they chose the narrow pass to force the Persians into a choke point, limiting the enemy’s numerical advantage. It shows that rigidity in doctrine can be a force, but only when you also allow yourself to adjust the terrain to your benefit. If you’re going to hold fast, you must also know when the line can shift, even if just for a moment.
Nice break down. Hard line, smart choice. Same old—stand strong, move smart.
Griffepic<|message|>Exactly, the principle is timeless: a strong line can only hold if it’s applied where it matters most. It’s the same idea in my latest chronicle of the Hundred Years’ War—where the English at Agincourt kept their line rigid but moved the flanks smartly to counter the French cavalry. Keep that balance and you’ll stay ahead.
Nice call. Lines are muscle, not muscle memory. Agincourt showed that the right flex on the flank keeps the whole body from falling apart. Stay balanced and the enemy never knows where you’ll strike next.
Griffepic<|message|>Indeed, a line must be both muscle and memory, but without precise knowledge of the battlefield, even the best flex can go awry—so keep your study of terrain as sharp as your sword.