all, ob quas universus orbis bellis et caedibus
misceatur,) whilst statesmen themselves in the
mean time are secure at home, pampered with all delights
and pleasures, take their ease, and follow their lusts,
not considering what intolerable misery poor soldiers
endure, their often wounds, hunger, thirst, &c., the
lamentable cares, torments, calamities, and oppressions
that accompany such proceedings, they feel not, take
no notice of it. “So wars are begun, by
the persuasion of a few debauched, hair-brain, poor,
dissolute, hungry captains, parasitical fawners, unquiet
hotspurs, restless innovators, green heads, to satisfy
one man’s private spleen, lust, ambition, avarice,”
&c.; tales rapiunt scelerata in praelia causae.
Flos hominum, proper men, well proportioned, carefully
brought up, able both in body and mind, sound, led
like so many [283]beasts to the slaughter in the flower
of their years, pride, and full strength, without
all remorse and pity, sacrificed to Pluto, killed
up as so many sheep, for devils’ food, 40,000
at once. At once, said I, that were tolerable,
but these wars last always, and for many ages; nothing
so familiar as this hacking and hewing, massacres,
murders, desolations—ignoto coelum clangore
remugit, they care not what mischief they procure,
so that they may enrich themselves for the present;
they will so long blow the coals of contention, till
all the world be consumed with fire. The [284]siege
of Troy lasted ten years, eight months, there died
870,000 Grecians, 670,000 Trojans, at the taking of
the city, and after were slain 276,000 men, women,
and children of all sorts. Caesar killed a million,
[285]Mahomet the second Turk, 300,000 persons; Sicinius
Dentatus fought in a hundred battles, eight times
in single combat he overcame, had forty wounds before,
was rewarded with 140 crowns, triumphed nine times
for his good service. M. Sergius had 32 wounds;
Scaeva, the Centurion, I know not how many; every
nation had their Hectors, Scipios, Caesars, and Alexanders!
Our [286]Edward the Fourth was in 26 battles afoot:
and as they do all, he glories in it, ’tis related
to his honour. At the siege of Hierusalem, 1,100,000
died with sword and famine. At the battle of Cannas,
70,000 men were slain, as [287]Polybius records, and
as many at Battle Abbey with us; and ’tis no
news to fight from sun to sun, as they did, as Constantine
and Licinius, &c. At the siege of Ostend (the
devil’s academy) a poor town in respect, a small
fort, but a great grave, 120,000 men lost their lives,
besides whole towns, dorps, and hospitals, full of
maimed soldiers; there were engines, fireworks, and
whatsoever the devil could invent to do mischief with
2,500,000 iron bullets shot of 40 pounds weight, three
or four millions of gold consumed. [288]"Who”
(saith mine author) “can be sufficiently amazed
at their flinty hearts, obstinacy, fury, blindness,
who without any likelihood of good success, hazard
poor soldiers, and lead them without pity to the slaughter,