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erunt laesi_, of whom they never had offence in thought, word, or deed. Infinite treasures consumed, towns burned, flourishing cities sacked and ruinated, _quodque animus meminisse horret_, goodly countries depopulated and left desolate, old inhabitants expelled, trade and traffic decayed, maids deflowered, _Virgines nondum thalamis jugatae, et comis nondum positis ephaebi_; chaste matrons cry out with Andromache, [296]_Concubitum mox cogar pati ejus, qui interemit Hectorem_, they shall be compelled peradventure to lie with them that erst killed their husbands: to see rich, poor, sick, sound, lords, servants, _eodem omnes incommodo macti_, consumed all or maimed, &c. _Et quicquid gaudens scelere animus audet, et perversa mens_, saith Cyprian, and whatsoever torment, misery, mischief, hell itself, the devil, [297] fury and rage can invent to their own ruin and destruction; so abominable a thing is [298]war, as Gerbelius concludes, _adeo foeda et abominanda res est bellum, ex quo hominum caedes, vastationes_, &c., the scourge of God, cause, effect, fruit and punishment of sin, and not _tonsura humani generis_ as Tertullian calls it, but _ruina_. Had Democritus been present at the late civil wars in France, those abominable wars--_bellaque matribus detestata_, [299]"where in less than ten years, ten thousand men were consumed," saith Collignius, twenty thousand churches overthrown; nay, the whole kingdom subverted (as [300]Richard Dinoth adds). So many myriads of the commons were butchered up, with sword, famine, war, _tanto odio utrinque ut barbari ad abhorrendam lanienam obstupescerent_, with such feral hatred, the world was amazed at it: or at our late Pharsalian fields in the time of Henry the Sixth, betwixt the houses of Lancaster and York, a hundred thousand men slain, [301]one writes; [302]another, ten thousand families were rooted out, "that no man can but marvel," saith Comineus, "at that barbarous immanity, feral madness, committed betwixt men of the same nation, language, and religion." [303]_Quis furor, O cives_? "Why do the Gentiles so furiously rage," saith the Prophet David, Psal. ii. 1. But we may ask, why do the Christians so furiously rage? [304]_Arma volunt, quare poscunt, rapiuntque juventus_? Unfit for Gentiles, much less for us so to tyrannise, as the Spaniard in the West Indies, that killed up in 42 years (if we may believe [305]Bartholomeus a Casa, their own bishop) 12 millions of men, with stupend and
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