Page:A Discourse of Constancy in Two Books Chiefly containing Consolations Against Publick Evils.pdf/283

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262
A Diſcourſe
Book II.

teen hundred thousand men. The civill war betwixt Pompey and Cæsar three hundred thousand. And the Arms of Brutus, Cassius, and Sextus Pompeius a greater number. But why should I insist upon such Warrs, as were managed by the conduct of several Commanders? That one Caius Cæsar (the plague and poyson of mankind) confesses and that in a way of triumph, that there fell by him in several batails, eleven hundred ninety and two thousand men; not reckoning into this number the slaughters of the civil Warrs; But only those of forraign Nations, which he had made in those few years wherein he had the Government of Spain and Gaul. In which notwithstanding (greater in this too) the Great Pompey out-went him; who wrote in the Temple of Minerva that there were by him vanquished, put to flight, slain and taken One and twenty hundred, and eighty three thousand men. To these (if you will)

you