Page:Jerusalem's captivities lamented, or, A plain description of Jerusalem from Joshua's time to the year 1517, both from Scripture and ancient history.pdf/16

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Jeruſalem's Captivities Lamented.

by the Romans, you might have ſeen aged men and women, and ſeveral other wretched people, who, with blubbered cheeks and diſhevelled hair, went howling and lamenting for the ruin of the Temple and Sanctuary, wearing, and bearing in their habits and bodies, the ſad character of divine vengeance, of whom the ſoldiers exacted a fee for liberty of weeping; and they who formerly ſold the blood of Jeſus, were now forced to buy their own tears, without being pitied.

The Roman ſoldiers, being now quite ſpent with doing execution, and having a great deal more of their work yet to do, Titus ordered his men to hold their hands, ſaving only to thoſe whom they found armed, or in a poſture of reſiſtance, and to give quarter to all the reſt. But the Soldiers went beyond their commiſfion, and put the aged and ſickly to the ſword, promiſcuouſly with their companions; and for thoſe that were ſtrong and ſerviceable, they ſhut them up in the temple, in the women's quarter. Cæſar appointed Fronto, one of his friends and free men to inform him of the people, and to do by them as they deſerved. As for the ruffians, and the ſeditious, that impeached one another, he had them all put to death; but for men of comely and graceful perſons, and in the prime of their youth, he reſerved them for the triumph; ſending away all