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A56158 Eight military aphorismes demonstrating the uselesness, unprofitableness, hurtfulness and prodigall expensiveness of all standing English forts and garrisons ... by William Prynne of Swanswick, Esquire ...; Pendennis and all other standing forts dismantled Prynne, William, 1600-1669. 1658 (1658) Wing P3948; ESTC R22224 27,110 44

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more unruly deboist injurious imperious over them in all kindes then in Peace 5. By inviting inducing or necessitating the Enemies Forces to besiege and inflict upon them the saddest Calamities and Plagues of War from which ungarrisoned Towns and places far from Garrisons are usually exempted or not so liable to especially in civil Wars To enumerate some particular miseries accompanying Seiges 1. Burning wasting destroying their own Suburbs Neighboring Houses Villages Orchards Gardens Trees in or near their Garrisons Walls or Works and that frequently by their own Officers and Garrison Soldiers to prevent the Enemies quartering in them or some annoyances from them or to contract their Works for their better and easier defence of what remaiins unburnt or unwasted to the undoing of hundreds and thousands left houslesse and harborless by this inhumane Policy as bad or worse then any Enemies rage as the sad late presidents of the firing the Suburbs of Bristol Excester Taunton Lincoln York Colchester and other Garrisons experiment with some stately Houses and whole Villages adjoyning to them To which may be added the like frequent furious devastations of them by the Enemies if spared by themselves Secondly Losse of all Trading Commerce and Markets during the Leaguers about them when they need them most of all Thirdly Perpetual Fears Alarms Disturbances Watchings Frights day and night continual hard military duties and skirmishes with the Enemy even by the Inhabitants themselves at their free cost notwithstanding their hired dear-waged Guardian Soldiers to secure them Fourthly Forcible seisures of the Inhabitants Houshold-Provisions of all sorts with their Beds Bedding Arms Money Plate to feed lodge arm pay their Mercenary Servants then in all things their most absolute Lording Masters who extort and will take from them and theirs all they have of purpose forsooth to protect them though those their protected Pay-masters and their whole Families starve lye cold or naked on the boards want money to buy them bread necessaries or lie sick in greatest distress Fifthly The losse of many of the Inhabitants lives by Assaults Granadoes Fire-works Sallies Shots wounds Famines Plagues Feavers and other Sicknesses usually accompanying Sieges and Wars by invented false accusations suspitions of holding intelligence with the Enemies or plotting to betray the Garrison to them by suddain fears frights discontents firing or beating down Houses springing of Mines and the like during their Seiges in many whereof if sharp or long or accompanyed with Plagues and Sicknesses above half the Inhabitants or more have frequently been quite consumed and the rest utterly undone though the Enemies left the Seige at last Sixthly The Wounding Maiming loss of Limbs of many of the Inhabitants multiplying of their poor Widows desolate Orphans by Seiges and their new charge to relieve them Seventhly The total Banishment Captivity Slaughter and extirpation of all the Inhabitants and mercenary Soldiers too in Garrisons if taken by storm or assault by putting them all to the Sword Man Woman and Childe without distinction or the greatest number of them and carrying the rest Captives thence whereof there are hundreds of sad presidents in * Sacred and Prophane History The famous Protestant Town of Magdeburgh in Germany of late years was by bloody General Tilly put totally to the Sword and then burnt to ashes And Tredagh in Ireland though for the most part Protestants always constant to the Parliament enduring many long and sharp Seiges by the Irish Popish Rebels yet submitting to Marquesse Ormond a sincere Protestant formerly General for the Parliament in Ireland and then for the King and receiving a Garrison from him at the last when their Governor entred into an offensive and defensive League with Owen Roe-Oneal the General of the Popish Rebels their greatest Enemy and chief Contriver Fomenter of the Irish Massacre and Rebellion upon the late taking of it by storm most of the Inhabitants were thereupon put to the sword without distinction together with all the Garrison Soldiers by Gen. Cromwell himself and his Forces to the great grief of many good Protestants there which fatal desolation and total destruction they had all escaped had they not been a Garrison Eightly The total demolition and burning to the very ground of sundry private Garrisons Castles strong magnificent Houses of ancient Nobles and Gentlemen and of some fair Churches too when taken whereof our late Wars have produced many sad Spectacles as Rag land Castle Basing House Rowden House Cambden House Litchfield Clos● Banbury Pomfret Castles with sundry more And which is yet more grievous the burning to the ground and total desolation depopulation ruine of many great famous Garrisons Cities and Towns as Troy Jerusalem Tyrus Athens with hundreds more and of the best and greatest part of other stately Cities never since repaired re-peopled whereof * Sacred and Prophane Stories of former ages our own Annals and late experience can furnish us with multitudes of sad Presidents Which fatal Subversions Devastations they had all escaped had they not been Garrisoned and stood out a Siege Ninthly the total Spoil Plunder Confiscation of all the Inhabitants Goods and Estates if not their Lives to the Enemy if taken by Assault or Stratagem to their universal undoing and yet putting them to future Fines Ransoms and heavy Taxes afterward to buy their Peace or save them from the general subsequent Plunder of all not formerly spoiled by the Soldiers All which they had escaped if un-Garrisoned Tenthly The unavoidable reception of greater and usually worse domineering new Garrisons from the conquering Enemies oft spoiling plundering firing ransoming executing the wealthiest of the Inhabitants notwithstanding all Articles of agreement for their Indempnity and Security though taken by surrender onely not by storm which Articles are usually much violated and very seldome kept by faithlesse greedy rude plundering Officers or Soldiers who add affliction to affliction and a new undoing to the old to whose new Lording Lawlesse power Orders Pleasures Government the Inhabitants must all submit or else they their Families must be forthwith banished out of their native Habitations as enemies stript naked of all they have and forced to wander cold naked about the Countrey like vagrants for bread clothes relief houseroom which they plentifully enjoyed before to the breaking of their hearts and shortning of their lives Eleventhly These Garrisons are oft taken re-taken over and over and so as oft plundered re plundered spoiled ransomed and new garrisond by both sides yea those of them who were protected as friends and favorites to the one side are sure to be most spoiled plundered oppressed persecuted by the other and to suffer thus in their successive turns till they be quite undone and ruined by their frequent takings and re-takings on both sides as Bristol Exeter with other places have found by late sad experience the vicissitudes and miseries of these Garrisons never ceasing till their Wars and Garrisons cease and they became no Garrisons Twelfly If any besieged Garrisons escape
Eight Military APHORISMES DEMONSTRATING The Uselesness Unprofitableness Hurtfulness and Prodigall Expensiveness of all standing English Forts and Garrisons to the People of England Their inability to protect them from Invasions Depredations of Enemies or Pyrates by Sea or Land The great mischief Pressures Inconveniences they draw upon the Inhabitants Country and adjacent places in times of open wars when pretended most usefull and the grand Oversight Mistake Injury in continuing them for the present or future Reall Defence of the peoples Lives Liberties Estates the onely ends pretended for them By William Prynne of Swanswick Esquire for the common benefit ease and Information of the whole Nation Habak. 1.10 They shall deride every strong hold for they shall heap dust and take it Hosea 3 14 Iudah hath multiplied fenced Cities but I will send a fire upon his Cities which shall devoure the palaces thereof 2 Chron. 12 4. And he took the fenced Cities which appertained to Judah Dan. 11. ●5 The King of the North shall come and cast up a mount and take the most fenced Cities neither shall there he any strenght to withstand Ezeck. 26. 11 12. He shall stay thy people by the sword and thy strong garrisons shall go down to the ground and they shall make a spoile of thy riches and make a prey of thy merchandise and they shall break down thy wals and destroy thy pleasant houses and they shall lay thy stones and thy timber and thy dust in the middest of the water London Printed for the Author and are to be sold by Edward Thomas at his Shop at the signe of the Adam and Eve in Little Brittain 1658. EIGHT Military Aphorisms DEMONSTRATING The uselesness unprofitableness hurtfulness and Prodigal expensivenesse of all standing English Garrisons to the people of England their Inability to protect them from Enemies Invasions Depredations by Sea or Land the great mischiefs they occasion in peace open War the oversight injury of continuing them at the Peoples excessive expence or any other mercinary Land-forces for the present or future real defence of the Peoples Persons Liberties Laws or Estates THough Garrisons in three or four of our greatest richest strongest Cities which are as so many Magazenes and places of refuge may in some respects be necessarie and convenient in times of war especially when guarded by the Cities own Arms and Forces yet that our ordinary standing mercenary Garrisons especially in small Castles and Blockhouses are not only altogether uselesse but most dangerous oppressive and mischievous grievances to the Nation both in times of war and Peace I shall briefly evidence by these ensuing Aphorisms 1. THat the Principal use end of Garrisons is onely to keep a forraign conquered Enemy or Countrey in constant subiect on and contribution to the Conquerers therefore not to be contniued in our own free Nation by those who pretend its Freedom and Enfranchisement from bondage unlesse they resolve to make us their conquered Vassals and Tributaries instead of English-Freemen 2. That all Garrisons Castles Forts Block-houses throughout England if their works and fortifications were demolish'd would be nothing else but meer despicable worthless barren Hills or Clods of Earth scarce worth two hundred pounds a yeer at their best improved value which no wise Statesman or enemy upon due consideration would either value look after or go about to fortifie more then those many thousand unfortified Rocks Hills upon the Sea-coast or in inland Counties which any forraign or Domestick Enemies might with as much advantage to themselves and prejudice to the Nation soon fortifie and Garrison with ease and advantage if they would bestow so much charge pains as on those now fortified furnished to their hands at the peoples cost if once but Masters of the Field w●●h forts would stand the Enemies in no more stead if now sleighted then any other unfortified Hills Rocks or those Garrison'd Hills and Rocks would do before they were fortified and Garrison'd being altogether as unuseful unable to defend or secure the Nation and People near them from the Invasions Plunders Conquests of any Potent Enemy or Party stronger then these petty Garrisons as any other unfortified ungarrisond Hills or Rocks throughout the Island of like or as strong a situation and really serving only to defend the bare mercenary Garrison-Soldiers in them and the barren Rocks Hills alone whereon they stand not the whole Nation or Counties adjoining in time of such Invasion Danger till they be either taken by or surrendred to the prevailing Party Enemy Therefore to put the Nation Countrey to a vast annual expence of many thousand pounds each yeer to fortifie furnish and man such Garrison'd fruitlesse Rocks and Clods of Earth not worth 200.l a yeer at utmost value which can neither secure the whole Island nor people near them from Forraign or Domestick Enemies and to continue them Garrison'd at such a prodigal expence is as great a Solecisir Madnesse Prodigality in true Martial State Politicks as it would be ill Countrey husbandry for the whole Nation or private Statesmen to bestow one hundred thousand pounds every yeer in Planting sowing the Hills and Rocks whereon these Garrisons now stand to reap a barren crop only of 200.l a yeer at most which as they are now garrison'd yeild them not one farthing towards the publice Revenue and yet have cost the Nation very many thousand pounds out of their Purses every yeer to no use or end at all but to cast away so much money on lazie Garrison-Soldiers to smoke Tobacco and cry one to another Who goes there as if we had stil too much mony in our dry-dra●ned-Purses and to continue them at this grand charge only because the Island and places near them might be endangered if slighted their ruins supprised regarrisond by an enemy who wil never certainly be so mad or sottish as to fortifie any slighted Garrisons unlesse able to defend them against the whole Nation is as grosse an absurdity as to argue we must forthwith fortifie Garrison all other advantagious Sea-coasts Rocks Hills Basses in England because else any Enemy might master seise and fortifie them to the Nations Peoples danger damage and repair fortifie all old late demolished Castles Forts Block-houses upon the same reason and accompt which all the Indian Mines would not suffice to Garrison 3. That England being subject to the Forraign Invasions Depredation of Enemies or Pirates only by Sea with Ships which no fixed Land-Garrisons can incounter assault board take sink or pursue from place to place nor hinder from landing under their Noses if stronger then they muchlesse in any other place out of their command as is undeniable by our ancient seising of Cadez and sundry Townes Garrisons in the Indies by Sir Francis Drak others and our late invading and taking in of the Isles of S●lly Ge●sey Ga●nsey the Barbadoes and Scottish Island without the losse of any one Ship and of very