Selected quad for the lemma: city_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
city_n honour_n young_a youth_n 31 3 7.6535 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A15036 The honorable reputation of a souldier with a morall report, of the vertues, offices, and (by abuse) the disgrace of his profession. Drawen out of the liues, documents, and disciplines, of the most renowned Romaine, Grecian, and other famous martialistes. By George Whetstone, Gent. Whetstone, George, 1544?-1587? 1585 (1585) STC 25339; ESTC S111682 22,474 44

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

of our modernt Souldiers which haue y e courage but not the gouernment of the auncient greatly slaundreth their profession and displeaseth God When God deliuereth any Cittie or towne into their hands they especially the Spaniard and the Italian take small compassion of the Inhabitantes afflictions but to iniurie them in the hyest extreamitie as the sweetest part of their spoile they most impiously and barbarously abuse honest matrones deflower their daughters Which vnpardonable and vnsufferable offences the vengeance of God still followeth and therfore this Turkish wickednes that stinketh before god mā is to be banished or rather to be punished in euery Christian Army The Continencie of Alexander Scipio and many other most illustrious Captains at worthy presidents to brydle the intemperate affections of the multitude of Souldiers Alexander vsed the wife daughters and mother of the mightie Darius and other most beautiful Ladies of Persia with so honorable chaste a regarde as he tooke awaye all suspition that should make them feare to be dishonored or deflowred He would oftētimes say that the Ladies of Persia made mēs eyes sore to beholde them but notwithstanding preferring the beautie of his continēcie before their sweet faces he did neuer suffer himself to be alured yea he so much hated vnchaste affectiōns as hearing that Damon Timotheus vnder Parmenioes charge had forced two of their fellowe Souldiers wiues He wrote vnto Parmenio if they were found giltie to put them to death as brute beastes destroyers of mankind yea so vnspotted was Alexanders fame in this vertue that Darius his enemie prayed to the gods that if the time were come that the kingdome of Persia must needs haue an ende either by deuine reuenge or by naturall change of earthly thinges Then graunt good Gods quoth hee that none but Alexander may sit in Cyrus Throane to recompence the great honour that in my misery hee shewed to those I loued best in the world Aulus Gellius equalleth the continencie of the most noble Romane Captaine Scipio with the chastitie of ALEXANDER Scipio entring by force of Armes into the new Cittie of Carthage among other captiues hee was presented with a most faire Damosell young and of a most excellent proportion who notwithstanding hee was in the flower of his youth so vanquished his affections as he did no dishonest act with the mayde And afterwards vnderstanding that shee was of a noble house and betroathed to a great Lord of Spaine hee sent to seeke him forth and deliuered the Damosell vnto him in no point dishonored and withall augmented her dower with the monie that was payd for her fathers raunsome An acte of great continencie and honour in a victorious Captaine towarde his captiue This Scippio was the most illustrious captaine that euer Roome fostered Hee for his glorius victories was surnamed African and Carthage hee was called Prince of the Senate which dignitie was giuen vnto none but such as had obtained the Type of all honour he vsed such discipline in his Army as his meanest Souldiers seemed to bee graue Senators and as Plutarke sayth among all his other charges he specially commanded that the wemen which were taken in the warres should bee kept from being defiled Worthy exāples for Generals and other Officers of charge in Martiall gouernment to imitate that their wisedomes and examples may bridle the inordinate affections of inferiour Souldiers And as companiōs with this beastly sinne the well gouerned Souldier is forbidden Gluttonnie and drunkenesse as two mortal enimies of his profession For the Souldier must many tymes indure hunger thirste cold trauell and other sharpe miseries which pampered and delicate bodies cannot indure Besides when the body is stuffed with delicates the minde is dull desirous of ease which is the vndoer of a Souldier who ought to haue his handes or his minde alwayes occupyed The one wounding his enimie in the field the other working out pollicies to intrappe him as hee lyeth in campe Alexander the great to keepe his men in breath when there was intermission from warre accustomed himselfe and his people to take great paines in hunting of wilde beasts especially those that were of most fearce natures euery man to show his agillitie strength was inioyned to vāquish or to bee vanquished by the beast which hee vndertooke In so much as Alexander himself fighting one day very dangerously hand to hand with a Lyon after the victorie hardly obtained an Ambassador of La●idemon tould him that it seemed by the egernesse of their fight that his grace and the Lyon striued which of both them should bee king Yea quoth Alexander and he that wilbe the king of kings must alwayes be thus occupied He was so temperate of his dyet as when the Princes Ada of meere goodwill sent him many dilicate dishes of meate He sent her word he knewe not what to do with them For his gouernor Lyonides appointed him for his dinner to rise before day and to march in the night and for his supper to eat but a little at dinner A spare dyet for a Prince yet necessary for him that wrought for the whole world to haue his bodie hardened and prepared for all dangers Haniball Iugurthe could neuer haue punished the Romanes so oft if that with wonderfull paines they had not placed their aduauntages neither could they haue taken halfe the paines if their bodies had not beene prepared with a temperate and thinne diet The temperaunce of Iulius Caesar in eating and drinking is vpon many occasions commended and it well appeared by the ablenes and exercise of his body hee vndertooke great matter and therfore it behoued him to bestur himselfe And sure dilligence which ouercommeth the mightiest thinges dwelled in hym when his Souldiours were at rest hee deuised his worthiest Stratagemes and yet he so tyred them with such dayly trauels that they cryed out To what ende doth this man hale vs after him vp and downe the world Should not Caesar think when hee seeth our blood and woundes that we are mortall men and feele the mise●ie paine that other men do But neuerthelesse Caesar marched and they for shame could not tarry behinde The Souldiers that carrieth subduing minds by regard of these worthy exāples will no doubt dyet their bodies for to indure paine as faulkeners do their flying Hawkes and he that wayeth what dangers dishonors ouerthrowes haue followed feastings drunkennesse and Idle dalliaunce will if he regard his honour be more affrayd of a wāton banquet then a bloody battaile Wine and delicate cheere were the baytes that Cyrus layde to kill Queene Tomyris sonne and a great part of her Army That daye that Alexander first delighted in the drunkennesse and effeminate delicasie of the Parsians he ouerthrew his owne life and glory For in his drunkennesse hee put his best Captaines to death and in reuēge was poysoned himselfe The Romaines so hated this