THE WARS OF THE JEWS
OR
THE HISTORY OF THE DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM
Book VI: Chapter 7
WHAT AFTERWARD BEFELL THE SEDITIOUS
WHEN THEY HAD DONE A GREAT DEAL OF MISCHIEF, AND
SUFFERED MANY MISFORTUNES; AS ALSO HOW CAESAR BECAME
MASTER OF THE UPPER CITY.
1. AND now the seditious rushed into the royal
palace, into which many had put their effects, because
it was so strong, and drove the Romans away from it.
They also slew all the people that had crowded into
it, who were in number about eight thousand four
hundred, and plundered them of what they had. They
also took two of the Romans alive; the one was a
horseman, and the other a footman. They then cut the
throat of the footman, and immediately had him drawn
through the whole city, as revenging themselves upon
the whole body of the Romans by this one instance. But
the horseman said he had somewhat to suggest to them
in order to their preservation; whereupon he was
brought before Simon; but he having nothing to say
when he was there, he was delivered to Ardalas, one of
his commanders, to be punished, who bound his hands
behind him, and put a riband over his eyes, and then
brought him out over against the Romans, as intending
to cut off his head. But the man prevented that
execution, and ran away to the Romans, and this while
the Jewish executioner was drawing out his sword. Now
when he was gotten away from the enemy, Titus could
not think of putting him to death; but because he
deemed him unworthy of being a Roman soldier any
longer, on account that he had been taken alive by the
enemy, he took away his arms, and ejected him out of
the legion whereto he had belonged; which, to one that
had a sense of shame, was a penalty severer than death
itself.
2. On the next day the Romans drove the robbers out
of the lower city, and set all on fire as far as
Siloam. These soldiers were indeed glad to see the
city destroyed. But they missed the plunder, because
the seditious had carried off all their effects, and
were retired into the upper city; for they did not yet
at all repent of the mischiefs they had done, but were
insolent, as if they had done well; for, as they saw
the city on fire, they appeared cheerful, and put on
joyful countenances, in expectation, as they said, of
death to end their miseries. Accordingly, as the
people were now slain, the holy house was burnt down,
and the city was on fire, there was nothing further
left for the enemy to do. Yet did not Josephus grow
weary, even in this utmost extremity, to beg of them
to spare what was left of the city; he spake largely
to them about their barbarity and impiety, and gave
them his advice in order to their escape; though he
gained nothing thereby more than to be laughed at by
them; and as they could not think of surrendering
themselves up, because of the oath they had taken, nor
were strong enough to fight with the Romans any longer
upon the square, as being surrounded on all sides, and
a kind of prisoners already, yet were they so
accustomed to kill people, that they could not
restrain their right hands from acting accordingly. So
they dispersed themselves before the city, and laid
themselves in ambush among its ruins, to catch those
that attempted to desert to the Romans; accordingly
many such deserters were caught by them, and were all
slain; for these were too weak, by reason of their
want of food, to fly away from them; so their dead
bodies were thrown to the dogs. Now every other sort
of death was thought more tolerable than the famine,
insomuch that, though the Jews despaired now of mercy,
yet would they fly to the Romans, and would
themselves, even of their own accord, fall among the
murderous rebels also. Nor was there any place in the
city that had no dead bodies in it, but what was
entirely covered with those that were killed either by
the famine or the rebellion; and all was full of the
dead bodies of such as had perished, either by that
sedition or by that famine.
3. So now the last hope which supported the
tyrants, and that crew of robbers who were with them,
was in the caves and caverns under ground; whither, if
they could once fly, they did not expect to be
searched for; but endeavored, that after the whole
city should be destroyed, and the Romans gone away,
they might come out again, and escape from them. This
was no better than a dream of theirs; for they were
not able to lie hid either from God or from the
Romans. However, they depended on these under-ground
subterfuges, and set more places on fire than did the
Romans themselves; and those that fled out of their
houses thus set on fire into the ditches, they killed
without mercy, and pillaged them also; and if they
discovered food belonging to any one, they seized upon
it and swallowed it down, together with their blood
also; nay, they were now come to fight one with
another about their plunder; and I cannot but think
that, had not their destruction prevented it, their
barbarity would have made them taste of even the dead
bodies themselves.
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