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<h2> CHAPTER VI——THAT THE HOUR OF PARLEY DANGEROUS </h2>
<p>I saw, notwithstanding, lately at Mussidan, a place not far from my house,
that those who were driven out thence by our army, and others of their
party, highly complained of treachery, for that during a treaty of
accommodation, and in the very interim that their deputies were treating,
they were surprised and cut to pieces: a thing that, peradventure, in
another age, might have had some colour of foul play; but, as I have just
said, the practice of arms in these days is quite another thing, and there
is now no confidence in an enemy excusable till the treaty is finally
sealed; and even then the conqueror has enough to do to keep his word: so
hazardous a thing it is to entrust the observation of the faith a man has
engaged to a town that surrenders upon easy and favourable conditions, to
the licence of a victorious army, and to give the soldier free entrance
into it in the heat of blood.</p>
<p>Lucius AEmilius Regillus, the Roman praetor, having lost his time in
attempting to take the city of Phocaea by force, by reason of the singular
valour wherewith the inhabitants defended themselves, conditioned, at
last, to receive them as friends to the people of Rome, and to enter the
town, as into a confederate city, without any manner of hostility, of
which he gave them all assurance; but having, for the greater pomp,
brought his whole army in with him, it was no more in his power, with all
the endeavour he could use, to restrain his people: so that, avarice and
revenge trampling under foot both his authority and all military
discipline, he there saw a considerable part of the city sacked and ruined
before his face.</p>
<p>Cleomenes was wont to say, "that what mischief soever a man could do his
enemy in time of war was above justice, and nothing accountable to it in
the sight of gods and men." And so, having concluded a truce with those of
Argos for seven days, the third night after he fell upon them when they
were all buried in sleep, and put them to the sword, alleging that there
had no nights been mentioned in the truce; but the gods punished this
subtle perfidy.</p>
<p>In a time of parley also; and while the citizens were relying upon their
safety warrant, the city of Casilinum was taken by surprise, and that even
in the age of the justest captains and the most perfect Roman military
discipline; for it is not said that it is not lawful for us, in time and
place, to make advantage of our enemies' want of understanding, as well as
their want of courage.</p>
<p>And, doubtless, war has naturally many privileges that appear reasonable
even to the prejudice of reason. And therefore here the rule fails,
"Neminem id agere ut ex alte rius praedetur inscitia."—["No one should
preys upon another's folly."—Cicero, De Offic., iii. 17.]—But
I am astonished at the great liberty allowed by Xenophon in such cases,
and that both by precept and by the example of several exploits of his
complete emperor; an author of very great authority, I confess, in those
affairs, as being in his own person both a great captain and a philosopher
of the first form of Socrates' disciples; and yet I cannot consent to such
a measure of licence as he dispenses in all things and places.</p>
<p>Monsieur d'Aubigny, besieging Capua, and after having directed a furious
battery against it, Signor Fabricio Colonna, governor of the town, having
from a bastion begun to parley, and his soldiers in the meantime being a
little more remiss in their guard, our people entered the place at
unawares, and put them all to the sword. And of later memory, at Yvoy,
Signor Juliano Romero having played that part of a novice to go out to
parley with the Constable, at his return found his place taken. But, that
we might not scape scot-free, the Marquess of Pescara having laid siege to
Genoa, where Duke Ottaviano Fregosa commanded under our protection, and
the articles betwixt them being so far advanced that it was looked upon as
a done thing, and upon the point to be concluded, the Spaniards in the
meantime having slipped in, made use of this treachery as an absolute
victory. And since, at Ligny, in Barrois, where the Count de Brienne
commanded, the emperor having in his own person beleaguered that place,
and Bertheville, the said Count's lieutenant, going out to parley, whilst
he was capitulating the town was taken.</p>
<p>"Fu il vincer sempremai laudabil cosa,<br/>
Vincasi o per fortuna, o per ingegno,"<br/>
["Victory is ever worthy of praise, whether obtained by valour or<br/>
wisdom."—Ariosto, xv. I.]<br/></p>
<p>But the philosopher Chrysippus was of another opinion, wherein I also
concur; for he was used to say that those who run a race ought to employ
all the force they have in what they are about, and to run as fast as they
can; but that it is by no means fair in them to lay any hand upon their
adversary to stop him, nor to set a leg before him to throw him down. And
yet more generous was the answer of that great Alexander to Polypercon who
was persuading him to take the advantage of the night's obscurity to fall
upon Darius. "By no means," said be; "it is not for such a man as I am to
steal a victory, 'Malo me fortunae poeniteat, quam victoria pudeat.'"—["I
had rather complain of ill-fortune than be ashamed of victory." Quint.
Curt, iv. 13]—</p>
<p>"Atque idem fugientem baud est dignatus Oroden<br/>
Sternere, nec jacta caecum dare cuspide vulnus<br/>
Obvius, adversoque occurrit, seque viro vir<br/>
Contulit, haud furto melior, sed fortibus armis."<br/>
["He deigned not to throw down Orodes as he fled, or with the darted<br/>
spear to give him a wound unseen; but overtaking him, he confronted<br/>
him face to face, and encountered man to man: superior, not in<br/>
stratagem, but in valiant arms."—AEneid, x. 732.]<br/></p>
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