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WHILE the holy house was on fire, every thing was plundered that
came to hand, and ten thousand of those that were caught were slain; nor
was there a commiseration of any age, or any reverence of gravity, but
children, and old men, and profane persons, and priests were all slain
in the same manner; so that this war went round all sorts of men, and brought
them to destruction, and as well those that made supplication for their
lives, as those that defended themselves by fighting. The flame was also
carried a long way, and made an echo, together with the groans of those
that were slain; and because this hill was high, and the works at the temple
were very great, one would have thought the whole city had been on fire.
Nor can one imagine any thing either greater or more terrible than this
noise; for there was at once a shout of the Roman legions, who were marching
all together, and a sad clamor of the seditious, who were now surrounded
with fire and sword. The people also that were left above were beaten back
upon the enemy, and under a great consternation, and made sad moans at
the calamity they were under; the multitude also that was in the city joined
in this outcry with those that were upon the hill. And besides, many of
those that were worn away by the famine, and their mouths almost closed,
when they saw the fire of the holy house, they exerted their utmost strength,
and brake out into groans and outcries again: Pera
1
did also return the echo, as well as the mountains round about [the city,]
and augmented the force of the entire noise. Yet was the misery itself
more terrible than this disorder; for one would have thought that the hill
itself, on which the temple stood, was seething hot, as full of fire on
every part of it, that the blood was larger in quantity than the fire,
and those that were slain more in number than those that slew them; for
the ground did no where appear visible, for the dead bodies that lay on
it; but the soldiers went over heaps of those bodies, as they ran upon
such as fled from them. And now it was that the multitude of the robbers
were thrust out [of the inner court of the temple by the Romans,] and had
much ado to get into the outward court, and from thence into the city,
while the remainder of the populace fled into the cloister of that outer
court. As for the priests, some of them plucked up from the holy house
the spikes
2
that were upon it, with their bases, which were made of lead, and shot
them at the Romans instead of darts. But then as they gained nothing by
so doing, and as the fire burst out upon them, they retired to the wall
that was eight cubits broad, and there they tarried; yet did two of these
of eminence among them, who might have saved themselves by going over to
the Romans, or have borne up with courage, and taken their fortune with
the others, throw themselves into the fire, and were burnt together with
the holy house; their names were Meirus the son of Belgas, and Joseph the
son of Daleus.