Seneca the Elder: What is this hideous disease, this appalling evil that drove you to shed each other’s blood?

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Anti-war essays, poems, short stories and literary excerpts
Greek and Roman writers on war and peace
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Seneca the Elder
From Controversiae
Translated by M. Winterbottom
Look: often have armies of citizens and relatives taken their stand, drawn up to join battle; the hills on either side are filled with cavalry; and suddenly the whole terrain is strewn with the bodies of the slaughtered. Suppose someone amid that mass of corpses and looters should ask: What was it that compelled man to commit crime against man? Beasts do not war among themselves, and even if beasts did wars would we be unworthy of man, a quiet species, and nearest to the divine. What is this hideous disease, this fury that drove you to shed each other’s blood – though you are of one stock, one blood? What is this appalling evil that fate or chance has inflicted on this species alone?

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