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the-prince

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Florentines were so completely defeated at all points that

scarcely a third of them escaped, and Castruccio was again

covered with glory. Many captains were taken prisoners,

and Carlo, the son of King Ruberto, with Michelagnolo

Falconi and Taddeo degli Albizzi, the Florentine commissioners,

fled to Empoli. If the spoils were great, the slaughter

was infinitely greater, as might be expected in such a battle.

Of the Florentines there fell twenty thousand two hundred

and thirty-one men, whilst Castruccio lost one thousand

five hundred and seventy men.

But Fortune growing envious of the glory of Castruccio

took away his life just at the time when she should have preserved

it, and thus ruined all those plans which for so long

a time he had worked to carry into effect, and in the successful

prosecution of which nothing but death could have

stopped him. Castruccio was in the thick of the battle the

whole of the day; and when the end of it came, although fatigued

and overheated, he stood at the gate of Fucecchio to

welcome his men on their return from victory and personally

thank them. He was also on the watch for any attempt

of the enemy to retrieve the fortunes of the day; he being of

the opinion that it was the duty of a good general to be the

first man in the saddle and the last out of it. Here Castruccio

stood exposed to a wind which often rises at midday on

the banks of the Arno, and which is often very unhealthy;

from this he took a chill, of which he thought nothing, as he

was accustomed to such troubles; but it was the cause of his

death. On the following night he was attacked with high fever,

which increased so rapidly that the doctors saw it must

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