Roman History
(Selections)
Titus Livius
BOOK XXV.
Publius Cornelius Scipio, afterwards called Africanus, elected aedile before
he had attained the age required by the law. The citadel of Tarentum, in
which the Roman garrison had taken refuge, betrayed to Hannibal. Games
instituted in honor of Apollo, called Apollinarian. Quintus Fulvius and
Appius Claudius, consuls, defeat Hanno the Carthaginian general. Tiberius
Sempronius Gracchus betrayed by a Lucanian to Mago, and slain. Centenius
Penula, who had been a centurion, asks the senate for the command of an
army, promising to engage and vanquish Hannibal, is cut off with eight
thousand men. Cneius Fulvius engages Hannibal, and is beaten, with the
loss of sixteen thousand men slain, he himself escapes with only two hundred
horsemen. Quintus Fulvius and Appius Claudius, consuls, lay siege to Capua.
Syracuse taken by Claudius Marcellus after a siege of three years. In the
tumult occasioned by taking the city, Archimedes is killed while intently
occupied on some figures which he had drawn in the sand. Publius and Cornelius
Scipio, after having performed many eminent services in Spain, are slain,
together with nearly the whole of their armies, eight years after their
arrival in that country; and the possession of that province would have
been entirely lost, but for the valor and activity of Lucius Marcius, a
Roman knight, who, collecting the scattered remains of the vanquished armies,
utterly defeats the enemy, storming their two camps, killing thirty-seven
thousand of them, and taking eighteen hundred together with an immense
booty.
1. Hannibal passed the summer during which these events occurred in
Africa and Italy, in the Tarentine territory, with the hope of having
the city of the Tarentines betrayed to him. Meanwhile some
inconsiderable towns belonging to them, and to the Sallentines,
revolted to him. At the same time, of the twelve states of the
Bruttians, which had in a former year gone over to the Carthaginians,
the Consentians and Thurians returned to the protection of the Roman
people. And more would have done the same, had not Titus Pomponius
Veientanus, praefect of the allies, having acquired the appearance of
a regular general, in consequence of several successful predatory
expeditions in the Bruttian territory, got together a tumultuary band,
and fought a battle with Hanno. In that battle, a great number of men,
consisting, however, of a disorderly rabble of slaves and rustics,
were slain or captured. The least part of the loss was, that the
praefect himself was taken prisoner; for he was not only in the
present instance guilty of having rashly engaged the enemy, but
previously, in the capacity of farmer of the revenue, by iniquitous
practices of every description, had shown himself faithless and
injurious to the state, as well as the companies. Among the Lucanians,
the consul, Sempronius, fought several small battles, but none worthy
of being recorded, he also took several inconsiderable towns. In
proportion as the war was protracted, and the sentiments no less than
the circumstances of men fluctuated accordingly as events flowed
prosperously or otherwise, the citizens were seized with such a
passion for superstitious observances, and those for the most part
introduced from foreign countries, that either the people or the gods
appeared to have undergone a sudden change. And now the Roman rites
were growing into disuse, not only in private, and within doors, but
in public also; in the forum and Capitol there were crowds of women
sacrificing, and offering up prayers to the gods, in modes unusual in
that country. A low order of sacrificers and soothsayers had enslaved
men's understandings, and the numbers of these were increased by the
country people, whom want and terror had driven into the city, from
the fields which were lain uncultivated during a protracted war, and
had suffered from the incursions of the enemy, and by the profitable
cheating in the ignorance of others which they carried on like an
allowed and customary trade. At first, good men gave protest in
private to the indignation they felt at these proceedings, but
afterwards the thing came before the fathers, and formed a matter of
public complaint. The aediles and triumviri, appointed for the
execution of criminals, were severely reprimanded by the senate for
not preventing these irregularities, but when they attempted to remove
the crowd of persons thus employed from the forum, and to overthrow
the preparations for their sacred rites, they narrowly escaped
personal injury. It being now evident, that the evil was too powerful
to be checked by inferior magistrates, the senate commissioned Marcus
Atilius, the city praetor, to rid the people of these superstitions.
He called an assembly, in which he read the decree of the senate, and
gave notice, that all persons who had any books of divination, or
forms of prayer, or any written system of sacrificing, should lay all
the aforesaid books and writings before him before the calends of
April; and that no person should sacrifice in any public or
consecrated place according to new or foreign rites.
2. Several of the public priests too died this year: Lucius Cornelius Lentulus, chief pontiff, Caius Papirius Maso, son of Caius, a pontiff, Publius Furius Philo, an augur, and Caius Papirius Maso, son of Lucius, a decemvir for the superintendence of sacred rites. In lieu of Lentulus, Marcus Cornelius Cethegus, in lieu of Papirius Cnaeius, Servilius Caepio, were created pontiffs. Lucius Quinctius Flaminius was created augur, and Lucius Cornelius Lentulus decemvir for the superintendence of sacred rites. The time for the election of consuls was now approaching; but as it was not thought proper to call the consuls away from the war with which they were intently occupied, Tiberius Sempronius, the consul, nominated Caius Claudius Centho as dictator to hold the election. He appointed Quintus Fulvius Flaccus as his master of the horse. On the first day on which the election could be held, the dictator appointed as consuls, Quintus Fulvius Flaccus, his master of the horse, and Appius Claudius Pulcher, who had held the government of Sicily as praetor. The praetors created were Cneius Fulvius Flaccus, Caius Claudius Nero, Marcus Junius Silanus, Publius Cornelius Sulla. The election completed, the dictator retired from his office. This year, Publius Cornelius Scipio, afterwards surnamed Africanus, held the office of curule aedile, with Marcus Cornelius Cethegus; and when the tribunes of the people opposed his pretensions to the aedileship, alleging, that no notice ought to be taken of him, because he had not attained the legal age for candidateship, he observed, "if the citizens in general are desirous of appointing me aedile, I am old enough." Upon this the people ran to their respective tribes to give their votes, with feelings so strongly disposed in his favor, that the tribunes on a sudden abandoned their attempt. The largesses bestowed by the aediles were the following: the Roman games were sumptuously exhibited, considering the present state of their resources; they were repeated during one day, and a gallon of oil was given to each street. Lucius Villius Tapulus, and Marcus Fundanius Fundulus, the plebeian aediles, accused some matrons of misconduct before the people, and some of them they convicted and sent into exile. The plebeian games were repeated during two days, and a feast in honour of Jupiter was celebrated on occasion of the games.
3. Quintus Fulvius Flaccus, for the third time, and Appius Claudius entered upon the office of consuls. The praetors determined their provinces by lot. Publius Cornelius Sulla received both the city and the foreign jurisdiction, formerly allotted to two persons, Cneius Fulvius Flaccus, Apulia, Caius Claudius Nero, Suessula, and Marcus Junius Silanus, Tuscany. To the consuls the conduct of the war with Hannibal was decreed with two legions each, one taking the troops of Quintus Fabius, the consul of the former year, the other those of Fulvius Centumalus. Of the praetors, Fulvius Flaccus was to have the legions which were in Luceria under Aemilius the praetor, Nero Claudius those in Picenum under Caius Terentius, each raising recruits for himself to fill up the number of his troops. To Marcus Junius the city legions of the former year were assigned, to be employed against the Tuscans. Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus and Publius Sempronius Tuditanus were continued in command in their provinces of Lucania and Gaul with the armies they had, as was also Publius Lentulus in that part of Sicily which formed the ancient Roman province. Marcus Marcellus had Syracuse, and that which was the kingdom of Hiero. Titus Otacilius was continued in the command of the fleet, Marcus Valerius in that of Greece, Quintus Mucius Scaevola in that of Sardinia. The Cornelii, Publius and Cneius, were continued in the command of Spain. In addition to the armies already existing, two legions for the service of the city were levied by the consuls, and a total of twenty-three legions was made up this year. The levy of the consuls was impeded by the conduct of Marcus Posthumius Pyrgensis, almost accompanied with a serious disturbance. Posthumius was a farmer of the revenue, who, for knavery and rapacity, practiced through a course of many years, had no equal except Titus Pomponius Veientanus, who had been taken prisoner the former year by the Carthaginians under the conduct of Hanno, while carelessly ravaging the lands in Lucania. As the state had taken upon itself the risk of any loss which might arise from storms to the commodities conveyed to the armies, not only had these two men fabricated false accounts of shipwrecks, but even those which had really occurred were occasioned by their own knavery, and not by accident. Their plan was to put a few goods of little value into old and shattered vessels, which they sank in the deep, taking up the sailors in boats prepared for the purpose, and then returning falsely the cargo as many times more valuable than it was. This fraudulent practice had been pointed out to Marcus Atilius, the praetor in a former year, who had communicated it to the senate; no decree, however, had been passed censuring it, because the fathers were unwilling that any offense should be given to the order of revenue farmers while affairs were in such a state. The people were severer avengers of the fraud; and at length two tribunes of the people, Spurius and Lucius Carvilius, being moved to take some active measure, as they saw that this conduct excited universal disgust, and had become notorious, proposed that a fine of two hundred thousand asses should be imposed on Marcus Posthumius. When the day arrived for arguing the question, the people assembled in such numbers, that the area of the Capitol could scarcely contain them; and the cause having been gone through, the only hope of safety which presented itself was, that Caius Servilius Casca, a tribune of the people, a connection and relation of Posthumius, should interpose his protest before the tribes were called to give their votes. The witnesses having been produced, the tribunes caused the people to withdraw, and the urn was brought, in order that the tribes should draw lots which should give the vote first. Meanwhile, the farmers of the revenue urged Casca to stop the proceedings for that day. The people, however, loudly opposed it; and Casca happened to be sitting on the most prominent part of the rostrum, whose mind fear and shame were jointly agitating. Seeing that no dependence was to be placed in him for protection, the farmers of the revenue, forming themselves into a wedge, rushed into the void space occasioned by the removal of the people for the purpose of causing disturbance, wrangling at the same time with the people and the tribunes. The affair had now almost proceeded to violence, when Fulvius Flaccus, the consul, addressing the tribunes, said, "Do you not see that you are degraded to the common rank, and that an insurrection will be the result, unless you speedily dismiss the assembly of the commons."
4. The commons being dismissed, the senate was assembled, when the
consuls proposed the consideration of the interruption experienced by
the assembly of the commons, in consequence of the violence and
audacity of the farmers of the revenue. They said, that "Marcus Furius
Camillus, whose banishment was followed by the downfall of the city,
had suffered himself to be condemned by his exasperated countrymen.
That before him, the decemviri, according to whose laws they lived up
to the present day, and afterwards many men of the first rank in the
state, had submitted to have sentence passed upon them by the people.
But Posthumius Pyrgensis had wrested from the Roman people their right
of suffrage, had dissolved the assembly of the commons, had set at
nought the authority of the tribunes, had drawn up a body of men in
battle-array against the Roman people; and seized upon a post, in
order to cut off the tribunes from the commons, and prevent the tribes
being called to give their votes. That the only thing which had
restrained the people from bloodshed and violence, was the forbearance
of the magistrates in giving way for the moment to the fury and
audacity of a few individuals, and suffering themselves and the Roman
people to be overcome; and that no opportunity might be afforded those
who were seeking an occasion of violence, in dissolving, agreeably to
the wish of the defendant himself, that assembly which he was about to
interrupt by force of arms." Observations of this kind having been
urged with a warmth proportioned to the atrocity of the conduct which
called them forth, by all the most respectable persons, and the senate
having passed a decree to the effect that the violence offered was
prejudicial to the state, and a precedent of pernicious tendency,
immediately the Carvilii, tribunes of the people, giving up the action
for a fine, appointed a day on which Posthumius should be tried
capitally, and ordered, that unless he gave bail, he should be
apprehended by the beadle, and carried to prison. Posthumius gave
bail, but did not appear. The tribunes then proposed to the commons,
and the commons resolved, that if Marcus Posthumius did not appear
before the calends of May, and if on being cited on that day he did
not answer, and sufficient cause were not shown why he did not, he
would be adjudged an exile, his goods would be sold, and himself
interdicted from water and fire. They then proceeded to indict
capitally, and demand bail of each of the persons who had been the
promoters of the disorder and riot. At first they threw into prison
those who did not give bail, and afterwards even such as could; upon
which the greater part of them went into exile, to avoid the danger to
which this proceeding exposed them.
5. The knavery of the revenue farmers, and their subsequent audacious conduct
to screen themselves from its effects, thus terminated. An assembly was
then held for the creation of a chief pontiff. The new pontiff, Marcus
Cornelius Cethegus, presided. The election was contested with the greatest
obstinacy by three candidates, Quintus Fulvius Flaccus, the consul, who
had been twice consul before and censor, Titus Manlius Torquatus, who had
himself also been distinguished by two consulships and the censorship,
and Publius Licinius Ciassus, who was about to stand for the office of
curule aedile. In this contest, the last-mentioned candidate, though a
young man, beat the others, who were his superiors in years, and had filled
offices of honour. Before him there had not been a man for a hundred and
twenty years, except Publius Cornelius Calussa, who had been created chief
pontiff without having sat in the curule chair. Though the consuls found
great difficulty in completing the levy, for in consequence of the scarcity
of young men, it was not easy to procure enough for the two purposes of
forming the new city legions, and recruiting the old ones, the senate forbade
them to desist from the attempt, and ordered two triumvirates to be appointed,
one of which within, the other without the fiftieth mile from the city,
might ascertain the utmost number of free-born men which were to be found
in the villages, and market towns, and hamlets, and enlist whom they thought
strong enough to bear arms, though they had not attained the military age.
That the tribunes of the people, if they thought proper, should propose
to the people, that such as should take the military oath being under seventeen
years, should be allowed to reckon their period of service in the same
manner as if they had enlisted at seventeen or older. The two triumvirates,
created agreeably to this decree of the senate, enlisted free-born men
throughout the country. At the same time a letter from Marcellus from Sicily,
respecting the petition of the troops who served with Publius Lentulus,
was read in the senate. These troops were the relics of the disaster at
Cannae, and had been sent out of the way into Sicily, as has been mentioned
before, on an understanding that they should not be brought home before
the conclusion of the Carthaginian war.
6. With the permission of Lentulus, these men sent the most distinguished
of the cavalry and centurions, and a select body of the legionary infantry,
as ambassadors to Marcellus, to his winter quarters. Having obtained leave
to speak, one of them thus addressed him: "We should have approached
you, Marcus Marcellus, when consul in Italy, as soon as that decree of
the senate was passed respecting us, which, though not unjust, was certainly
severe, had we not hoped, that being sent into a province which was in
a state of disorder in consequence of the death of its kings, to carry
on an arduous war against the Sicilians and Carthaginians together, we
should make atonement to the state by our blood and wounds, in the same
manner as, within the memory of our fathers, those who were taken prisoners
by Pyrrhus at Heraclea, made atonement by fighting against the same Pyrrhus.
And yet, for what fault of ours, conscript fathers, did you then, or do
you now, feel displeasure towards us; for when I look upon you, Marcus
Marcellus, I seem to behold both the consuls and the whole body of the
senate; and had you been our consul at Cannae, a better fate would have
attended the state as well as ourselves. Permit me, I entreat you, before
I complain of the hardship of our situation, to clear ourselves of the
guilt with which we are charged. If it was neither by the anger of the
gods, nor by fate, according to whose laws the course of human affairs
is unalterably fixed, but by misconduct that we were undone at Cannae;
but whose was that misconduct; the soldiers', or that of their generals?
For my own part, I, as a soldier, will never say a word of my commander,
particularly when I know that he received the thanks of the senate for
not having despaired of the state; and who has been continued in command
through every year since his flight from Cannae. We have heard that others
also who survived that disaster, who were military tribunes, solicit and
fill offices of honour, and have the command of provinces. Do you then,
conscript fathers, pardon yourselves and your children, while you exercise
severity towards such insignificant persons as we are? It was no disgrace
to a consul and other leading persons in the state, to fly when no other
hope remained; and did you send your soldiers into the field as persons
who must of necessity die there? At the Allia nearly the whole army fled;
at the Caudine Forks the troops delivered up their arms to the enemy, without
even making an effort; not to mention other disgraceful defeats of our
armies. Yet, so far from any mark of infamy being sought for, which might
be fixed upon these troops, the city of Rome was recovered by means of
those very troops who had fled to Veii from the Allia; and the Caudine
legions, which had returned to Rome without their arms, being sent back
armed to Samnium, brought under the yoke that very enemy who had exulted
in the disgrace which, in this instance, attached to them. But is there
a man who can bring a charge of cowardice or running away against the army
which fought at Cannae, where more than fifty thousand men fell; from whence
the consul fled with only seventy horsemen; where not a man survived, except
perchance those whom the enemy left, being wearied with killing? When the
proposal to ransom the prisoners was negatived, we were the objects of
general commendation, because we reserved ourselves for the service of
the state; because we returned to the consul to Venusia, and exhibited
an appearance of a regular army. Now we are in a worse condition than those
who were taken prisoners in the time of our fathers; for they only had
their arms, the nature of their service, and the place where they might
pitch their tents in the camp altered; all which, however, they got restored
by one service rendered to the state, and by one successful battle. Not
one of them was sent away into banishment; not one was deprived of the
hope of completing the period of his service; in short, an enemy was assigned
to them, fighting with whom they might at once terminate their life or
their disgrace. We, to whom nothing can be objected, except that it is
owing to us that any Roman soldier has survived the battle of Cannae, are
removed far away, not only from our country and Italy, but even from an
enemy; where we may grow old in exile, where we can have no hope or opportunity
of obliterating our disgrace, of appeasing the indignation of our countrymen,
or, in short, of obtaining an honorable death. We seek neither to have
our ignominy terminated, nor our virtue rewarded, we only ask to be allowed
to make trial of our courage, and to exercise our virtue. We seek for labor
and danger that we may discharge the duty of men and soldiers. A war is
carrying on in Sicily, now for the second year, with the utmost vigor on
both sides. The Carthaginians are storming some cities, the Romans others,
armies of infantry and horse are engaging in battle, at Syracuse the war
is prosecuted by sea and by land. We hear distinctly the shout of the combatants,
and the din of arms, while we ourselves lie inactive and unemployed, as
if we had neither hands nor arms. The consul, Sempronius has now fought
many pitched battles with the enemy with legions of slaves. They receive
as the fruits of their exertion their liberty, and the rights of citizens.
Let us at least be employed by you as slaves purchased for the service
of this war, let us be allowed to combat with the enemy and acquire our
freedom by fighting. Do you wish to make trial of our valor by sea, by
land, in a pitched battle, or in the assault of towns? We ask as our portion
all those enterprises which present the greatest difficulty and danger,
that what ought to have been done at Cannae may be done as soon as possible,
for the whole of our subsequent lives has been doomed to ignominy."
7. At the conclusion of this speech they prostrated themselves at the knees
of Marcellus. Marcellus replied, that the question was neither within his
authority nor his power, that he would, however, write to the senate, and
be guided in every thing he did by the judgment of the fathers. This letter
was brought to the new consuls, and by them read in the senate, and, on
the question being put relative to this letter, they decreed, "that
the senate saw no reason why the interests of the republic should be entrusted
to the hands of soldiers who had deserted then comrades, in battle, at
Cannae. If Marcus Marcellus, the proconsul, thought otherwise, that he
should act as he deemed consistent with the good of the republic and his
own honour, with this proviso, however, that none of these men should be
exempt from service, nor be presented with any military reward in consideration
of valor, or be conveyed back to Italy, while the enemy was in that country."
After this, agreeably to the decree of the senate, and the order of the
people, an election was held by the city praetor, at which five commissioners
were created for the purpose of repairing the walls and turrets, and two
sets of triumviri, one to search for the property belonging to the temples,
and to register the offerings, the other for repairing the temples of Fortune
and Mother Matuta within the Carmental gate, and also that of Hope without
the gate, which had been destroyed by fire the year before. Dreadful storms
occurred at this time. It rained stones for two days without intermission
in the Alban mount. Many places were struck by lightning; two buildings
in the Capitol, the rampart in the camp above Suessula in many places,
and two of the men on guard were killed. A wall and certain towers at Cannae
were not only struck with lightning, but demolished. At Reate, a vast rock
was seen to fly about; the sun appeared unusually red and blood-like. On
account of these prodigies there was a supplication for one day, and the
consuls employed themselves for several days in sacred rites; at the same
time there was a sacred rite performed through nine days. An accidental
circumstance which occurred at a distance, hastened the revolt of Tarentum,
which had now for a long time been the object of the hopes of Hannibal
and of the suspicion of the Romans. Phileas, a native of Tarentum, who
had been a long time at Rome under the pretense of an embassy, being a
man of a restless mind, and ill brooking that inactive state in which he
considered that his powers had been for too long a time sinking into imbecility,
discovered for himself a means of access to the Tarentine hostages. They
were kept in the court of the temple of Liberty, and guarded with less
care, because it was neither the interest of themselves nor of their state
to escape from the Romans. By corrupting two of the keepers of the temple,
he was enabled to hold frequent conferences with them, at which he solicited
them to come into this design; and having brought them out of their place
of confinement as soon as it was dark, he became the companion of their
clandestine flight, and got clear away. As soon as day dawned, the news
of their escape spread through the city, and a party sent in pursuit, having
seized them all at Tarracina, brought them back. They were led into the
Comitium, and after being scourged with rods, with the approbation of the
people, were thrown down from the rock.
8. The severity of this punishment exasperated the inhabitants of two of the most distinguished Greek states in Italy, not only publicly as communities, but privately as individuals, according as each was connected, either by relationship or friendship, with those who had been so disgracefully put to death. Of these about thirteen noble Tarentine youths formed a conspiracy, the chief of whom were Nico and Philemenus. Concluding that it would be right to confer with Hannibal before they took any step, they went to him, having been allowed to go out of the city by night on pretense of hunting. When they were now not far from the camp, all the rest hid themselves in a wood by the road side; but Nico and Philemenus, proceeding to the advanced guard, were seized, and at their own request brought before Hannibal. Having laid before him the motives of their plan, and the object they had in view, they received the highest commendation, and were loaded with promises; and that their countrymen might believe that they had gone out of the city to obtain plunder, they were desired to drive to the city some cattle of the Carthaginians which had been sent out to graze. A promise was given them that they might do this without danger or interruption. The booty of the young men attracted notice, and less astonishment was therefore felt that they should frequently repeat the attempt. At a second meeting with Hannibal they entered into a solemn engagement, that the Tarentines should be free, enjoying their own laws, and all their rights uninterfered with; that they should neither pay any tribute to the Carthaginians, nor receive a garrison against their will; that their present garrison should be delivered up to the Carthaginians. These points being agreed upon, Philemenus then began to repeat more frequently his customary practice of going out and returning to the city followed by his dogs, and furnished with the other requisites for hunting; for he was remarkable for his fondness of hunting; and generally bringing home something which he had captured or taken away from the enemy, who had purposely placed it in his way he presented it to the commander or the guards of the gates. They supposed that he preferred going and returning by night through fear of the enemy. After this practice had become so familiar, that at whatever time of the night he gave a signal, by whistling, the gate was opened, Hannibal thought that it was now time to put the plan in execution. He was at the distance of three days' journey, and to diminish the wonder which would be felt at his keeping his camp fixed in one and the same place so long, he feigned himself ill. Even to the Romans who formed the garrison of Tarentum, his protracted inactivity had ceased to be an object of suspicion.
9. But after he determined to proceed to Tarentum, selecting from his infantry
and cavalry ten thousand men, whom, from activity of body, and lightness
of arms, he judged best adapted for the expedition, he began his march
in the fourth watch of the night; and sending in advance about eighty Numidian
horsemen, ordered them to scour the country on each side of the road, and
narrowly examine every place, lest any of the rustics who might have observed
his army at a distance should escape; to bring back those who were got
before, and kill those whom they met, that they might appear to the neighboring
inhabitants to be a plundering party, rather than a regular army. Hannibal
himself, marching at a rapid pace, pitched his camp about fifteen miles
from Tarentum; and without telling his soldiers even there, what was their
destination, he only called them together and admonished them to march
all of them in the road, and not to suffer any one to turn aside or deviate
from the line; and above all, that they would be on the watch, so as to
catch the word of command, and not do any thing without the order of their
leaders; that in due time he would issue his commands as to what he wished
to be done. About the same hour a rumor reached Tarentum, that a few Numidian
horsemen were devastating the fields, and had terrified the rustics through
a wide extent of country; at which intelligence the Roman praefect took
no further step than to order a division of his cavalry to go out the following
day at sunrise to check the depredations of the enemy; and so far was he
from directing his attention to any thing else on this account, that on
the contrary, this excursion of the Numidians was a proof to him that Hannibal
and his army had not moved from his camp. Early in the night Hannibal put
his troops in motion, and Philemenus, with his customary burden of prey
taken in hunting, was his guide. The rest of the conspirators waited the
accomplishment of what had been concerted; and the agreement was, that
Philemenus, while bringing in his prey through the small gate by which
he was accustomed to pass, should introduce some armed men, while Hannibal
in another quarter approached the gate called Temenis, which faced the
east, in that quarter which was towards the continent, near the tombs which
were within the walls. When he drew near to the gate, Hannibal raised a
fire according to agreement, which made a blaze; the same signal was returned
by Nico, and the fires were extinguished on both sides. Hannibal led his
troops on in silence to the gate. Nico suddenly fell upon the guards while
asleep, slew them in their beds, and opened the gate. Hannibal then entered
with his infantry, ordering his cavalry to stay behind, that they might
be able to bring their assistance wherever it was required without obstruction.
Philemenus also in another quarter approached the small gate by which he
was accustomed to pass and re-pass. His voice, which was well known, for
he said he could scarcely bear the weight of the huge beast he had gotten,
and his signal, which had now become familiar, having roused the guard,
the small gate was opened. Two youths carrying in a boar, Philemenus himself
followed, with a huntsman, unencumbered, and while the attention of the
guard was incautiously turned upon those who carried the boar, in consequence
of its astonishing size, he transfixed him with a hunting spear. About
thirty armed men then entering, slew the rest of the guards, and broke
open the adjoining gate, when a body of troops, in regular array, instantly
rushed in. Being conducted hence in silence to the forum, they joined Hannibal.
The Carthaginian then sent the Tarentines, with two thousand Gauls formed
into three divisions, in different directions through the city, with orders
to occupy the most frequented streets. A confusion arising, the Romans
were put to the sword on all hands. The townsmen were spared; but in order
to insure this, he instructed the Tarentine youths, when they saw any of
their friends at a distance, to bid them be quiet and silent, and be of
good courage.
10. The tumult and clamor was now such as usually takes place in a captured
city, but no man knew for certain what was the occasion. The Tarentines
supposed that the Romans had suddenly risen to plunder the city. To the
Romans it appeared, that some commotion had been set on foot by the townsmen
with a treacherous design. The praefect, who was awakened at the first
alarm, escaped to the port, whence getting into a boat he was conveyed
round to the citadel. The sound of a trumpet also from the theatre excited
alarm; for it was a Roman trumpet, prepared by the conspirators for this
very purpose; and as it was blown unskillfully by a Grecian, it could not
be ascertained who gave the signal, or to whom it was given. At dawn of
the day, the Romans recognized the Carthaginian and Gallic arms, which
removed all doubt; and the Greeks, seeing the bodies of slain Romans spread
about in all directions, perceived that the city had been taken by Hannibal.
When the light had increased, so that they could discriminate with greater
certainty, and the Romans who survived the carnage had taken refuge in
the citadel, the tumult now beginning to subside a little, Hannibal gave
orders to assemble the Tarentines without their arms. All of them attended
the assembly, except those who had accompanied the Romans in their retreat
to the citadel, to share every fortune with them. Here Hannibal having
addressed the Tarentines in terms of kindness, and appealed to the services
he had rendered to those of their countrymen whom he had captured at the
Trasimenus and at Cannae, and having at the same time inveighed against
the haughty domination of the Romans, desired that they would every one
of them retire to their respective houses, and inscribe their names upon
their doors; declaring, that he should give orders that those houses which
had not the names written upon them should be plundered. That if any man
should write his name upon the house of a Roman, (and the Romans occupied
houses by themselves,) he should treat him as an enemy. Having dismissed
the assembly, and the names inscribed upon the doors having made it easy
to distinguish the house of an enemy from that of a friend, on a signal
given, the troops ran in every direction to plunder the lodgings of the
Romans, and a considerable booty was found.
11. The next day he led his troops to assault the citadel; but seeing that
it was protected by very high rocks towards the sea, which washed the greater
part of it, and formed it into a sort of peninsula, and towards the city
by a wall and ditch, and consequently that it could not be taken by assault
or by works; lest the design to protect the Tarentines should detain him
from the prosecution of more important objects, and lest the Romans should
have the power of sallying from the citadel whenever they pleased against
the Tarentines, if left without a strong protecting force, he resolved
to cut off the communication between the citadel and city by a rampart;
not without a hope that he might have an opportunity of fighting with the
Romans, when attempting to obstruct the work; and if they should sally
forth too eagerly, that by killing many of them the strength of the garrison
would be so far reduced, that the Tarentines alone would be easily able
to defend themselves from them. After they had begun, the Romans, suddenly
throwing open the gate, rushed in upon the workmen. The guard stationed
before the works allowed itself to be driven back, in order that their
boldness might be increased by success, and that they might pursue them
when driven back, in greater numbers, and to a greater distance. Then on
a signal given, the Carthaginians, whom Hannibal kept in readiness for
this purpose, sprang up on all sides; nor could the Romans sustain the
attack, but were prevented from precipitate flight by the narrowness of
the ground, by impediments occasioned in some places by the works already
commenced, in others by the preparations for the work. Most of them were
driven headlong into the ditch, and more were killed in the flight than
in the battle. After this the work was commenced without any attempt to
obstruct it. A large ditch was formed, within which a rampart was thrown
up. He prepared also to add a wall at a small distance, and on the same
side, that they might defend themselves from the Romans even without a
garrison. He, however, left them a small force, at once for their protection
and to assist in building the wall. The general himself, setting out with
the rest of his forces, pitched his camp at the river Galaesus, five miles
from the city. Returning from this position to inspect the work, which
had gone on somewhat faster than he had anticipated, he conceived a hope
that the citadel might even be taken by storm; for it was not protected
by an elevated situation as the other parts were, but placed upon a plain,
and separated from the city only by a wall and ditch. While subjected to
an attack from every kind of military engine and work, a reinforcement
sent from Metapontum inspired the Romans with courage to assault the works
of the enemy, by a sudden attack, under cover of the night. Some of them
they threw down, others they destroyed by fire, and thus there was an end
to Hannibal's attempts against the citadel in that quarter. His only remaining
hope was in a siege; nor did that afford a good prospect of success, because,
occupying a citadel which was placed on a peninsula and commanded the entrance
of the harbor, they had the sea open to them, while the city, on the contrary,
was deprived of any supplies by sea: and thus the besiegers were in greater
danger of want than the besieged. Hannibal assembled the chief men of the
Tarentines, and laid before them all the present difficulties. He said,
"That he could neither discover any method by which a citadel so well
fortified could be taken, nor could he hope for any favorable result from
a siege, while the enemy was master of the sea; but that if ships could
be obtained, by which the introduction of supplies might be prevented,
the enemy would either immediately evacuate it, or surrender themselves."
The Tarentines agreed with him; but were of opinion, that "he who
gave the advice ought also to assist in carrying it into execution; for
if the Carthaginian ships were brought there from Sicily, they would be
able to effect it; but by what means could their own ships, shut up as
they were in a confined harbor, the mouth of which was in the command of
the enemy, be brought out into the open sea." "They shall be
brought out," said Hannibal. "Many things which are difficult
in themselves, are easily effected by contrivance. You have a city situated
upon a plain; you have level and sufficiently wide roads extending in every
direction. By the road which runs through the midst of the city from the
harbor to the sea I will convey your ships in wagons without any great
difficulty, and the sea will be ours which the enemy now commands. We will
invest the citadel on one side by sea, on the other by land; nay, rather,
in a short time, we will take it either abandoned by the enemy, or with
the enemy in it." This speech not only inspired hopes of accomplishing
the object, but excited the greatest admiration of the general. Wagons
were immediately collected from every quarter and joined together; machines
were employed to haul the ships on shore, and the road was prepared, in
order that the wagons might run more easily, and thus the difficulty of
passing be diminished. Beasts of burden and men were next collected, and
the work was actively commenced. After the lapse of a few days, the fleet,
equipped and ready for action, sailed round the citadel, and cast anchor
just before the mouth of the harbor. Such was the state of things at Tarentum,
when Hannibal left it and returned to his winter quarters. Authors, however,
are divided as to whether the defection of the Tarentines took place in
the present or former year. The greater number, and those who, from their
age, were more able to recollect these events, represent it to have occurred
in the present year.
12. The Latin holidays detained the consuls and praetors at Rome till the fifth of the calends of May; on which day, having completed the solemnities on the mount, they proceeded to their respective provinces. Afterwards a new difficulty respecting religious matters arose out of the prophetic verses of Marcius, who had been a distinguished soothsayer; and on a search being made the year before, for books of this description, agreeably to a decree of the senate, these verses had fallen into the hands of Marcus Atilius, the city praetor, who had the management of that business, and he had immediately handed them over to the new praetor, Sulla. The importance attached to one of the two predictions of Marcius, which was brought to light after the event to which it related had occurred, and the truth of which was confirmed by the event, attached credence to the other, the time of whose fulfillment had not yet arrived. In the former prophecy, the disaster at Cannae was predicted in nearly these words: "Roman of Trojan descent, fly the river Canna, lest foreigners should compel thee to fight in the plain of Diomede. But thou wilt not believe me until thou shalt have filled the plain with blood, and the river carries into the great sea, from the fruitful land, many thousands of your slain countrymen, and thy flesh becomes a prey for fishes, birds, and beasts inhabiting the earth. For thus hath Jupiter declared to me." Those who had served in that quarter recognized the correspondence with respect to the plains of the Argive Diomede and the river Canna, as well as the defeat itself. The other prophecy was then read, which was more obscure, not only because future events are more uncertain than past, but also from being more perplexed in its style of composition. "Romans, if you wish to expel the enemy and the ulcer which has come from afar, I advise, that games should be vowed, which may be performed in a cheerful manner annually to Apollo; when the people shall have given a portion of money from the public coffers, that private individuals then contribute, each according to his ability. That the praetor shall preside in the celebration of these games, who holds the supreme administration of justice to the people and commons. Let the decemviri perform sacrifice with victims after the Grecian fashion. If you do these things properly you will ever rejoice, and your affairs will be more prosperous, for that deity will destroy your enemies who now, composedly, feed upon your plains." They took one day to explain this prophecy. The next day a decree of the senate was passed, that the decemviri should inspect the books relating to the celebration of games and sacred rites in honour of Apollo. After they had been consulted, and a report made to the senate, the fathers voted, that "games should be vowed to Apollo and celebrated; and that when the games were concluded, twelve thousand asses should be given to the praetor to defray the expense of sacred ceremonies, and also two victims of the larger sort." A second decree was passed, that "the decemviri should perform sacrifice in the Grecian mode, and with the following victims: to Apollo, with a gilded ox, and two white goats gilded; to Latona, with a gilded heifer." When the praetor was about to celebrate the games in the Circus Maximus, he issued an order, that during the celebration of the games, the people should pay a contribution, as large as was convenient, for the service of Apollo. This is the origin of the Apollinarian games, which were vowed and celebrated in order to victory, and not restoration to health, as is commonly supposed. The people viewed the spectacle in garlands; the matrons made supplications; the people in general feasted in the courts of their houses, throwing the doors open; and the day was distinguished by every description of ceremony.
13. While Hannibal was in the neighborhood of Tarentum, and both the consuls in Samnium, though they seemed as if they were about to besiege Capua, the Campanians were experiencing famine, that calamity which is the usual attendant of a protracted siege. It was occasioned by the Roman armies' having prevented the sowing of the lands. They therefore sent ambassadors to Hannibal, imploring him to give orders that corn should be conveyed to Capua from the neighboring places, before both the consuls led their legions into their fields, and all the roads were blocked up by the troops of the enemy. Hannibal ordered Hanno to pass with his army from Bruttium into Campania, and to take care that the Campanians were supplied with corn. Hanno, setting out from Bruttium with his army, and carefully avoiding the camp of the enemy and the consuls who were in Samnium, when he drew near to Beneventum, pitched his camp on an eminence three miles from the city. He next ordered that the corn which had been collected during the summer, should be brought from the neighboring people in alliance with him, into his camp, assigning a guard to escort those supplies. He then sent a messenger to the Capuans, fixing a day when they should attend at his camp to receive the corn, bringing with them vehicles and beasts of every description, collected from every part of their country. The Campanians executed this business with their usual indolence and carelessness. Somewhat more than four hundred vehicles, with a few beasts of burden besides, were sent. After receiving a reproof from Hanno for this conduct, who told them, that not even hunger, which excited dumb animals to exertion, could stimulate them to diligence, another day was named when they were to fetch the corn after better preparation. All these transactions being reported to the Beneventans, just as they occurred, they lost no time in sending ten ambassadors to the Roman consuls, who were encamped in the neighborhood of Bovianum. The consuls, hearing what was going on at Capua, arranged it so that one of them should lead an army into Campania; and Fulvius, to whose lot that province had fallen, setting out by night, entered the walls of Beneventum. Being now near the enemy, he obtained information that Hanno had gone out to forage with a portion of his troops; that the Campanians were supplied with corn by a quaestor; that two thousand wagons had arrived together with an undisciplined and unarmed rabble; that every thing was done in a disorderly and hurried manner; and that the form of a camp, and all military subordination, were destroyed by the intermixture of rustics out of the neighborhood. This intelligence being sufficiently authenticated, the consul ordered his soldiers to get ready only their standards and arms against the next night, as he must attack the Carthaginian camp. They set out at the fourth watch of the night, leaving all their packages and baggage of every description at Beneventum; and arriving a little before daylight at the camp, they occasioned such a panic, that, had the camp been situated on level ground, it might doubtlessly have been taken on the first assault. The height of its situation and the works defended it; for they could not be approached on any side except by a steep and difficult ascent. At break of day a hot engagement commenced, when the Carthaginians not only defended their rampart, but having more even ground, threw down the enemy as they attempted to ascend the steep.
14. Persevering courage, however, at length prevailed over every impediment,
and they made their way up to the ditch and rampart in several parts at
the same time, but with many wounds and much loss of soldiers. The consul,
therefore assembling the military tribunes, said they must desist from
this inconsiderate enterprise; and that it appeared to him to be the safer
course, that the troops should be led back to Beneventum for that day,
and then on the following day to pitch his camp close to that of the enemy,
so that the Campanians could not quit it, nor Hanno return to it; and in
order that that object might be attained with the greater ease, that he
should send for his colleague and his army; and that they would direct
their whole force on that point. This plan of the general was disconcerted,
after the signal began to sound for a retreat, by the clamors of the soldiery,
who despised so pusillanimous an order. Nearest to the gate of the enemy's
camp was a Pelignian cohort, whose commander, Vibius Accuaeus, seizing
the standard, threw it over the rampart. Then pronouncing a curse upon
himself and his cohort, if the enemy got possession of that standard, he
rushed forward before the rest, and crossing the ditch and rampart, burst
into the camp of the enemy. The Pelignians were now fighting within the
rampart, when in another quarter Valerius Flaccus, a military tribune of
the third legion, taunting the Romans with cowardice for conceding to allies
the honour of taking the camp. Titus Pedanius, first centurion of the first
century, snatched the standard out of the hands of the standard-bearer,
and cried out, "Soon shall this standard, and this centurion, be within
the rampart of the enemy; let those follow who would prevent the standard's
being captured by the enemy." Crossing the ditch, he was followed
first by the men of his own maniple, and then by the whole legion. By this
time the consul also, changing his plan on seeing them crossing the rampart,
began to incite and encourage his soldiers, instead of calling them off;
representing to them, how critical and perilous was the situation of the
bravest cohort of their allies and a legion of their countrymen. All, therefore,
severally exerting themselves to the utmost, regardless whether the ground
were even or uneven, while showers of weapons were thrown against them
from all sides, the enemy opposing their arms and their persons to obstruct
them, made their way and burst in. Many who were wounded, even those whose
blood and strength failed them, pressed forward, that they might fall within
the rampart of the enemy. The camp, therefore, was taken in an instant,
as if it had been situated upon level ground, and not completely fortified.
What followed was a carnage rather than a battle. The troops of both sides
being huddled together within the rampart, above six thousand of the enemy
were slain; above seven thousand, together with the Campanians who fetched
the corn, and the whole collection of waggons and beasts of burden, were
captured. There was also a great booty, which Hanno in his predatory excursions,
which he had been careful to make in every quarter, had drawn together
from the lands of the allies of the Romans. After throwing down the camp
of the enemy, they returned thence to Beneventum; and there both the consuls
(for Appius Claudius came thither a few days after) sold the booty and
distributed it, making presents to those by whose exertions the camp of
the enemy had been captured; above all, to Accuaeus the Pelignian, and
Titus Pedanius, first centurion of the third legion. Hanno, setting off
from Cominium in the territory of Cere, whither intelligence of the loss
of the camp had reached him, with a small party of foragers, whom he happened
to have with him, returned to Bruttium, more after the manner of a flight
than a march.
15. The Campanians, when informed of the disaster which had befallen themselves and their allies, sent ambassadors to Hannibal to inform him, that "the two consuls were at Beneventum, which was a day's march from Capua; that the war was all but at their gates and their walls; and that if he did not hasten to their assistance, Capua would fall into the power of the enemy sooner than Arpi had; that not even Tarentum itself, much less its citadel, ought to be considered of so much consequence as to induce him to deliver up to the Roman people, abandoned and undefended, Capua, which he used to place on an equal footing with Carthage." Hannibal, promising that he would not neglect the interest of the Campanians, sent, for the present, two thousand horse, with the ambassadors, aided by which, they might secure their lands from devastation. The Romans, meanwhile, among the other things which engaged their attention, had an eye to the citadel of Tarentum, and the garrison besieged therein. Caius Servilius, lieutenant-general, having been sent, according to the advice of the fathers, by Publius Cornelius, the praetor, to purchase corn in Etruria, made his way into the harbor of Tarentum, through the guard-ships of the enemy, with some ships of burden. At his arrival, those who before, having very slight hopes of holding out, were frequently invited by the enemy, in conferences, to pass over to them, now, on the contrary, were the persons to invite and solicit the enemy to come over to them; and now, as the soldiers who were at Metapontum had been brought to assist in guarding the citadel of Tarentum, the garrison was sufficiently powerful. In consequence of this measure, the Metapontines, being freed from the fears which had influenced them, immediately revolted to Hannibal. The people of Thurium, situated on the same coast, did the same. They were influenced not more by the defection of the Metapontines and Tarentines, with whom they were connected, being sprung from the same country, Achaia, than by resentment towards the Romans, in consequence of the recent execution of the hostages. The friends and relations of these hostages sent a letter and a message to Hanno and Mago, who were not far off among the Bruttii, to the effect, that if they brought their troops up to the walls, they would deliver the city into their hands. Marcus Atinius was in command at Thurium, with a small garrison, who they thought might easily be induced to engage rashly in a battle, not from any confidence which he reposed in his troops, of which he had very few, but in the youth of Thurium, whom he had purposely formed into centuries, and armed against emergencies of this kind. The generals, after dividing their forces between them, entered the territory of Thurium; and Hanno, with a body of infantry, proceeded towards the city in hostile array. Hanno staid behind with the cavalry, under the cover of some hills, conveniently placed for the concealment of an ambush. Atinius, having by his scouts discovered only the body of infantry, led his troops into the field, ignorant both of the domestic treachery and of the stratagem of the enemy. The engagement with the infantry was particularly dull, a few Romans in the first rank engaging while the Thurians rather waited than helped on the issue. The Carthaginian line retreated, on purpose that they might draw the incautious enemy to the back of the hill, where their cavalry were lying in ambush; and when they had come there, the cavalry rising up on a sudden with a shout, immediately put to flight the almost undisciplined rabble of the Thurians, not firmly attached to the side on which they fought. The Romans, notwithstanding they were surrounded and hard pressed on one side by the infantry, on the other by the cavalry, yet prolonged the battle for a considerable time; but at length even they were compelled to turn their backs, and fled towards the city. There the conspirators, forming themselves into a dense body, received the multitude of their countrymen with open gates; but when they perceived that the routed Romans were hurrying towards the city, they exclaimed that the Carthaginian was close at hand, and that the enemy would enter the city mingled with them, unless they speedily closed the gates. Thus they shut out the Romans, and left them to be cut up by the enemy. Atinius, however, and a few others were taken in. After this for a short time there was a division between them, some being of opinion that they ought to defend the city, others that they ought, after all that had happened, to yield to fortune, and deliver up the city to the conquerors; but, as it generally happens, fortune and evil counsels prevailed. Having conveyed Atinius and his party to the sea and the ships, more because they wished that care should be taken of him, in consequence of the mildness and justice of his command, than from regard to the Romans, they received the Carthaginians into the city. The consuls led their legions from Beneventum into the Campanian territory, with the intention not only of destroying the corn, which was in the blade, but of laying siege to Capua; considering that they would render their consulate illustrious by the destruction of so opulent a city, and that they would wipe away the foul disgrace of the empire, from the defection of a city so near remaining unpunished for three years. Lest, however, Beneventum should be left without protection, and that in case of any sudden emergency, if Hannibal should come to Capua, in order to bring assistance to his friends, which they doubted not he would do, the cavalry might be able to sustain his attack, they ordered Tiberius Gracchus to come from Lucania to Beneventum with his cavalry and light-armed troops and to appoint some person to take the command of the legions and stationary camp, for the defense of Lucania.
16. An unlucky prodigy occurred to Gracchus, while sacrificing, previous to his departure from Lucania. Two snakes gliding from a secret place to the entrails, after the sacrifice was completed, ate the liver; and after having been observed, suddenly vanished out of sight. The sacrifice having been repeated according to the admonition of the aruspices, and the vessel containing the entrails being watched with increased attention, it is reported that the snakes came a second, and a third time, and, after tasting the liver, went away untouched. Though the aruspices forewarned him that the portent had reference to the general, and that he ought to be on his guard against secret enemies and machinations, yet no foresight could avert the destiny which awaited him. There was a Lucanian, named Flavius, the leader of that party which adhered to the Romans when the others went over to Hannibal; he was this year in the magistracy, having been created praetor by the same party. Suddenly changing his mind, and seeking to ingratiate himself with the Carthaginians, he did not think it enough that he himself should pass over to them, or that he should induce the Lucanians to revolt with him, unless he ratified his league with the enemy with the head and blood of the general, betrayed to them, though his guest. He entered into a secret conference with Mago, who had the command in Bruttium, and receiving a solemn promise from him, that he would take the Lucanians into his friendship, without interfering with their laws, if he should betray the Roman general to the Carthaginians, he conducted Mago to a place to which he was about to bring Gracchus with a few attendants. He then directed Mago to arm his infantry and cavalry, and to occupy the retired places there, in which he might conceal a very large number of troops. After thoroughly inspecting and exploring the place on all sides, a day was agreed upon for the execution of the affair. Flavius came to the Roman general, and said, that "he had begun a business of great importance, for the completion of which, it was necessary to have the assistance of Gracchus himself. That he had persuaded the praetors of all the states which had revolted to the Carthaginians in the general defection of Italy, to return into the friendship of the Romans, since now the Roman power too, which had almost come to ruin by the disaster at Cannae. was daily improving and increasing, while the strength of Hannibal was sinking into decay, and was almost reduced to nothing. He had told them that the Romans would be disposed to accept an atonement for their former offense; that there never was any state more easy to be entreated, or more ready to grant pardon; how often, he had observed to them, had they forgiven rebellion even in their own ancestors! These considerations," he said, "he had himself urged, but that they would rather hear the same from Gracchus himself in person, and touching his right hand, carry with them that pledge of faith. That he had agreed upon a place with those who were privy to the transaction, out of the way of observation, and at no great distance from the Roman camp; that there the business might be settled in few words, so that all the Lucanian states might be in the alliance and friendship of the Romans." Gracchus, not suspecting any treachery either from his words or the nature of the proposal, and being caught by the probability of the thing, set out from the camp with his lictors and a troop of horse, under the guidance of his host, and fell headlong into the snare. The enemy suddenly arose from their lurking-place, and Flavius joined them; which made the treachery obvious. A shower of weapons was poured from all sides on Gracchus and his troop. He immediately leaped from his horse, and ordering the rest to do the same, exhorted them, that "as fortune had left them only one course, they would render it glorious by their valor. And what is there left," said he, "to a handful of men, surrounded by a multitude, in a valley hemmed in by a wood and mountains, except death? The only question was, whether, tamely exposing themselves to be butchered like cattle, they should die unavenged; or whether, drawing the mind off from the idea of suffering and anticipation of the event, and giving full scope to fury and resentment, they should fall while doing and daring, covered with hostile blood, amid heaps of arms and bodies of their expiring foes." He desired that "all would aim at the Lucanian traitor and deserter;" adding, that "the man who should send that victim to the shades before him, would acquire the most distinguished glory, and furnish the highest consolation for his own death." While thus speaking, he wound his cloak round his left arm, for they had not even brought their shields out with them, and then rushed upon the enemy. The exertion made in the fight was greater than could be expected from the smallness of the number. The bodies of the Romans were most exposed to the javelins, with which, as they were thrown on all sides from higher ground into a deep valley, they were transfixed. The Carthaginians seeing Gracchus now bereft of support, endeavored to take him alive; but he having descried his Lucanian host among the enemy, rushed with such fury into their dense body that it became impossible to save his life without a great loss. Mago immediately sent his corpse to Hannibal, ordering it to be placed, with the fasces which were taken at the same time, before the tribunal of the general. This is the true account; Gracchus fell in Lucania, near the place called the Old Plains.
17. There are some who have put forth an account, stating, that when in
the territory of Beneventum, near the river Calor, having gone out from
his camp with his lictors and three servants, for the purpose of bathing,
he was slain while naked and unarmed, and endeavoring to defend himself
with the stones which the river brought down, by a party of the enemy which
happened to be concealed among the osiers which grew upon the banks. Others
state, that having gone out five hundred paces from the camp, at the instance
of the aruspices, in order to expiate the prodigies before mentioned on
unpolluted ground, he was cut off by two troops of Numidians who happened
to be lying in ambush there. So different are the accounts respecting the
place and manner of the death of so illustrious and distinguished a man.
Various also are the accounts of the funeral of Gracchus. Some say that
he was buried by his own friends in the Roman camp; others relate, and
this is the more generally received account, that a funeral pile was erected
by Hannibal, in the entrance of the Carthaginian camp; that the troops
under arms performed evolutions, with the dances of the Spaniards, and
motions of the arms and body, which were customary with the several nations;
while Hannibal himself celebrated his obsequies with every mark of respect,
both in word and deed. Such is the account of those who assert that the
affair occurred in Lucania. If you are disposed to credit the statement
of those who relate that he was slain at the river Calor, the enemy got
possession only of the head of Gracchus; which being brought to Hannibal,
he immediately dispatched Carthalo to convey it into the Roman camp to
Cneius Cornelius, the quaestor, who buried the general in the camp, the
Beneventans joining the army in the celebration.
18. The consuls having entered the Campanian territory, while devastating
the country on all sides, were alarmed, and thrown into confusion, by an
eruption of the townsmen and Mago with his cavalry. They called in their
troops to their standards from the several quarters to which they were
dispersed, but having been routed when they had scarcely formed their line,
they lost above fifteen hundred men. The confidence of the Campanians,
who were naturally presumptuous, became excessive in consequence of this
event, and in many battles they challenged the Romans; but this one battle,
which they had been incautiously and imprudently drawn into, had increased
the vigilance of the consuls. Their spirits were restored, while the presumption
of the other party was diminished, by one trifling occurrence; but in war
nothing is so inconsiderable as not to be capable, sometimes, of producing
important consequences. Titus Quinctius Crispinus was a guest of Badius,
a Campanian, united with him by the greatest intimacy. Their acquaintance
had increased from the circumstance of Badius having received the most
liberal and kind attentions at the house of Crispinus, in a fit of illness,
at Rome, before the Campanian revolt. On the present occasion, Badius,
advancing in front of the guards, which were stationed before the gate,
desired Crispinus to be called; and Crispinus, on being informed of this,
thinking that a friendly and familiar interview was requested, and the
memory of their private connection remaining even amidst the disruption
of public ties, advanced a little from the rest. When they had come within
view of each other, Badius exclaimed, "I challenge you to combat,
Crispinus; let us mount our horses, and making the rest withdraw, let us
try which is the better soldier." In reply, Crispinus said, that "neither
of them were in want of enemies to display their valor upon; for his own
part, even if he should meet him in the field he would turn aside, lest
he should pollute his right-hand with the blood of a guest;" and then
turning round, was going away. But the Campanian, with increased presumption,
began to charge him with cowardice and effeminacy, and cast upon him reproaches
which he deserved himself, calling him "an enemy who sheltered himself
under the title of host, and one who pretended to spare him for whom he
knew himself not to be a match. If he considered; that when public treaties
were broken, the ties of private connection were not severed with them,
then Badius the Campanian openly, and in the hearing of both armies, renounced
his connection of hospitality with Titus Quinctius Crispinus the Roman.
He said, that there could exist no fellowship or alliance with him and
an enemy whose country and tutelary gods, both public and private, he had
come to fight against. If he was a man, he would meet him." Crispinus
hesitated for a long time; but the men of his troop at length prevailed
upon him not to allow the Campanian to insult him with impunity. Waiting,
therefore, only to ask his generals whether they would allow him to fight,
contrary to rule, with an enemy who had challenged him; having obtained
their permission, he mounted his horse, and addressing Badius by name,
called him out to the combat. The Campanian made no delay. They engaged
with their horses excited to hostility. Crispinus transfixed Badius with
his spear in the left shoulder, over his shield. He fell from his horse
in consequence of the wound; and Crispinus leaped down to dispatch him
as he lay, on foot. But Badius, before his enemy was upon him, ran off
to his friends, leaving his horse and buckler. Crispinus, decorated with
the spoils, and displaying the horse and arms which he had seized together
with the bloody spear, was conducted amid the loud plaudits and congratulations
of the soldiery into the presence of the consuls, where he was highly commended,
and was presented with gifts.
19. Hannibal, having moved his camp from the territory of Beneventum
to Capua, drew out his troops in order of battle the third day after
his arrival; not entertaining the least doubt but that, as the
Campanians had fought successfully a few days ago when he was absent,
the Romans would be still less able to withstand him and his army,
which had been so often victorious. After the battle had commenced,
the Roman line was distressed chiefly from the attack of the cavalry,
being overwhelmed with their darts, till the signal was given to the
Roman cavalry to direct their horses against the enemy; thus it was a
battle of the cavalry. But at this time the Sempronian army, commanded
by Cneius Cornelius the quaestor, being descried at a distance,
excited alarm in both parties equally, lest those who were approaching
should be fresh enemies. As if by concert, therefore, both sounded a
retreat; and the troops were withdrawn from the field to their camps,
in an equal condition; a greater number, however, of the Romans fell
in the first charge of the cavalry. The consuls, to divert the
attention of Hannibal from Capua, departed thence on the following
night in different directions, Fulvius into the territory of Cuma,
Claudius into Lucania. The next day Hannibal, having received
intelligence that the camp of the Romans was deserted, and that they
had gone off in different directions in two divisions, doubtful at
first which he should follow, commenced the pursuit of Appius; who,
after leading him about whichever way he pleased, returned by another
route to Capua. Hannibal, while in this quarter, had another
opportunity of gaining an advantage. Marcus Centenius, surnamed
Penula, was distinguished among the centurions of the first rank by
the size of his person, and his courage. Having gone through his
period of service, he was introduced to the senate by Publius
Cornelius Sulla, when he requested of the fathers that five thousand
men might be placed at his disposal. He said, that "as he was
acquainted with the character of the enemy, and the nature of the
country, he should speedily perform some service; and that he would
employ those arts by which our generals and armies had been hitherto
ensnared against the inventor of them." This was not promised more
foolishly than it was believed; as if the qualifications of a soldier
and a general were the same. Instead of five, eight thousand men were
given him, half Romans, half allies. He himself also got together a
considerable number of volunteers, in the country, on his march; and
having almost doubled his force, arrived in Lucania, where Hannibal
had halted after having in vain pursued Claudius. No doubt could be
entertained of the issue of a contest which was to take place between
Hannibal, as general on one side, and a centurion on the other;
between armies, one of which had grown old in victory, the other
entirely inexperienced, and for the most part even tumultuary and
half-armed. As soon as the troops came within sight of each other,
and neither of them declined an engagement, the lines were formed. The
battle, notwithstanding the utter disparity of the contending parties,
lasted more than two hours, the Roman troops acting with the greatest
spirit as long as their general survived. But after that he had
fallen, for he continually exposed himself to the weapons of the
enemy, not only from regard to his former character, but through fear
of the disgrace which would attach to him if he survived a disaster
occasioned by his own temerity, the Roman line was immediately routed.
But so completely were they prevented from flying, every way being
beset by the cavalry, that scarcely a thousand men escaped out of so
large an army; the rest were destroyed on all hands, in one way or
other.
20. The siege of Capua was now resumed by the consuls with the utmost energy. Every thing requisite for the business was conveyed thither and got in readiness. A store of corn was collected at Casilinum; at the mouth of the Vulturnus, where a town now stands, a strong post was fortified; and a garrison was stationed in Puteoli, which Fabius had formerly fortified, in order to have the command of the neighboring sea and the river. Into these two maritime forts, the corn recently sent from Sicily, with that which Marcus Junius, the praetor, had bought up in Etruria, was conveyed from Ostia, to supply the army during the winter. But, in addition to the disaster sustained in Lucania, the army also of volunteer slaves, who had served during the life of Gracchus with the greatest fidelity, as if discharged from service by the death of their general, left their standards. Hannibal was not willing that Capua should be neglected, or his allies deserted, at so critical a juncture; but, having obtained such success from the temerity of one Roman general, his attention was fixed on the opportunity which presented itself of crushing the other general and his army. Ambassadors from Apulia reported that Cneius Fulvius, the praetor, had at first conducted his measures with caution, while engaged in besieging certain towns of Apulia, which had revolted to Hannibal; but that afterwards, in consequence of extraordinary success, both himself and his soldiers, being glutted with booty, had so given themselves up to licentiousness and indolence, that all military discipline was disregarded. Having frequently on other occasions, as well as but a few days ago, experienced what an army was good for, when conducted by an unskillful commander, he moved his camp into Apulia.
21. The Roman legions, and the praetor, Fulvius, were in the neighborhood
of Herdonia, where, receiving intelligence of the approach of the enemy,
they had nearly torn up the standards and gone out to battle without the
praetor's orders; nor did any thing tend more to prevent it than the assured
hope they entertained that they could do so whenever they pleased, consulting
only their own will. The following night, Hannibal having obtained information
that the camp was in a state of tumult, and that most of the troops were
in a disorderly manner urging the general to give the signal, and calling
out to arms, and therefore feeling convinced that an opportunity presented
itself for a successful battle, distributed three thousand light troops
in the houses in the neighborhood, and among the thorns and woods. These,
on a signal being given, were to rise up from their lurking-place with
one accord; and Mago, with about two thousand horse, was ordered to occupy
all the roads in the direction in which he supposed their flight would
be directed. Having made these preparations during the night, he led his
troops into the field at break of day. Nor did Fulvius decline the challenge;
not so much from any hope of success entertained by himself, as drawn by
the blind impetuosity of his soldiers. Accordingly, the line itself was
formed with the same want of caution with which they entered the field,
agreeably to the whim of the soldiers, who came up as chance directed,
and took their stations just where they pleased; which they afterwards
abandoned, as fear or caprice suggested. The first legion and the left
wing of the allied troops were drawn up in front. The line was extended
to a great length, the tribunes remonstrating, that there was no strength
in it, and that wherever the enemy made the charge they would break through
it: but no salutary advice reached their minds, nor even their ears. Hannibal
was now come up, a general of a totally different character, with an army
neither similar in its nature, nor similarly marshalled. The consequence
was, that the Romans did not so much as sustain their shout and first attack.
Their general, equal to Centenius in folly and temerity, but by no means
to be compared with him in courage, when he saw things going against him,
and his troops in confusion, hastily mounting his horse, fled from the
field with about two hundred horsemen. The rest of the troops, beaten in
front, and surrounded on the flank and rear, were slaughtered to such a
degree, that out of eighteen thousand men, not more than two thousand escaped.
The enemy got possession of the camp.
22. When these disastrous defeats, happening one upon another, were reported
at Rome, great grief and consternation seized the city. But still, as the
consuls had been hitherto successful when it was most important, they were
the less affected by these disasters. Caius Lastorius and Marcus Metilius
were sent as ambassadors to the consuls, with directions carefully to collect
the remains of the two armies, and use every endeavor to prevent their
surrendering themselves to the enemy, through fear or despair, (which was
the case after the battle of Cannae,) and to search for the deserters from
the army of volunteer slaves. Publius Cornelius was charged with the same
business; to him also the levy was entrusted. He caused an order to be
issued throughout the market and smaller towns, that search should be made
for the volunteer slaves, and that they should be brought back to their
standards. All these things were executed with the most vigilant care.
The consul, Appius Claudius, having placed Decius Junius in command at
the mouth of the Vulturnus, and Marcus Aurelius Cotta at Puteoli, with
directions to send off the corn immediately to the camp, as each of the
ships from Etruria and Sardinia arrived with it, returned himself to Capua,
and found his colleague Quintus Fulvius at Casilinum, conveying every requisite
thence, and making every preparation for the siege of Capua. Both of them
then joined in besieging the city, summoning Claudius Nero, the praetor,
from the Claudian camp at Suessula; who, leaving a small garrison there,
marched down to Capua with all the rest of his forces. Thus there were
three generals' tents erected round Capua; and three armies, applying themselves
to the work in different parts, proceeded to surround the city with a ditch
and rampart, erecting forts at moderate intervals. The Campanians attempting
to obstruct the work, a battle was fought in several places at once; the
consequence of which was, that at length the Campanians confined themselves
within their gates and walls. Before, however, these works were carried
quite round, ambassadors were sent to Hannibal to complain that Capua was
abandoned, and almost given up to the Romans, and to implore him, that
he would now, at least, bring them assistance, when they were not only
besieged, but surrounded by a rampart. A letter was sent to the consuls
from Publius Cornelius, the praetor, directing that before they completely
enclosed Capua with their works, they should grant permission to such of
the Campanians as chose to quit Capua, and take their property with them.
That those should retain their liberty, and all their possessions, who
quitted it before the ides of March, but that those who quitted it after
that day, as well as those who continued there, would be considered as
enemies. Proclamation was made to the Campanians to this effect, but it
was received with such scorn, that they spontaneously used insulting language
and menaces. Hannibal had marched his legions from Herdonea to Tarentum,
with the hope of getting possession of the citadel of that place, by force
or stratagem. But not succeeding there, he turned his course to Brundusium,
thinking that town would be betrayed to him, but, while fruitlessly spending
time there also, the Campanian ambassadors came to him with complaints
and entreaties. Hannibal answered them in a proud manner, that he had before
raised the siege of Capua, and that now the consuls would not sustain his
approach. The ambassadors, dismissed with these hopes, with difficulty
effected their return to Capua, which was by this time surrounded by a
double trench and rampart.
23. At the time when the circumvallation of Capua was carrying on with the greatest activity, the siege of Syracuse, which had been forwarded by intestine treachery, in addition to the efforts and bravery of the general and his army, was brought to a conclusion. For in the beginning of spring, Marcellus being in doubt whether he should direct the operations of the war against Himilco and Hippocrates at Agrigentum, or press the siege of Syracuse, though he saw that it was impossible to take the city by force, which, from its situation, both with respect to sea and land, was impregnable, nor by famine, as it was supported by an uninterrupted supply of provisions from Carthage, yet that he might leave no course untried, directed the Syracusan deserters (and there were in the Roman camp some men in this situation of the highest rank, who had been driven out of the city during the defection from the Romans, because they were averse to a change of measures) to sound the feelings of those who were of the same party in conferences, and to promise them, that if Syracuse was delivered up, they should have their liberty, and be governed by their own laws. There was no opportunity however, of having a conference; for as many were suspected of disaffection, the attention and observation of all were exerted, lest any thing of the kind should occur unknown to them. One of the exiles, who was a servant, having been allowed to enter the city in the character of a deserter, assembled a few persons, and opened a conversation upon the subject. After this, certain persons, covering themselves with nets in a fishing smack, were in this way conveyed round to the Roman camp, and conferred with the fugitives. The same was frequently repeated by different parties, one after another; and at last they amounted to eighty. But after every thing had been concerted for betraying the city, the plot was reported to Epicydes, by one Attalus, who felt hurt that he had not been entrusted with the secret; and they were all put to death with torture. This attempt having miscarried, another hope was immediately raised. One Damippus, a Lacedaemonian, who had been sent from Syracuse to king Philip, had been taken prisoner by the Roman fleet. Epicydes was particularly anxious to ransom this man above any other; nor was Marcellus disinclined to grant it; the Romans, even at this time, being desirous of gaining the friendship of the Aetolians, with whom the Lacedaemonians were in alliance. Some persons having been sent to treat respecting his ransom, the most central and convenient place to both parties for this purpose appeared to be at the Trogilian port, near the tower called Galeagra. As they went there several times, one of the Romans, having a near view of the wall, and having determined its height, as nearly as it could be done by conjecture, from counting the stones, and by forming an estimate, in his own mind, what was the height of each stone in the face of the work; and having come to the conclusion that it was considerably lower than he himself and all the rest had supposed it, and that it was capable of being scaled with ladders of moderate size, laid the matter before Marcellus. It appeared a thing not to be neglected; but as the spot could not be approached, being on this very account guarded with extraordinary care, a favorable opportunity of doing it was sought for. This a deserter suggested, who brought intelligence that the Syracusans were celebrating the festival of Diana; that it was to last three days, and that as there was a deficiency of other things during the siege, the feasts would be more profusely celebrated with wine, which was furnished by Epicydes to the people in general, and distributed through the tribes by persons of distinction. When Marcellus had received this intelligence, he communicated it to a few of the military tribunes; then having selected, through their means, such centurions and soldiers as had courage and energy enough for so important an enterprise, and having privately gotten together a number of scaling-ladders, he directed that a signal should be given to the rest of the troops to take their refreshment, and go to rest early, for they were to go upon an expedition that night. Then the time, as it was supposed, having arrived, when, after having feasted from the middle of the day, they would have had their fill of wine, and have begun to sleep, he ordered the soldiers of one company to proceed with the ladders, while about a thousand armed men were in silence marched to the spot in a slender column. The foremost having mounted the wall, without noise or confusion, the others followed in order; the boldness of the former inspiring even the irresolute with courage.
24. The thousand armed men had now taken a part of the city, when the rest,
applying a greater number of ladders, mounted the wall on a signal given
from the Hexapylos. To this place the former party had arrived in entire
solitude; as the greater part of them, having feasted in the towers, were
either asleep from the effects of wine, or else, half asleep, were still
drinking. A few of them, however, they surprised in their beds, and put
to the sword. They began then to break open a postern gate near the Hexapylos,
which required great force; and a signal was given from the wall by sounding
a trumpet, as had been agreed upon. After this, the attack was carried
on in every quarter, not secretly, but by open force; for they had now
reached Epipolae, a place protected by numerous guards, where the business
was to terrify the enemy, and not to escape their notice. In effect they
were terrified; for as soon as the sound of the trumpets was heard, and
the shouts of the men who had got possession of the walls and a part of
the city, the guards concluded that every part was taken, and some of them
fled along the wall, others leaped down from it, or were thrown down headlong
by a crowd of the terrified townsmen. A great part of the inhabitants,
however, were ignorant of this disastrous event, all of them being overpowered
with wine and sleep; and because, in a city of so wide extent, what was
perceived in one quarter was not readily made known through the whole city.
A little before day, Marcellus having entered the city with all his forces,
through the Hexapylos, which was forced open roused all the townsmen; who
ran to arms, in order, if possible, by their efforts, to afford succor
to the city, which was now almost taken. Epicydes advanced with a body
of troops at a rapid pace from the Insula, which the Syracusans themselves
call Nasos, not doubting but that he should be able to drive out what he
supposed a small party, which had got over the wall through the negligence
of the guards. He earnestly represented to the terrified inhabitants who
met him, that they were increasing the confusion, and that in their accounts
they made things greater and more important than they really were. But
when he perceived that every place around Epipolae was filled with armed
men, after just teasing the enemy with the discharge of a few missiles,
he marched back to the Achradina, not so much through fear of the number
and strength of the enemy, as that some intestine treachery might show
itself, taking advantage of the opportunity, and he might find the gates
of the Achradina and island closed upon him in the confusion. When Marcellus,
having entered the walls, beheld this city as it lay subjected to his view
from the high ground on which he stood, a city the most beautiful, perhaps,
of any at that time, he is said to have shed tears over it; partly from
the inward satisfaction he felt at having accomplished so important an
enterprise, and partly in consideration of its ancient renown. The fleets
of the Athenians sunk there, and two vast armies destroyed, with two generals
of the highest reputation, as well as the many wars waged with the Carthaginians
with so much peril arose before his mind; the many and powerful tyrants
and kings; but above all Hiero, a king who was not only fresh in his memory,
but who was distinguished for the signal services he had rendered the Roman
people, and more than all by the endowments which his own virtues and good
fortune had conferred. All these considerations presenting themselves at
once to his recollection, and reflecting, that in an instant every thing
before him would be in flames, and reduced to ashes; before he marched
his troops to the Achradina, he sent before him some Syracusans, who, as
was before observed, were among the Roman troops, to induce the enemy,
by a persuasive address, to surrender the city.
25. The gates and walls of the Achradina were occupied principally by
deserters, who had no hopes of pardon in case of capitulation. These
men would neither suffer those who were sent to approach the walls,
nor to address them. Marcellus, therefore, on the failure of this
attempt, gave orders to retire to the Euryalus, which is an eminence
at the extremity of the city, at the farthest point from the sea, and
commanding the road leading into the fields and the interior of the
island, and is conveniently situated for the introduction of supplies.
This fort was commanded by Philodemus, an Argive, who was placed in
this situation by Epicydes. Marcellus sent Sosis, one of the
regicides, to him. After a long conversation, being put off for the
purpose of frustrating him, he brought back word to Marcellus, that
Philodemus had taken time to deliberate. This man postponing his
answer day after day, till Hippocrates and Himilco should quit their
present position, and come up with their legions; not doubting but
that if he should receive them into the fort, the Roman army, shut up
as it was within the walls, might be annihilated, Marcellus, who saw
that the Euryalus would neither be delivered up to him, nor could be
taken by force, pitched his camp between Neapolis and Tycha, which are
names of divisions of the city, and are in themselves like cities;
fearful lest if he entered populous parts of the city, he should not
be able to restrain his soldiers, greedy of plunder, from running up
and down after it. When three ambassadors came to him from Tycha and
Neapolis with fillets and other badges of supplicants, imploring him
to abstain from fire and slaughter, Marcellus, having held a council
respecting these entreaties, for so they were, rather than demands,
ordered his soldiers, according to the unanimous opinion of the
council, not to offer violence to any free person, but told them that
every thing else might be their booty. The walls of the houses forming
a protection for his camp, he posted guards and parties of troops at
the gates, which were exposed, as they faced the streets, lest any
attack should be made upon his camp while the soldiers were dispersed
in pursuit of plunder. After these arrangements, on a signal given,
the soldiers dispersed for that purpose; and though they broke open
doors and every place resounded in consequence of the alarm and
confusion created, they nevertheless refrained from blood. They did
not desist from plunder till they had gutted the houses of all the
property which had been accumulated during a long period of
prosperity. Meanwhile, Philodemus also, who despaired of obtaining
assistance, having received a pledge that he might return to Epicydes
in safety, withdrew the garrison, and delivered up the fortress to the
Romans. While the attention of all was engaged by the tumult
occasioned in that part of the city which was captured, Bomilcar,
taking advantage of the night, when, from the violence of the weather
the Roman fleet was unable to ride at anchor in the deep, set out from
the bay of Syracuse, with thirty-five ships, and sailed away into the
main without interruption; leaving fifty-five ships for Epicydes and
the Syracusans; and having informed the Carthaginians in what a
critical situation Syracuse was placed, returned, after a few days,
with a hundred ships; having, as report says, received many presents
from Epicydes out of the treasure of Hiero.
26. Marcellus, by gaining possession of the Euryalus, and placing a garrison
in it, was freed from one cause of anxiety; which was, lest any hostile
force received into that fortress on his rear might annoy his troops, shut
up and confined as they were within the walls. He next invested the Achradina,
erecting three camps in convenient situations, with the hope of reducing
those enclosed within it to the want of every necessary. The outposts of
both sides had remained inactive for several days, when the arrival of
Hippocrates and Himilco suddenly caused the Romans to be attacked aggressively
on all sides; for Hippocrates, having fortified a camp at the great harbor,
and given a signal to those who occupied the Achradina, attacked the old
camp of the Romans, in which Crispinus had the command; and Epicydes sallied
out against the outposts of Marcellus, the Carthaginian fleet coming up
to that part of the shore which lay between the city and the Roman camp,
so that no succor could be sent by Marcellus to Crispinus. The enemy, however,
produced more tumult than conflict; for Crispinus not only drove back Hippocrates
from his works, but pursued him as he fled with precipitation, while Marcellus
drove Epicydes into the city; and it was considered that enough was now
done even to prevent any danger arising in future from their sudden sallies.
They were visited too by a plague; a calamity extending to both sides,
and one which might well divert their attention from schemes of war. For
as the season of the year was autumn, and the situation naturally unwholesome,
though this was much more the case without than within the city, the intolerable
intensity of the heat had an effect upon the constitution of almost every
man in both the camps. At first they sickened and died from the unhealthiness
of the season and climate; but afterwards the disease was spread merely
by attending upon, and coming in contact with, those affected; so that
those who were seized with it either perished neglected and deserted, or
else drew with them those who sat by them and attended them, by infecting
them with the same violence of disease. Daily funerals and death were before
the eye; and lamentations were heard from all sides, day and night. At
last, their feelings had become so completely brutalized by being habituated
to these miseries, that they not only did not follow their dead with tears
and decent lamentations, but they did not even carry them out and bury
them; so that the bodies of the dead lay strewed about, exposed to the
view of those who were awaiting a similar fate; and thus the dead were
the means of destroying the sick, and the sick those who were in health,
both by fear and by the filthy state and the noisome stench of their bodies.
Some preferring to die by the sword, even rushed alone upon the outposts
of the enemy. The violence of the plague, however, was much greater in
the Carthaginian than the Roman army; for the latter, from having been
a long time before Syracuse, had become more habituated to the climate
and the water. Of the army of the enemy, the Sicilians, as soon as they
perceived that diseases had become very common from the unwholesomeness
of the situation, dispersed to their respective cities in the neighborhood;
but the Carthaginians, who had no place to retire to, perished, together
with their generals, Hippocrates and Himilco, to a man. Marcellus, on seeing
the violence with which the disease was raging, had removed his troops
into the city, where their debilitated frames were recruited in houses
and shade. Many however, of the Roman army were cut off by this pestilence.
27. The land forces of the Carthaginians being thus destroyed, the Sicilians,
who had served under Hippocrates retired to two towns of no great size,
but well secured by natural situation and fortifications; one was three
miles, the other fifteen, from Syracuse. Here they collected a store of
provisions from their own states, and sent for reinforcements. Meanwhile,
Bomilcar, who had gone a second time to Carthage, by so stating the condition
of their allies as to inspire a hope that they might not only render them
effectual aid, but also that the Romans might in a manner be made prisoners
in the city which they had captured, induced the Carthaginians to send
with him as many ships of burden as possible, laden with every kind of
provisions, and to augment the number of his ships. Setting sail, therefore,
from Carthage with a hundred and thirty men of war and seven hundred transports,
he had tolerably fair winds for crossing over to Sicily, but was prevented
by the same wind from doubling Cape Pachynum. The news of the approach
of Bomilcar, and afterwards his unexpected delay, excited alternate fear
and joy in the Romans and Syracusans. Epicydes, apprehensive lest if the
same wind which now detained him should continue to blow from the east
for several days, the Carthaginian fleet would return to Africa, put the
Achradina in the hands of the generals of the mercenary troops, and sailed
to Bomilcar; whom he at length prevailed upon to try the issue of a naval
battle, though he found him with his fleet stationed in the direction of
Africa, and afraid of fighting, not so much because he was unequal in the
strength or the number of his ships, for he had more than the Romans, as
because the wind was more favourable to the Roman fleet than to his own.
Marcellus also seeing that an army of Sicilians was assembling from every
part of the island, and that the Carthaginian fleet was approaching with
a great want of supplies, though inferior in the number of his ships, resolved
to prevent Bomilcar from coming to Syracuse, lest, blocked up in the city
of his enemies, he should be pressed both by sea and land. The two hostile
fleets were stationed near the promontory of Pachynum, ready to engage
as soon as the sea should become calm enough to admit of their sailing
out into the deep. Accordingly, the east wind, which had blown violently
for several days, now subsiding, Bomilcar got under sail first, his van
seeming to make for the main sea, in order to double the promontory with
greater ease; but seeing the Roman ships bearing down upon him, terrified
by some unexpected occurrence, it is not known what, he sailed away into
the main sea; and sending messengers to Heraclea, to order the transports
to return to Africa, he passed along the coast of Sicily and made for Tarentum.
Epicydes, thus suddenly disappointed in such great expectations, to avoid
returning to endeavor to raise the siege of a city, a great part of which
was already in the hands of the enemy, sailed to Agrigentum, intending
to wait the issue of the contest, rather than take any new measures when
there.
28. Intelligence of these events having been carried into the camp of the
Sicilians, that Epicydes had departed from Syracuse, that the island was
deserted by the Carthaginians, and almost again delivered up to the Romans;
after sounding the inclinations of the besieged in conferences, they sent
ambassadors to Marcellus, to treat about terms of capitulation. They had
not much difficulty in coming to an agreement, that all the parts of the
island which had been under the dominion of their kings should be ceded
to the Romans; that the rest, with their liberty and their own laws, should
be preserved to the Sicilians. They then invited to a conference the persons
who had been entrusted with the management of affairs by Epicydes; to whom
they said, that they were sent from the army of the Sicilians, at once
to Marcellus and to them, that both those who were besieged and those who
were not might share the same fortune; and that neither of them might stipulate
any thing for themselves separately. They were then allowed to enter, in
order to converse with their relations and friends; when, laying before
them the terms which they had made with Marcellus, and holding out to them
a hope of safety, they induced them to join with them in an attack upon
the prefects of Epicydes, Polyclitus, Philistion, and Epicydes, surnamed
Sindon. Having put them to death, they summoned the multitude to an assembly;
and after complaining of the famine, at which they had been accustomed
to express their dissatisfaction to each other in secret, they said, that
"although they were pressed by so many calamities, they had no right
to accuse Fortune, because it was at their own option how long they should
continue to suffer them. That the motive which the Romans had in besieging
Syracuse was affection for the Syracusans, and not hatred; for when they
heard that the government was usurped by Hippocrates and Epicydes, the
creatures first of Hannibal and then of Hieronymus, they took arms and
began to besiege the city, in order to reduce not the city itself, but
its cruel tyrants. But now that Hippocrates is slain, Epicydes shut out
of Syracuse, his praefects put to death, and the Carthaginians driven from
the entire possession of Sicily by sea and land, what reason can the Romans
have left why they should not desire the preservation of Syracuse, in the
same manner as they would if Hiero were still lining, who cultivated the
friendship of Rome with unequalled fidelity? That, therefore, neither the
city nor its inhabitants were in any danger, except from themselves, if
they neglected an opportunity of restoring themselves to the favor of the
Romans; and that no so favourable a one would ever occur as that which
presented itself at the present instant, immediately upon its appearing
that they were delivered from their insolent tyrants."
29. This speech was received with the most unqualified approbation of all
present. It was resolved, however, that praetors should be elected before
the nomination of deputies; which being done, some of the praetors themselves
were sent as deputies to Marcellus, the chief of whom thus addressed him:
"Neither in the first instance did we Syracusans revolt from you,
but Hieronymus, whose impiety towards you was by no means so great as towards
us; nor afterwards was it any Syracusan who disturbed the peace established
by the death of the tyrant, but Hippocrates and Epicydes, creatures of
the tyrant; while we were overpowered, on the one hand by fear, and on
the other by treachery. Nor can any one say that there ever was a time
when we were in possession of our liberty, when we were not also at peace
with you. In the present instance, manifestly, as soon as ever we became
our own masters, by the death of those persons who held Syracuse in subjection,
we lost no time in coming to deliver up our arms, to surrender ourselves,
our city, and our walls, and to refuse no conditions which you shall impose
upon us. To you, Marcellus, the gods have given the glory of having captured
the most renowned and beautiful of the Grecian cities. Every memorable
exploit which we have at any time achieved by land or sea accrues to the
splendor of your triumph. Would you wish that it should be known only by
fame, how great a city has been captured by you, rather than that she should
stand as a monument even to posterity; so that to every one who visits
her by sea or land, she may point out at one time our trophies gained from
the Athenians and Carthaginians, at another time those which you have gained
from us; and that you should transmit Syracuse unimpaired to your family,
to be kept under the protection and patronage of the race of the Marcelli?
Let not the memory of Hieronymus have greater weight with you than that
of Hiero. The latter was your friend for a much longer period than the
former was your enemy. From the latter you have realized even benefits,
while the frenzy of Hieronymus only brought ruin upon himself." At
the hands of the Romans all things were obtainable and secure. There was
a greater disposition to war, and more danger to be apprehended among themselves;
for the deserters, thinking that they were delivered up to the Romans,
induced the mercenary auxiliaries to entertain the same apprehension; and
hastily seizing their arms, they first put the praetors to death, and then
ran through the city to massacre the Syracusans. In their rage they slew
all whom chance threw in their way, and plundered every thing which presented
itself; and then, lest they should have no leaders, they elected six praetors,
so that three might have the command in the Achradina, and three in the
island. At length, the tumult having subsided, and the mercenary troops
having ascertained, by inquiry, what had been negotiated with the Romans,
it began to appear, as was really the case, that their cause and that of
the deserters were different.
30. The ambassadors returned from Marcellus very opportunely. They informed them that they had been influenced by groundless suspicions, and that the Romans saw no reason why they should inflict punishment upon them. Of the three praefects of the Achradina one was a Spaniard, named Mericus. To him one of the Spanish auxiliaries was designedly sent, among those who accompanied the ambassadors. Having obtained an interview with Mericus in the absence of witnesses, he first explained to him the state in which he had left Spain, from which he had lately returned: "That there every thing was in subjection to the Roman arms; that it was in his power, by doing the Romans a service, to become the first man among his countrymen, whether he might be inclined to serve with the Romans, or to return to his country. On the other hand, if he persisted in preferring to hold out against the siege, what hope could he have, shut up as he was by sea and land?" Mericus was moved by these suggestions, and when it was resolved upon to send ambassadors to Marcellus, he sent his brother among them; who, being brought into the presence of Marcellus, apart from the rest, by means of the same Spaniard, after receiving an assurance of protection, arranged the method of carrying their object into effect, and then returned to the Achradina. Mericus then, in order to prevent any one from conceiving a suspicion of treachery, declared, that he did not like that deputies should be passing to and fro; he thought that they should neither admit nor send any; and in order that the guards might be kept more strictly, that such parts as were most exposed should be distributed among the prefects, each being made responsible for the safety of his own quarter. All approved of the distribution of the posts. The district which fell to the lot of Mericus himself extended from the fountain Arethusa to the mouth of the large harbor, of which he caused the Romans to be informed. Accordingly, Marcellus ordered a transport with armed men to be towed by a quadrireme to the Achradina during the night, and the soldiers to be landed in the vicinity of that gate which is near the fountain of Arethusa. This order having been executed at the fourth watch, and Mericus having received the soldiers when landed at the gate, according to the agreement, Marcellus assaulted the walls of the Achradina with all his forces at break of day, so that he not only engaged the attention of those who occupied the Achradina, but also bands of armed men, quitting their own posts ran to the spot from the island, in order to repel the furious attack of the Romans. During this confusion, some light ships which had been prepared beforehand, and had sailed round, landed a body of armed men at the island; these suddenly attacking the half-manned stations and the opened door of the gate at which the troops had a little before run out, got possession of the island without much opposition, abandoned as it was, in consequence of the flight and trepidation of its guards. Nor were there any who rendered less service, or showed less firmness in maintaining their posts, than the deserters; for as they did not repose much confidence even in those of their own party, they fled in the middle of the contest. When Marcellus learnt that the island was taken, one quarter of the Achradina in the hands of his troops, and that Mericus, with the men under his command, had joined them, he sounded a retreat, lest the royal treasure, the fame of which was greater than the reality, should be plundered.
31. The impetuosity of the soldiers having been checked, time and opportunity to escape were given to the deserters in the Achradina; and the Syracusans, at length delivered from their fears, threw open the gates of the Achradina, and sent deputies to Marcellus, requesting only safety for themselves and children. Having summoned a council, to which the Syracusans were invited who were among the Roman troops, having been driven from home during the disturbances, Marcellus replied, "that the services rendered by Hiero through a period of fifty years, were not more in number than the injuries committed against the Roman people in these few years by those who had had possession of Syracuse; but that most of these injuries had justly recoiled upon their authors, and that they had inflicted much more severe punishment upon themselves for the violation of treaties, than the Roman people desired. That he was indeed now besieging Syracuse for the third year, but not that the Romans might hold that state in a condition of slavery, but that the ringleaders of the deserters might not keep it in a state of thralldom and oppression. What the Syracusans could do was exemplified, either by the conduct of those Syracusans who were among the Roman troops, or that of the Spanish general, Mericus, who had delivered up the post which he was appointed to command, or, lastly, by the late but bold measure adopted by the Syracusans themselves. That the greatest possible recompense for all the evils and dangers which he had for so long a time undergone, both by sea and land, around the walls of Syracuse, was the reflection, that he had been able to take that city." The quaestor was then sent with a guard to the island, to receive and protect the royal treasure. The city was given up to be plundered by the soldiery, after guards had been placed at each of the houses of those who had been with the Roman troops. While many acts exhibited horrid examples of rage and rapacity, it is recorded that Archimedes, while intent on some figures which he had described in the dust, although the confusion was as great as could possibly exist in a captured city, in which soldiers were running up and down in search of plunder, was put to death by a soldier, who did not know who he was; that Marcellus was grieved at this event, and that pains were taken about his funeral, while his relations also for whom diligent inquiry was made, derived honour and protection from his name and memory. Such, for the most part, was the manner in which Syracuse was captured. The quantity of booty was so great, that had Carthage itself, which was carrying on a contest on equal terms, been captured, it would scarcely have afforded so much. A few days before the taking of Syracuse, Titus Otacilius passed over from Lilybaeum to Utica with eighty quinqueremes, and entering the harbor before it was light, took some transports laden with corn; then landing, he laid waste a considerable portion of the country around Utica, and brought back to his ships booty of every description. He returned to Lilybaeum, the third day after he set out, with a hundred and thirty transports laden with corn and booty. The corn he sent immediately to Syracuse; and had it not been for the very seasonable arrival of this supply, a destructive famine threatened alike the victors and the vanquished.
32. Nothing very memorable had been done in Spain for about two years,
the operations of the war consisting more in laying plans than in
fighting; but during the same summer in which the events above
recorded took place, the Roman generals, quitting their winter
quarters, united their forces; then a council was summoned; and the
opinions of all accorded, that since their only object hitherto had
been to prevent Hasdrubal from pursuing his march into Italy, it was
now time that an effort should be made to bring the war in Spain to a
termination; and they thought that the twenty thousand Celtiberians,
who had been induced to take arms that winter, formed a sufficient
accession to their strength. There were three armies of the enemy.
Hasdrubal, son of Gisgo, and Mago, who had united their forces, were
about a five days' journey from the Romans. Hasdrubal, son of
Hamilcar, who was the old commander in Spain, was nearer to them: he
was with his army near the city Anitorgis. The Roman generals were
desirous that he should be overpowered first; and they hoped that they
had enough and more than enough strength for the purpose. Their only
source of anxiety was, lest the other Hasdrubal and Mago, terrified at
his discomfiture, should protract the war by withdrawing into
trackless forests and mountains. Thinking it, therefore, the wisest
course to divide their forces and embrace the whole Spanish war, they
arranged it so that Publius Cornelius should lead two-thirds of the
Roman and allied troops against Mago and Hasdrubal, and that Cneius
Cornelius, with the remaining third of the original army, and with the
Celtiberians added to them, should carry on the war with the Barcine
Hasdrubal. The two generals and their armies, setting out together,
preceded by the Celtiberians, pitched their camp near the city
Anitorgis, within sight of the enemy, the river only separating them.
Here Cneius Scipio, with the forces above mentioned, halted, but
Publius Scipio proceeded to the portion of the war assigned to him.
33. Hasdrubal perceiving that there were but few Roman troops in the camp,
and that their whole dependence was on the Celtiberian auxiliaries; and
having had experience of the perfidy of the barbarian nations in general,
and particularly of all those nations among which he had served for so
many years; as there was every facility of intercourse, for both camps
were full of Spaniards, by secret conferences with the chiefs of the Celtiberians,
he agreed with them, for a large consideration, to take their forces away.
Nor did they conceive it to be any great crime; for the object was not
that they should turn their arms against the Romans, while the reward which
they were to receive to abstain from the war was large enough to remunerate
them for their service in it. At the same time the mere rest from labor,
the return to their homes, with the pleasure of seeing their friends and
property, were pleasing to the generality. Accordingly, the multitude were
prevailed upon as easily as their leaders. They had, moreover, nothing
to fear from the Romans, in consequence of the smallness of their numbers,
should they endeavor to detain them by force. It will indeed be the duty
of all Roman generals to take care, and the instances here recorded should
be considered as strong arguments, never to place so much confidence in
foreign auxiliaries, as not to retain in their camps a preponderance of
their own strength and of that force which is properly their own. The Celtiberians,
suddenly taking up their standards, marched away, replying only to the
Romans, who asked the cause of their departure and entreated them to stay,
that they were called away by a war at home. Scipio seeing that his allies
could be detained neither by prayers nor force, and that he was neither
a match for his enemy without them, nor could again effect a junction with
his brother, no other course which promised safety offering itself, resolved
to retire as far as possible, carefully using every caution not to encounter
the enemy any where on level ground. On his departing, the enemy, crossing
the river, pursued him almost in his footsteps.
34. During the same period an equal terror and a greater danger
pressed upon Publius Scipio. Masinissa was a young man at that time an
ally of the Carthaginians, whom afterwards the friendship of the
Romans rendered illustrious and powerful. He not only opposed himself
with his Numidian cavalry to Scipio on his approach, but afterwards
harassed him incessantly day and night, so as both to cut off his
stragglers, who had gone out to a distance from the camp in search of
wood and forage, and riding up to the very gates of his camp, and
charging into the midst of his advanced guards, to fill every quarter
with the utmost confusion. By night also alarm was frequently
occasioned in the gates and rampart by his sudden attacks. Nor was
there any time or place at which the Romans were exempt from fear and
anxiety; and driven within their rampart, and deprived of every
necessary, they suffered in a manner a regular siege; and it appeared
that it would have been still straiter, if Indibilis, who it was
reported was approaching with seven thousand five hundred Suessetani,
should form a junction with the Carthaginians. Scipio, though a wary
and provident general, overpowered by difficulties, adopted the rash
measure of going to meet Indibilis by night, with the intention of
fighting him wherever he should meet him. Leaving, therefore, a small
force in his camp, under the command of Titus Fonteius,
lieutenant-general, he set out at midnight, and meeting with the
enemy, came to battle with him. The troops fought in the order of
march rather than of battle. The Romans, however, had the advantage,
though in an irregular fight; but the Numidian cavalry, whose
observation the general supposed that he had escaped, suddenly
spreading themselves round his flanks, occasioned great terror. After
a new contest had been entered into with the Numidians, a third enemy
came up in addition to the rest, the Carthaginian generals having come
up with their rear when they were now engaged in fighting. Thus the
Romans were surrounded on every side by enemies; nor could they make
up their minds which they should attack first, or in what part,
forming themselves into a close body, they should force their way
through. The general, while fighting and encouraging his men, exposing
himself wherever the strife was the hottest, was run through the right
side with a lance; and when the party of the enemy, which, formed into
a wedge, had charged the troops collected round the general, perceived
Scipio falling lifeless from his horse, elated with joy, they ran
shouting through the whole line with the news that the Roman general
had fallen. These words spreading in every direction, caused the enemy
to be considered as victors, and the Romans as vanquished. On the loss
of the general the troops immediately began to fly from the field; but
though it was not difficult to force their way through the Numidians
and the other light-armed auxiliaries, yet it was scarcely possible
for them to escape so large a body of cavalry, and infantry equal to
horses in speed. Almost more were slain in the flight than in the
battle; nor would a man have survived, had not night put a stop to the
carnage, the day by this time rapidly drawing to a close.
35. After this, the Carthaginian generals, who were not slow in
following up their victory, immediately after the battle, scarcely
giving their soldiers necessary rest, hurry their army to Hasdrubal,
son of Hamilcar; confidently hoping, that after uniting their forces
with his, the war might be brought to a conclusion. On their arrival,
the warmest congratulations passed between the troops and their
generals, who were delighted with their recent victory; for they had
not only destroyed one distinguished general and all his men, but
looked forward to another victory of equal magnitude as a matter of
certainty. The intelligence of this great disaster had not yet reached
the Romans; but there prevailed a kind of melancholy silence and mute
foreboding, such as is usually found in minds which have a
presentiment of impending calamity. The general himself, besides
feeling that he was deserted by his allies, and that the forces of the
enemy were so much augmented, was disposed from conjecture and
reasoning rather to a suspicion that some defeat had been sustained,
than to any favourable hopes. "For how could Hasdrubal and Mago bring
up their troops without opposition, unless they had terminated their
part of the war? How was it that his brother had not opposed his
progress or followed on his rear? in order that if he could not
prevent the armies and generals of the enemy from forming a junction,
he might himself join his forces with his brother's." Disturbed with
these cares, he believed that the only safe policy for the present was
to retire as far as possible; and, accordingly, he marched a
considerable distance thence in one night, the enemy not being aware
of it, and on that account continuing quiet. At dawn, perceiving that
their enemy had decamped, they sent the Numidians in advance, and
began to pursue them as rapidly as possible. The Numidians overtook
them before night, and charged; sometimes their rear, at other times
their flanks. They then began to halt and defend themselves as well as
they could; but Scipio exhorted them at once to fight so as not to
expose themselves, and march at the same time, lest the infantry
should overtake them.
36. But having made but little progress for a long time, in consequence
of his making his troops sometimes advance and at others halt, and night
now drawing on, Scipio recalled his troops from the battle, and collecting
them, withdrew to a certain eminence, not very safe, indeed, particularly
for dispirited troops, but higher than any of the surrounding places. There,
at first, his infantry, drawn up around his baggage and cavalry, which
were placed in their center, had no difficulty in repelling the attacks
of the charging Numidians; but afterwards, when three generals with three
regular armies marched up in one entire body, and it was evident that his
men would not be able to do much by arms in defending the position without
fortifications, the general began to look about, and consider whether he
could by any means throw a rampart around; but the hill was so bare, and
the soil so rough, that neither could a bush be found for cutting a palisade,
nor earth for making a mound, nor the requisites for making a trench or
any other work; nor was the place naturally steep or abrupt enough to render
the approach and ascent difficult to the enemy, as it rose on every side
with a gentle acclivity. However, that they might raise up against them
some semblance of a rampart, they placed around them the panniers tied
to the burdens, building them up as it were to the usual height, and when
there was a deficiency of panniers for raising it, they presented against
the enemy a heap of baggage of every kind. The Carthaginian armies coming
up, very easily marched up the eminence, but were stopped by the novel
appearance of the fortification, as by something miraculous, when their
leaders called out from all sides, asking "what they stopped at? and
why they did not tear down and demolish that mockery, which was scarcely
strong enough to impede the progress of women and children; that the enemy,
who were skulking behind their baggage, were, in fact, captured and in
their hands." Such were the contemptuous reproofs of their leaders.
But it was not an easy task either to leap over or remove the burdens raised
up against them, or to cut through the panniers, closely packed together
and covered completely with baggage. When the removal of the burdens had
opened a way to the troops, who were detained by them for a long time,
and the same had been done in several quarters, the camp was now captured
on all sides; the Romans were cut to pieces on all hands, the few by the
many, the dispirited by the victorious. A great number of the men, however,
having fled for refuge into the neighboring woods, effected their escape
to the camp of Publius Scipio, which Titus Fonteius commanded. Some authors
relate that Cneius Scipio was slain on the eminence on the first assault
of the enemy; others that he escaped with a few attendants to a castle
near the camp; this, they say, was surrounded with fire, by which means
the doors which they could not force were consumed; that it was thus taken,
and all within, together with the general himself, put to death. Cneius
Scipio was slain in the eighth year after his arrival in Spain, and on
the twenty-ninth day after the death of his brother. At Rome the grief
occasioned by their death was not more intense than that which was felt
throughout Spain. The sorrow of the citizens, however, was partly distracted
by the loss of the armies, the alienation of the province, and the public
disaster, while in Spain they mourned and regretted the generals themselves,
Cneius, however, the more, because he had been longer in command of them,
had first engaged their affections, and first exhibited a specimen of Roman
justice and forbearance.
37. When it seemed that the Roman armies were annihilated, and Spain lost, one man recovered this desperate state of affairs. There was in the army one Lucius Marcius, the son of Septimus, a Roman knight, an enterprising youth, and possessing a mind and genius far superior to the condition in which he had been born. To his high talents had been added the discipline of Cneius Scipio, under which he had been thoroughly instructed during a course of so many years in all the qualifications of a soldier. This man, having collected the troops which had been dispersed in the flight, and drafted some from the garrisons, had formed an army not to be despised, and united it with Titus Tonteius, the lieutenant-general of Publius Scipio. But so transcendent was the Roman knight in authority and honour among the troops, that when, after fortifying a camp on this side of the Iberus, it had been resolved that a general of the two armies should be elected in an assembly of the soldiers, relieving each other in the guard of the rampart, and in keeping the outposts until every one had given his vote, they unanimously conferred the supreme command upon Lucius Marcius. All the intervening time, which was but short, was occupied in fortifying their camp and collecting provisions, and the soldiers executed every order not only with vigor, but with feelings by no means depressed. But when intelligence was brought them that Hasdrubal, son of Gisgo, who was coming to put the finishing stroke to the war, had crossed the Iberus and was drawing near, and when they saw the signal for battle displayed by a new commander, then calling to mind whom they had had for their leaders a little while ago, relying on what leaders and what forces they used to go out to fight, they all suddenly burst into tears and beat their heads, some raising their hands to heaven and arraigning the gods, others prostrating themselves upon the ground and invoking by name each his own former commander. Nor could their lamentations be restrained, though the centurions endeavored to animate their companies, and though Marcius himself soothed and remonstrated with them, asking them "why they had given themselves up to womanish and unavailing lamentations rather than summon up all their courage to protect themselves and the commonwealth together, and not suffer their generals to lie unavenged?" But suddenly a shout and the sound of trumpets were heard; for by this time the enemy were near the rampart. Upon this, their grief being suddenly converted into rage, they hastily ran to arms, and, as it were, burning with fury, rushed to the gates and charged the enemy, while advancing in a careless and disorderly manner. This unexpected event instantly struck terror into the Carthaginians, who wondering whence so many enemies could have sprung up so suddenly, as the army had been almost annihilated; what could have inspired men who had been vanquished and routed with such boldness and confidence in themselves; what general could have arisen now that the two Scipios were slain; who could command the camp, and who had given the signal for battle; in consequence of these so many and so unexpected circumstances, at first, being in a state of complete uncertainty and amazement, they gave ground; but afterwards, discomfited by the violence of the charge, they turned their backs; and either there would have been a dreadful slaughter of the flying enemy, or a rash and dangerous effort on the part of the pursuers, had not Marcius promptly given the signal for retreat, and by throwing himself in the way of the front rank, and even holding some back with his own hands, repressed the infuriated troops. He then led them back to the camp, still eager for blood and slaughter. When the Carthaginians, who were at first compelled to fly with precipitation from the rampart of their enemy, saw that no one pursued them, concluding that they had stopped from fear, now on the other hand went away to their camp at an easy pace, with feelings of contempt for the enemy. There was a corresponding want of care in guarding their camp; for though the enemy were near, yet it seemed that they were but the remains of the two armies which had been cut to pieces a few days before. As in consequence of this all things were neglected in the enemy's camp, Marcius having ascertained this, addressed his mind to a measure which on the first view of it might appear rather rash than bold: it was, aggressively to assault the enemy's camp, concluding that the camp of Hasdrubal, while alone, might be carried with less difficulty than his own could be defended, if the three armies and as many generals should again unite; taking into consideration also that either if he succeeded he would retrieve their prostrate fortune, or if repulsed, still, by making the attack himself, he would rescue himself from contempt.
38. Lest, however, the suddenness of the affair, and the fear of night,
should frustrate a measure which was in itself ill adapted to his condition,
he thought it right that his soldiers should be addressed and exhorted;
and having called an assembly, he discoursed as follows: "Soldiers,
either my veneration for our late commanders, both living and dead, or
our present situation, may impress on every one the belief that this command,
as it is highly honorable to me, conferred by your suffrages, so is it
in its nature a heavy and anxious charge. For at a time when I should be
scarcely so far master of myself as to be able to find any solace for my
afflicted mind, did not fear deaden the sense of sorrow, I am compelled
to take upon myself alone the task of consulting for the good of you all;
a task of the greatest difficulty when under the influence of grief. And
not even at that critical moment, when I ought to be considering in what
manner I may be enabled to keep together for my country these remains of
two armies, can I divert my mind from the affliction which incessantly
preys upon me. For bitter recollection is ever present, and the Scipios
ever disturb me with anxious cares by day and dreams by night, frequently
rousing me from my sleep, and imploring me not to suffer themselves nor
their soldiers, your companions in war, who had been victorious in this
country for eight years, nor the commonwealth to remain unrevenged; enjoining
me also to follow their discipline and their plans; and desiring that as
there was no one more obedient to their commands while they were alive
than I, so after their death I would consider that conduct as best, which
I might have the strongest reason for believing they would have adopted
in each case. I could wish also that you, my soldiers, should not show
your respect for them by lamentations and tears, as if they were dead;
(for they still live and flourish in the fame of their achievements;) but
that whenever the memory of those men shall occur to you, you would go
into battle as though you saw them encouraging you and giving you the signal.
Nor certainly could anything else than their image presenting itself yesterday
to your eyes and minds, have enabled you to fight that memorable battle,
in which you proved to the enemy that the Roman name had not become extinct
with the Scipios; and that the energy and valor of that people, which had
not been overwhelmed by the disaster at Cannae, would, doubtlessly, emerge
from the severest storms of fortune. Now since you have dared so much of
your own accord, I have a mind to try how much you will dare when authorized
by your general: for yesterday, when I gave the signal for retreat while
you were pursuing the routed enemy with precipitation, I did not wish to
break your spirit, but to reserve it for greater glory and more advantageous
opportunities; that you might afterwards, when prepared and armed, seize
an occasion of attacking your enemy while off their guard, unarmed, and
even buried in sleep. Nor do I entertain the hope of gaining an opportunity
of this kind rashly, but from the actual state of things. Doubtless, if
any one should ask even himself, by what means, though few in number and
disheartened by defeat, you defended your camp against troops superior
in number and victorious, you would give no other answer than that, as
this was the very thing you were afraid of, you had kept every place secured
by works and yourselves ready and equipped. And so it generally happens:
men are least secure against that which fortune causes not to be feared;
because you leave unguarded and exposed what you think is not necessary
to be cared about. There is nothing whatever which the enemy fear less
at the present time, than lest we, who were a little while ago besieged
and assaulted, should aggressively assault their camp ourselves. Let us
dare, then, to do that which it is incredible we should have the courage
to attempt; it will be most easy from the very fact of its appearing most
difficult. At the third watch of the night I will lead you thither in silence.
I have ascertained by means of scouts that they have no regular succession
of watches, no proper outposts. Our shout at their gates, when heard, and
the first assault, will carry their camp. Then let that carnage be made
among men, torpid with sleep, terrified at the unexpected tumult, and overpowered
while lying defenseless in their beds, from which you were so grieved to
be recalled yesterday. I know that the measure appears to you a daring
one; but in difficult and almost desperate circumstances the boldest counsels
are always the safest. For if when the critical moment has arrived, the
opportunity of seizing which is of a fleeting nature, you delay ever so
little, in vain do you seek for it afterwards when it has been neglected.
One army is near us; two more are not far off. We have some hopes if we
make an attack now; and you have already made trial of your own and their
strength. If we postpone the time and cease to be despised in consequence
of the fame of yesterday's eruption, there is danger lest all the generals
and all the forces should unite. Shall we be able then to withstand three
generals and three armies, whom Cneius Scipio with his army unimpaired
could not withstand? As our generals have perished by dividing their forces,
so the enemy may be overpowered while separated and divided. There is no
other mode of maintaining the war; let us, therefore, wait for nothing
but the opportunity of the ensuing night. Now depart, with the favor of
the gods, and refresh yourselves, that, unfatigued and vigorous, you may
burst into the enemy's camp with the same spirit with which you have defended
your own." This new enterprise, proposed by their new general, they
received with joy; and the more daring it was the more it pleased them.
The remainder of the day was spent in getting their arms in readiness and
recruiting their strength, the greater part of the night was given to rest,
and at the fourth watch they were in motion.
39. At a distance of six miles beyond their nearest camp lay other
forces of the Carthaginians. A deep valley, thickly planted with
trees, intervened. Near about the middle of this wood a Roman cohort
and some cavalry were placed in concealment with Punic craft. The
communication between the two armies being thus cut off, the rest of
the forces were marched in silence to the nearest body of the enemy;
and as there were no outposts before the gates, and no guards on the
rampart, they entered quite into the camp, as though it had been their
own, no one any where opposing them. The signals were then sounded and
a shout raised. Some put the enemy to the sword when half asleep;
others threw fire upon the huts, which were covered in with dry straw;
others blocked up the gates to intercept their escape. The enemy, who
were assailed at once with fire, shouting, and the sword, were in a
manner bereaved of their senses, and could neither hear each other,
nor take any measures for their security. Unarmed, they fell into the
midst of troops of armed men: some hastened to the gates; others, as
the passes were flocked up, leaped over the rampart, and as each
escaped they fled directly towards the other camp, where they were cut
off by the cohort and cavalry rushing forward from their concealment,
and were all slain to a man. And even had any escaped from that
carnage, the Romans, after taking the nearer camp, ran over to the
other with such rapidity, that no one could have arrived before them
with news of the disaster. In this camp, as they were far distant from
the enemy, and as some had gone off just before daylight for forage,
wood, and plunder, they found every thing in a still more neglected
and careless state. Their arms only were placed at the outposts, the
men being unarmed, and either sitting and reclining upon the ground,
or else walking up and down before the rampart and the gates. On these
men, thus at their ease and unguarded, the Romans, still hot from the
recent battle, and flushed with victory, commenced an attack; no
effectual opposition therefore could be made to them in the gates.
Within the gates, the troops having rushed together from every part of
the camp at the first shout and alarm, a furious conflict arose; which
would have continued for a long time, had not the bloody appearance of
the Roman shields discovered to the Carthaginians the defeat of the
other forces, and consequently struck them with dismay. This alarm
produced a general flight; and all except those who were overtaken
with the sword, rushing out precipitately wherever they could find a
passage, abandoned their camp. Thus, in a night and a day, two camps
of the enemy were carried, under the conduct of Lucius Marcius.
Claudius, who translated the annals of Acilius out of Greek into
Latin, states that as many as thirty-seven thousand men were slain,
one thousand eight hundred and thirty made prisoners, and a great
booty obtained; among which was a silver shield of a hundred and
thirty-eight pounds' weight, with an image upon it of the Barcine
Hasdrubal. Valerius Antias states, that the camp Of Mago only was
captured, and seven thousand of the enemy slain; and that in the other
battle, when the Romans sallied out and fought with Hasdrubal, ten
thousand were slain, and four thousand three hundred captured. Piso
writes, that five thousand were slain in an ambuscade when Mago
incautiously pursued our troops who retired. With all, the name of the
general, Marcius, is mentioned with great honour, and to his real
glory they add even miracles. They say, that while he was haranguing
his men a stream of fire poured from his head without his perceiving
it, to the great terror of the surrounding soldiers; and that a
shield, called the Marcian, with an image of Hasdrubal upon it,
remained in the temple up to the time of the burning of the Capitol, a
monument of his victory over the Carthaginians. After this, affairs
continued for a considerable time in a tranquil state in Spain, as
both parties, after giving and receiving such important defeats,
hesitated to run the hazard of a general battle.
40. During these transactions in Spain, Marcellus, after the capture of
Syracuse, having settled the other affairs in Sicily with so much honour
and integrity as not only to add to his own renown, but also to the majesty
of the Roman people, conveyed to Rome the ornaments of the city, together
with the statues and pictures with which Syracuse abounded. These were
certainly spoils taken from enemies, and acquired according to the laws
of war; but hence was the origin of the admiration of the products of Grecian
art, and to that freedom with which at present all places, both sacred
and profane, are despoiled; which at last recoiled upon the Roman gods,
and first upon that very temple which was so choicely adorned by Marcellus.
For foreigners were in the habit of visiting the temples dedicated by Marcellus
near the Capuan gate, on account of their splendid ornaments of this description,
of which a very small portion can be found. Embassies from almost all the
states of Sicily came to him. As their cases were different, so were also
the terms granted to them. Those who had either not revolted or had returned
to the alliance before the capture of Syracuse, were received and honored
as faithful allies. Those who had been induced to submit through fear after
the capture of Syracuse, as vanquished, received laws from the conqueror.
The Romans, however, had still remaining a war of no small magnitude at
Agrigentum, headed by Epicydes and Hanno, generals in the late war, and
a third new one sent by Hannibal in the room of Hippocrates, a Libyphoenician
by nation, and a native of Hippo, called by his countrymen Mutines; an
energetic man, and thoroughly instructed in all the arts of war under the
tuition of Hannibal. To this man the Numidian auxiliaries were assigned
by Epicydes and Hanno. With these he so thoroughly overran the lands of
his enemies, and visited his allies with such activity, in order to retain
them in their allegiance, and for the purpose of bringing them seasonable
aid as each required it, that in a short time he filled all Sicily with
his fame, nor was greater confidence placed in any one else by those who
favored the Carthaginian interest. Accordingly the Carthaginian and Syracusan
generals, who had been hitherto compelled to keep within the walls of Agrigentum,
not more at the advice of Mutines than from the confidence they reposed
in him, had the courage to go out from the walls, and pitched a camp near
the river Himera. When this was announced to Marcellus, he immediately
advanced and sat down at a distance of about four miles from the enemy,
with the intention of waiting to see what steps they took, and what they
meditated. But Mutines allowed no room or time for delay or deliberation,
but crossed the river, and, charging the outposts of his enemy, created
the greatest terror and confusion. The next day, in an engagement which
might almost be called regular, he compelled his enemy to retire within
their works. Being called away by a mutiny of the Numidians, which had
broken out in the camp, and in which about three hundred of them had retired
to Heraclea Minoa, he set out to appease them and bring them back; and
is said to have earnestly warned the generals not to engage with the enemy
during his absence. Both the generals were indignant at this conduct, but
particularly Hanno, who was before disturbed at his reputation. "Is
it to be borne," said he, "that a mongrel African should impose
restraints upon me, a Carthaginian general, commissioned by the senate
and people?" Epicydes, who wished to wait, was prevailed upon by him
to agree to their crossing the river and offering battle; for, said he,
if they should wait for Mutines, and the battle should terminate successfully,
Mutines would certainly have the credit of it.
41. But Marcellus, highly indignant that he who had repulsed Hannibal from
Nola, when rendered confident by his victory at Cannae, should succumb
to enemies whom he had vanquished by sea and land, ordered his soldiers
immediately to take arms and raise the standards. While marshalling his
army, ten Numidians rode up rapidly from the enemy's line with information
that their countrymen, first induced by the same causes which brought on
the mutiny, in which three hundred of their number retired to Heraclea,
and secondly, because they saw their commander, just on the approach of
a battle, sent out of the way by generals who wished to detract from his
glory, would not take any part in the battle. This deceitful nation made
good their promise in this instance. Accordingly the spirits of the Romans
were increased by the intelligence, which was speedily conveyed through
the lines, that the enemy were abandoned by the cavalry, which the Romans
principally feared; while at the same time the enemy were dispirited, not
only because they were deprived of the principal part of their strength,
but further, because they were afraid lest they should themselves be attacked
by their own cavalry. Accordingly, there was no great resistance made:
the first shout and onset determined the business. The Numidians who stood
quiet in the wings during the action, when they saw their party turning
their backs, accompanied them in their flight only for a short time; but
when they perceived that they were all making for Agrigentum with the most
violent haste, they turned off to the neighboring towns round about, through
fear of a siege. Many thousand men were slain and captured, together with
eight elephants. This was the last battle which Marcellus fought in Sicily,
after which he returned victorious to Syracuse. The year was now about
closing; the senate therefore decreed that Publius Cornelius, the praetor,
should send a letter to Capua to the consuls, with directions that while
Hannibal was at a distance, and nothing of any great importance was going
on at Capua, one of them, if they thought fit, should come to Rome to elect
new magistrates. On the receipt of the letter, the consuls arranged it
between themselves, that Claudius should hold the election, and Fulvius
remain at Capua. The consuls created by Claudius were Cneius Fulvius Centumalus,
and Publius Sulpicius Galba, the son of Servius, who had never exercised
any curule magistracy. After this Lucius Cornelius Lentulus, Marcus Cornelius
Cethegus, Caius Sulpicius, and Caius Calpurnius Piso, were created praetors.
Piso had the city jurisdiction; Sulpicius, Sicily; Cethegus, Apulia; Lentulus,
Sardinia. The consuls were continued in command for a year longer.
BOOK XXVI.
Hannibal encamps on the banks of the Amo, within three miles of Rome. Attended by two thousand horsemen, he advances close to the Colline gate to take a view of the walls and situation of the city. On two successive days the hostile armies are hindered from engaging by the severity of the weather. Capua taken by Quintus Fulvius and Appius Claudius, the chief nobles die, voluntarily, by poison. Quintus Fulvius having condemned the principal senators to death, at the moment they are actually tied to the stakes, receives dispatches from Rome, commanding him to spare their lives, which he postpones reading until the sentence is executed. Publius Scipio, offering himself for the service, is sent to command in Spain, takes New Carthage in one day. Successes in Sicily. Treaty of friendship with the Aetolians. War with Philip, king of Macedonia, and the Acarnanians.
1. The consuls, Cneius Fulvius Centumalus and Publius Sulpicius Galba,
having entered on their office on the ides of March, assembled the
senate in the Capitol, and took the opinion of the fathers on the
state of the republic, the manner of conducting the war, and on what
related to the provinces and the armies. Quintus Fulvius and Appius
Claudius, the consuls of the former year, were continued in command;
and the armies which they before had were assigned to them, it being
added that they should not withdraw from Capua, which they were
besieging, till they had taken it. The Romans were now solicitously
intent upon this object, not from resentment so much, which was never
juster against any city, as from the consideration that as this city,
so celebrated and powerful, had by its defection drawn away several
states, so when reduced it would bring back their minds to respect for
the former supreme government. Two praetors also of the former year,
Marcus Junius and Publius Sempronius, were each continued in command
of the two legions which they had under them, the former in Etruria,
the latter in Gaul. Marcus Marcellus also was continued in command,
that he might, as proconsul, finish the war in Sicily with the army he
had there. If he wanted recruits he was to take them from the legions
which Publius Cornelius, the propraetor, commanded in Sicily, provided
he did not choose any soldier who was of the number of those whom the
senate had refused to allow to be discharged, or to return home till
the war was put an end to. To Caius Sulpicius, to whose lot Sicily had
fallen, the two legions which Publius Cornelius had commanded were
assigned, to be recruited from the army of Cneius Fulvius, which had
been shamefully beaten, and had experienced a dreadful loss the year
before in Apulia. To soldiers of this description the senate had
assigned the same period of service as to those who fought at Cannae;
and as an additional mark of ignominy upon both, they were not allowed
to winter in towns, or to build huts for wintering within the distance
of ten miles from any town. To Lucius Cornelius, in Sardinia, the two
legions which Quintus Mucius had commanded were assigned; if recruits
were wanted, the consuls were ordered to enlist them. To Titus
Otacilius and Marcus Valerius was allotted the protection of the
coasts of Sicily and Greece, with the legions and fleets which they
had commanded. The Greek coast had fifty ships with one legion; the
Sicilian, a hundred ships with two legions. Twenty-three legions were
employed by the Romans in carrying on the war this year by land and
sea.
2. In the beginning of the year, on a letter from Lucius Marcius being
laid before the senate, they considered his achievements as most glorious;
but the title of honour which he assumed (for though he was neither invested
with the command by the order of the people, nor by the direction of the
fathers, his letter ran in this form, "The propraetor to the senate")
gave offense to a great many. It was considered as an injurious precedent
for generals to be chosen by the armies, and for the solemn ceremony of
elections, held under auspices, to be transferred to camps and provinces,
and (far from the control of the laws and magistrates) to military thoughtlessness.
And though some gave it as their opinion, that the sense of the senate
should be taken on the matter, yet it was thought more advisable that the
discussion should be postponed till after the departure of the horsemen
who brought the letter from Marcius. It was resolved, that an answer should
be returned respecting the corn and clothing of the army, stating, that
the senate would direct its attention to both those matters; but that the
letter should not be addressed to Lucius Marcius, propraetor, lest he should
consider that as already determined which was the very point they reserved
for discussion. After the horsemen were dismissed, it was the first thing
the consuls brought before the senate; and the opinions of all to a man
coincided, that the plebeian tribunes should be instructed to consult the
commons with all possible speed, as to whom they might resolve to send
into Spain to take the command of that army which had been under the conduct
of Cneius Scipio. The plebeian tribunes were instructed accordingly, and
the question was published. But another contest had pre-engaged the minds
of the people: Caius Sempronius Blaesus, having brought Cneius Fulvius
to trial for the loss of the army in Apulia, harassed him with invectives
in the public assemblies: "Many generals," he reiterated, "had
by indiscretion and ignorance brought their armies into most perilous situations,
but none, save Cneius Fulvius, had corrupted his legions by every species
of excess before he betrayed them to the enemy; it might therefore with
truth be said, that they were lost before they saw the enemy, and that
they were defeated, not by Hannibal, but by their own general. No man,
when he gave his vote, took sufficient pains in ascertaining who it was
to whom he was entrusting an army. What a difference was there between
this man and Tiberius Sempronius! The latter having been entrusted with
an army of slaves, had in a short time brought it to pass, by discipline
and authority, that not one of them in the field of battle remembered his
condition and birth, but they became a protection to our allies and a terror
to our enemies. They had snatched, as it were, from the very jaws of Hannibal,
and restored to the Roman people, Cumae, Beneventum, and other towns. But
Cneius Fulvius had infected with the vices peculiar to slaves, an army
of Roman citizens, of honorable parentage and liberal education; and had
thus made them insolent and turbulent among their allies, inefficient and
dastardly among their enemies, unable to sustain, not only the charge,
but the shout of the Carthaginians. But, by Hercules, it was no wonder
that the troops did not stand their ground in the battle, when their general
was the first to fly; with him, the greater wonder was that any had fallen
at their posts, and that they were not all the companions of Cneius Fulvius
in his consternation and his flight. Caius Flaminius, Lucius Paullus, Lucius
Posthumius, Cneius and Publius Scipio, had preferred falling in the battle
to abandoning their armies when in the power of the enemy. But Cneius Fulvius
was almost the only man who returned to Rome to report the annihilation
of his army. It was a shameful crime that the army of Cannae should be
transported into Sicily, because they fled from the field of battle, and
not be allowed to return till the enemy has quitted Italy; that the same
decree should have been lately passed with respect to the legions of Cneius
Fulvius; while Cneius Fulvius himself has no punishment inflicted upon
him for running away, in a battle brought about by his own indiscretion;
that he himself should be permitted to pass his old age in stews and brothels,
where he passed his youth, while his troops, whose only crime was that
they resembled their general, should be sent away in a manner into banishment,
and suffer an ignominious service. So unequally," he said, "was
liberty shared at Rome by the rich and the poor, by the ennobled and the
common people."
3. The accused shifted the blame from himself to his soldiers; he said,
"that in consequence of their having in the most turbulent manner
demanded battle, they were led into the field, not on the day they desired,
for it was then evening, but on the following; that they were drawn up
at a suitable time and on favourable ground; but either the reputation
or the strength of the enemy was such, that they were unable to stand their
ground. When they all fled precipitately, he himself also was carried away
with the crowd, as had happened to Varro at the battle of Cannae, and to
many other generals. How could he, by his sole resistance, benefit the
republic, unless his death would remedy the public disasters? that he was
not defeated in consequence of a failure in his provisions; that he had
not, from want of caution, been drawn into a disadvantageous position;
that he had not been cut off by an ambuscade in consequence of not having
explored his route, but had been vanquished by open force, and by arms,
in a regular engagement. He had not in his power the minds of his own troops,
or those of the enemy. Courage and cowardice were the result of each man's
natural constitution." He was twice accused, and the penalty was laid
at a fine. On the third accusation, at which witnesses were produced, he
was not only overwhelmed with an infinity of disgraceful charges, but a
great many asserted on oath, that the flight and panic commenced with the
praetor, that the troops being deserted by him, and concluding that the
fears of their general were not unfounded, turned their backs; when so
strong a feeling of indignation was excited, that the assembly clamorously
rejoined that he ought to be tried capitally. This gave rise to a new controversy;
for when the tribune, who had twice prosecuted him as for a finable offense,
now, on the third occasion, declared that he prosecuted him capitally;
the tribunes of the commons being appealed to, said, "they would not
prevent their colleague from proceeding, as he was permitted according
to the custom of their ancestors, in the manner he himself preferred, whether
according to the laws or to custom, until he had obtained judgment against
a private individual, convicting him either of a capital or finable offense."
Upon this, Sempronius said, that he charged Cneius Fulvius with the crime
of treason; and requested Caius Calpurnius, the city praetor, to appoint
a day for the comitia. Another ground of hope was then tried by the accused,
viz. if his brother, Quintus Fulvius, could be present at his trial, who
was at that time flourishing in the fame of his past achievements and in
the near expectation of taking Capua. Fulvius wrote to the senate, requesting
the favor in terms calculated to excite compassion, in order to save the
life of his brother; but the fathers replied, that the interest of the
state would not admit of his leaving Capua. Cneius Fulvius, therefore,
before the day appointed for the comitia arrived, went into exile to Tarquinii,
and the commons resolved that it was a legal exile.
4. Meanwhile all the strength of the war was directed against Capua. It was, however, more strictly blockaded than besieged. The slaves and populace could neither endure the famine, nor send messengers to Hannibal through guards so closely stationed. A Numidian was at length found, who, on undertaking to make his way with it, was charged with a letter; and going out by night, through the midst of the Roman camp, in order to fulfill his promise, he inspired the Campanians with confidence to try the effect of a sally from every quarter, while they had any strength remaining. In the many encounters which followed, their cavalry were generally successful, but their infantry were beaten: however, it was by no means so joyful to conquer, as it was miserable to be worsted in any respect by a besieged and almost subdued enemy. A plan was at length adopted, by which their deficiency in strength might be compensated by stratagem. Young men were selected from all the legions, who, from the vigor and activity of their bodies, excelled in swiftness; these were supplied with bucklers shorter than those worn by horsemen, and seven javelins each, four feet in length, and pointed with steel in the same manner as the spears used by light-armed troops. The cavalry taking one of these each upon their horses, accustomed them to ride behind them, and to leap down nimbly when the signal was given. When, by daily practice, they appeared to be able to do this in an orderly manner, they advanced into the plain between the camp and the walls, against the cavalry of the Campanians, who stood there prepared for action. As soon as they came within a dart's cast, on a signal given, the light troops leaped down, when a line of infantry formed out of the body of horse suddenly rushed upon the cavalry of the enemy, and discharged their javelins one after another with great rapidity; which being thrown in great numbers upon men and horses indiscriminately, wounded a great many. The sudden and unsuspected nature of the attack, however, occasioned still greater terror; and the cavalry charging them, thus panic-struck, chased them with great slaughter as far as their gates. From that time the Roman cavalry had the superiority; and it was established that there should be velites in the legions. It is said that Quintus Navius was the person who advised the mixing of infantry with cavalry, and that he received honour from the general on that account.
5. While affairs were in this state at Capua, Hannibal was perplexed between two objects, the gaining possession of the citadel of Tarentum, and the retaining of Capua. His concern for Capua, however, prevailed, on which he saw that the attention of every body, allies and enemies, was fixed; and whose fate would be regarded as a proof of the consequences resulting from defection from the Romans. Leaving therefore, a great part of his baggage among the Bruttians, and all his heavier armed troops, he took with him a body of infantry and cavalry, the best he could select for marching expeditiously, and bent his course into Campania. Rapidly as he marched he was followed by thirty-three elephants. He took up his position in a retired valley behind Mount Tifata, which overhung Capua. Having at his coming taken possession of fort Galatia, the garrison of which he dislodged by force, he then directed his efforts against those who were besieging Capua. Having sent forward messengers to Capua stating the time at which he would attack the Roman camp, in order that they also, having gotten themselves in readiness for a sally, might at the same time pour forth from all their gates, he occasioned the greatest possible terror; for on one side he himself attacked them suddenly, and on the other side all the Campanians sallied forth, both foot and horse, joined by the Carthaginian garrison under the command of Bostar and Hanno. The Romans, lest in so perilous an affair they should leave any part unprotected, by running together to any one place, thus divided their forces: Appius Claudius was opposed to the Campanians; Fulvius to Hannibal; Caius Nero, the propraetor, with the cavalry of the sixth legion, placed himself in the road leading to Suessula; and Caius Fulvius Flaccus, the lieutenant-general, with the allied cavalry, on the side opposite the river Vulturnus. The battle commenced not only with the usual clamor and tumult, but in addition to the din of men, horses, and arms, a multitude of Campanians, unable to bear arms, being distributed along the walls, raised such a shout together with the clangor of brazen vessels, similar to that which is usually made in the dead of night when the moon is eclipsed, that it diverted the attention even of the combatants. Appius easily repulsed the Campanians from the rampart. On the other side Hannibal and the Carthaginians, forming a larger force, pressed hard on Fulvius. There the sixth legion gave way; being repulsed, a cohort of Spaniards with three elephants made their way up to the rampart. They had broken through the center of the Roman line, and were in a state of anxious and perilous suspense, whether to force their way into the camp, or be cut off from their own army. When Fulvius saw the disorder of the legion, and the danger the camp was in, he exhorted Quintus Navius, and the other principal centurions, to charge the cohort of the enemy which was fighting under the rampart; he said, "that the state of things was most critical; that either they must retire before them, in which case they would burst into the camp with less difficulty than they had experienced in breaking through a dense line of troops, or they must cut them to pieces under the rampart: nor would it require a great effort; for they were few, and cut off from their own troops, and if the line which appeared broken, now while the Romans were dispirited, should turn upon the enemy on both sides, they would become enclosed in the midst, and exposed to a twofold attack." Navius, on hearing these words of the general, snatched the standard of the second company of spearmen from the standard-bearer, and advanced with it against the enemy, threatening that he would throw it into the midst of them unless the soldiers promptly followed him and took part in the fight. He was of gigantic stature, and his arms set him off; the standard also, raised aloft, attracted the gaze both of his countrymen and the enemy. When, however, he had reached the standards of the Spaniards, javelins were poured upon him from all sides, and almost the whole line was turned against him; but neither the number of his enemies nor the force of the weapons could repel the onset of this hero.
6. Marcus Atilius, the lieutenant-general, also caused the standard of
the first company of principes of the same legion to be borne against a
cohort of the Spaniards. Lucius Portius Licinus and Titus Popilius, the
lieutenant-generals, who had the command of the camp, fought valiantly
in defense of the rampart, and slew the elephants while in the very act
of crossing it. The carcasses of these filling up the ditch, afforded a
passage for the enemy as effectually as if earth had been thrown in, or
a bridge erected over it; and a horrid carnage took place amid the carcasses
of the elephants which lay prostrate. On the other side of the camp, the
Campanians, with the Carthaginian garrison, had by this time been repulsed,
and the battle was carried on immediately under the gate of Capua leading
to Vulturnus. Nor did the armed men contribute so much in resisting the
Romans, who endeavored to force their way in, as the gate itself, which,
being furnished with ballistas and scorpions, kept the enemy at bay by
the missiles discharged from it. The ardor of the Romans was also clamped
by the general, Appius Claudius, receiving a wound; he was struck by a
javelin in the upper part of his breast, beneath the left shoulder, while
encouraging his men before the front line. A great number, however, of
the enemy were slain before the gate, and the rest were driven in disorder
into the city. When Hannibal saw the destruction of the cohort of Spaniards,
and that the camp of the enemy was defended with the utmost vigor, giving
up the assault, he began to withdraw his standards, making his infantry
face about, but throwing out his cavalry in the rear lest the enemy should
pursue them closely. The ardor of the legions to pursue the enemy was excessive,
but Flaccus ordered a retreat to be sounded, considering that enough had
been achieved to convince the Campanians, and Hannibal himself, how unable
he was to afford them protection. Some who have undertaken to give accounts
of this battle, record that eight thousand of the army of Hannibal, and
three thousand Campanians, were slain; that fifteen military standards
were taken from the Carthaginians, and eighteen from the Campanians. In
other authors I find the battle to have been by no means so important,
and that there was more of panic than fighting; that a party of Numidians
and Spaniards suddenly bursting into the Roman camp with some elephants,
the elephants, as they made their way through the midst of the camp, threw
down their tents with a great noise, and caused the beasts of burden to
break their halters and run away. That in addition to the confusion occasioned,
a stratagem was employed; Hannibal having sent in some persons acquainted
with the Latin language, for he had some such with him, who might command
the soldiers, in the name of the consuls, to escape every one as fast as
he could to the neighboring mountains, since the camp was lost; but that
the imposture was soon discovered, and frustrated with a great slaughter
of the enemy; that the elephants were driven out of the camp by fire. However
commenced, and however terminated, this was the last battle which was fought
before the surrender of Capua. Seppius Lesius was Medixtuticus, or chief
magistrate of Capua, that year, a man of obscure origin and slender fortune.
It is reported that his mother, when formerly expiating a prodigy which
had occurred in the family in behalf of this boy, who was an orphan, received
an answer from the aruspex, stating, that "the highest office would
come to him;" and that not recognizing, at Capua, any ground for such
a hope, exclaimed, "the state of the Campanians must be desperate
indeed, when the highest office shall come to my son." But even this
expression, in which the response was turned into ridicule, turned to be
true, for those persons whose birth allowed them to aspire to high offices,
refusing to accept them when the city was oppressed by sword and famine,
and when all hope was lost, Lesius, who complained that Capua was deserted
and betrayed by its nobles, accepted the office of chief magistrate, being
the last Campanian who held it.
7. But Hannibal, when he saw that the enemy could not be drawn into another
engagement, nor a passage be forced through their camp into Capua, resolved
to remove his camp from that place and leave the attempt unaccomplished,
fearful lest the new consuls might cut off his supplies of provision. While
anxiously deliberating on the point to which he should next direct his
course, an impulse suddenly entered his mind to make an attack on Rome,
the very source of the war. That the opportunity of accomplishing this
ever coveted object, which occurred after the battle of Cannae, had been
neglected, and was generally censured by others, he himself did not deny.
He thought that there was some hope that he might be able to get possession
of some part of the city, in consequence of the panic and confusion which
his unexpected approach would occasion, and that if Rome were in danger,
either both the Roman generals, or at least one of them, would immediately
leave Capua; and if they divided their forces, both generals being thus
rendered weaker, would afford a favourable opportunity either to himself
or the Campanians of gaining some advantage. One consideration only disquieted
him, and that was, lest on his departure the Campanians should immediately
surrender. By means of presents he induced a Numidian, who was ready to
attempt any thing, however daring, to take charge of a letter; and, entering
the Roman camp under the disguise of a deserter, to pass out privately
on the other side and go to Capua. As to the letter, it was full of encouragement.
It stated, that "his departure, which would be beneficial to them,
would have the effect of drawing off the Roman generals and armies from
the siege of Capua to the defense of Rome. That they must not allow their
spirits to sink; that by a few days' patience they would rid themselves
entirely of the siege." He then ordered the ships on the Vulturnus
to be seized, and rowed up to the fort which he had before erected for
his protection. And when he was informed that there were as many as were
necessary to convey his army across in one night, after providing a stock
of provisions for ten days, he led his legions down to the river by night,
and passed them over before daylight.
8. Fulvius Flaccus, who had discovered from deserters that this would happen,
before it took place, having written to Rome to the senate to apprise them
of it, men's minds were variously affected by it according to the disposition
of each. As might be expected in so alarming an emergency, the senate was
immediately assembled, when Publius Cornelius, surnamed Asina, was for
recalling all the generals and armies from every part of Italy to protect
the city, disregarding Capua and every other concern. Fabius Maximus thought
that it would be highly disgraceful to retire from Capua, and allow themselves
to be terrified and driven about at the nod and menaces of Hannibal. "Was
it probable that he, who, though victorious at Cannae, nevertheless dared
not approach the city, now, after having been repulsed from Capua, had
conceived hopes of making himself master of Rome? It was not to besiege
Rome, but to raise the siege of Capua that he was coming. Jupiter, the
witness of treaties violated by Hannibal, and the other deities, would
defend the city of Rome with that army which is now at the city."
To these opposite opinions, that of Publius Valerius Flaccus, which recommended
a middle course, was preferred. Regardful of both objects, he thought that
a letter should be written to the generals at Capua, informing them of
the force they had at the city for its protection, and stating, that as
to the number of forces which Hannibal was bringing with him, or how large
an army was necessary to carry on the siege of Capua, they themselves knew.
If one of the generals and a part of the army could be sent to Rome, and
at the same time Capua could be efficiently besieged by the remaining general
and army, that then Claudius and Fulvius should settle between themselves
which should continue the siege of Capua, and which should come to Rome
to protect their capital from being besieged. This decree of the senate
having been conveyed to Capua, Quintus Fulvius, the proconsul, who was
to go to Rome, as his colleague was ill from his wound, crossed the Vulturnus
with a body of troops, to the number of fifteen thousand infantry and a
thousand horse, selected from the three armies. Then having ascertained
that Hannibal intended to proceed along the Latin road, he sent persons
before him to the towns on and near the Appian way, Setia, Cora, and Lanuvium,
with directions that they should not only have provisions ready in their
towns, but should bring them down to the road from the fields which lay
out of the way, and that they should draw together into their towns troops
for their defense, in order that each state might be under its own protection.
9. On the day he crossed the Vulturnus, Hannibal pitched his camp at a
small distance from the river. The next day, passing by Cales, he
reached the Sidicinian territory, and having spent a day there in
devastating the country, he led his troops along the Latin way through
the territory of Suessa, Allifae, and Casinum. Under the walls of
Casinum he remained encamped for two days, ravaging the country all
around; thence passing by Interamna and Aquinum, he came into the
Fregellan territory, to the river Liris, where he found the bridge
broken down by the Fregellans in order to impede his progress. Fulvius
also was detained at the Vulturnus, in consequence of Hannibal's
having burnt the ships, and the difficulty he had in procuring rafts
to convey his troops across that river from the great scarcity of
materials. The army having been conveyed across by rafts, the
remainder of the march of Fulvius was uninterrupted, a liberal supply
of provisions having been prepared for him, not only in all the towns,
but also on the sides of the road; while his men, who were all
activity, exhorted each other to quicken their pace, remembering that
they were going to defend their country. A messenger from Fregella,
who had travelled a day and a night without intermission, arriving at
Rome, caused the greatest consternation; and the whole city was thrown
into a state of alarm by the running up and down of persons who made
vague additions to what they heard, and thus increased the confusion
which the original intelligence created. The lamentations of women
were not only heard from private houses, but the matrons from every
quarter, rushing into the public streets, ran up and down around the
shrines of the gods, sweeping the altars with their dishevelled hair,
throwing themselves upon their knees and stretching their uplifted
hands to heaven and the gods, imploring them to rescue the city of
Rome out of the hands of their enemies, and preserve the Roman mothers
and their children from harm. The senate sat in the forum near the
magistrates, in case they should wish to consult them. Some were
receiving orders and departing to their own department of duty; others
were offering themselves wherever there might be occasion for their
aid. Troops were posted in the citadel, in the Capitol, upon the walls
around the city, and also on the Alban mount, and the fort of Aesula.
During this confusion, intelligence was brought that Quintus Fulvius,
the proconsul, had set out from Capua with an army; when the senate
decreed that Quintus Fulvius should have equal authority with the
consuls, lest on entering the city his power should cease. Hannibal,
having most destructively ravaged the Fregellan territory, on account
of the bridge having been broken down, came into the territory of the
Lavici, passing through those of Frusino, Ferentinum, and Anagnia;
thence passing through Algidum he directed his course to Tusculum; but
not being received within the walls, he went down to the right below
Tusculum to Gabii; and marching his army down thence into the
territory of the Pupinian tribe, he pitched his camp eight miles from
the city. The nearer the enemy came, the greater was the number of
fugitives slain by the Numidians who preceded him, and the greater the
number of prisoners made of every rank and age.
10. During this confusion, Fulvius Flaccus entered the city with his troops
through the Capuan gate, passed through the midst of the city, and through
Carinae, to Esquiliae; and going out thence, pitched his camp between the
Esquiline and Colline gates. The plebeian aediles brought a supply of provisions
there. The consuls and the senate came to the camp, and a consultation
was held on the state of the republic. It was resolved that the consuls
should encamp in the neighborhood of the Colline and Esquiline gates; that
Caius Calpurnius, the city praetor, should have the command of the Capitol
and the citadel; and that a full senate should be continually assembled
in the forum, in case it should be necessary to consult them amidst such
sudden emergencies. Meanwhile, Hannibal advanced his camp to the Anio,
three miles from the city, and fixing his position there, he advanced with
two thousand horse from the Colline gate as far as the temple of Hercules,
and riding up, took as near a view as he could of the walls and site of
the city. Flaccus, indignant that he should do this so freely, and so much
at his ease, sent out a party of cavalry, with orders to displace and drive
back to their camp the cavalry of the enemy. After the fight had begun,
the consuls ordered the Numidian deserters who were on the Aventine, to
the number of twelve hundred, to march through the midst of the city to
the Esquiliae, judging that no troops were better calculated to fight among
the hollows, the garden walls, and tombs, or in the enclosed roads which
were on all sides. But some persons, seeing them from the citadel and Capitol
as they filed off on horseback down the Publician hill, cried out that
the Aventine was taken. This circumstance occasioned such confusion and
terror, that if the Carthaginian camp had not been without the city, the
whole multitude, such was their alarm, would have rushed out. They then
fled for refuge into their houses and upon the roofs, where they threw
stones and weapons on their own soldiers as they passed along the streets,
taking them for enemies. Nor could the tumult be repressed, or the mistake
explained, as the streets were thronged with crowds of rustics and cattle,
which the sudden alarm had driven into the city. The battle between the
cavalry was successful, and the enemy were driven away; and as it was necessary
to repress the tumults which were arising in several quarters without any
cause, it was resolved that all who had been dictators, consuls, or censors,
should be invested with authority till such time as the enemy had retired
from the walls. During the remainder of the day and the following night,
several tumults arose without any foundation, and were repressed.
11. The next day Hannibal, crossing the Anio, drew out all his forces in
order of battle; nor did Flaccus and the consuls decline to fight. When
the troops on both sides were drawn up to try the issue of a battle, in
which Rome was to be the prize of the victors, a violent shower of rain
mingled with hail created such disorder in both the lines, that the troops,
scarcely able to hold their arms, retired to their camps, less through
fear of the enemy than of any thing else. On the following day, likewise,
a similar tempest separated the armies marshalled on the same ground; but
after they had retired to their camps the weather became wonderfully serene
and tranquil. The Carthaginians considered this circumstance as a Divine
interposition, and it is reported that Hannibal was heard to say, "That
sometimes he wanted the will to make himself master of Rome, at other times
the opportunity." Two other circumstances also, one inconsiderable,
the other important, diminished his hopes. The important one was, that
while he lay with his armed troops near the walls of the city, he was informed
that troops had marched out of it with colors flying, as a reinforcement
for Spain; that of less importance was, that he was informed by one of
his prisoners, that the very ground on which his camp stood was sold at
this very time, without any diminution in its price. Indeed, so great an
insult and indignity did it appear to him that a purchaser should be found
at Rome for the very soil which he held and possessed by right of conquest,
that he immediately called a crier, and ordered that the silversmiths'
shops, which at that time stood around the Roman forum, should be put up
for sale. Induced by these circumstances he retired to the river Tutia,
six miles from the city, whence he proceeded to the grove of Feronia, where
was a temple at that time celebrated for its riches. The Capenatians and
other states in the neighborhood, by bringing here their first-fruits and
other offerings according to their abilities, kept it decorated with abundance
of gold and silver. Of all these offerings the temple was now despoiled.
After the departure of Hannibal, vast heaps of brass were found there,
as the soldiers, from a religious feeling, had thrown in pieces of uncoined
brass. The spoliation of this temple is undoubted by historians; but Caelius
asserts, that Hannibal, in his progress to Rome, turned out of his way
to it from Eretum. According to him his route commenced with Amiternum,
Caetilii, and Reate. He came from Campania into Samnium, and thence into
Pelignia; then passing the town Sulmio, he entered the territory of the
Marrucini; thence through the Alban territory he came to that of the Marsi,
from which he came to Amiternum and the village of Foruli. Nor is this
diversity of opinion a proof that the traces of so great an army could
be confounded in the lapse of so brief a period. That he went that way
is evident. The only question is, whether he took this route to the city,
or returned by it from the city into Campania?
12. With regard to Capua, Hannibal did not evince such obstinate perseverance
in raising the siege of it as the Romans did in pressing it; for quitting
Lucania, he came into the Bruttian territory, and marched to the strait
and Rhegium with such rapidity, that he was very near taking the place
by surprise, in consequence of the suddenness of his arrival. Though the
siege had been urged with undiminished vigor during his absence, yet Capua
felt the return of Flaccus; and astonishment was excited that Hannibal
had not returned with him. Afterwards they learnt, by conversations, that
they were abandoned and deserted, and that the Carthaginians had given
up all hopes of retaining Capua. In addition to this a proclamation was
made by the proconsul, agreeably to a decree of the senate, and published
among the enemy, that any Campanian citizen who came over before a stated
day should be indemnified. No one, however, came over, as they were held
together by fear more than fidelity; for the crimes they had committed
during their revolt were too great to admit of pardon. As none of them
passed over to the enemy, consulting their own individual interest, so
no measure of safety was taken with regard to the general body. The nobility
had deserted the state, nor could they be induced to meet in the senate,
while the office of chief magistrate was filled by a man who had not derived
honour to himself from his office, but stripped the office of its influence
and authority by his own unworthiness. Now none of the nobles made their
appearance even in the forum, or any public place, but shut themselves
up in their houses, in daily expectation of the downfall of their city,
and their own destruction together. The chief responsibility in every thing
devolved upon Bostar and Hanno, the praefects of the Punic garrison, who
were anxious on account of their own danger, and not that of their allies.
They addressed a letter to Hannibal, in terms, not only of freedom, but
severity, charging him with "delivering, not only Capua into the hands
of the enemy, but with treacherously abandoning themselves also, and their
troops, to every species of torture;" they told him "he had gone
off to the Bruttians, in order to get out of the way, as it were, lest
Capua should be taken before his eyes; while, by Hercules, the Romans,
on the contrary, could not be drawn off from the siege of Capua, even by
an attack upon their city. So much more constant were the Romans in their
enmity than the Carthaginians in their friendship. If he would return to
Capua and direct the whole operations of the war to that point, that both
themselves and the Campanians would be prepared for a sally. That they
had crossed the Alps not to carry on a war with the people of Rhegium nor
Tarentum. That where the Roman legions were, there the armies of the Carthaginians
ought to be. Thus it was that victories had been gained at Cannae and Trasimenus;
by uniting, by pitching their camp close to that of the enemy, by trying
their fortune." A letter to this effect was given to some Numidians
who had already engaged to render their services for a stated reward. These
men came into the camp to Flaccus under pretense of being deserters, with
the intention of quitting it by seizing an opportunity, and the famine,
which had so long existed at Capua, afforded a pretext for desertion which
no one could suspect. But a Campanian woman, the paramour of one of the
deserters, unexpectedly entered the camp, and informed the Roman general
that the Numidians had come over according to a preconcerted plan of treachery,
and were the bearers of letters to Hannibal; that she was prepared to convict
one of the party of that fact, as he had discovered it to her. On being
brought forward, he at first pretended, with considerable pertinacity,
that he did not know the woman; but afterwards, gradually succumbing to
the force of truth, when he saw the instruments of torture called for and
preparing, he confessed that it was so. The letters were produced, and
a discovery was made of an additional fact, before concealed, that other
Numidians were strolling about in the Roman camp, under pretense of being
deserters. Above seventy of these were arrested, and, with the late deserters,
scourged with rods; and after their hands had been cut off, were driven
back to Capua. The sight of so severe a punishment broke the spirit of
the Campanians.
13. The people, rushing in crowds to the senate-house, compelled Lesius
to assemble a senate, and openly threatened the nobles, who had now for
a long time absented themselves from the public deliberations, that unless
they attended the meeting of the senate, they would go round to their houses
and drag them all before the public by force. The fear of this procured
the magistrate a full senate. Here, while the rest contended for sending
ambassadors to the Roman generals, Vibius Virrius, who had been the instigator
of the revolt from the Romans, on being asked his opinion, observed, that
"those persons who spoke of sending ambassadors, and of peace, and
a surrender, did not bear in mind either what they would do if they had
the Romans in their power, or what they themselves must expect to suffer.
What! do you think," says he, "that your surrender will be like
that in which formerly we placed ourselves and every thing belonging to
us at the disposal of the Romans, in order that we might obtain assistance
from them against the Samnites? Have you already forgotten at what a juncture
we revolted from the Romans, and what were their circumstances? Have you
forgotten how at the time of the revolt we put to death, with torture and
indignity, their garrison, which might have been sent out? How often, and
with determined hostility, we have sallied out against them when besieging
us, and assaulted their camp? How we invited Hannibal to come and cut them
off? And how most recently we sent him hence to lay siege to Rome? But
come, retrace on the other hand what they have done in hostility towards
us, that you may learn therefrom what you have to hope for. When a foreign
enemy was in Italy, and that enemy Hannibal; when the flame of war was
kindled in every quarter; disregarding every other object, disregarding
even Hannibal himself, they sent two consuls with two consular armies to
lay siege to Capua. This is the second year, that, surrounded with lines
and shut up within our walls, they consume us by famine, having suffered
in like manner with ourselves the extremest dangers and the severest hardships,
having frequently had their troops slain near their rampart and trenches,
and at last having been almost deprived of their camp. But I pass over
these matters. It has been usual, even from of old, to suffer dangers and
hardships in besieging an enemy's city. The following is a proof of their
animosity and bitter hatred. Hannibal assaulted their camp with an immense
force of horse and foot, and took a part of it. By so great a danger they
were not in the least diverted from the siege. Crossing the Vulturnus,
he laid waste the territory of Cales with fire. Such calamities inflicted
upon their allies had no effect in calling them off. He ordered his troops
to march in hostile array to the very city of Rome. They despised the tempest
which threatened them in this case also. Crossing the Anio, he pitched
his camp three miles from the city, and lastly, came up to the very walls
and gates. He gave them to understand that he would take their city from
them, unless they gave up Capua. But they did not give it up. Wild beasts,
impelled by headlong fury and rage, you may divert from their object to
bring assistance to those belonging to them, if you attempt to approach
their dens and their young. The Romans could not be diverted from Capua
by the blockade of Rome, by their wives and children, whose lamentations
could almost be heard from this place, by their altars, their hearths,
the temples of their gods, and the sepulchers of their ancestors profaned
and violated. So great was their avidity to bring us to punishment, so
insatiable their thirst for drinking our blood. Nor, perhaps, without reason.
We too would have done the same had the opportunity been afforded us. Since,
however, the gods have thought proper to determine it otherwise, though
I ought not to shrink from death, while I am free, while I am master of
myself, I have it in my power, by a death not only honorable but mild,
to escape the tortures and indignities which the enemy hope to inflict
upon me. I will not see Appius Claudius and Quintus Fulvius in the pride
and insolence of victory, nor will I be dragged in chains through Rome
as a spectacle in a triumph, that afterwards in a dungeon, or tied to a
stake, after my back has been lacerated with stripes, I may place my neck
under a Roman axe. I will neither see my native city demolished and burnt,
nor the matrons, virgins, and free-born youths of Campania dragged to constupration.
Alba, from which they themselves derived their origin, they demolished
from her foundations, that there might remain no trace of their rise and
extraction, much less can I believe they will spare Capua, towards which
they bear a more rancorous hatred than towards Carthage. For such of you,
therefore, as have a mind to yield to fate, before they behold such horrors,
a banquet is furnished and prepared at my house. When satiated with wine
and food, the same cup which shall have been given to me shall be handed
round to them. That potion will rescue our bodies from torture, our minds
from insult, our eyes and ears from seeing and hearing all those cruelties
and indignities which await the vanquished. There will be persons in readiness
who will throw our lifeless bodies upon a large pile kindled in the court-yard
of the house. This is the only free and honorable way to death. Our very
enemies will admire our courage, and Hannibal will learn that those whom
he deserted and betrayed were brave allies."
14. More of those who heard this speech of Virrius approved of the
proposal contained in it, than had strength of mind to execute what
they approved. The greater part of the senate being not without hopes
that the Romans, whose clemency they had frequently had proof of in
many wars, would be exorable by them also, decreed and sent
ambassadors to surrender Capua to the Romans. About twenty-seven
senators, following Vibius Virrius to his home, partook of the banquet
with him; and after having, as far as they could, withdrawn their
minds, by means of wine, from the perception of the impending evil,
all took the poison. They then rose from the banquet, after giving
each other their right hands, and taking a last embrace, mingling
their tears for their own and their country's fate; some of them
remained, that they might be burned upon the same pile, and the rest
retired to their homes. Their veins being filled in consequence of
what they had eaten, and the wine they drank, rendered the poison less
efficacious in expediting death; and accordingly, though the greater
part of them languished the whole of that night and part of the
following day, all of them, however, breathed their last before the
gates were opened to the enemy. The following day the gate of Jupiter,
which faced the Roman camp, was opened by order of the proconsul, when
one legion and two squadrons of allies marched in at it, under the
command of Caius Fulvius, lieutenant-general. When he had taken care
that all the arms and weapons to be found in Capua should be brought
to him; having placed guards at all the gates to prevent any one's
going or being sent out, he seized the Carthaginian garrison, and
ordered the Campanian senators to go into the camp to the Roman
generals. On their arrival they were all immediately thrown into
chains, and ordered to lay before the quaestor an account of all the
gold and silver they had. There were seventy pounds of gold, and three
thousand two hundred of silver. Twenty-five of the senators were sent
to Cales, to be kept in custody, and twenty-eight to Teanum; these
being the persons by whose advice principally it appeared that the
revolt from the Romans had taken place.
15. Fulvius and Claudius were far from being agreed as to the
punishment of the Campanian senators. Claudius was disposed to grant
their prayer for pardon, but Fulvius was more inclined to severity.
Appius, therefore, was for referring the entire disposal of the
question to the Roman senate. He thought it right also, that the
fathers should have the opportunity of asking them whether any of the
Latin confederates, or of the municipal towns, had taken part in these
designs, and whether they had derived any assistance from them in the
war. Fulvius, on the contrary, urged that they ought by no means to
run the hazard of having the minds of faithful allies harassed by
doubtful accusations, and subjected to informers who never cared at
all what they did or what they said. For this reason he said that he
should prevent and put a stop to any such inquiry. After this
conversation they separated; Appius not doubting but that his
colleague, though he expressed himself so warmly, would, nevertheless,
wait for a letter from Rome, in an affair of such magnitude. But
Fulvius, fearing that his designs would be frustrated by that very
means, dismissed his council, and commanded the military tribunes and
the praefects of the allies to give notice to two thousand chosen
horsemen to be in readiness at the third trumpet. Setting out for
Teanum with this body of cavalry, he entered the gate at break of day,
and proceeded direct to the forum; and a number of people having
flocked together at the first entrance of the horsemen, he ordered the
Sidicinian magistrate to be summoned; when he desired him to bring
forth the Campanians whom he had in custody. These were all
accordingly brought forth, scourged, and beheaded. He then proceeded
at full speed to Cales; where, when he had taken his seat on the
tribunal, and while the Campanians, who had been brought forth, were
being bound to the stake, an express arrived from Rome, and delivered
to him a letter from Caius Calpurnius, the praetor, and a decree of
the senate. A murmur immediately pervaded the whole assembly,
beginning at the tribunal, that the entire question respecting the
Campanians was referred to the decision of the fathers, and Fulvius,
suspecting this to be the case, took the letter, and without opening
it put it into his bosom, and then commanded the crier to order the
lictor to do his duty. Thus punishment was inflicted on those also who
were at Cales. The letter was then read, together with the decree of
the senate, when it was too late to prevent the business which was
already executed, and which had been accelerated by every means to
prevent its being obstructed. When Fulvius was now rising from his
seat, Jubellius Taurea, a Campanian making his way through the middle
of the city and the crowd, called upon him by name, and when Flaccus,
who wondered greatly what he could want, had resumed his seat, he
said, "Order me also to be put to death, that you may be able to
boast, that a much braver man than yourself has been put to death by
you." Fulvius at first said, that the man could not certainly be in
his senses, then, that he was restrained by a decree of the senate,
even though he might wish it, when Jubellius exclaimed "Since, after
the capture of my country, and the loss of my relations and friends,
after having killed, with my own hand, my wife and children to prevent
their suffering any indignity, I am not allowed even to die in the
same manner as these my countrymen, let a rescue be sought in courage
from this hated existence." So saying, he thrust a sword, which he had
concealed under his garment, right through his breast, and fell
lifeless at the general's feet.
16. Because not only what related to the punishment of the Campanians,
but most of the other particulars of this affair, were transacted according
to the judgment of Flaccus alone, some authors affirm that Appius Claudius
died about the time of the surrender of Capua, and that this same Taurea
neither came to Cales voluntarily nor died by his own hand, but that while
he was being tied to the stake among the rest, Flaccus, who could not distinctly
hear what he vociferated from the noise which was made, ordered silence,
when Taurea said the things which have been before related "that he,
a man of the greatest courage, was being put to death by one who was by
no means his equal in respect to valor." That immediately on his saying
this, the herald, by command of the proconsul, pronounced this order. "Lictor,
apply the rods to this man of courage, and execute the law upon him first."
Some authors also relate, that he read the decree of the senate before
he beheaded them, but that as there was a clause in it, to the effect,
that if he thought proper he should refer the entire question to the senate,
he construed it that the decision as to what was most for the interest
of the state was left to himself. He returned from Cales to Capua. Atella
and Calatia surrendered themselves, and were received. Here also the principal
promoters of the revolt were punished. Thus eighty principal members of
the senate were put to death, and about three hundred of the Campanian
nobles thrown into prison. The rest were distributed through the several
cities of the Latin confederacy, to be kept in custody, where they perished
in various ways. The rest of the Campanian citizens were sold. The remaining
subject of deliberation related to the city and its territory. Some were
of opinion that a city so eminently powerful, so near, and so hostile,
ought to be demolished. But immediate utility prevailed, for on account
of the land, which was evidently superior to any in Italy from the variety
and exuberance of its produce, the city was preserved that it might become
a settlement of husbandmen. For the purpose of peopling the city, a number
of sojourners, freed-men, dealers, and artificers, were retained, but all
the land and buildings were made the property of the Roman state. It was
resolved, however, that Capua should only be inhabited and peopled as a
city, that there should be no body-politic, nor assembly of the senate
or people, nor magistrates. For it was thought that a multitude not possessing
any public council, without a ruling power, and unconnected by the participation
of any common rights, would be incapable of combination. They resolved
to send a praefect annually from Rome to administer justice. Thus were
matters adjusted at Capua, upon a plan in every respect worthy of commendation.
Punishment was inflicted upon the most guilty with rigor and despatch,
the populace dispersed beyond all hope of return, no rage vented in fire
and ruins upon the unoffending houses and walls. Together also with advantage,
a reputation for clemency was obtained among the allies, by the preservation
of a city of the greatest celebrity and opulence, the demolition of which,
all Campania, and all the people dwelling in the neighborhood of Campania,
would have bewailed, while their enemies were compelled to admit the ability
of the Romans to punish their faithless allies, and how little assistance
could be derived from Hannibal towards the defense of those whom he had
taken under his protection.
17. The Roman senate having gone through every thing which required their
attention relative to Capua, decreed to Caius Nero six thousand foot and
three hundred horse, whichever he should himself choose out of those two
legions which he had commanded at Capua, with an equal number of infantry,
and eight hundred horse of the Latin confederacy. This army Nero embarked
at Puteoli, and conveyed over into Spain. Having arrived at Tarraco with
his ships, landed his troops, hauled his ships ashore, and armed his mariners
to augment his numbers, he proceeded to the river Iberus, and received
the army from Titus Fonteius and Lucius Marcius. He then marched towards
the enemy. Hasdrubal, son of Hamilcar, was encamped at the black stones
in Ausetania, a place situated between the towns Illiturgi and Mentissa.
The entrance of this defile Nero seized, and Hasdrubal, to prevent his
being shut up in it, sent a herald to engage that, if he were allowed to
depart thence, he would convey the whole of his army out of Spain. The
Roman general having received this proposition gladly, Hasdrubal requested
the next day for a conference, when the Romans might draw up conditions
relative to the surrender of the citadels of the towns, and the appointment
of a day on which the garrisons might be withdrawn, and the Carthaginians
might remove every thing belonging to them without imposition. Having obtained
his point in this respect, Hasdrubal gave orders that as soon as it was
dark, and during the whole of the night afterwards, the heaviest part of
his force should get out of the defile by whatever way they could. The
strictest care was taken that many should not go out that night, that the
very fewness of their numbers might both be more adapted to elude the notice
of the enemy from their silence, and to an escape through confined and
rugged paths. Next day they met for the conference; but that day having
been spent, on purpose, in speaking and writing about a variety of subjects,
which were not to this point, the conference was put off to the next day.
The addition of the following night gave him time to send still more out;
nor was the business concluded the next day. Thus several days were spent
in openly discussing conditions, and as many nights in privately sending
the Carthaginian troops out of their camp; and after the greater part of
the army had been sent out, he did not even keep to those terms which he
had himself proposed; and his sincerity decreasing with his fears, they
became less and less agreed. By this time nearly all the infantry had cleared
the defile, when at daybreak a dense mist enveloped the whole defile and
the neighboring plains; which Hasdrubal perceiving, sent to Nero to put
off the conference to the following day, as the Carthaginians held that
day sacred from the transaction of any serious business. Not even then
was the cheat suspected. Hasdrubal having gained the indulgence he sought
for that day also, immediately quitted his camp with his cavalry and elephants,
and without creating any alarm escaped to a place of safety. About the
fourth hour the mist, being dispelled by the sun, left the atmosphere clear,
when the Romans saw that the camp of the enemy was deserted. Then at length
Claudius, recognizing the Carthaginian perfidy, and perceiving that he
had been caught by trickery, immediately began to pursue the enemy as they
moved off, prepared to give battle; but they declined fighting. Some skirmishes,
however, took place between the rear of the Carthaginians and the advanced
guard of the Romans.
18. During the time in which these events occurred, neither did those states
of Spain which had revolted after the defeat that was sustained, return
to the Romans, nor did any others desert them. At Rome, the attention of
the senate and people, after the recovery of Capua, was not fixed in a
greater degree upon Italy than upon Spain. They resolved that the army
there should be augmented and a general sent. They were not, however, so
clear as to the person whom they should send, as that, where two generals
had fallen within the space of thirty days, he who was to supply the place
of them should be selected with unusual care. Some naming one person, and
others another, they at length came to the resolution that the people should
assemble for the purpose of electing a proconsul for Spain, and the consuls
fixed a day for the election. At first they waited in expectation that
those persons who might think themselves qualified for so momentous a command
would give in their names, but this expectation being disappointed, their
grief was renewed for the calamity they had suffered, and then regret for
the generals they had lost. The people thus afflicted, and almost at their
wits' end, came down, however, to the Campus Martius on the day of the
election, where, turning towards the magistrates, they looked round at
the countenances of their most eminent men, who were earnestly gazing at
each other, and murmured bitterly, that their affairs were in so ruinous
a state, and the condition of the commonwealth so desperate, that no one
dared undertake the command in Spain. When suddenly Publius Cornelius,
son of Publius who had fallen in Spain, who was about twenty-four years
of age, declaring himself a candidate, took his station on an eminence
from which he could be seen by all. The eyes of the whole assembly were
directed towards him, and by acclamations and expressions of approbation,
a prosperous and happy command were at once augured to him. Orders were
then given that they should proceed to vote, when not only every century,
but every individual to a man, decided that Publius Scipio should be invested
with the command in Spain. But after the business had been concluded, and
the ardor and impetuosity of their zeal had subsided, a sudden silence
ensued, and a secret reflection on what they had done, whether their partiality
had not got the better of their judgment? They chiefly regretted his youth,
but some were terrified at the fortune which attended his house and his
name, for while the two families to which he belonged were in mourning,
he was going into a province where he must carry on his operations between
the tombs of his father and his uncle.
19. Perceiving the solicitude and anxiety which people felt, after performing the business with so much ardor, he summoned an assembly, in which he discoursed in so noble and high minded a manner, on his years, the command entrusted to him, and the war which he had to carry on, as to rekindle and renew the ardor which had subsided, and inspire the people with more confident hopes than the reliance placed on human professions, or reasoning on the promising appearance of affairs, usually engenders. For Scipio was not only deserving of admiration for his real virtues, but also for his peculiar address in displaying them, to which he had been formed from his earliest years;--effecting many things with the multitude, either by feigning nocturnal visions or as with a mind divinely inspired; whether it was that he was himself, too, endued with a superstitious turn of mind, or that they might execute his commands and adopt his plans without hesitation, as if they proceeded from the responses of an oracle. With the intention of preparing men's minds for this from the beginning, he never at any time from his first assumption of the manly gown transacted any business, public or private, without first going to the Capitol, entering the temple, and taking his seat there; where he generally passed a considerable time in secret and alone. This practice, which was adhered to through the whole of his life, occasioned in some persons a belief in a notion which generally prevailed, whether designedly or undesignedly propagated, that he was a man of divine extraction; and revived a report equally absurd and fabulous with that formerly spread respecting Alexander the Great, that he was begotten by a huge serpent, whose monstrous form was frequently observed in the bedchamber of his mother, but which, on any one's coming in, suddenly unfolding his coils, glided out of sight. The belief in these miraculous accounts was never ridiculed by him, but rather increased by his address; neither positively denying any such thing nor openly affirming it. There were also many other things, some real and others counterfeit, which exceeded in the case of this young man the usual measure of human admiration, in reliance on which the state entrusted him with an affair of so much difficulty, and with so important a command, at an age by no means ripe for it. To the forces in Spain, consisting of the remains of the old army, and those which had been conveyed over from Puteoli by Claudius Nero, ten thousand infantry and a thousand horse were added; and Marcus Junius Silanus, the propraetor, was sent to assist in the management of affairs. Thus with a fleet of thirty ships, all of which were quinqueremes, he set sail from the mouth of the Tiber, and coasting along the shore of the Tuscan Sea, the Alps, and the Gallic Gulf, and then doubling the promontory of the Pyrenees, landed his troops at Emporiae, a Greek city, which also derived its origin from Phocaea. Ordering his ships to attend him, he marched by land to Tarraco; where he held a congress of deputies from all the allies; for embassies had poured forth from every province on the news of his arrival. Here he ordered his ships to be hauled on shore, having sent back the four triremes of the Massilians which had, in compliment to him, attended him from their home. After that, he began to give answers to the embassies of the several states, which had been in suspense on account of the many vicissitudes of the war; and this with so great dignity, arising from the great confidence he had in his own talents, that no presumptuous expression ever escaped him; and in every thing he said there appeared at once the greatest majesty and sincerity.
20. Setting out from Tarraco, he visited the states of his allies and the
winter quarters of his army; and bestowed the highest commendations upon
the soldiers, because, though they had received two such disastrous blows
in succession, they had retained possession of the province, and not allowing
the enemy to reap any advantage from their successes, had excluded them
entirely from the territory on this side of the Iberus, and honorably protected
their allies. Marcius he kept with him, and treated him with such respect,
that it was perfectly evident there was nothing he feared less than lest
any one should stand in the way of his own glory. Silanus then took the
place of Nero, and the fresh troops were led into winter quarters. Scipio
having in good time visited every place where his presence was necessary,
and completed every thing which was to be done, returned to Tarraco. The
reputation of Scipio among his enemies was not inferior to that which he
enjoyed among his allies and countrymen. They felt also a kind of presentiment
of what was to come, which occasioned the greater apprehension, the less
they could account for their fears, which had arisen without any cause.
They had retired to their winter quarters in different directions. Hasdrubal,
son of Gisgo, had gone quite to the ocean and Gades; Mago into the midland
parts chiefly above the forest of Castulo; Hasdrubal, son of Hamilcar,
wintered in the neighborhood of Saguntum, close upon the Iberus. At the
close of the summer in which Capua was recovered and Scipio entered Spain,
a Carthaginian fleet, which had been fetched from Sicily to Tarentum, to
cut off the supplies of the Roman garrison in the citadel of that place,
had blocked up all the approaches to the citadel from the sea; but by lying
there too long, they caused a greater scarcity of provisions to their friends
than to their enemies. For so much corn could not be brought in for the
townsmen, along the coasts which were friendly to them, and through the
ports which were kept open through the protection afforded by the Carthaginian
fleet, as the fleet itself consumed, which had on board a crowd made up
of every description of persons. So that the garrison of the citadel, which
was small in number, could be supported from the stock they had previously
laid in without importing any, while that which they imported was not sufficient
for the supply of the Tarentines and the fleet. At length the fleet was
sent away with greater satisfaction than it was received. The scarcity
of provisions, however, was not much relieved by it; because when the protection
by sea was removed corn could not be brought in.
21. At the close of the same summer, Marcus Marcellus arriving at the city from his province of Sicily, an audience of the senate was given him by Caius Calpurnius, the praetor, in the temple of Bellona. Here, after discoursing on the services he had performed, and complaining in gentle terms, not on his own account more than that of his soldiers, that after having completely reduced the province, he had not been allowed to bring home his army, he requested that he might be allowed to enter the city in triumph; this he did not obtain. A long debate took place on the question, whether it was less consistent to deny a triumph on his return to him, in whose name, when absent, a supplication had been decreed and honors paid to the immortal gods, for successes obtained under his conduct; or, when they had ordered him to deliver over his army to a successor, which would not have been decreed unless there were still war in the province, to allow him to triumph, as if the war had been terminated, when the army, the evidence of the triumph being deserved or undeserved, were absent. As a middle course between the two opinions, it was resolved that he should enter the city in ovation. The plebeian tribunes, by direction of the senate, proposed to the people, that Marcus Marcellus should be invested with command during the day on which he should enter the city in ovation. The day before he entered the city he triumphed on the Alban mount; after which he entered the city in ovation, having a great quantity of spoils carried before him, together with a model of the capture of Syracuse. The catapultas and ballistas, and every other instrument of war were carried; likewise the rich ornaments laid up by its kings during a long continuance of peace; a quantity of wrought silver and brass, and other articles, with precious garments, and a number of celebrated statues, with which Syracuse had been adorned in such a manner as to rank among the chief Grecian cities in that respect. Eight elephants were also led as an emblem of victory over the Carthaginians. Sosis, the Syracusan, and Mericus, the Spaniard, who preceded him with golden crowns, formed not the least interesting part of the spectacle; under the guidance of one of whom the Romans had entered Syracuse by night, while the other had betrayed to them the island and the garrison in it. To both of them the freedom of the city was given, and five hundred acres of land each. Sosis was to have his portion in the Syracusan territory, out of the lands which had belonged either to the kings or the enemies of the Roman people, together with a house at Syracuse, which had belonged to any one of those persons who had been punished according to the laws of war. Mericus and the Spaniards who had come over with him were ordered to have a city and lands assigned to them in Sicily, which had belonged to some of those who had revolted from the Romans. It was given in charge to Marcus Cornelius to assign them the city and lands wherever he thought proper. In the same country, four hundred acres of land were decreed to Belligenes, by whose means Mericus had been persuaded to come over. After the departure of Marcellus from Sicily, a Carthaginian fleet landed eight thousand infantry and three thousand Numidian cavalry. To these the Murgantian territories revolted; Hybla, Macella, and certain other towns of less note followed their defection. The Numidians also, headed by Mutines, ranging without restraint through the whole of Sicily, ravaged with fire the lands of the allies of the Romans. In addition to these unfortunate circumstances, the Roman soldiers, incensed partly because they had not been taken from the province with their general, and partly because they had been forbidden to winter in towns, discharged their duties negligently, and wanted a a leader more than inclination for a mutiny. Amid these difficulties Marcus Cornelius, the praetor, sometimes by soothing, at other times by reproving them, pacified the minds of the soldiers; and reduced to obedience all the states which had revolted; out of which he gave Murgantia to those Spaniards who were entitled to a city and land, in conformity with the decree of the senate.
22. As both the consuls had Apulia for their province, and as there was
now less to be apprehended from Hannibal and the Carthaginians, they were
directed to draw lots for the provinces of Apulia and Macedonia. Macedonia
fell to the lot of Sulpicius, who succeeded Laevinus. Fulvius having been
called to Rome on account of the election, held an assembly to elect new
consuls; when the junior Veturian century, which had the right of voting
first, named Titus Manlius Torquatus and Titus Otacilius. A crowd collecting
round Manlius, who was present, to congratulate him, and it being certain
that the people would concur in his election, he went, surrounded as he
was with a multitude of persons, to the tribunal of the consul, and requested
that he would listen to a few words from him; and that he would order the
century which had voted to be recalled. While all present were waiting
impatiently to hear what it was he was going to ask, he alleged as an excuse
the weakness of his eyes; observing, that "a pilot or a general might
fairly be charged with presumption who should request that the lives and
fortunes of others might be entrusted to him, when in every thing which
was to be done he must make use of other people's eyes. Therefore he requested,
that, if it seemed good to him, he would order the junior Veturian century
to come and vote again; and to recollect, while electing consuls, the war
which they had in Italy, and the present exigencies of the state. That
their ears had scarcely yet ceased to ring with the noise and tumult raised
by the enemy, when but a few months ago they nearly scaled the walls of
Rome." This speech was followed by the century's shouting out, one
and all, that "they would not in the least alter their vote, but would
name the same persons for consuls;" when Torquatus replied, "neither
shall I as consul be able to put up with your conduct, nor will you be
satisfied with my government. Go back and vote again, and consider that
you have a Punic war in Italy, and that the leader of your enemies is Hannibal."
Upon this the century, moved by the authority of the man and the shouts
of admirers around, besought the consul to summon the elder Veturian century;
for they were desirous of conferring with persons older than themselves,
and to name the consuls in accordance with their advice. The elder Veturian
century having been summoned, time was allowed them to confer with the
others by themselves in the ovile. The elders said that there were three persons whom they ought to deliberate
about electing, two of them having already served all the offices of honour,
namely, Quintus Fabius and Marcus Marcellus; and if they wished so particularly
to elect some fresh person as consul to act against the Carthaginians,
that Marcus Valerius Laevinus had carried on operations against king Philip
by sea and land with signal success. Thus, three persons having been proposed
to them to deliberate about, the seniors were dismissed, and the juniors
proceeded to vote. They named as consuls, Marcus Claudius Marcellus, then
glorious with the conquest of Sicily, and Marcus Valerius, both in their
absence. All the centuries followed the recommendation of that which voted
first. Let men now ridicule the admirers of antiquity. Even if there existed
a republic of wise men, which the learned rather imagine than know of;
for my own part I cannot persuade myself that there could possibly be a
nobility of sounder judgment, and more moderate in their desire of power,
or a people better moralled. Indeed that a century of juniors should have
been willing to consult their elders, as to the persons to whom they should
entrust a command by their vote, is rendered scarcely probable by the contempt
and levity with which the parental authority is treated by children in
the present age.
23. The assembly for the election of praetors was then held, at which
Publius Manlius Vulso, Lucius Manlius Acidinus, Caius Laetorius, and
Lucius Cincius Alimentus were elected. It happened that just as the
elections were concluded, news was brought that Titus Otacilius, whom
it seemed the people would have made consul in his absence, with Titus
Manlius, had not the course of the elections been interrupted, had
died in Sicily. The games in honour of Apollo had been performed the
preceding year, and on the motion of Calpurnius, the praetor, that
they should be performed this year also, the senate decreed that they
should be vowed every year for the time to come. The same year several
prodigies were seen and reported. At the temple of Concord, a statue
of Victory, which stood on the roof, having been struck by lightning
and thrown down, stuck among the figures of Victory, which were among
the ornaments under the eaves, and did not fall to the ground from
thence. Both from Anagnia and Fregellae it was reported that a wall
and some gates had been struck by lightning. That in the forum of
Sudertum streams of blood had continued flowing through a whole day;
at Eretum, that there had been a shower of stones; and at Reate, that
a mule had brought forth. These prodigies were expiated with victims
of the larger sort, the people were commanded to offer up prayers for
one day, and perform the nine days' sacred rite. Several of the public
priests died off this year, and fresh ones were appointed. In the room
of Manius Aemilius Numida, decemvir for sacred rites, Marcus Aemilius
Lepidus was appointed; in the room of Manius Pomponius Matho, the
pontiff, Caius Livius; in the room of Spurius Carvilius Maximus, the
augur, Marcus Servilius. As Titus Otacilius Crassus, a pontiff, died
after the year was concluded, no person was nominated to succeed him.
Caius Claudius, flamen of Jupiter, retired from his office, because he
had distributed the entrails improperly.
24. During the same time Marcus Valerius Laevinus, having first sounded
the intentions of the leading men by means of secret conferences, came
with some light ships to a council of the Aetolians, which had been previously
appointed to meet for this very purpose. Here having proudly pointed to
the capture of Syracuse and Capua, as proofs of the success of the Roman
arms in Sicily and Italy, he added, that "it was a custom with the
Romans, handed down to them from their ancestors, to respect their allies;
some of whom they had received into their state, and had admitted to the
same privileges they enjoyed themselves, while others they treated so favorably
that they chose rather to be allies than citizens. That the Aetolians would
be honored by them so much the more, because they were the first of the
nations across the sea which had entered into friendship with them. That
Philip and the Macedonians were troublesome neighbors to them, but that
he had broken their strength and spirits already, and would still further
reduce them to that degree, that they should not only evacuate the cities
which they had violently taken from the Aetolians, but have Macedonia itself
disturbed with war. And that as to the Acarnanians, whose separation from
their body was a source of grief to the Aetolians, he would place them
again under their ancient system of jurisdiction and dominion." These
assertions and promises of the Roman general, Scopas, who was at that time
praetor of the nation, and Dorymachus, a leading man among the Aetolians,
confirmed on their own authority, extolling the power and greatness of
the Roman people with less reserve, and with greater force of conviction.
However, the hope of recovering Acarnania principally moved them. The terms,
therefore, were reduced to writing, on which they should enter into alliance
and friendship with the Roman people, and it was added, that "if it
were agreeable to them and they wished it, the Eleans and Lacedaemonians,
with Attalus, Pleuratus, and Scerdilaedas, should be included on the same
conditions." Attalus was king of Asia; the latter, kings of the Thracians
and Illyrians. The conditions were, that "the Aetolians should immediately
make war on Philip by land, in which the Romans should assist, with not
less than twenty quinqueremes. That the site and buildings, together with
the walls and lands, of all the cities as far as Corcyra, should become
the property of the Aetolians, every other kind of booty, of the Romans.
That the Romans should endeavor to put the Aetolians in possession of Acarnania.
If the Aetolians should make peace with Philip, they should insert a stipulation
that the peace should stand good only on condition that they abstained
from hostilities against the Romans, their allies, and the states subject
to them. In like manner, if the Romans should form an alliance with the
king, that they should provide that he should not have liberty to make
war upon the Aetolians and their allies." Such were the terms agreed
upon; and copies of them having been made, they were laid up two years
afterwards by the Aetolians at Olympia, and by the Romans in the Capitol,
that they might be attested by these consecrated records. The delay had
been occasioned by the Aetolian ambassadors' having been detained at Rome.
This, however, did not form an impediment to the war's proceeding. Both
the Aetolians immediately commenced war against Philip, and Laevinus taking,
all but the citadel, Zacynthus, a small island near to Aetolia, and having
one city of the same name with the island; and also taking Aeniadae and
Nasus from the Acarnanians, annexed them to the Aetolians; and also considering
that Philip was sufficiently engaged in war with his neighbors to prevent
his thinking of Italy, the Carthaginians, and his compact with Hannibal,
he retired to Corcyra.
25. To Philip intelligence of the defection of the Aetolians was brought
while in winter quarters at Pella. As he was about to march an army into
Greece at the beginning of the spring, he undertook a sudden expedition
into the territories of Oricum and Apollonia, in order that Macedonia might
not be molested by the Illyrians, and the cities bordering upon them, in
consequence of the terror he would thus strike them with in turn. The Apollonians
came out to oppose him, but he drove them, terrified and dismayed, within
their walls. After devastating the adjacent parts of Illyricum he turned
his course into Pelagonia, with the same expedition. He then took Sintia,
a town of the Dardanians, which would have afforded them a passage into
Macedonia. Having with the greatest despatch performed these achievements,
not forgetting the war made upon him by the Aetolians and Romans in conjunction,
he marched down into Thessaly through Pelagonia, Lyncus, and Bottiaea.
He trusted that people might be induced to take part with him in the war
against the Aetolians, and, therefore, leaving Perseus with four thousand
armed men at the gorge, which formed the entrance into Thessaly, to prevent
the Aetolians from passing it, before he should be occupied with more important
business, he marched his army into Macedonia, and thence into Thrace and
Maedica. This nation had been accustomed to make incursions into Macedonia
when they perceived the king engaged in a foreign war, and the kingdom
left unprotected. Accordingly, he began to devastate the lands in the neighborhood
of Phragandae, and to lay siege to the city Jamphorina, the capital and
chief fortress of Maedica. Scopas, on hearing that the king had gone into
Thrace, and was engaged in a war there, armed all the Aetolian youths,
and prepared to invade Acarnania. The Acarnanian nation, unequal to their
enemy in point of strength, and seeing that they had lost Aeniadae and
Nasus, and moreover that the Roman arms were threatening them, prepare
the war rather with rage than prudence. Having sent their wives, children,
and those who were above sixty years old into the neighboring parts of
Epirus, all who were between the ages of fifteen and sixty, bound each
other by an oath not to return unless victorious. That no one might receive
into his city or house, or admit to his table or hearth, such as should
retire from the field vanquished, they drew up a form of direful execration
against their countrymen who should do so; and the most solemn entreaty
they could devise, to friendly states. At the same time they entreated
the Epirotes to bury in one tomb such of their men as should fall in the
encounter, adding this inscription over their remains: HERE LIE THE ACARNANIANS,
WHO DIED WHILE FIGHTING IN DEFENSE OF THEIR COUNTRY, AGAINST THE VIOLENCE
AND INJUSTICE OF THE AETOLIANS. Having worked up their courage to the highest
pitch by these means, they fixed their camp at the extreme borders of their
country in the way of the enemy; and sending messengers to Philip to inform
him of the critical situation in which they stood, they obliged him to
suspend the war in which he was engaged, though he had gained possession
of Jamphorina by surrender, and had succeeded in other respects. The ardor
of the Aetolians was damped, in the first instance, by the news of the
combination formed by the Acarnanians; but afterwards the intelligence
of Philip's approach compelled them even to retreat into the interior of
the country. Nor did Philip proceed farther than Dium, though he had marched
with great expedition to prevent the Acarnanians being overpowered; and
when he had received information that the Aetolians had returned out of
Acarnania, he also returned to Pella.
26. Laevinus set sail from Corcyra in the beginning of the spring, and doubling the promontory Leucate, arrived at Naupactus; when he gave notice that he should go thence to Anticyra, in order that Scopas and the Aetolians might be ready there to join him. Anticyra is situated in Locris, on the left hand as you enter the Corinthian Gulf. The distance between Naupactus and this place is short both by sea and land. In about three days after, the attack upon this place commenced on both elements. The attack from the sea produced the greatest effect, because there were on board the ships engines and machines of every description, and because the Romans besieged from that quarter. In a few days, therefore, the town surrendered, and was delivered over to the Aetolians, the booty, according to compact, was given up to the Romans. Laevinus then received a letter informing him, that he had been elected consul in his absence, and that Publius Sulpicius was coming as his successor. He arrived at Rome later than he was generally expected, being detained by a lingering illness. Marcus Marcellus, having entered upon the consulship on the ides of March, assembled the senate on that day merely for form's sake He declared, that "in the absence of his colleague he would not enter into any question relative to the state or the provinces." He said, "he well knew there were crowds of Sicilians in the neighborhood of the city at the country-houses of those who maligned him, whom he was so far from wishing to prevent from openly publishing, at Rome, the charges which had been circulated and got up against him by his enemies, that did they not pretend that they entertained some fear of speaking of a consul in the absence of his colleague, he would forthwith have given them a hearing of the senate. That when his colleague had arrived, he would not allow any business to be transacted before the Sicilians were brought before the senate. That Marcus Cornelius had in a manner held a levy throughout all Sicily, in order that as many as possible might come to Rome to prefer complaints against him, that the same person had filled the city with letters containing false representations that there was still war in Sicily, in order to detract from his merit." The consul, having acquired on that day the reputation of having a well-regulated mind, dismissed the senate, and it appeared that there would be almost a total suspension of every kind of business till the other consul returned to the city. The want of employment, as usual, produced expressions of discontent among the people. They complained of the length of the war, that the lands around the city were devastated wherever Hannibal had marched his hostile troops; that Italy was exhausted by levies, and that almost every year their armies were cut to pieces, that the consuls elected were both of them fond of war, men over-enterprising and impetuous, who would probably stir up war in a time of profound peace, and therefore were the less likely to allow the state to breathe in time of war.
27. A fire which broke out in several places at once in the neighborhood
of the forum, on the night before the festival of Minerva, interrupted
these discourses. Seven shops, where five were afterwards erected, and
the banks, which are now called the new banks, were all on fire at once.
Afterwards the private dwellings caught, for there were no public halls
there then, the prisons called the Quarry, the fish-market, and the royal
palace. The temple of Vesta was with difficulty saved, principally by the
exertions of thirteen slaves, who were redeemed at the public expense and
manumitted. The fire continued for a day and a night. It was evident to
every body that it was caused by human contrivance, because the flames
burst forth in several places at once, and those at a distance from each
other. The consul, therefore, on the recommendation of the senate, publicly
notified, that whoever should make known by whose act the conflagration
was kindled, should rewarded, if a free-man, with money, if a slave, with
liberty. Induced by this reward, a slave of the Campanian family, the Calavii,
named Mannus, gave information that "his masters, with five noble
Campanian youths, whose parents had been executed by Fulvius, were the
authors of the fire, and that they would commit various other acts of the
same kind if they were not seized." Upon this they were seized, as
well as their slaves. At first, the informer and his evidence were disparaged,
for that "he had run away from his masters the day before in consequence
of a whipping, and that from an event which had happened by mere chance,
he had fabricated this charge, from resentment and wantonness." But
when they were charged by their accusers face to face, and the ministers
of their villanies begin to be examined in the middle of the forum, they
all confessed, and punishment was inflicted upon the masters and their
accessory slaves. The informer received his liberty and twenty thousand
asses.
The consul Laevinus, while passing by Capua, was surrounded by a
multitude of Campanians, who besought him, with tears, that they might
be permitted to go to Rome to the senate, so that if they could at
length be in any degree moved by compassion, they might not carry
their resentment so far as to destroy them utterly, nor suffer the
very name of the Campanian nation to be obliterated by Quintus
Flaccus. Flaccus declared, that "he had individually no quarrel with
the Campanians, but that he did entertain an enmity towards them on
public grounds and because they were foes, and should continue to do
so as long as he felt assured that they had the same feelings towards
the Roman people; for that there was no nation or people on earth more
inveterate against the Roman name. That his reason for keeping them
shut up within their walls was, that if any of these got out any where
they roamed through the country like wild beasts, tearing and
massacring whatever fell in their way. That some of them had deserted
to Hannibal, others had gone and set fire to Rome; that the consul
would find the traces of the villany of the Campanians in the
half-burnt forum. That the temple of Vesta, the eternal fire, and the
fatal pledge for the continuance of the Roman empire deposited in the
shrine, had been the objects of their attack. That in his opinion it
was extremely unsafe for any Campanians to be allowed to enter the
walls of Rome." Laevinus ordered the Campanians to follow him to Rome,
after Flaccus had bound them by an oath to return to Capua on the
fifth day after receiving an answer from the senate. Surrounded by
this crowd, and followed also by the Sicilians and Aeolians, who came
out to meet him, he went to Rome; taking with him into the city as
accusers of two men who had acquired the greatest celebrity by the
overthrow of two most renowned cities, those whom they had vanquished
in war. Both the consuls, however, first proposed to the senate the
consideration of the state of the commonwealth, and the arrangements
respecting the provinces.
28. On this occasion Laevinus reported the state of Macedonia and
Greece, of the Aetolians, Acarnanians, and Locrians, and the services
he had himself performed there on sea and land. That "Philip, who was
bringing an army against the Aetolians, had been driven back by him
into Macedonia, and compelled to retire into the heart of his kingdom.
That the legion might therefore be withdrawn from that quarter, and
that the fleet was sufficient to keep the king out of Italy." Thus
much he said respecting himself and the province where he had
commanded. The consuls jointly proposed the consideration of the
provinces, when the senate decreed, that, "Italy and the war with
Hannibal should form the province of one of the consuls; that the
other should have the command of the fleet which Titus Otacilius had
commanded, and the province of Sicily, in conjunction with Lucius
Cincius, the praetor." The two armies decreed to them were those in
Etruria and Gaul, consisting of four legions. That the two city
legions of the former year should be sent into Etruria and the two
which Sulpicius, the consul, had commanded, into Gaul; that he should
have the command of Gaul, and the legions there whom the consul, who
had the province of Italy, should appoint. Caius Calpurnius, having
his command continued to him for a year after the expiration of his
praetorship, was sent into Etruria. To Quintus Fulvius also the
province of Capua was decreed, with his command continued for a year.
The army of citizens and allies was ordered to be reduced, so that,
out of two, one legion should be formed consisting of five thousand
foot and three hundred horse, those being discharged who had served
the greatest number of campaigns. That of the allies there should be
left seven thousand infantry and three hundred horse, the same rule
being observed with regard to the periods of their service in
discharging the old soldiers. With Cneius Fulvius, the consul of the
former year, no change was made touching his province of Apulia nor
his army; only he was continued in command for a year. Publius
Sulpicius, his colleague, was ordered to discharge the whole of his
army excepting the marines. It was ordered also, that the army which
Marcus Cornelius had commanded, should be sent out of Sicily as soon
as the consul arrived in his province. The soldiers which had fought
at Cannae, amounting to two legions, were assigned to Lucius Cincius,
the praetor, for the occupation of Sicily. As many legions were
assigned to Publius Manlius Vulso, the praetor, for Sardinia, being
those which Lucius Cornelius had commanded in that province the former
year. The consuls were directed so to raise legions for the service of
the city, as not to enlist any one who had served in the armies of
Marcus Claudius, Marcus Valerius, or Quintus Fulvius, so that the
Roman legions might not exceed twenty-one that year.
29. After the senate had passed these decrees, the consuls drew lots
for their provinces. Sicily and the fleet fell to the lot of
Marcellus; Italy, with the war against Hannibal, to Laevinus. This
result so terrified the Sicilians, who were standing in sight of the
consuls waiting the determination of the lots, that their bitter
lamentations and mournful cries both drew upon them the eyes of all at
the time, and afterwards furnished matter for conversation. For they
went round to the several senators in mourning garments, affirming,
that "they would not only abandon, each of them, his native country,
but all Sicily, if Marcellus should again go thither with command.
That he had formerly been implacable toward them for no demerit of
theirs, what would he do now, when exasperated that they had come to
Rome to complain of him? That it would be better for that island to be
overwhelmed with the fires of Aetna, or sunk in the sea, than to be
delivered up, as it were, for execution to an enemy." These complaints
of the Sicilians, having been carried round to the houses of the
nobility, and frequently canvassed in conversations, which were
prompted partly by compassion for the Sicilians and partly by dislike
for Marcellus, at length reached the senate also. The consuls were
requested to take the sense of the senate on an exchange of provinces.
Marcellus said, that "if the Sicilians had already had an audience of
the senate, his opinion perhaps might have been different, but as the
case now stood, lest any one should be able to say that they were
prevented by fear from freely venting their complaints respecting him,
to whose power they were presently about to be subject, he was
willing, if it made no difference to his colleague, to exchange
provinces with him. That he deprecated a premature decision on the
part of the senate, for since it would be unjust that his colleague
should have the power of selecting his province without drawing lots,
how much greater injustice would it be, nay, rather indignity, for his
lot to be transferred to him." Accordingly the senate, having rather
shown than decreed what they wished, adjourned. An exchange of
provinces was made by the consuls of themselves, fate hurrying on
Marcellus to encounter Hannibal, that he might be the last of the
Roman generals, who, by his fall, when the affairs of the war were
most prosperous, might add to the glory of that man, from whom he
derived the reputation of having been the first Roman general who
defeated him.
30. After the provinces had been exchanged, the Sicilians, on being
introduced into the senate, discoursed largely on the constant
fidelity of king Hiero to the Roman people, converting it into a
public merit. They said, "that the tyrants, Hieronymus, and, after
him, Hippocrates and Epicydes, had been objects of detestation to
them, both on other accounts and especially on account of then
deserting the Romans to take part with Hannibal. For this cause
Hieronymus was put to death by the principal young men among them,
almost with the public concurrence, and a conspiracy was formed to
murder Epicydes and Hippocrates, by seventy of the most distinguished
of their youth; but being left without support in consequence of the
delay of Marcellus, who neglected to bring up his troops to Syracuse
at the time agreed upon, they were all, on an indictment that was
made, put to death by the tyrants. That Marcellus, by the cruelty
exercised in the sacking of Leontini, had given occasion to the
tyranny of Hippocrates and Epicydes. From that time the leading men
among the Syracusans never ceased going over to Marcellus, and
promising him that they would deliver the city to him whenever he
pleased; but that he, in the first instance, was disposed rather to
take it by force, and afterwards, finding it impossible to effect his
object by sea or land, after trying every means, he preferred having
Syracuse delivered to him by Sosis, a brazier, and Mericus, a
Spaniard, to receiving it from the principal men of Syracuse, who had
so often offered it to him voluntarily to no purpose; doubtless in
order that he might with a fairer pretext butcher and plunder the most
ancient allies of the Roman people. If it had not been Hieronymus who
revolted to Hannibal, but the people and senate of Syracuse; if the
body of the Syracusan people, and not their tyrants, Hippocrates and
Epicydes, who held them in thraldom, had closed the gates against
Marcellus; if they had carried on war with the Roman people with the
animosity of Carthaginians, what more could Marcellus have done in
hostility than he did, without levelling Syracuse with the ground?
Nothing indeed was left at Syracuse except the walls and gutted houses
of her city, the temples of her gods broken open and plundered; her
very gods and their ornaments having been carried away. From many
their possessions also were taken away, so that they were unable to
support themselves and their families, even from the naked soil, the
only remains of their plundered property. They entreated the conscript
fathers, that they would order, if not all, at least such of their
property as could be found and identified, to be restored to the
owners." After they had made these complaints, Laevinus ordered them
to withdraw from the senate-house, that the senate might deliberate on
their requests, when Marcellus exclaimed, "Nay, rather let them stay
here, that I may reply to their charges in their presence, since we
conduct your wars for you, conscript fathers, on the condition of
having as our accusers those whom we have conquered with our arms. Of
the two cities which have been captured this year, let Capua arraign
Fulvius, and Syracuse Marcellus."
31. The deputies having been brought back into the senate-house, the consul said: "I am not so unmindful of the dignity of the Roman people and of the office I fill as consul, conscript fathers, as to make a defense against charges brought by Greeks, had the inquiry related only to my own delinquency. But it is not so much what I have done, as what they deserved to suffer, which comes into dispute. For if they were not our enemies, there was no difference between sacking Syracuse then, and when Hiero was alive. But if, on the other hand, they have renounced their connection with us, attacked our ambassadors sword in hand, shut us out of their city and walls, and defended themselves against us with an army of Carthaginians, who can feel indignant that they should suffer the hostilities they have offered? I turned away from the leading men of the Syracusans, when they were desirous of delivering up the city to me, and esteemed Sosis and Mericus as more proper persons for so important an affair. Now you are not the meanest of the Syracusans, who reproach others with the meanness of their condition. But who is there among you, who has promised that he would open the gates to me, and receive my armed troops within the city? You hate and execrate those who did so; and not even here can you abstain from speaking with insult of them; so far is it from being the case that you would yourselves have done any thing of the kind. The very meanness of the condition of those persons, conscript fathers, with which these men reproach them, forms the strongest proof that I did not turn away from any man who was willing to render a service to our state. Before I began the siege of Syracuse I attempted a peace, at one time by sending ambassadors, at another time by going to confer with them; and after that they refrained not from laying violent hands on my ambassadors, nor would give me an answer when I held an interview with their chief men at their gates, then, at length, after suffering many hardships by sea and land, I took Syracuse by force of arms. Of what befell them after their city was captured they would complain with more justice to Hannibal, the Carthaginians, and those who were vanquished with them, than to the senate of the victorious people. If, conscript fathers, I had intended to conceal the fact that I had despoiled Syracuse, I should never have decorated the city of Rome with her spoils. As to what things I either took from individuals or bestowed upon them, as conqueror, I feel assured that I have acted agreeably to the laws of war, and the deserts of each. That you should confirm what I have done, conscript fathers, certainly concerns the commonwealth more than myself, since I have discharged my duty faithfully; but it is the duty of the state to take care, lest, by rescinding my acts, they should render other commanders for the time to come less zealous. And since, conscript fathers, you have heard both what the Sicilians and I had to say, in the presence of each other, we will go out of the senate-house together, in order that in my absence the senate may deliberate more freely." Accordingly, the Sicilians having been dismissed, he himself also went away to the Capitol to levy soldiers.
32. The other consul then proposed to the fathers the consideration of
the requests of the Sicilians, when a long debate took place. A great
part of the senate acquiesced in an opinion which originated with
Titus Manlius Torquatus, "that the war ought to have been carried on
against the tyrants, the enemies both of the Syracusans and the Roman
people; that the city ought to have been recovered, not captured; and,
when recovered, should have been firmly established under its ancient
laws and liberty, and not distressed by war, when worn out with a
wretched state of bondage. That in the contest between the tyrants and
the Roman general, that most beautiful and celebrated city, formerly
the granary and treasury of the Roman people, which was held up as the
reward of the victor, had been destroyed; a city by whose munificence
and bounty the commonwealth had been assisted and adorned on many
occasions, and lastly, during this very Punic war. Should king Hiero,
that most faithful friend of the Roman empire, rise from the shades,
with what face could either Syracuse or Rome be shown to him, when,
after beholding his half-demolished and plundered native city, he
should see, on entering Rome, the spoils of his country in the
vestibule, as it were, of the city, and almost in the very gates?"
Although these and other similar things were said, to throw odium upon
the consul and excite compassion for the Sicilians, yet the fathers,
out of regard for Marcellus, passed a milder decree, to the effect,
"that what Marcellus had done while prosecuting the war, and when
victorious, should be confirmed. That for the time to come, the senate
would look to the affairs of Syracuse, and would give it in charge to
the consul Laevinus, to consult the interest of that state, so far as
it could be done without detriment to the commonwealth." Two senators
having been sent to the Capitol to request the consul to return to the
senate-house, and the Sicilians having been called in, the decree of
the senate was read. The deputies were addressed in terms of kindness,
and dismissed, when they threw themselves at the knees of the consul,
Marcellus, beseeching him to pardon them for what they had said for
the purpose of exciting compassion, and procuring relief from their
calamities, and to receive themselves and the city of Syracuse under
his protection and patronage; after which, the consul addressed them
kindly and dismissed them.
33. An audience of the senate was then granted to the Campanians.
Their speech was more calculated to excite compassion, but their case
less favourable, for neither could they deny that they deserved the
punishment they had suffered, nor were there any tyrants to whom they
could transfer their guilt. But they trusted that sufficient atonement
had been made by the death of so many of their senators by poison and
the hands of the executioner. They said, "that a few only of their
nobles remained, being such as were not induced by the consciousness
of their demerit to adopt any desperate measure respecting themselves,
and had not been condemned to death through the resentment of their
conquerors. That these implored the restoration of their liberty, and
some portion of their goods for themselves and families, being
citizens of Rome, and most of them connected with the Romans by
affinity and now too near relationship, in consequence of
intermarriages which had taken place for a long period." After this
they were removed from the senate-house, when for a short time doubts
were entertained whether it would be right or not to send for Quintus
Fulvius from Capua, (for Claudius, the proconsul, died after the
capture of that place,) that the question might be canvassed in the
presence of the general who had been concerned, as was done in the
affair between Marcellus and the Sicilians. But afterwards, when they
saw in the senate Marcus Atilius, and Caius Fulvius, the brother of
Flaccus, his lieutenant-generals, and Quintus Minucius, and Lucius
Veturius Philo, who were also his lieutenant-generals, who had been
present at every transaction; and being unwilling that Fulvius should
be recalled from Capua, or the Campanians put off, Marcus Atilius
Regulus, who possessed the greatest weight of any of those present who
had been at Capua, being asked his opinion, thus spoke: "I believe I
assisted at the council held by the consuls after the capture of
Capua, when inquiry was made whether any of the Campanians had
deserved well of our state; and it was found that two women had done
so; Vestia Oppia, a native of Atella and an inhabitant of Capua, and
Faucula Cluvia, formerly a common woman. The former had daily offered
sacrifice for the safety and success of the Roman people, and the
latter had clandestinely supplied the starving prisoners with food.
The sentiments of all the rest of the Campanians towards us had been
the same," he said, "as those of the Carthaginians; and those who had
been decapitated by Fulvius, were the most conspicuous in rank, but
not in guilt. I do not see," said he, "how the senate can decide
respecting the Campanians who are Roman citizens, without an order of
the people. And the course adopted by our ancestors, in the case of
the Satricani when they had revolted, was, that Marcus Antistius, the
plebeian tribune, should first propose and the commons make an order,
that the senate should have the power of pronouncing judgment upon the
Satricani. I therefore give it as my opinion, that application should
be made to the plebeian tribunes, that one or more of them should
propose to the people a bill, by which we may be empowered to
determine in the case of the Campanians." Lucius Atilius, plebeian
tribune, proposed to the people, on the recommendation of the senate,
a bill to the following effect: "Concerning all the Campanians,
Atellanians, Calatinians, and Sabatinians, who have surrendered
themselves to the proconsul Fulvius, and have placed themselves under
the authority and dominion of the Roman people; also concerning what
things they have surrendered, together with their persons, both lands
and city, divine or human, together with their utensils and whatsoever
else they have surrendered; concerning these things, Roman citizens, I
ask you what it is your pleasure should be done." The commons thus
ordered: "Whatsoever the senate on oath, or the majority of those
present, may determine, that we will and order."
34. The senate having taken the matter into their consideration in
conformity with this order of the people, first restored to Oppia and
Cluvia their goods and liberty; directing, that if they wished to
solicit any other rewards from the senate, they should come to Rome.
Separate decrees were passed respecting each of the Campanian
families, all of which it is not worth while to enumerate. The goods
of some were to be confiscated; themselves, their children, and their
wives were to be sold, excepting such of their daughters as had
married before they came into the power of the Roman people. Others
were ordered to be thrown into chains, and their cases to be
considered at a future time. They made the amount of income the ground
on which they decided, whether the goods of the rest of the Campanians
should be confiscated or not. They voted, that all the cattle taken
except the horses, all the slaves except adult males, and every thing
which did not belong to the soil, should be restored to the owners.
They ordered that all the Campanians, Atellanians, Calatinians, and
Sabatinians, except such as were themselves, or whose parents were,
among the enemy, should be free, with a proviso, that none of them
should become a Roman citizen or a Latin confederate; and that none of
those who had been at Capua while the gates were shut should remain in
the city or territory of Capua after a certain day. That a place
should be assigned to them to inhabit beyond the Tiber, but not
contiguous to it. That those who had neither been in Capua nor in any
Campanian city which had revolted from the Romans during the war,
should inhabit a place on this side the river Liris towards Rome; and
that those who had come over to the Romans before Hannibal arrived at
Capua, should be removed to a place on this side the Vulturnus, with a
proviso, that none of them should have either land or house within
fifteen miles of the sea. That such of them as were removed to a place
beyond the Tiber, should neither themselves nor their posterity
acquire or possess any property any where, except in the Veientian,
Sutrian, or Nepetian territories; and, except on condition, that no
one should possess a greater extent of land than fifty acres. That the
goods of all the senators, and such as had been magistrates at Capua,
Calatia, and Atella, should be sold at Capua; but that the free
persons who were decreed to be exposed to sale, should be sent to Rome
and sold there. As to the images and brazen statues, which were said
to have been taken from the enemy, whether sacred or profane, they
referred them to the college of pontiffs. They sent the Campanians
away, considerably more grieved than they were when they came, in
consequence of these decrees; and now they no longer complained of the
severity of Quintus Fulvius towards them, but of the malignity of the
gods and their own accursed fortune.
35. After the Sicilians and Campanians were dismissed, a levy was
made; and after the troops had been enlisted for the army, they then
began to consider about making up the number of rowers; but as there
was neither a sufficient supply of men for that purpose, nor any money
at that time in the treasury by which they might be purchased or paid,
the consuls issued an edict, that private persons should furnish
rowers in proportion to their income and rank, as had been done
before, with pay and provisions for thirty days. So great was the
murmuring and indignation of the people, on account of this edict,
that a leader, rather than matter, was wanting for an insurrection. It
was said, that "the consuls, after having ruined the Sicilians and
Campanians, had undertaken to destroy and lacerate the Roman commons;
that, drained as they had been for so many years by taxes, they had
nothing left but wasted and naked lands. That the enemy had burned
their houses, and the state had taken away their slaves, who were the
cultivators of their lands, at one time by purchasing them at a low
rate for soldiers, at another by commanding a supply of rowers. If any
one had any silver or brass it was taken away from him, for the
payment of rowers or for annual taxes. That no force could compel and
no command oblige them to give what they had not got. That they might
sell their goods and then vent their cruelty on their persons, which
were all that remained to them. That they had nothing even left from
which they could be redeemed." These complaints were uttered not in
secret, but publicly in the forum, and before the eyes of the consuls
themselves, by an immense crowd which surrounded them; nor could the
consuls appease them now by coercing nor by soothing them. Upon this
they said that three days should be allowed them to consider of the
matter; which interval the consuls employed in examining and planning.
The following day they assembled the senate to consider of raising a
supply of rowers; and after arguing at great length that the people's
refusal was fair, they brought their discourse to this point, that
whether it were just or unjust, this burden must be borne by private
individuals. For from what source could they procure rowers, when
there was no money in the treasury? and how, without fleets, could
Sicily be kept in subjection, or Philip be prevented from entering
Italy, or the shores of Italy be protected?
36. In this perplexing state of affairs, when all deliberation was at a
stand, and a kind of torpor had seized on men's minds, Laevinus, the consul,
observed, that "as the magistrates were more honored than the senators,
and the senators than the people, so also ought they to be the first in
taking upon themselves every thing that was burdensome and arduous. If
you would enjoin any duty on an inferior, and would first submit yourself
and those belonging to you to the obligation, you will find everybody else
more ready to obey; nor is an expense thought heavy, when the people see
every one of their principal men taking upon himself more than his proportion
of it. Are we then desirous that the Roman people should have and equip
a fleet? that private individuals should without repugnance furnish rowers?
Let us first execute the command ourselves. Let us, senators, bring into
the treasury to-morrow all our gold, silver, and coined brass, each reserving
rings for himself, his wife, and children, and a bulla for his son; and
he who has a wife or daughters, an ounce weight of gold for each. Let those
who have sat in a curule chair have the ornaments of a horse, and a pound
weight of silver, that they may have a salt-cellar and a dish for the service
of the gods. Let the rest of us, senators, reserve for each father of a
family, a pound weight only of silver and five thousand coined asses. All the rest of our gold, silver, and coined brass, let us immediately carry to the triumviri for banking affairs, no decree of the senate having been previously made; that our voluntary contributions, and our emulation in assisting the state, may excite the minds, first, of the equestrian order to emulate us, and after them of the rest of the community. This is the only course which we, your consuls, after much conversation on the subject, have been able to discover. Adopt it, then, and may the gods prosper the measure. If the state is preserved, she can easily secure the property of her individual members, but by betraying the public interests you would in vain preserve your own." This proposition was received with such entire approbation, that thanks were spontaneously returned to the consuls. The senate was then adjourned, when every one of the members brought his gold, silver, and brass into the treasury, with such emulation excited, that they were desirous that their names should appear among the first on the public tables; so that neither the triumviri were sufficient for receiving nor the notaries for entering them. The unanimity displayed by the senate was imitated by the equestrian order, and that of the equestrian order by the commons. Thus, without any edict, or coercion of the magistrates, the state neither wanted rowers to make up the numbers, nor money to pay them; and after every thing had been got in readiness for the war, the consuls set out for their provinces.
37. Nor was there ever any period of the war, when both the
Carthaginians and the Romans, plunged alike in vicissitudes, were in a
state of more anxious suspense between hope and fear. For on the side
of the Romans, with respect to their provinces, their failure in Spain
on the one hand, and their successes in Sicily on the other, had
blended joy and sorrow; and in Italy, the loss of Tarentum was an
injury and a source of grief to them, while the unexpected
preservation of the citadel with the garrison was matter of joy to
them. The sudden terror and panic occasioned by the siege and attack
of Rome, was turned into joy by the capture of Capua, a few days
after. Their affairs beyond sea also were equalized by a kind of
compensation. Philip had become their enemy at a juncture somewhat
unseasonable; but then the Aetolians, and Attalus, king of Asia, were
added to their allies; fortune now, in a manner, promising to the
Romans the empire of the east. The Carthaginians also set the loss of
Capua against the capture of Tarentum; and as they considered it as
glorious to them to have reached the walls of Rome without opposition,
so they were chagrined at the failure of their attempt, and they felt
ashamed that they had been held in such contempt, that while they lay
under the walls of Rome, a Roman army was marched out for Spain at an
opposite gate. With regard also to Spain itself, the greater the
reason was to hope that the war there was terminated, and that the
Romans were driven from the country, after the destruction of two such
renowned generals and their armies, so much the greater was the
indignation felt, that the victory had been rendered void and
fruitless by Lucius Marcius, a general irregularly appointed. Thus
fortune balancing events against each other, all was suspense and
uncertainty on both sides, their hopes and their fears being as strong
as though they were now first commencing the war.
38. What grieved Hannibal more than any thing was the fact, that Capua
having been more perseveringly besieged by the Romans than defended by
him, had turned from him the regard of many of the states of Italy, and
it was not only impossible for him to retain possession of all these by
means of garrisons, unless he could make up his mind to tear his army into
a number of small portions, which at that time was most inexpedient, but
he could not, by withdrawing the garrisons, leave the fidelity of his allies
open to the influence of hope, or subject to that of fear. His disposition,
which was strongly inclined to avarice and cruelty, induced him to plunder
the places he could not keep possession of, that they might be left for
the enemy in a state of desolation. This resolution was equally horrid
in principle and in its issue, for not only were the affections of those
who suffered such harsh treatment alienated from him, but also of the other
states, for the warning affected a greater number than did the calamity.
Nor did the Roman consul fail to sound the inclinations of the cities,
whenever any prospect of success presented itself. Dasius and Blasius were
the principal men in Salapia, Dasius was the friend of Hannibal, Blasius,
as far as he could do it with safety, promoted the Roman interest, and,
by means of secret messengers, had given Marcellus hopes of having the
place betrayed to him, but the business could not be accomplished without
the assistance of Dasius. After much and long hesitation and even then
more for the want of a better plan than from any hope of success, he addressed
himself to Dasius; but he, being both adverse to the measure and also hostile
to his rival in the government, discovered the affair to Hannibal. Both
parties were summoned, and while Hannibal was transacting some business
on his tribunal, intending presently to take cognizance of the case of
Blasius, and the accuser and the accused were standing apart from the crowd,
which was put back, Blasius solicited Dasius on the subject of surrendering
the city; when he exclaimed, as if the case were now clearly proved, that
he was being treated with about the betrayal of the city, even before the
eyes of Hannibal. The more audacious the proceeding was, the less probable
did it appear to Hannibal and those who were present. They considered that
the charge was undoubtedly a matter of rivalry and animosity, and that
it had been brought because it was of such a nature that, not admitting
of being proved by witnesses, it could the more easily be fabricated. Accordingly
the parties were dismissed. But Blasius, notwithstanding, desisted not
from his bold undertaking, till by continually harping upon the same subject,
and proving how conducive such a measure would be to themselves and their
country, he carried his point that the Punic garrison, consisting of five
hundred Numidians, and Salapia, should be delivered up to Marcellus. Nor
could it be betrayed without much bloodshed, consisting of the bravest
of the cavalry in the whole Punic army. Accordingly, though the event was
unexpected, and their horses were of no use to them in the city, yet hastily
taking arms, during the confusion, they endeavored to force their way out;
and not being able to escape, they fell fighting to the last, not more
than fifty of them falling into the hands of the enemy alive. The loss
of this body of cavalry was considerably more detrimental to Hannibal than
that of Salapia, for the Carthaginian was never afterwards superior in
cavalry, in which he had before been most effective.
39. During this time the scarcity of provisions in the citadel of Tarentum
was almost intolerable; the Roman garrison there, and Marcus Livius, the
praefect of the garrison and the citadel, placing all their dependence
in the supplies sent from Sicily; that these might safely pass along the
coast of Italy, a fleet of about twenty ships was stationed at Rhegium.
Decius Quinctius, a man of obscure birth, but who had acquired great renown
as a soldier, on account of many acts of bravery, had charge of the fleet
and the convoys. At first he had five ships, the largest of which were
two triremes, given to him by Marcellus, but afterwards, in consequence
of his spirited conduct on many occasions, three quinqueremes were added
to his number, at last, by exacting from the allied states of Rhegium,
Velia, and Paestum, the ships they were bound to furnish according to treaty,
he made up a fleet of twenty ships, as was before stated. This fleet setting
out from Rhegium, was met at Sacriportus, about fifteen miles from the
city by Democrates, with an equal number of Tarentine ships. It happened
that the Roman was then coming with his sails up, not expecting an approaching
contest, but in the neighborhood of Croto and Sybaris, he had supplied
his ships with rowers, and had his fleet excellently equipped and armed
for the size of his vessels, and it also happened, that just at the time
when the enemy were in sight, the wind completely fell, so that there was
sufficient time to furl their sails, and get their rowers and soldiers
in readiness for the approaching action. Rarely elsewhere have regular
fleets engaged with so much spirit, for they fought for what was of greater
importance than the fleets themselves. The Tarentines, in order that, having
recovered their city from the Romans after the lapse of almost a century,
they might also rescue their citadel, hoping also to cut off the supplies
of their enemy, if by a naval battle they could deprive them of the dominion
of the sea. The Romans, that, by keeping possession of the citadel, they
might prove that Tarentum was lost not by the strength and valor of their
enemies, but by treachery and stealth. Accordingly, the signal having been
given on both sides, they charged each other with the beaks of their ships,
and neither did they draw back their own, nor allow the ships of the enemy
with which they were engaged to separate from them, having thrown then
grappling irons, and thus the battle was carried on in such close quarters,
that they fought not only with missile weapons, but in a manner foot to
foot even with their swords. The prows joined together remained stationary,
while the sterns were moved round by the force of their adversaries' oars.
The ships were crowded together in so small a compass, that scarcely one
weapon fell into the sea without taking effect. They pressed front against
front like lines of troops engaging on land, and the combatants could pass
from one ship to another. But the contest between two ships which had engaged
each other in the van, was remarkable above the rest. In the Roman ship
was Quinctius himself, in the Tarentine, Nico, surnamed Perco, who hated,
and was hated by, the Romans, not only on public grounds, but also personally,
for he belonged to that faction which had betrayed Tarentum to Hannibal.
This man transfixed Quinctius with a spear while off his guard, and engaged
at once in fighting and encouraging his men, and he immediately fell headlong
with his arms over the prow. The victorious Tarentine promptly boarded
the ship, which was all in confusion from the loss of the commander, and
when he had driven the enemy back, and the Tarentines had got possession
of the prow, the Romans, who had formed themselves into a compact body,
with difficulty defending the stern, suddenly another trireme of the enemy
appeared at the stern. Thus the Roman ship, enclosed between the two, was
captured. Upon this a panic spread among the rest, seeing the commander's
ship captured, and flying in every direction, some were sunk in the deep
and some rowed hastily to land, where, shortly after, they became a prey
to the Thurians and Metapontines. Of the store-ships which followed, laden
with provisions, a very few fell into the hands of the enemy; the rest,
shifting their sails from one side to another with the changing winds,
escaped into the open sea. An affair took place at Tarentum at this time,
which was attended with widely different success; for a party of four thousand
men had gone out to forage, and while they were dispersed, and roaming
through the country, Livius, the commander of the citadel and the Roman
garrison, who was anxious to seize every opportunity of striking a blow,
sent out of the citadel Caius Persius, an active officer, with two thousand
soldiers, who attacked them suddenly when widely dispersed and straggling
about the fields; and after slaying them for a long time on all hands,
drove the few that remained of so many into the city, to which they fled
in alarm and confusion, and where they rushed in at the doors of the gates,
which were half-opened that the city might not be taken in the same attack.
In this manner affairs were equally balanced at Tarentum, the Romans being
victorious by land, and the Tarentines by sea. Both parties were equally
disappointed in their hope of receiving provisions after they were within
sight.
40. While these events were occurring, the consul, Laevinus, after a great part of the year had elapsed, having arrived in Sicily, where he had been expected by both the old and new allies, considered it his first and principal duty to adjust the affairs of Syracuse, which were still in a state of disorder, the peace being but recent. He then marched his legions to Agrigentum, the seat of the remaining part of the war, which was occupied by a strong garrison of Carthaginians; and here fortune favored his attempt. Hanno was commander-in-chief of the Carthaginians, but their whole reliance was placed upon Mutines and the Numidians. Mutines, scouring the whole of Sicily, employed himself in carrying off spoil from the allies of the Romans; nor could he by force or stratagem be cut off from Agrigentum, or prevented from sallying from it whenever he pleased. The renown which he gained by this conduct, as it began now to eclipse the fame of the commander-in-chief, was at last converted into a source of jealousy; so that even now his successes were not as acceptable as they ought to have been, on account of the person who gained them. For these reasons Hanno at last gave his commission to his own son, concluding that by taking away his command he should also deprive him of the influence he possessed with the Numidians. But the result was very different; for their former attachment to him was increased by the envy incurred by him. Nor did he brook the affront put upon him by this injurious treatment, but immediately sent secret messengers to Laevinus, to treat about delivering up Agrigentum. After an agreement had been entered into by means of these persons, and the mode of carrying it into execution concerted, the Numidians seized on a gate which leads towards the sea, having driven the guards from it, or put them to the sword, and then received into the city a party of Romans sent for that purpose; and when these troops were now marching into the heart of the city and the forum with a great noise, Hanno, concluding that it was nothing more than a disturbance and secession of the Numidians, such as had happened before, advanced to quell the mutiny; but observing at a distance that the numbers were greater than those of the Numidians, and hearing the Roman shout, which was far from being new to him, he betook himself to flight before he came within reach of their weapons. Passing out of the town at a gate in the opposite quarter, and taking Epicydes to accompany him, he reached the sea with a few attendants; and having very seasonably met with a small vessel, they abandoned to the enemy Sicily, for which they had contended for so many years, and crossed over into Africa. The remaining multitude of Carthaginians and Sicilians fled with headlong haste, but as every passage by which they could escape was blockaded up, they were cut to pieces near the gates. On gaining possession of the town, Laevinus scourged and beheaded those who took the lead in the affairs of Agrigentum. The rest, together with the booty, he sold. All the money he sent to Rome. Accounts of the sufferings of the Agrigentines spreading through all Sicily, all the states suddenly turned to the Romans. In a short time twenty towns were betrayed to them, and six taken by storm. As many as forty put themselves under their protection, by voluntary surrender. The consul having rewarded and punished the leading men of these states, according to their several deserts, and compelled the Sicilians, now that they had at length laid aside arms, to turn their attention to the cultivation of their lands, in order that the island might by its produce not only maintain its inhabitants, but, as it had frequently done on many former occasions, add to the supplies of Rome and Italy, he returned into Italy, taking with him a disorderly multitude from Agathyrna. These were as many as four thousand men, made up of a mixed assemblage of every description of persons, exiles, bankrupts, the greater part of them felons, who had supported themselves by rapine and robbery, both when they lived in their native towns, under the restraint of the laws, and also after that a coincidence in their fortunes, brought about by causes different in each case, had congregated them at Agathyrna. These men Laevinus thought it hardly safe to leave in the island, when an unwonted tranquillity was growing up, as the materials of fresh disturbances; and besides, they were likely to be useful to the Rhegians, who were in want of a band of men habituated to robbery, for the purpose of committing depredations upon the Bruttian territory. Thus, so far as related to Sicily, the war was this year terminated.
41. In Spain, in the beginning of spring, Publius Scipio, having launched
his ships, and summoned the auxiliary troops of his allies to Tarraco by
an edict, ordered his fleet and transports to proceed thence to the mouth
of the Iberus. He also ordered his legions to quit their winter quarters,
and meet at the same place; and then set out from Tarraco, with five thousand
of the allies, to join the army. On his arrival at the camp he considered
it right to harangue his soldiers, particularly the old ones who had survived
such dreadful disasters; and therefore, calling an assembly, he thus addressed
them: "Never was there a new commander before myself who could, with
justice and good reason, give thanks to his soldiers before he had availed
himself of their services. Fortune laid me under obligations to you before
I set eyes on my province or your camp; first, on account of the respect
you have shown to my father and uncle, both in their lifetime and since
their death; and secondly, because by your valor you have recovered and
preserved entire, for the Roman people, and me their successor, the possession
of the province which had been lost in consequence of so dreadful a calamity.
But since, now, by the favor of the gods, our purpose and endeavor is not
that we may remain in Spain ourselves, but that the Carthaginians may not;
and not to stand on the bank of the Iberus, and hinder the enemy from crossing
that river, but cross it first ourselves, and carry the war to the other
side, I fear lest to some among you the enterprise should appear too important
and daring, considering your late misfortunes, which are fresh in your
recollection, and my years. There is no person from whose mind the memory
of the defeats sustained in Spain could be obliterated with more difficulty
than from mine; inasmuch as there my father and uncle were both slain within
the space of thirty days, so that one death after another was accumulated
on my family. But as the orphanhood and desolation of my own family depresses
my mind, so both the good fortune and valor of our nation forbid me to
despair of the safety of the state. It has happened to us by a kind of
fatality, that in all important wars we have been victorious, after having
been defeated. I pass over those wars of ancient date with Porsena, the
Gauls, and Samnites. I will begin with the Punic wars. How many fleets,
generals, and armies were lost in the former war? Why should I mention
what has occurred in this present war? I have either been myself present
at all the defeats sustained, or have felt more than any other those from
which I was absent. What else are the Trebia, the Trasimenus, and Cannae,
but monuments of Roman armies and consuls slain? Add to these the defection
of Italy, of the greater part of Sicily and Sardinia, and the last terror
and panic, the Carthaginian camp pitched between the Anio and the walls
of Rome, and the victorious Hannibal seen almost in our gates. Amid this
general ruin, the courage of the Roman people alone stood unabated and
unshaken. When every thing lay prostrate on the ground, it was this that
raised and supported the state. You, first of all, my soldiers, under the
conduct and auspices of my father, opposed Hasdrubal on his way to the
Alps and Italy, after the defeat of Cannae, who, had he formed a junction
with his brother, the Roman name would now have been extinct. These successes
formed a counterpoise to those defeats. Now, by the favor of the gods,
every thing in Italy and Sicily is going on prosperously and successfully,
every day affording matter of fresh joy, and presenting things in a better
light. In Sicily, Syracuse and Agrigentum have been captured, the enemy
entirely expelled the island, and the province placed again under the dominion
of the Romans. In Italy, Arpi has been recovered and Capua taken. Hannibal
has been driven into the remotest corner of Bruttium, having fled thither
all the way from Rome, in the utmost confusion; and now he asks the gods
no greater boon than that he might be allowed to retire in safety, and
quit the territory of his enemy. What then, my soldiers, could be more
preposterous than that you, who here supported the tottering fortune of
the Roman people, together with my parents, (for they may be equally associated
in the honour of that epithet,) when calamities crowded one upon another
in quick succession, and even the gods themselves, in a manner, took part
with Hannibal, should now sink in spirits when every thing is going on
happily and prosperously? Even with regard to the events which have recently
occurred, I could wish that they had passed with as little grief to me
as to you. At the present time the immortal gods who preside over the destinies
of the Roman empire, who inspired all the centuries to order the command
to be given to me, those same gods, I say, by auguries and auspices, and
even by nightly visions, portend entire success and joy. My own mind also,
which has hitherto been to me the truest prophet, presages that Spain will
be ours; that the whole Carthaginian name will in a short time be banished
from this land, and will fill both sea and land with ignominious flight.
What my mind presages spontaneously, is also supported by sound reasoning.
Their allies, annoyed by them, are by ambassadors imploring our protection;
their three generals, having differed so far as almost to have abandoned
each other, have divided their army into three parts, which they have drawn
off into regions as remote as possible from each other. The same fortune
now threatens them which lately afflicted us; for they are both deserted
by their allies, as formerly we were by the Celtiberians, and they have
divided their forces, which occasioned the ruin of my father and uncle.
Neither will their intestine differences allow them to unite, nor will
they be able to cope with us singly. Only do you, my soldiers, favor the
name of the Scipios, favor the offspring of your generals, a scion springing
up from the trunks which have been cut down. Come then, veterans, lead
your new commander and your new army across the Iberus, lead us across
into a country which you have often traversed, with many a deed of valor.
I will soon bring it to pass that, as you now trace in me a likeness to
my father and uncle in my features, countenance, and figure, I will so
restore a copy of their genius, honour, and courage, to you, that every
man of you shall say that his commander, Scipio, has either returned to
life, or has been born again."
42. Having animated his troops with this harangue, and leaving Marcus Silanus
with three thousand infantry and three hundred horse, for the protection
of that district, he crossed the Iberus with all the rest of his troops,
consisting of twenty-five thousand infantry and two thousand five hundred
horse. Though certain persons there endeavored to persuade him that, as
the Carthaginian armies had retired from each other into three such distant
quarters, he should attack the nearest of them; yet concluding that if
he did so there was danger lest he should cause them to concentrate all
their forces, and he alone should not be a match for so many, he determined
for the present to make an attack upon New Carthage, a city not only possessing
great wealth of its own, but also full of every kind of military store
belonging to the enemy; there were their arms, their money, and the hostages
from every part of Spain. It was, besides, conveniently situated, not only
for a passage into Africa, but also near a port sufficiently capacious
for a fleet of any magnitude, and, for aught I know, the only one on the
coast of Spain which is washed by our sea. No one but Caius Laelius knew
whither he was going. He was sent round with the fleet, and ordered so
to regulate the sailing of his ships, that the army might come in view
and the fleet enter the harbor at the same time. Both the fleet and army
arrived at the same time at New Carthage, on the seventh day after leaving
the Iberus. The camp was pitched over against that part of the city which
looks to the north. A rampart was thrown up as a defense on the rear of
it, for the front was secured by the nature of the ground. Now the situation
of New Carthage is as follows: at about the middle of the coast of Spain
is a bay facing for the most part the south-west, about two thousand five
hundred paces in depth, and a little more in breadth. In the mouth of this
bay is a small island forming a barrier towards the sea, and protecting
the harbor from every wind except the south-west. From the bottom of the
bay there runs out a peninsula, which forms the eminence on which the city
is built; which is washed in the east and south by the sea, and on the
west is enclosed by a lake which extends a little way also towards the
north, of variable depth according as the sea overflows or ebbs. An isthmus
of about two hundred paces broad connects the city with the continent,
on which, though it would have been a work of so little labor, the Roman
general did not raise a rampart; whether his object was to make a display
of his confidence to the enemy from motives of pride, or that he might
have free regress when frequently advancing to the walls of the city.
43. Having completed the other requisite works, he drew up his ships in
the harbor, that he might exhibit to the enemy the appearance of a blockade
by sea also; he then went round the fleet, and having warned the commanders
of the ships to be particularly careful in keeping the night-watches, because
an enemy, when besieged, usually tried every effort and in every quarter
at first, he returned into his camp; and in order to explain to his soldiers
the reason why he had adopted the plan of commencing the war with the siege
of a city, in preference to any other, and also by exhortations to inspire
them with hopes of making themselves masters of it, he summoned them to
an assembly, and thus addressed them: "Soldiers, if any one among
you suppose that you have been brought here to attack a single city, that
man takes a more exact account of your present labor than of its profitable
result from it. For you will in truth attack the walls of a single city,
but in that single city you will have made yourselves masters of all Spain.
Here are the hostages of all her most distinguished kings and states; and
as soon as you shall have gained possession of these, they will immediately
deliver into your hands every thing which is now subject to the Carthaginians.
Here is the whole of the enemy's treasure, without which they cannot carry
on the war, as they are keeping mercenary troops, and which will be most
serviceable to us in conciliating the affections of the barbarians. Here
are their engines, their arms, their tackle, and every requisite in war;
which will at once supply you, and leave the enemy destitute. Besides,
we shall gain possession of a city, not only of the greatest beauty and
wealth, but also most convenient as having an excellent harbor, by means
of which we may be supplied with every requisite for carrying on the war
both by sea and land. Great as are the advantages we shall thus gain, we
shall deprive our enemies of much greater. This is their citadel, their
granary, their treasury, their magazine, their receptacle for every thing.
Hence there is a direct passage into Africa; this is the only station for
a fleet between the Pyrenees and Gades; this gives to Africa the command
of all Spain. But as I perceive you are arrayed and marshalled, let us
pass on to the assault of New Carthage, with our whole strength, and with
undaunted courage." Upon this, they all with, one accord cried out
that it should be done; and he led them to Carthage, and ordered that the
assault should be made both by sea and land.
44. On the other side, Mago, the Carthaginian general, perceiving that
a siege was being prepared for both by sea and land, himself also disposed
his forces thus: he placed two thousand of the townsmen to oppose the enemy,
on the side facing the Roman camp; he occupied the citadel with five hundred
soldiers, and stationed five hundred on a rising ground, facing the east;
the rest of his troops he ordered, intent on every thing that occurred,
to hasten with assistance wherever the shout, or any sudden emergency,
might call them. Then, throwing open the gate, he sent out those he had
drawn up in the street leading to the camp of the enemy. The Romans, according
to the direction of their general, retired a little, in order that they
might be nearer to the reserved troops which were to be sent to their assistance
during the engagement. At first they stood with pretty equal force, but
afterwards the reserved troops, sent from time to time from the camp, not
only obliged the enemy to turn their backs, but followed them up so close
when flying in disorder, that had not a retreat been sounded, they seemed
as though they would have rushed into the city together with the fugitives.
The consternation in the field was not greater than in every part of the
city; many of the outposts were abandoned in panic and flight; and the
walls were deserted, as they leaped down each in the part nearest him.
Scipio, who had gone out to an eminence called Mercury's hill, perceiving
that the walls were abandoned by their defenders in many parts, ordered
all his men to be called out of his camp and advance to take the city,
and orders them to bring the scaling-ladders. The general himself, covered
by the shields of three stout young men, (for now an immense number of
missiles of every description were let fly from the walls,) came up to
the city, cheered them on, and gave the requisite orders; and, what was
of the utmost importance in exciting the courage of his men, he appeared
among them a witness and spectator of the valor or cowardice of each. Accordingly,
they rushed forward, amidst wounds and weapons; nor could the walls, or
the armed troops which stood upon them, repel them from eagerly mounting
them. At the same time an attack was commenced by the fleet upon that part
of the city which was washed by the sea. But here the alarm occasioned
was greater than the force which could be employed; for while they were
bringing the boats to shore, and hastily landing the ladders and the men,
each man pressing forward to gain the land the shortest way, they hindered
one another by their very haste and eagerness.
45. In the mean time, the Carthaginians had now filled the walls again with armed men, who were supplied with a great quantity of missiles from the immense stores which they had laid up. But neither men nor missiles, nor any thing else, so effectually defended them as the walls themselves, for very few of the ladders were equal to the height of them, and all those which were longer than the rest were proportionably weaker. Accordingly, those who were highest being unable to mount from them, and being followed, nevertheless, by others, they broke from the mere weight upon them. Some, though the ladders stood, a dizziness having come over their eyes in consequence of the height, fell to the ground. And as men and ladders were every where tumbling down, while the boldness and alacrity of the enemy were increased by the mere success, the signal for retreat was sounded, which afforded hopes to the besieged, not only of present rest after such a laborious contest, but also for the future, as it appeared their city could not be taken by scalade and siege. To raise works they considered would be attended with difficulty, and would give time to their generals to bring them assistance. Scarcely had the first tumult subsided, when Scipio ordered other fresh and unfatigued troops to take the ladders from those who were tired and wounded and assault the city with increased vigor. Having received intelligence that the tide was ebbing, and having before been informed by some fishermen of Tarraco who used to pass through the lake, sometimes in light boats, and, when these ran aground, by wading, that it afforded an easy passage to the wall for footmen, he led some armed men thither in person. It was about mid-day, and besides that the water was being drawn off naturally, in consequence of the tide receding, a brisk north wind rising impelled the water in the lake, which was already in motion, in the same direction as the tide, and rendered it so shallow, that in some parts the water reached only to the navel, while in others it scarcely rose above the knees. Scipio, referring this discovery, which he had made by his own diligence and penetration, to the gods and to miracle, which had turned the course of the sea, withdrawn it from the lake, and opened ways never before trodden by human feet to afford a passage to the Romans, ordered them to follow Neptune as their guide, and passing through the middle of the lake, make good their way to the walls.
46. Those who renewed the assault by land experienced great difficulty;
for they were baffled not only by the height of the walls, but also because
they exposed the Romans, as they approached them, to the missiles of the
enemy from different quarters, so that their sides were endangered more
than the fronts of their bodies. But in the other quarter five hundred
passed without difficulty through the lake, and then mounted the wall,
for neither was it defended by any fortifications, because there they thought
the city was sufficiently protected by the nature of the place and the
lake, nor were there any outposts or guards stationed there, because all
were engaged in bringing succor to that quarter in which the danger appeared.
Having entered the city without opposition, they proceeded direct, with
all possible speed, to that gate near which the contest was concentrated;
and so intently occupied with this were not only the minds, but the eyes
and ears of all, both of those who were engaged in fighting, and of those
who were looking on and encouraging the combatants, that no one perceived
that the city had been captured in their rear till the weapons fell upon
their backs, and they had an enemy on both sides of them. Then, the defenders
having been thrown into confusion through fear, both the walls were captured,
and the gate began to be broken open both from within and from without;
and presently, the doors having been broken to pieces by blows, in order
that the way might not be obstructed, the troops rushed in. A great number
had also got over the walls, but these employed themselves in putting the
townsmen to the sword; those which entered by the gate, forming a regular
body, with officers and in ranks, advanced through the midst of the city
into the forum. Scipio then perceiving that the enemy fled in two different
directions, some to the eminence which lay eastward, which was occupied
by a garrison of five hundred men, others to the citadel, into which Mago
himself also had fled for refuge, together with almost all the troops which
had been driven from the walls, sent part of his forces to storm the hill,
and part he led in person against the citadel. Not only was the hill captured
at the first assault, but Mago also, after making an effort to defend it,
when he saw every place filled with the enemy, and that there was no hope,
surrendered himself and the citadel, with the garrison. Until the citadel
was surrendered, the massacre was continued in every quarter throughout
the city; nor did they spare any one they met who had arrived at puberty:
but after that, on a signal given, a stop was put to the carnage, and the
victors turned their attention to the plunder, of which there was an immense
quantity of every description.
47. Of males of free condition, as many as ten thousand were captured.
Of these he allowed to depart such as were citizens of New Carthage; and
restored to them their city, and all their property which the war had left
them. The artisans amounted to two thousand, whom he assigned to the Roman
people as their property; holding out to them a hope of speedy emancipation,
provided they should address themselves strenuously to the service of the
war. Of the rest of the mass of inhabitants, the young men and able-bodied
slaves he assigned for the service of the fleet, to fill up the numbers
of the rowers. He had also augmented his fleet with five ships which he
had captured. Besides this multitude, there remained the Spanish hostages,
to whom as much attention was paid as if they had been children of allies.
An immense quantity of military stores was also taken; one hundred and
twenty catapultae of the larger size, two hundred and eighty-one of the
smaller; twenty-three ballistae of the larger size, fifty-two of the smaller;
an immense number of scorpions of the larger and smaller size, and also
of arms and missile weapons; and seventy-four military standards. Of gold
and silver, an immense quantity was brought to the general; there were
two hundred and seventy-six golden bowls, almost all of them weighing a
pound; of silver, wrought and coined, eighteen thousand three hundred pounds'
weight; and of silver vessels an immense number. All these were weighed
and reckoned to the quaestor, Caius Flaminius. There were twenty thousand
pecks of wheat, and two hundred and seventy of barley. One hundred and
thirteen ships of burden were boarded and captured in the harbor, some
of them with their cargoes, consisting of corn and arms, besides brass,
iron, sails, spartum, and other naval materials, of use in equipping a
fleet; so that amid such large military stores which were captured, Carthage
itself was of the least consideration.
48. Having ordered Caius Laelius with the marines to guard the city, Scipio
led back his legions to the camp the same day in person; and as his soldiers
were tired, as they had in one day gone through every kind of military
labor; for they had engaged the enemy in the field, and had undergone very
great fatigue and danger in taking the city; and after they had taken it
had fought, and that on disadvantageous ground, with those who had fled
to the citadel, he ordered them to attend to themselves. The next day,
having assembled the land and naval forces, he, in the first place, ascribed
praise and thanks to the immortal gods, who had not only in one day made
him master of the wealthiest city in Spain, but had previously collected
in it the riches of almost all Africa and Spain; so that while his enemy
had nothing left, he and his army had a superabundance of every thing.
He then commended in the highest terms the valor of his soldiers, because
that neither the sally of the enemy, nor the height of the walls, nor the
unexplored fords of the lake, nor the fort standing upon a high hill, nor
the citadel, though most strongly fortified, had deterred them from surmounting
and breaking through every thing. Therefore, though all credit was due
to them all, he said that the man who first mounted the wall ought to be
distinguished above the rest, by being honored with a mural crown; and
he desired that he who thought himself worthy of that reward would claim
it. Two persons laid claim to it, Quintus Trebellius, a centurion of the
fourth legion, and Sextus Digitius, a marine. Nor did these contest so
fiercely as each excited the zeal of his own body of men. Caius Laelius,
admiral of the fleet, patronized the marines, and Marcus Sempronius Tuditanus,
the legionary troops. As this contest began almost to assume the character
of a mutiny, Scipio having notified that he should appoint three delegates,
who, after making themselves acquainted with the case, and examining the
witnesses, might decide which had been the first to scale the wall and
enter the town, added Publius Cornelius Caudinus, a middle party, to Laelius
and Sempronius, the advocates of the two parties, and ordered these three
delegates to sit and determine the cause. But as the contest was now carried
on with increased warmth, because those high characters, who had acted
more as moderators of the zeal of both than as advocates of any particular
party, were withdrawn, Caius Laelius, leaving the council, went up to the
tribunal of Scipio and informed him, "that the contest was proceeding
without bounds or moderation, and that they had almost come to blows. But
still, though no violence should take place, that the proceedings formed
a most hateful precedent, for that the honors due to valor were being sought
by fraud and perjury. That on one side stood the legionary troops, on the
other the marines, ready to swear by all the gods what they wished, rather
than what they knew, to be true, and to involve in the guilt of perjury
not only themselves and their own persons, but the military standards,
the eagles, and their solemn oath of allegiance. That he laid these matters
before him, in accordance with the opinion of Publius Cornelius and Marcus
Sempronius." Scipio, after highly praising Laelius, summoned an assembly,
and then declared, "that he had ascertained satisfactorily that Quintus
Trebellius and Sextus Digitius had mounted the wall at the same time, and
that he presented them both with mural crowns in consideration of their
valor." He then gave presents to the rest, according to the merit
and valor of each. Above all he honored Caius Laelius, the admiral of the
fleet, by the placing him upon an equality with himself, and bestowing
upon him every kind of commendation, and also by presenting him with a
golden crown and thirty oxen.
49. He then ordered the Spanish hostages to be summoned. What the
number of these was I feel reluctant to state, because in some authors
I find that it was about three hundred, in others seven hundred and
twenty-five. There is the same difference between authors with regard
to the other particulars. One writes that the Punic garrison consisted
of ten thousand, another of seven, a third of not more than two
thousand. In some you may find that ten thousand persons were
captured, in others above twenty-five thousand. I should have stated
the number of scorpions captured, both of the greater and smaller
size, at sixty, if I had followed the Greek author, Silenus, if
Valerius Antius, of the larger at six thousand, of the smaller at
thirteen, so great is the extent of falsehood. Nor are they agreed
even respecting the commanders, most say that Laelius commanded the
fleet, but some say Marcus Junius Silanus. Valerius Antius says, that
Arines commanded the Punic garrison, and was given up to the Romans;
other writers say it was Mago. They are not agreed respecting the
number of the ships taken, respecting the weight of gold and silver,
and of the money brought into the public treasury. If we must assent
to some of their statements, the medium is nearest to the truth.
However, Scipio having summoned the hostages, first bid them all keep
up their spirits observing, "that they had fallen into the hands of
the Roman people, who chose to bind men to them by benefits rather
than by fear, and keep foreign nations attached to them by honour and
friendship, rather than subject them to a gloomy servitude." Then
receiving the names of the states to which they belonged, he took an
account of the captives, distinguishing the number belonging to each
people, and sent messengers to their homes, to desire that they would
come and take back their respective friends. If ambassadors from any
of the states happened to be present, he delivered their countrymen to
them in person, and assigned to them the quaestor, Caius Flaminius,
the charge of kindly taking care of the rest. Meanwhile, there
advanced from the midst of the crowd of hostages a woman in years, the
wife of Mandonius, who was the brother of Indibilis, the chieftain of
the Illergetians; she threw herself weeping at the general's feet, and
began to implore him to give particularly strict injunctions to their
guardians with respect to the care and treatment of females. Scipio
replied, that nothing certainly should be wanting; when the woman
rejoined: "We do not much value such things, for what is not good
enough for such a condition? A care of a different kind disquiets me,
when beholding the age of these females; for I am myself no longer
exposed to the danger peculiar to females." Around her stood the
daughters of Indibilis, in the bloom of youth and beauty, with others
of equal rank, all of whom looked up to her as a parent. Scipio then
said: "Out of regard for that discipline which I myself and the Roman
nation maintain, I should take care that nothing, which is any where
held sacred, should be violated among us. In the present case, your
virtue and your rank cause me to observe it more strictly; for not
even in the midst of misfortunes have you forgotten the delicacy
becoming matrons." He then delivered them over to a man of tried
virtue, ordering him to treat them with no less respect and modesty
than the wives and mothers of guests.
50. The soldiers then brought to him a female captive, a grown-up virgin,
of such exquisite beauty, that whichever way she walked she attracted the
eyes of every body. Scipio, on making inquiries as to her country and parentage,
heard, among other particulars, that she was betrothed to a young prince
of the Celtiberians, named Allucius. He immediately, therefore, summoned
from their abode her parents and lover, and having heard in the mean time
that the latter was desperately enamored of her, as soon as he arrived
he addressed him in a more studied manner than her parents. "A young
man myself," said he, "I address myself to a young man, and therefore
there need be the less reserve in this conversation. As soon as your intended
bride, having been captured by my soldiers, was brought into my presence,
and I was informed that she was endeared to you, which her beauty rendered
probable, considering that I should myself wish that my affection for my
intended bride, though excessive, should meet with indulgence, could I
enjoy the pleasures suited to my age, (particularly in an honorable and
lawful love,) and were not my mind engrossed by public affairs, I indulge
as far as I can your passion. Your mistress, while under my protection,
has received as much respect as under the roof of her own parents, your
father-in-law and mother-in-law. She has been kept in perfect safety for
you, that she might be presented to you pure, a gift worthy of me and of
you. This only reward I bargain for in return for the service I have rendered
you, that you would be a friend to the Roman people, and if you believe
that I am a true man, as these nations knew my father and uncle to have
been heretofore, that you would feel assured that in the Roman state there
are many like us, and that no nation in the world at the present time can
be mentioned, with which you ought to be less disposed that you, or those
belonging to you, should be at enmity, or with which you would rather be
in friendship." The young man, overcome at once with joy and modesty,
clung to Scipio's right hand, and invoked all the gods to recompense him
in his behalf, since he himself was far from possessing means proportioned
either to his own wishes or Scipio's deserts. He then addressed himself
to the parents and relatives of the damsel, who, on receiving her back
without any reward, whom they had brought a very large weight of gold to
redeem, entreated Scipio to accept it from them as a present to himself;
affirming, that if he would do so, they should feel as grateful for it
as they did for the restoration of their daughter inviolate. As they were
so earnest in their entreaties, Scipio promised to accept it, and ordered
it to be laid at his feet. Then calling Allucius to him, he said: "To
the dowry which you are about to receive from your father-in-law, let these
marriage presents also from me be added;" bidding him take away the
gold and keep it for himself. Delighted with these presents and honors,
he was dismissed to his home, where he inspired his countrymen with the
deserved praises of Scipio, observing, "that a most godlike youth
had come among them, who conquered every thing, not only by arms, but by
kindness and generosity." Accordingly, making a levy among his dependants,
he returned to Scipio after a few days, with fourteen hundred chosen horsemen.
51. Scipio kept Laelius with him until he had disposed of the captives, hostages, and booty, in accordance with his advice; but when all these matters were satisfactorily arranged, he gave him a quinquereme; and selecting from the captives Mago, and about fifteen senators who had been made prisoners at the same time with him, put them on board, and sent him to Rome with the news of his victory. He himself employed the few days he had resolved to stay at Carthage, in exercising his naval and land forces. On the first day the legions under arms performed evolutions through a space of four miles; on the second day he ordered them to repair and clean their arms before their tents; on the third day they engaged in imitation of a regular battle with wooden swords, throwing javelins with the points covered with balls; on the fourth day they rested; on the fifth they again performed evolutions under arms. This succession of exercise and rest they kept up as long as they staid at Carthage. The rowers and mariners, pushing out to sea when the weather was calm, made trial of the manageableness of their ships by mock sea-fights. Such exercises, both by sea and land, without the city prepared their minds and bodies for war. The city itself was all bustle with warlike preparations, artificers of every description being collected together in a public workshop. The general went round to all the works with equal attention. At one time he was employed in the dock-yard with his fleet, at another he exercised with the legions; sometimes he would devote his time to the inspection of the works, which were every day carried on with the greatest eagerness by a multitude of artificers both in the workshops, and in the armory and docks. Having put these preparations in a train, repaired the walls in a part where they had been shattered, and placed bodies of troops to guard the city, he set out for Tarraco; and on his way thither was visited by a number of embassies, some of which he dismissed, having given them answers on his journey, others he postponed till his arrival at Tarraco; at which place he had appointed a meeting of all his new and old allies. Here ambassadors from almost all the people dwelling on this side the Iberus, and from many dwelling in the further Spain, met. The Carthaginian generals at first industriously suppressed the rumor of the capture of Carthage; but afterwards, when it became too notorious to be concealed or dissembled, they disparaged its importance by their language. They said, that "by an unexpected attack, and in a manner by stealth, in one day, one city of Spain had been snatched out of their hands; that a presumptuous youth, elated with the acquisition of this, so inconsiderable an advantage, had, by the extravagance of his joy, given it the air of an important victory; but that as soon as he should hear that three generals and three victorious armies of his enemies were approaching, the deaths which had taken place in his family would occur to his recollection." Such was the tone in which they spoke of this affair to the people, though they were, at the same time, far from ignorant how much their strength had been diminished, in every respect, by the loss of Carthage.
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