Roman History
(Selections)
Titus Livius
BOOK XXIX.
In Spain, Mandonius and Indibilis, reviving hostilities,
are finally subdued. Scipio goes over from Syracuse to Locri;
dislodges the Carthaginian general; repulses Hannibal, and
recovers that city. Peace made with Philip. The Idaean Mother
brought to Rome from Phrygia; received by Publius Scipio
Nasica, judged by the senate the best man in the state. Scipio
passes over into Africa. Syphax, having married a daughter of
Hasdrubal, renounces his alliance with Scipio. Masinissa, who
had been expelled his kingdom by Syphax, joins Scipio with two
hundred horsemen; they defeat a large army commanded by Hanno.
Hasdrubal and Syphax approach with a most numerous force.
Scipio raises the siege of Utica, and fortifies a post for the
winter. The consul Sempronius gets the better of Hannibal in a
battle near Croton. Dispute between Marcus Livius and Claudius
Nero, censors.
1. Scipio, after his arrival in Sicily, formed his volunteers into cohorts
and centuries. Of these he kept about his person three hundred young men,
in the bloom of their age and the prime of their strength, unarmed, and
not knowing for what purpose they were reserved, as they were not included
in the centuries, nor furnished with arms. He then selected out of the
number of the youth of all Sicily three hundred horsemen, of the highest
birth and fortune, who were to cross over with him into Africa, appointing
a day on which they were to present themselves equipped and furnished with
horses and arms. This severe service, far from their native land, appeared
to them likely to be attended with many hardships, and great dangers, both
by sea and land; nor did that anxiety affect themselves alone, but also
their parents and relations. When the appointed day arrived, they exhibited
their arms and horses. Then Scipio observed, "that an intimation had
been conveyed to him that certain of the Sicilian horsemen felt a strong
aversion to that service, as being severe and arduous. If there were any
who entertained such a feeing, that he would rather they should then confess
it to him, than, complaining afterwards, prove themselves slothful and
useless soldiers to the state. He desired that they would openly avow their
sentiments, for that he would hear them with kindly feeling." When
one of the number took courage to declare, that if he were allowed the
uncontrolled exercise of his will he certainly would not serve, Scipio
replied to him thus: "Since then, young man, you have not dissembled
your sentiments, I will furnish a substitute for you, to whom I request
that you transfer your arms, your horse, and other appliances of war; and,
taking him hence immediately to your house, train him, and take care that
he is instructed in the management of his horse and arms." The youth
accepted the terms joyfully, when Scipio delivered to him one of the three
hundred whom he kept unarmed. The rest, seeing the horseman thus discharged
without giving any offense to the general, began severally to excuse themselves
and receive substitutes. Thus Roman horsemen were substituted for the three
hundred Sicilian, without any expense to the state. The Sicilians had the
care of instructing and training them, because the general had ordered
that the man who should not do so, should serve himself. It is said that
this turned out to be an admirable body of cavalry, and rendered effectual
service to the state in many engagements. Afterwards, inspecting the legions,
he chose out of them such soldiers as had served the greatest number of
campaigns, particularly those who had acted under Marcellus; for he considered
that they were formed under the best discipline, and also, from the long
time in which they were engaged in the siege of Syracuse, were most skilled
in the assault of towns: for his thoughts were now occupied with no small
object, but the destruction of Carthage. He then distributed his army through
the towns; ordered the Sicilian states to furnish corn, sparing that which
had been brought from Italy; repaired his old ships, and sent Caius Laelius
with them into Africa to plunder. His new ships he hauled on shore at Panormus,
that they might be kept on land during the winter, as they had been hastily
built of unseasoned timber.
When every thing was got in readiness for the war he came to Syracuse,
which had hardly yet returned to a state of tranquillity, after the violent
commotions of the war. The Greeks, demanding restitution of their property,
which had been granted to them by the senate, from certain persons of the
Italian nation, who retained possession of it in the same forcible manner
in which they had seized it in the war, Scipio, who deemed it of the first
importance to preserve the public faith, restored their property to the
Syracusans, partly by proclamation, and partly even by judgments pronounced
against those who pertinaciously retained their unjust acquisitions. This
measure was acceptable not only to the persons immediately concerned, but
to all the states of Sicily, and so much the more energetically did they
give aid in the war. During the same summer a very formidable war sprang
up in Spain, at the instance of Indibilis the Hergetian, from no other
cause than the contempt he conceived for the other generals, in consequence
of his admiration of Scipio. He considered "that he was the only commander
the Romans had left, the rest having been slain by Hannibal. That they
had, therefore, no other general whom they could send into Spain after
the Scipios were cut off there, and that afterwards, when the war in Italy
pressed upon them with increased severity, he was recalled to oppose Hannibal.
That, in addition to the fact that the Romans had the names only of generals
in Spain, their old army had also been withdrawn thence. That all the troops
they had there were irresolute, as consisting of an undisciplined multitude
of recruits. That there would never again occur such an opportunity for
the liberation of Spain. That up to that time they had been the slaves
either of Carthaginians or Romans, and that not to one or the other in
turns, but sometimes to both together. That the Carthaginians had been
driven out by the Romans, and that the Romans might be driven out by the
Spaniards, if they would unite: so that Spain, for ever freed from a foreign
yoke, might return to her native customs and rites." By these and
other observations he stirred up not only his countrymen, but the Ausetanians
also, a neighboring nation, as well as other states bordering on his own
and their country. Accordingly, within a few days, thirty thousand foot
and about four thousand horse assembled in the Sedetanian territory, according
to the orders which had been given.
2. On the other side, the Roman generals also, Lucius Lentulus and Lucius
Manlius Acidinus, lest by neglecting the first beginnings of the war it
should increase in violence, having united their armies, and led their
troops through the Ausetanian territory in a peaceable manner, as though
it had been the territory of friends instead of enemies, came to the position
of the enemy, and pitched their camp at a distance of three miles from
theirs. At first an unsuccessful attempt was made, through ambassadors,
to induce them to lay down their arms; then the Spanish cavalry making
a sudden attack on the Roman foragers, a body of cavalry was sent to support
them from the Roman outposts, when a battle between the cavalry took place
with no memorable issue to either side. The next day, at sun-rise, the
whole force displayed their line, armed and drawn out for battle, at the
distance of about a mile from the Roman camp. The Ausetanians were in the
center, the right wing was occupied by the Ilergetians, the left by some
inconsiderable states of Spain. Between the wings and the center they had
left intervals of considerable extent, through which they might send out
their cavalry when occasion required. The Romans also, drawing up their
army in their usual manner, imitated the enemy in respect only of leaving
themselves also intervals between the legions to afford passages for their
cavalry. Lentulus, however, concluding that the cavalry could be employed
with advantage by those only who should be the first to send them against
the enemy's line, thus broken by intervals, ordered Servius Cornelius,
a military tribune, to direct the cavalry to ride at full speed into the
spaces left in the enemy's line. Lentulus himself, as the battle between
the infantry was somewhat unfavorable in its commencement, waited only
until he had brought up from the reserve into the front line the thirteenth
legion to support the twelfth legion, which had been posted in the left
wing, against the Ilergetians, and which was giving ground. And when the
battle was thus placed on an equal footing in that quarter, he came to
Lucius Manlius, who was exhorting the troops in the foremost line, and
bringing up the reserves in such places as circumstances required, and
told him that all was safe in the left wing, and that Cornelius Servius,
who had been sent by him for that purpose, would soon pour round the enemy
a storm of cavalry. He had scarcely uttered these words, when the Roman
horse, riding into the midst of the enemy, at once threw their line of
infantry into disorder, and closed up the passage by which the Spanish
cavalry were to advance. The Spaniards, therefore, giving up all thoughts
of fighting on horseback, dismounted and fought on foot. When the Roman
generals saw that the ranks of the enemy were in confusion, that they were
in a state of trepidation and dismay, their standards moving to and fro,
they exhorted and implored their men to charge them while thus discomfited,
and not allow them to form their line again. So desperate was their charge
that the barbarians could not have withstood the shock, had not the prince
Indibilis in person, together with the discounted cavalry, opposed himself
to the enemy before the front rank of the infantry. There an obstinate
contest continued for a considerable time; but those who fought round the
king, who continued his resistance though almost expiring, and who was
afterwards pinned to the earth by a javelin, having at length fallen, overwhelmed
with darts, a general flight took place; and the number slain was the greater
because the horsemen were prevented from remounting, and because the Romans
pressed impetuously upon the discomfited troops; nor did they give over
until they had deprived the enemy of their camp. On that day thirteen thousand
Spaniards were slain, and about eight hundred captured. Of the Romans and
allies there fell a little more than two hundred, and those principally
in the left wing. Such of the Spaniards as were beaten out of their camp,
or had escaped from the battle, at first dispersed themselves through the
country, but afterwards returned each to his own state.
3. They were then summoned to an assembly by Mandonius, at which,
after complaining bitterly of the losses they had sustained, and
upbraiding the instigators of the war, they resolved that ambassadors
should be sent with proposals to deliver up their arms and make a
surrender. These, laying the blame on Indibilis, the instigator of the
war, and the other chiefs, most of whom had fallen in the battle, and
offering to deliver up their arms and surrender themselves, received
for answer, that their surrender would be accepted on condition that
they delivered up alive Mandonius and the rest of the persons who had
fomented the war; but if they refused to comply, that armies should be
marched into the territories of the Ilergetians and Ausetanians, and
afterwards into those of the other states in succession. This answer
given to the ambassadors, was reported to the assembly, and
Mandonius and the other chiefs were there seized and delivered up
for punishment. Peace was restored to the states of Spain, which
were ordered to pay double taxes that year, and furnish corn for six
months, together with cloaks and gowns for the army; and hostages were
taken from about thirty of the states.
The tumult occasioned by the rebellion in Spain having been thus excited and suppressed within the space of a few days, without any great disturbance, the whole terror of the war was directed against Africa. Caius Laelius having arrived at Hippo Regius by night, at break of day led his soldiers and mariners in regular array to lay waste the country. As all the inhabitants were living unguardedly, as in a time of peace, great damage was done; and messengers, flying in terror, filled Carthage with alarm, by reporting that the Roman fleet and the general, Scipio, had arrived; for there was a rumor that Scipio had already crossed over into Sicily. Not knowing accurately how many ships they had seen, or how large a body of troops was devastating the country, they, under the influence of fear, which represented them as greater than they really were, exaggerated every thing. Accordingly, at first, terror and dismay took possession of their minds, but afterwards grief, when they reflected that their circumstances had undergone so great a change; that they, who lately as conquerors had an army before the walls of Rome, and, after having laid prostrate so many armies of the enemy, had received the surrender of all the states of Italy, either by force or choice, now, the war having taken an unfavorable turn, were destined to behold the devastation of Africa and the siege of Carthage, without any thing like the resources to enable them to bear up against those calamities which the Romans possessed. To the latter the Roman commons and Latium afforded a supply of young men, which continually grew up more vigorous and more numerous, in the room of so many armies destroyed, while their own people, both those in the city and those in the country, were unfit for military service; their troops consisted of auxiliaries, procured by hire from the Africans, a faithless nation, and veering about with every gale of fortune. Now too, with regard to the kings, Syphax was alienated from them since his conference with Scipio, and Masinissa, by an open defection, had become their most determined enemy. Wherever they turned their eyes there was no hope, no aid. Neither did Mago excite any commotion on the side of Gaul, nor join his forces with those of Hannibal; while Hannibal himself was now declining both in reputation and strength.
4. Their minds, which had fallen into these melancholy reflections in consequence
of the intelligence they had just received, were brought back by their
immediate fears to deliberate how to oppose the instant danger. They resolved,
that troops should be hastily levied both in the city and in the country;
that persons should be sent to hire auxiliaries from the Africans; that
the city should be fortified, corn collected, weapons and arms prepared,
and ships equipped and sent to Hippo against the Roman fleet. But now,
while engaged in these matters, news at length arrived that it was Laelius,
and not Scipio; that the forces which he had brought over were only what
were sufficient for making predatory incursions into the country, and that
the principal stress of the war still lay in Sicily. Thus they were enabled
to take breath, and they began to send embassies to Syphax and the other
petty princes, for the purpose of strengthening their alliances. To Philip
also ambassadors were sent, to promise him two hundred talents of silver,
if he would cross over into Sicily or Italy. Ambassadors were also sent
into Italy to the two generals, to desire them to keep Scipio at home by
terrifying the enemy in every way they could. To Mago, not only ambassadors
were sent, but twenty-five men of war, six thousand infantry, eight hundred
horse, and seven elephants, besides a large sum of money to be employed
in hiring auxiliaries, in order that, encouraged by these aids, he might
advance his army nearer to the city of Rome, and form a junction with Hannibal.
Such were the preparations and plans at Carthage. While Laelius was employed
in carrying off an immense quantity of booty from the country, the inhabitants
of which had no arms, and which was destitute of forces, Masinissa, moved
by the report of the arrival of the Roman fleet, came to him attended by
a small body of horse. He complained that "Scipio had not acted with
promptness in this business, in that he had not already passed his army
over into Africa, while the Carthaginians were in consternation, and while
Syphax was entangled in wars with the neighboring states, and in doubt
and uncertainty as to the course he should take; that if time was allowed
to Syphax to adjust his own affairs according to his mind, he would not
in any thing keep his faith with the Romans inviolate." He requested
that he would exhort and stimulate Scipio not to delay. Though driven from
his kingdom, he said he would join him with no despicable force of foot
and horse. Nor was it right, said he that Laelius should continue in Africa,
for he believed that a fleet had set sail from Carthage, with which, in
the absence of Scipio, it would not be altogether safe to engage.
5. After this discourse Masinissa departed. Laelius, the next day, sailed from Hippo with his ships loaded with booty, and returning to Sicily, delivered to Scipio the injunctions of Masinissa. About the same time the ships which were sent from Carthage to Mago touched at the country between the Albingaunian Ligurians and Genoa. Mago happened to be lying here with his fleet at this time. After hearing the message of the ambassadors, directing him to collect as great a number of troops as possible, he immediately held a council of the Gauls and Ligurians, for a great number of both those nations were there. He said that he was sent to restore them to liberty, and, as they themselves might see, succors were sent him from home; but that it depended upon them with how great forces and how large an army the war for that purpose was to be carried on. That the Romans had two armies in the field, one in Gaul and another in Etruria. That he was well informed that Spurius Lucretius would form a junction with Marcus Livius, and that they on their part must arm many thousands, in order to cope with two Roman generals and two armies. The Gauls replied, that they had the strongest possible inclination to this, but as the Romans had one army within their borders, and another in the neighboring country of Etruria, almost within sight, if it should be known that they had supported the Carthaginians with auxiliaries, those would immediately invade their territories on both sides with determined hostility. They requested that he would ask of the Gauls such aids as they could afford in a covert manner. The purposes of the Ligurians, they said, were unrestrained, because the Roman troops were at a distance from their lands and cities; that it was fair that they should arm their youth and take upon themselves a portion of the war. The Ligurians did not dissent; they only requested the space of two months to make their levies. Having dismissed the Gauls, Mago in the mean time secretly hired soldiers through their country. Provisions also of every description were sent to him privately by the Gallic states. Marcus Livius led his army of volunteer slaves out of Etruria into Gaul, and having joined Lucretius, prepared to meet Mago in case he should move from Liguria nearer to the city; but intending, if the Carthaginian should keep himself quiet under the angle formed by the Alps, to remain himself also in the same quarter, near Ariminum, for the protection of Italy.
6. After the return of Caius Laelius from Africa, though Scipio was goaded on by the exhortations of Masinissa; and the soldiers, on seeing the booty which was taken from the enemy's country landed from the whole fleet, were inflamed with the strongest desire to cross over as soon as possible; this important object was interrupted by one of minor consideration, namely, that of regaining the town of Locri, which at the time of the general defection of Italy had itself also gone over to the Carthaginians. The hope of accomplishing this object beamed forth from a very trifling circumstance. The war was carried on in Bruttium rather in a predatory than a regular manner, the Numidians having set the example, and the Bruttians falling in with that practice, not more in consequence of their connection with the Carthaginians, than from their natural inclination. At last the Romans also, who now took delight in plunder by a sort of infection, made excursions into the lands of their enemies so far as their leaders would permit it. Some Locrians who had gone out of the town, were surrounded by them and carried off to Rhegium. Among the number of the prisoners were certain artisans, who, as it happened, had been accustomed to work for the Carthaginians in the city of Locri for hire. They were recognized by some of the Locrian nobles, who having been driven out by the opposite faction, which had delivered up Locri to Hannibal, had retired to Rhegium; and having answered their other questions relative to what was going on at home, questions which are usually put by such as have been long absent, they gave them hopes that, if ransomed and sent back, they might be able to deliver up the citadel to them; for there they resided, and among the Carthaginians they enjoyed unlimited confidence. Accordingly, as these nobles were at once tormented with a longing for their country, and inflamed with a desire to be revenged on their enemies, they immediately ransomed the prisoners and sent them back, after having settled the plan of operation, and agreed upon the signals which were to be given at a distance and observed by them. They then went themselves to Scipio to Syracuse, with whom some of the exiles were; and having, by relating to him the promises made by the prisoners, inspired the consul with hopes which seemed likely to be realized, Marcus Sergius and Publius Matienus, military tribunes, were sent with them, and ordered to lead three thousand soldiers from Rhegium to Locri. A letter was also written to Quintus Pleminius, the propraetor, with directions that he should assist in the business. The troops, setting out from Rhegium and carrying with them ladders to suit the alleged height of the citadel, about midnight gave a signal to those who were to betray it from the place agreed upon. The latter were ready and on the watch, and having themselves also lowered down ladders made for the purpose, and received the Romans as they climbed up in several places at once, an attack was made upon the Carthaginian sentinels, who were fast asleep, as they were not afraid of any thing of the kind before any noise was made. Their dying groans were the first sound that was heard; then, awaking from their sleep, a sudden consternation and confusion followed, the cause of the alarm being unknown. At length, one rousing another, the fact became more certain, and now every one shouted "To arms" with all his might; "that the enemy were in the citadel and the sentinels slain;" and the Romans, who were far inferior in numbers, would have been overpowered, had not a shout raised by those who were outside of the citadel rendered it uncertain whence the noise proceeded, while the terror of an alarm by night magnified all fears, however groundless. The Carthaginians, therefore, terrified and supposing that the citadel was already filled with the enemy, gave up all thoughts of opposition and fled to the other citadel; for there were two at no great distance from each other. The townsmen held the city, which lay between the two fortresses, as the prize of the victors. Slight engagements took place daily from the two citadels. Quintus Pleminius commanded the Roman, Hamilcar the Carthaginian garrison. They augmented their forces by calling in aids from the neighboring places. At last Hannibal himself came; nor would the Romans have held out, had not the general body of the Locrians, exasperated by the pride and rapacity of the Carthaginians, leaned towards the Romans.
7. When Scipio received intelligence that the posture of affairs at Locri
had become more critical, and that Hannibal himself was approaching, lest
even the garrison might be exposed to danger; for it was not an easy matter
for it to retire thence; as soon as the direction of the tide in the strait
had changed, he let the ships drive with the tide from Messana, having
left his brother, Lucius Scipio, in command there. Hannibal also sent a
messenger in advance from the river Butrotus, which is not far from the
town of Locri, to desire his party to attack the Romans and Locrians at
break of day in the most vigorous manner, while he on the opposite side
assaulted the town, which would be unprepared for such a measure, as every
one would have his attention occupied with the tumult created in the other
quarter. But when, as soon as it was light, he found that the battle had
commenced, he was unwilling to shut himself up in the citadel, where, by
his numbers, he would crowd that confined place; nor had he brought with
him scaling-ladders to enable him to mount the walls. Having, however,
had the baggage thrown together in a heap, and displayed his line at a
distance from the walls to intimidate the enemy, while the scaling-ladders
and other requisites for an assault were preparing, he rode round the city
with some Numidian horsemen, in order to observe in what quarter the attack
might be best made. Having advanced towards the rampart, the person who
happened to stand next him was struck by a weapon from a scorpion; and,
terrified at an accident in which he had been exposed to so much danger,
he retired, gave directions for sounding a retreat, and fortified a camp
out of the reach of weapons. The Roman fleet from Messana came to Locri
several hours before night. The troops were all landed and had entered
the city before sun-set. The following day the fight began from the citadel
on the part of the Carthaginians, and Hannibal, having now prepared ladders
and all the other requisites for an assault, was coming up to the walls;
when, throwing open the gate, the Romans suddenly sallied out upon him,
Hannibal fearing nothing less than such a step. They slew as many as two
hundred in the attack, having taken them by surprise. The rest Hannibal
withdrew into the camp when he found the consul was there; and having dispatched
a messenger to those who were in the citadel, to desire them to take measures
for their own safety, he decamped by night. Those who were in the citadel
also, after throwing fire upon the buildings they occupied, in order that
the alarm thus occasioned might detain their enemy, went away with a speed
which resembled flight, and overtook the body of their army before night.
8. Scipio, seeing that the citadel was abandoned by the enemy, and their camp deserted, called the Locrians to an assembly and rebuked them severely for their defection. He inflicted punishment on the persons principally concerned, and gave their effects to the leaders of the other party, in consideration of their extraordinary fidelity to the Romans. As to the Locrians in general, he said that he would neither grant them any thing, nor take any thing from them. They might send ambassadors to Rome, and they should experience that treatment which the senate thought proper to adopt. Of one thing, however, he said he was confident, which was, that although they had deserved ill at the hands of the Romans, they would be better off when subject to them, though incensed against them, than they had been when in the power of their friends the Carthaginians. Leaving Quintus Pleminius lieutenant-general, and the garrison which had taken the citadel to defend the city, the general himself crossed over to Messana with the forces he had brought with him. The Locrians had been treated with such insolence and cruelty by the Carthaginians since their revolt from the Romans, that they were able to endure severities of an ordinary kind not only with patience but almost willingness. But indeed, so greatly did Pleminius surpass Hamilcar, who had commanded the garrison, so greatly did the Roman soldiers in the garrison surpass the Carthaginians in villainy and rapacity, that it would appear that they endeavored to outdo each other, not in arms, but in vices. None of all those things which render the power of a superior hateful to the powerless was omitted towards the inhabitants, either by the general or his soldiers. The most shocking insults were committed against their own persons, their children, and their wives, For their rapacity did not abstain from the spoliation even of sacred things; and not only were other temples violated, but even the treasures of Proserpine, which had never been touched through all ages, excepting that they were said to have been carried away by Pyrrhus, who restored the spoils, together with a costly offering in expiation of his sacrilege. Therefore, as on the former occasion, the royal ships, wrecked and shattered, brought nothing safe to land, except the sacred money of the goddess, which they were carrying away; so now also, that same money, by a different kind of calamity, cast a spirit of madness upon all who were contaminated by this violation of the temple, and turned them against each other with the fury of enemies, general against general, and soldier against soldier.
9. Pleminius had the chief command; that part of the soldiers which he
had brought with him from Rhegium were under his own command, the rest
were under the command of the tribunes. One of Pleminius's men, while running
away with a silver cup which he had stolen from the house of a townsman,
the owners pursuing him, happened to meet Sergius and Matienus, the military
tribunes. The cup having been taken away from him at the order of the tribunes,
abuse and clamor ensued, and at last a fight arose between the soldiers
of Pleminius and those of the tribunes; the numbers engaged and the tumult
increasing at the same time, as either party was joined by their friends
who happened to come up at the time. When the soldiers of Pleminius, who
had been worsted, had run to him in crowds, not without loud clamoring
and indignant feelings, showing their blood and wounds, and repeating the
reproaches which had been heaped upon him during the dispute, Pleminius,
fired with resentment, flung himself out of his house, ordered the tribunes
to be summoned and stripped, and the rods to be brought out. During the
time which was consumed in stripping them, for they made resistance, and
implored their men to aid them, on a sudden the soldiers, flushed with
their recent victory, ran together from every quarter, as if there had
been a shout to arms against enemies; and when they saw the bodies of their
tribunes now mangled with rods, then indeed, suddenly inflamed with much,
more ungovernable rage, without respect, not only for the dignity of their
commander, but of humanity, they made an attack upon the lieutenant-general,
having first mutilated the lictors in a shocking manner; they then cruelly
lacerated the lieutenant-general himself, having cut him off from his party
and hemmed him in, and after mutilating his nose and ears left him almost
lifeless. Accounts of these occurrences arriving at Messana, Scipio, a
few days after, passing over to Locri in a ship with six banks of oars,
took cognizance of the cause of Pleminius and the tribunes. Having acquitted
Pleminius and left him in command of the same place, and pronounced the
tribunes guilty and thrown them into chains, that they might be sent to
Rome to the senate, he returned to Messana, and thence to Syracuse. Pleminius,
unable to restrain his resentment, for he thought that the injury he had
sustained had been treated negligently and too lightly by Scipio, and that
no one could form an estimate of the punishment which ought to be inflicted
in such a case, except the man who had in his own person felt its atrocity,
ordered the tribunes to be dragged before him, and after lacerating them
with every punishment which the human body could endure, put them to death;
and not satisfied with the punishment inflicted on them while alive, cast
them out unburied. The like cruelty he exercised towards the Locrian nobles,
whom he heard had gone to Scipio to complain of the injuries he had done
them. The horrid acts, prompted by lust and rapacity, which he had before
perpetrated upon his allies, he now multiplied from resentment; thus bringing
infamy and odium, not only upon himself, but upon the general also.
10. The time of the elections was now drawing near, when a letter from
the consul Publius Licinius arrived at Rome, stating that "he himself
and his army were afflicted with a severe sickness, nor could they have
stood their ground had not the malady attacked the enemy with the same
or even greater violence. Therefore, as he could not come himself to the
election, he would, with the approbation of the senate, nominate Quintus
Caecilius Metellus dictator, for the purpose of holding the election. That
it was for the interest of the state that the army of Quintus Caecilius
should be disbanded; for that it could not be made any use of under present
circumstances, for Hannibal had now withdrawn his troops into winter quarters;
and so violent was the malady which had infected that camp, that unless
it was speedily broken up, there would not survive one man out of the whole
army." The senate left it to the consul to settle these matters, as
he should deem consistent with the interest of the state and his own honor.
The state was at this time suddenly occupied with a question of a religious
nature, in consequence of the discovery of a prediction in the Sibylline
books, which had been inspected on account of there having been so many
showers of stones this year. It ran thus: "Whensoever a foreign enemy
should bring war into the land of Italy, he may be driven out of Italy
and conquered, if the Idaean Mother should be brought from Pessinus to
Rome." This prophecy, discovered by the decemviri, produced the greater
impression upon the senate, because ambassadors also, who had carried a
present to Delphi, had brought word back, that they had both obtained a
favorable appearance in sacrificing to the Pythian Apollo, and that a response
was delivered from the oracle, to the effect, that a much greater victory
than that from the spoils of which they now brought presents, awaited the
Roman people. They considered the presentiment which existed in the mind
of Publius Scipio, with regard to the termination of the war, when he claimed
Africa as his province, as corroborating the same anticipation. In order,
therefore, that they might the more speedily put themselves in possession
of victory, which was portended to them by the fates, omens, and oracles,
they began to think what method could be adopted for conveying the goddess
to Rome.
11. As yet the Roman people had none of the states of Asia in alliance
with them. Recollecting, however, that formerly Aesculapius, on
account of a sickness among the people, was fetched from Greece, which
was not then united with them by any treaty; recollecting, also, that
a friendship had already commenced between them and king Attalus, on
account of the war which they waged in common against Philip, and
that he would do whatever he could to oblige the Roman people, they
resolved to send, as ambassadors to him, Marcus Valerius Laevinus, who
had been twice consul, and had carried on operations in Greece; Marcus
Caecilius Metellus, who had been praetor; Servius Sulpicius Galba,
who had been aedile; and two who had been quaestors, Caius Tremellius
Flaccus and Marcus Valerius Falto. To these five quinqueremes were
assigned, in order that, in a manner suitable to the dignity of the
Roman people, they might visit those lands where it was important
to gain respect for the Roman name. The ambassadors, on their way
to Asia, having landed at Delphi, immediately approached the oracle,
inquiring what hopes the deity held out to themselves and the Roman
people, of accomplishing the business for which they had been sent
from home. It is said that the answer given was, "that they would
obtain what they were seeking by means of king Attalus. When they had
conveyed the goddess to Rome, they must take care that the best man at
Rome should receive her to his hospitality." They came to Pergamus to
the king, who received the ambassadors graciously, and conducted them
to Pessinus in Phrygia, and putting into their hands a sacred stone,
which the inhabitants said was the mother of the gods, bid them convey
it to Rome. Marcus Valerius Falto, who was sent in advance, brought
word that the goddess was on her way, and that the most virtuous man
in the state must be sought out, who might in due form receive and
entertain her. Quintus Caecilius Metellus was nominated dictator for
holding the elections, by the consul in Bruttium, and his army was
disbanded. Lucius Veturius Philo was made master of the horse. The
elections were held by the dictator; the consuls elected were Marcus
Cornelius Cethegus and Publius Sempronius Tuditanus, who was absent,
being engaged in his province of Greece. The praetors were then
elected: Titus Claudius Nero, Marcus Marcius Ralla, Lucius Scribonius
Libo, Marcus Pomponius Matho. On the conclusion of the elections, the
dictator abdicated his office. The Roman games were repeated thrice,
the plebeian seven times. The curule aediles were Cneius and Lucius
Cornelius Lentulus: Lucius had the province of Spain; he was elected
in his absence, and was absent while he filled the office. The
plebeian aediles were Titus Claudius Asellus and Marcus Junius Pennus.
Marcus Marcellus this year dedicated the temple of Virtue at the Porta
Capena, in the seventeenth year after it had been vowed by his father
during his first consulate at Clastidium in Gaul: also Marcus Aemilius
Regillus, flamen of Mars, died this year.
12. For the last two years the affairs of Greece had been neglected. Accordingly,
as the Aetolians were deserted by the Romans, on whom alone they depended
for assistance, Philip compelled them to sue for and agree to a peace on
whatever conditions he pleased. Had he not exerted himself to the utmost
in expediting this measure, he would have been overpowered, while engaged
in war with the Aetolians, by Publius Sempronius, the proconsul, who had
been sent to succeed Sulpicius in the command, with ten thousand infantry
and a thousand horse, together with thirty-five ships of war, a force of
no small importance to bring to the assistance of allies. Ere the peace
was well concluded, news was brought to the king that the Romans had arrived
at Dyrrachium; that the Parthinians, and other bordering nations, were
up in arms on seeing hopes of effecting a change; and that Dimallum was
besieged. The Romans had turned their efforts to that quarter instead of
assisting the Aetolians, for which purpose they had been sent, from resentment
at the conduct of the Aetolians for making peace with the king without
their sanction, contrary to the league. When Philip had received intelligence
of these events, lest any greater commotion should arise in the neighboring
nations and states, he proceeded by forced marches to Apollonia, to which
place Sempronius had retired, having sent Laetorius, his lieutenant-general,
with a part of his forces and fifteen ships into Aetolia, to look into
the state of affairs, and, if he could, dissolve the peace. Philip laid
waste the lands of the Apollonians, and, advancing his troops to the tower,
offered the Romans battle. But seeing that they remained quiet, only defending
the walls, and not having sufficient confidence in his strength to assault
the town, being desirous also of making peace with the Romans if possible,
as he had with the Aetolians, or at least a truce, he withdrew into his
own dominions, without further exciting their animosity by a fresh contest.
During the same time the Epirots, wearied by the long continuance of the
war, having first sounded the disposition of the Romans, sent ambassadors
to Philip on the subject of a common peace; affirming that they were well
satisfied that it might be arranged if he would come to a conference with
Publius Sempronius, the Roman general. They easily prevailed on him to
pass into Epirus, for neither were the king's own inclinations averse from
this measure. Phoenice is a city of Epirus; here Philip first conferred
with Aeropus Dardas and Philip, praetors of the Epirots, and afterwards
met Publius Sempronius. Amynander, king of the Athamanians, and other magistrates
of the Epirots and Acarnanians, were present at the conference. The praetor
Philip spoke first, and requested at once of the king and the Roman general,
that they would put an end to the war, and grant this boon to the Epirots.
Publius Sempronius proposed as the conditions of the peace, that the Parthinians,
and Dimallum, and Bargulum, and Eugenium, should be under the dominion
of the Romans; that Atintania, if on sending ambassadors to Rome they could
prevail upon the senate to acquiesce, should be added to the dominions
of the Macedonian. The peace having been agreed upon on these terms, Prusias
king of Bithynia, the Achaeans, the Boeotians, the Thessalians, the Acarnanians,
and the Epirots, were included in the treaty by the king; by the Romans,
the Ilians, king Attalus, Pleuratus, Nabis tyrant of the Lacedaemonians,
the Eleans, the Messenians, and Athenians. These conditions were committed
to writing and sealed; and a truce was agreed upon for two months, to allow
time for ambassadors being sent to Rome, that the people might order the
peace upon these terms. All the tribes agreed in ordering it, because now
that the operations of the war were removed into Africa, they were desirous
to be relieved for the present from all other wars. The peace being concluded,
Publius Sempronius took his departure for Rome, to attend to the duties
of his consulship.
13. To Publius Sempronius and Marcus Cornelius, the consuls in the
fifteenth year of the Punic war, the provinces assigned were, to
Cornelius, Etruria, with the old army; to Sempronius, Bruttium, with
directions to levy fresh legions. Of the praetors, to Marcus Marcius
fell the city jurisdiction; to Lucius Scribonius Libo, the foreign,
together with Gaul; to Marcus Pomponius Matho, Sicily; to Titus
Claudius Nero, Sardinia. Publius Scipio was continued in command
with the army and fleet which he had under him, as was also Publius
Licinius, with directions to occupy Bruttium with two legions, so long
as the consul should deem it for the advantage of the state that
he should continue in the province with command. Marcus Livius and
Spurius Lucretius were also continued in command, with the two legions
with which they had protected Gaul against Mago; also Cneius Octavius,
with orders that, after he had delivered up Sardinia and the legion
to Titus Claudius, he should, with forty ships of war, protect the
sea-coast within such limits as the senate should appoint. To Marcus
Pomponius, the praetor in Sicily, the troops which had fought at
Cannae, consisting of two legions, were assigned. It was decreed, that
Titus Quinctius and Caius Tubulus, propraetors, should occupy, the
former Tarentum, the latter Capua, as in the former year, each having
his old army. With respect to the command in Spain, it was submitted
to the people to decide on the two proconsuls to be sent into that
province. All the tribes agreed in ordering that the same persons,
namely, Lucius Cornelius Lentulus and Lucius Manlius Acidinus, should,
as proconsuls, hold the command of those provinces as they had the
former year. The consuls set about making the levies, both to raise
new legions for Bruttium, and recruit the other armies; for so were
they directed by the senate.
14. Although Africa had not as yet been openly declared a province, the senate keeping it a secret, I suppose, lest the Carthaginians should get intelligence of it beforehand, nevertheless, the most sanguine hopes were entertained in the city, that the enemy would be vanquished that year in Africa, and that the termination of the Punic war was at hand. This circumstance had filled the minds of the people with superstitious notions, and they were strongly disposed to credit and propagate accounts of prodigies, and for that reason more were reported. It was said, "that two suns had been seen; that it had become light for a time during the night; that at Setia a meteor had been seen, extending from the east to the west; that at Tarracina a gate, at Anagnia a gate and the wall in many places, had been struck by lightning; that in the temple of Juno Sospita, at Lanuvium, a noise had been heard, accompanied with a tremendous crash." There was a supplication for one day for the purpose of expiating these, and the nine days' sacred rite was celebrated on account of a shower of stones. In addition to these cares, they had to deliberate about the reception of the Idaean Mother; for besides that Marcus Valerius, one of the ambassadors who had come before the rest, had brought word that she would be in Italy forthwith a recent account had arrived that she was at Tarracina. The senate was occupied with the determination of a matter of no small importance, namely, who was the most virtuous man in the state. Every one doubtless would wish for himself the victory in this contest, rather than any office of command, or any honors, which could be conferred by the suffrages either of the senate or the people. Publius Scipio, son of Cneius who had fallen in Spain, a youth not yet of the age to be quaestor, they adjudged to be the best of the good men in the whole state. Though I would willingly record it for the information of posterity, had the writers who lived in the times nearest to those events mentioned by what virtues of his they were induced to come to this determination, yet I will not obtrude my own opinion, formed upon conjecture, relative to a matter buried in the obscurity of antiquity. Publius Cornelius was ordered to go to Ostia, attended by all the matrons, to meet the goddess; to receive her from the ship himself, and, when landed, place her in the hands of the matrons to convey her away. After the ship arrived at the mouth of the Tiber, Scipio, according to the directions given him, sailed out into the open sea, and, receiving the goddess from the priests, conveyed her to land. The chief matrons in the state received her, among whom the name of Claudia Quinta alone is worthy of remark. Her fame, which, as it is recorded, was before that time dubious, became, in consequence of her having assisted in so solemn a business, illustrious for chastity among posterity. The matrons, passing her from one to another in orderly succession, conveyed the goddess into the temple of Victory, in the Palatium, on the day before the ides of April, which was made a festival, while the whole city poured out to meet her; and, placing censers before their doors, on the way by which she was conveyed in procession, kindled frankincense, and prayed that she would enter the city of Rome willingly and propitiously. The people in crowds carried presents to the goddess in the Palatium; a lectisternium was celebrated, with games called the Megalesian.
15. When the business of recruiting the legions in the provinces was under consideration, it was suggested by certain senators that now was the time, when, by the favor of the gods, their fears were removed, to put a stop to certain things, however they might have been tolerated in perilous circumstances. The senators, being intent in expectation, subjoined, that the twelve Latin colonies which had refused to furnish soldiers to the consuls, Quintus Fabius and Quintus Fulvius, were enjoying, for now the sixth year, exemption from military service, as though it had been granted to them a mark of honor and favor; while in the mean time their good and dutiful allies, in return for their fidelity and obedience to the Roman people, had been exhausted by continual levies every year. By these words the recollection of the senate was renewed touching a matter which was now almost obliterated, and their indignation equally excited. Accordingly, without allowing the consuls to lay any other business before the senate in priority, they decreed, "that the consuls should summon to Rome the magistrates, and ten principal inhabitants, from each of the colonies, Xepete, Sutrium, Ardea, Cales, Alba, Carseoli, Sora, Suessa, Setia, Circeii, Narnia, and Interamna; for these were the colonies implicated in this affair; and command them that each of those colonies should furnish double the greatest number of foot soldiers which they had ever provided for the Roman people since the enemy had been in Italy, and one hundred and twenty horsemen each. If any of them was unable to make up that number of horsemen, that it should be allowed to furnish three foot soldiers for every horseman deficient. That both the foot and horse soldiers should be chosen from the wealthiest of the inhabitants, and should be sent out of Italy wheresoever there was want of recruits. If any of them refused to comply, it was their pleasure that the magistrates and ambassadors of such should be detained; and that, if they requested it, they should not be allowed an audience of the senate till they had obeyed these orders. Moreover, that an annual tax should be imposed upon them, and collected after the rate of one as for every thousand; and that a census should be taken in those colonies, according to a formula appointed by the Roman censors, which should be the same which was employed in the case of the Roman people; and that a return should be made at Rome by sworn censors of the colonies, before they retired from their office." The magistrates and principal men of these colonies having been summoned to Rome, when the consuls imposed upon them the contribution of men, and the management of the tax, they vied with each other in making excuses, and remonstrating against it. They said "it was impossible that so large a number of men could be raised. That they could scarcely accomplish it, if even the simple contribution only, according to the established ratio, were required of them. They entreated and besought them that they might be allowed to appear before the senate and deprecate their resolution. They had committed no crime for which they deserved to be ruined; but, even if they were to be ruined, neither their own crime nor the resentment of the Roman people could make them furnish a greater number of soldiers than they had got." The consuls, persisting, ordered the ambassadors to remain at Rome, and the magistrates to go home to make the levies; observing, that "unless the amount of soldiers enjoined were brought to Rome, no one would give them an audience of the senate." All hope of appearing before the senate, and deprecating their decision, being then cut off, the levies were completed in the twelve colonies without difficulty, as the number of their youth had increased during their long exemption from service.
16. Another affair, likewise, which had been passed over in silence
for an almost equally long period, was laid before the senate by
Marcus Valerius Laevinus; who said, "that equity required that the
monies which had been contributed by private individuals, when he
and Marcus Claudius were consuls, should now at length be repaid. Nor
ought any one to feel surprised that a case, where the public faith
was pledged, should have engaged his attention in an especial manner;
for, besides that the matter appertained, in some degree, peculiarly
to the consul of that year in which the money was contributed, he was
himself the author of the measure, as the treasury was drained, and
the people unable to pay the taxes." This suggestion was well received
by the senate, and, bidding the consuls to propose the question, they
decreed, "that this money should be paid by three instalments; that
the present consuls should make the first payment immediately, and the
third and fifth consuls, from that time, the two remaining."
After this, all their other cares gave place to one alone when the sufferings
of the Locrians, of which they had been ignorant up to that day, were made
known by the arrival of their ambassadors. Nor was it the villainy of Pleminius
so much as the partiality or negligence of Scipio in that affair, which
excited the resentment of the people. While the consuls were sitting in
the comitium, ten ambassadors of the Locrians, covered with filth, and
in mourning, and extending branches of olive, the badges of suppliants,
according to the Grecian custom, prostrated themselves on the ground before
the tribunal, with loud lamentations. In answer to the inquiry of the consuls,
they said, "that they were Locrians, who had suffered such things
at the hands of Pleminius the lieutenant-general, and the Roman soldiers,
as the Roman people would not wish even the Carthaginians to experience.
They requested that they would allow them to appear before the senate,
and complain of their sufferings."
17. An audience having been granted, the eldest of them thus spoke: "I know, conscript fathers, that the importance you will attach to the complaints we make before you must depend, in a very great degree, upon your accurately knowing the manner in which Locri was betrayed to Hannibal, and placed again under your dominion after the expulsion of his garrison. Inasmuch as if the guilt of defection does not rest upon the public, and it is made apparent that our restoration to your dominion was effected, not only in concurrence with our wishes, but by our own co-operation and valor, you will be the more indignant that such atrocious and shameful injuries should have been inflicted upon good and faithful allies by your lieutenant-general and soldiers. But I think it proper that the subject of our changing sides, in both instances, should be deferred to another time, on two accounts: first, that it may be discussed in the presence of Publius Scipio, who retook Locri, and who witnessed all our acts, both good and bad; and secondly, because, whatever we are, we ought not to have suffered what we have. We cannot conceal, conscript fathers, that when we had a Carthaginian garrison in our citadel we were exposed to many sufferings, of a shocking and shameful kind, from Hamilcar, the captain of the garrison, and the Numidians and Africans. But what are they compared with what we endure this day? I request, conscript fathers, that you will hear without offense what I am reluctant to mention. All mankind are now in a state of anxious suspense, whether they are to see you or the Carthaginians lords of the world. If an estimate is to be formed of the Roman and Carthaginian governments from what we Locrians have suffered from the Carthaginians on the one hand, or on the other, from what we are suffering, at the present time especially, from your garrison; there is no one who would not wish the Carthaginians to be his masters rather than the Romans. And yet observe what are the feelings which the Locrians have entertained towards you. When we were suffering injuries of much less magnitude from the Carthaginians, we fled for protection to your general; now we are suffering more than hostile indignities from your garrison, we have carried our complaints to no others than yourselves. Conscript fathers! either you will consider our forlorn condition or there is no other resource left us for which we can even pray to the immortal gods. Quintus Pleminius, the lieutenant-general, was sent with a body of troops to recover Locri from the Carthaginians, and was left there in command of the same as a garrison. In this your lieutenant-general there is neither any thing of a man, conscript fathers, but the figure and outward appearance, (for the extremity of our misery prompts me to speak freely,) nor of a Roman citizen, but the attire and dress, and the sound of the Latin language. He is a pest and savage monster, such as are fabled to have beset the strait by which we are separated from Sicily, for the destruction of mariners. And yet if he had been content to be the only person to vent his villainy, his lust, and rapacity upon your allies, that one gulf, deep as it was, we would however have filled up by our patience. But the case is, he has made every one of your centurions and soldiers a Pleminius, so indiscriminately has he willed that licentiousness and wickedness should be practiced. All plunder, spoil, beat, wound, and slay; all defile matrons, virgins, and free-born youths torn from the embraces of their parents. Our city is captured daily, plundered daily. Day and night, every place indiscriminately rings with the lamentations of women and children, seized and carried away. Any one, acquainted with our sufferings, might be astonished how it is that we are capable of bearing them, or that the authors of them are not yet satiated with inflicting such enormous cruelties. Neither am I able to go through with them, nor is it worth your while to listen to the particulars of our sufferings. I will embrace them all in a general description. I declare that there is not a house or a man at Locri exempt from injury. I say that there cannot be found any species of villainy, lust, or rapacity which has not been exercised on every one capable of being the object of them. It would be difficult to determine in which case the city was visited with the more horrible calamity, whether when it was captured by an enemy, or when a sanguinary tyrant crushed it by violence and arms. Every evil, conscript fathers, which captured cities suffer, we have suffered, and do now as much as ever suffer. All the enormities which the most cruel and savage tyrants are wont to perpetrate upon their oppressed subjects, Pleminius has perpetrated upon ourselves, our children, and our wives.
18. "There is one circumstance, however, in complaining of which particularly we may be allowed to yield to our deeply-rooted sense of religion, and indulge a hope that you will listen to it; and, if it shall seem good to you, conscript fathers, free your state from the guilt of irreligious conduct. For we have seen with how great solemnity you not only worship your own deities, but entertain even those of foreign countries. We have a fane dedicated to Proserpine, of the sanctity of which temple I imagine some accounts must have reached you, during the war with Pyrrhus; who, when sailing by Locri, on his return from Sicily, among other horrid enormities which he committed against our state, on account of our fidelity towards you, plundered also the treasures of Proserpine, which had never been touched up to that day; and then, putting the money on board his ships, proceeded on his journey himself by land. What, therefore, was the result, conscript fathers? The next day his fleet was shattered by a most hideous tempest, and all the ships which carried the sacred money were thrown on our shores. That most insolent king, convinced by this so great disaster that there were gods, ordered all the money to be collected and restored to the treasures of the goddess. However, he never met with any success afterwards; but, after being driven out of Italy, he died an ignoble and dishonorable death, having incautiously entered Argos by night. Though your lieutenant-general and military tribune had heard of these, and a thousand other circumstances, which were related not for the purpose of creating increased reverence, but frequently experienced by ourselves and our ancestors, through the special interposition of the goddess, they had, nevertheless, the audacity to apply their sacrilegious hands to those hallowed treasures, and pollute themselves, their own families, and your soldiers, with the impious booty. Through whom we implore you, conscript fathers, by your honor, not to perform any thing in Italy or in Africa, until you have expiated their guilty deed, lest they should atone for the crime they have committed, not with their own blood only, but by some disaster affecting their country. Although, even now, conscript fathers, the resentment of the goddess does not tarry either towards your generals or your soldiers. Already have they several times engaged each other in pitched battles, one party headed by Pleminius, and the other by the two military tribunes. Never did they employ their weapons with more fury against the Carthaginians than when encountering each other; and they would have afforded Hannibal an opportunity of retaking Locri, had not Scipio, whom we called in, come in time to prevent it. But, by Hercules, is it that the soldiers are impelled by frenzy, and that the influence of the goddess has not shown itself in punishing the generals themselves? Nay, herein her interposition was manifested in the most conspicuous manner. The tribunes were beaten with rods by the lieutenant-general. Then the lieutenant-general, treacherously seized by the tribunes, besides being mangled in every part of his body, had his nose and ears cut off, and was left for dead. Then, recovering from his wounds, he threw the tribunes into chains; beat them, tortured them with every species of degrading punishment, and put them to death in a cruel manner, forbidding them to be buried. Such atonements has the goddess exacted from the despoilers of her temple; nor will she cease to pursue them, with every species of vengeance, till the sacred money shall have been replaced in the treasury. Formerly, our ancestors, during a grievous war with the Crotonians, because the temple was without the town, were desirous of removing the money into it; but a voice was heard from the shrine, during the night, commanding them to hold off their hands, for the goddess would defend her own temple. As they were deterred, by religious awe, from removing the treasures thence, they were desirous of surrounding the temple with a wall. The walls were raised to a considerable height, when they suddenly fell down in ruins. But, both now, and frequently on other occasions, the goddess has either defended her own habitation and temple, or has exacted heavy expiations from those who had violated it. Our injuries she cannot avenge, nor can any but yourselves avenge them, conscript fathers. To you, and to your honor, we fly, as suppliants. It makes no difference to us whether you suffer Locri to be subject to that lieutenant-general and that garrison, or whether you deliver us up for punishment to incensed Hannibal and the Carthaginians. We do not request that you should at once believe us respecting one who is absent, and when the cause has not been heard. Let him come; let him hear our charges in person, and refute them himself. If there is any enormity one man can commit against another which he has not committed upon us we do not refuse to suffer all the same cruelties over again, if it is possible we can endure them, and let him be acquitted of all guilt towards gods and men."
19. When the ambassadors had thus spoken, and Quintus Fabius had asked
them whether they had carried those complaints to Publius Scipio, they
answered, "that deputies were sent to him, but he was occupied with
the preparations for the war, and had either already crossed over into
Africa, or was about to do so within a few days. That they had experienced
how highly the lieutenant-general was in favor with the general, when,
after hearing the cause between him and the tribunes, he threw the tribunes
into chains, while he left the lieutenant-general, who was equally or more
guilty, in possession of the same power as before." The ambassadors,
having been directed to withdraw from the senate-house, not only Pleminius,
but even Scipio, was severely inveighed against by the principal men; but,
above all, by Quintus Fabius, who endeavored to show, "that he was
born for the corruption of military discipline. It was thus," he said,
"that in Spain he almost lost more men in consequence of mutiny than
the war. That, after the manner of foreigners and kings, he indulged the
licentiousness of the soldiers, and then punished them with cruelty."
He then followed up his speech by a resolution equally harsh: that "it
was his opinion, that Pleminius should be conveyed to Rome in chains, and
in chains plead his cause; and, if the complaints of the Locrians were
founded in truth, that he should be put to death in prison, and his effects
confiscated. That Publius Scipio should be recalled, for having quitted
his province without the permission of the senate; and that the plebeian
tribunes should be applied to, to propose to the people the abrogation
of his command. That the senate should reply to the Locrians, when brought
before them, that the injuries which they complained of having received
were neither approved of by the senate nor the people of Rome. That they
should be acknowledged as worthy men, allies, and friends; that their children,
their wives, and whatsoever else had been taken from them, should be restored;
that the sum of money which had been taken from the treasures of Proserpine
should be collected, and twice the amount placed in the treasury. That
an expiatory sacred rite should be celebrated, first referring it to the
college of pontiffs, to determine what atonements should be made, to what
gods, and with what victims, in consequence of the sacred treasures' having
been removed and violated. That the soldiers at Locri should be all transported
into Sicily, and four cohorts of the allies of the Latin confederacy taken
to Locri for a garrison." The votes could not be entirely collected
that day in consequence of the warm feeling excited for and against Scipio.
Besides the atrocious conduct of Pleminius, and the calamities of the Locrians,
much was said about the dress of the general himself, as being not only
not Roman, but even unsoldierlike. It was said, that "he walked about
in the gymnasium in a cloak and slippers, and that he gave his time to
light books and the palaestra. That his whole staff were enjoying the delights
which Syracuse afforded, with the same indolence and effeminacy. That Carthage
and Hannibal had dropped out of his memory; that the whole army, corrupted
by indulgence, like that at Sucro in Spain, or that now at Locri, was more
to be feared by its allies than by its enemies."
20. Though these charges, partly true, and partly containing a mixture
of truth and falsehood, and therefore, probably, were urged with
vehemence; the opinion, however, of Quintus Metellus prevailed, who,
agreeing with Maximus on other points, differed from him in the case
of Scipio. "For how inconsistent would it be," said he, "that the
person whom the state a little while ago selected as their general,
though a very young man, for the recovery of Spain; whom, after he
had taken Spain out of the hands of their enemies, they elected their
consul, for the purpose of putting an end to the Punic war; whom they
marked out with the most confident anticipation as the person who
would draw Hannibal out of Italy, and subdue Africa; how inconsistent
would it be, that this man, like another Pleminius, condemned in
a manner without a hearing, should suddenly be recalled from his
province! when the Locrians asserted that the wicked acts which had
been committed against them were done not even in the presence of
Scipio, and no other charge could be brought against him, than that he
spared the lieutenant-general, either from good nature or respect. He
thought it advisable, that Marcus Pomponius the praetor, to whose lot
the province of Sicily had fallen, should go to his province within
the next three days; that the consuls should select out of the senate
ten deputies, whomsoever they thought proper, and send them with the
praetor, together with two tribunes of the people, and an aedile. That
the praetor, assisted by this council, should take cognizance of the
affair. If those acts of which the Locrians complained were committed
at the command or with the concurrence of Scipio, that they should
command him to quit the province. If Publius Scipio had already
crossed over into Africa, that the tribunes of the people and the
aedile, with two of the deputies, whom the praetor should judge most
fit for it, should proceed into Africa; the tribunes and the aedile to
bring Scipio back from thence, and the deputies to take the command of
the army until a new general had come to it. But if Marcus Pomponius
and the ten deputies should discover that those acts had been
committed neither with the orders nor concurrence of Publius Scipio,
that Scipio should then remain with the army and carry on the war as
he had proposed." A decree of the senate having passed to this effect,
application was made to the tribunes of the people to arrange among
themselves, or determine by lot, which two should go with the praetor
and the deputies. The advice of the college of pontiffs was taken on
the subject of the expiations to be made, on account of the treasures
in the temple of Proserpine, at Locri, having been touched, violated,
and carried out of it. The tribunes of the people, who went with the
praetor and ten deputies, were Marcus Claudius Marcellus and Marcus
Cincius Alimentus. To these a plebeian aedile was given, whom, if
Scipio, whether he was still in Sicily or had now crossed over into
Africa, should refuse to obey the orders of the praetor, the tribunes
might direct to apprehend him, and bring him home in right of their
most sacred authority. The plan was, to go to Locri before they went
to Messana.
21. With regard to Pleminius, there are two different accounts. Some
relate that, having heard what measures had been adopted at Rome,
as he was going into exile to Naples, he accidentally fell in with
Quintus Metellus, one of the deputies, by whom he was forcibly
conveyed back to Rhegium. Others say, that Scipio himself sent a
lieutenant-general with thirty of the most distinguished of the
cavalry to throw Quintus Pleminius into chains, and with him the
principal movers of the mutiny. All these, whether by the orders
of Scipio before, or of the praetor now, were delivered over to the
Rhegians to be kept in custody. The praetor and the deputies going to
Locri, gave their attention first to the affair relating to religion,
agreeably to their instructions; for, collecting all the sacred money,
whether in the possession of Pleminius or the soldiers, they replaced
it in the treasury, together with that which they had brought with
them, and performed an expiatory sacred rite. The praetor then,
summoning the soldiers to an assembly, ordered them to march out of
the city, and pitched a camp in the plain, issuing an edict which
threatened severe punishment to any soldier who either had remained
behind in the city, or had carried out with him what did not belong to
him. He gave permission to the Locrians to seize whatever each of them
identified as his property, and demand restitution to be made of any
thing which was concealed. Above all, he was resolved that the free
persons should be restored to the Locrians without delay. That the man
who did not restore them should be visited with no light punishment.
He then held an assembly of the Locrians, and told them, that "the
people and senate of Rome restored to them their liberty and their
laws. That if any one was desirous of bringing charges against
Pleminius, or any one else, he should follow them to Rhegium. If they
were desirous of complaining, in the name of their state, of Publius
Scipio, as having ordered and approved of the nefarious acts which had
been committed at Locri against gods and men, that they should send
deputies to Messana, where, with the assistance of his council, he
would hear them." The Locrians returned thanks to the praetor and
deputies, and to the senate and people of Rome, and said that they
would go and bring their charge against Pleminius. That Scipio, though
he had evinced too little sympathy in the injuries inflicted on their
state, was such a man as they would rather have their friend than
their enemy; that they were convinced that the many and horrid acts
which had been committed were done neither by the orders nor with
the approval of Publius Scipio; that he had either placed too much
confidence in Pleminius, or too little in them; that the natural
disposition of some men was such, that they rather were unwilling that
crimes should be committed, than had sufficient resolution to punish
them when committed. Both the praetor and his council were relieved
from a burden of no ordinary weight in not having to take cognizance
of charges against Scipio. Pleminius, and as many as thirty-two
persons with him, they condemned and sent in chains to Rome. They
then proceeded to Scipio, that they might carry to Rome a statement
attested by their own observation relative to the facts which had been
so generally talked of, concerning the dress and indolent habits of
the general, and the relaxation of military discipline.
22. While they were on their way to Syracuse, Scipio prepared to clear
himself, not by words but facts. He ordered all his troops to assemble
there, and the fleet to be got in readiness, as though a battle had been
to be fought that day with the Carthaginians, by sea and land. On the day
of their arrival he entertained them hospitably, and on the next day presented
to their view his land and naval forces, not only drawn up in order, but
the former performing evolutions, while the fleet in the harbor itself
also exhibited a mock naval fight. The praetor and the deputies were then
conducted round to view the armories, the granaries, and other preparations
for the war. And so great was the admiration excited in them of each particular,
and of the whole together, that they firmly believed, that under the conduct
of that general, and with that army, the Carthaginians would be vanquished,
or by none other. They bid him, with the blessing of the gods, cross over,
and, as soon as possible, realize to the Roman people the hopes they conceived
on that day when all the centuries concurred in naming him first consul.
Thus they set out on their return in the highest spirits, as though they
were about to carry to Rome tidings of a victory, and not of a grand preparation
for war. Pleminius, and those who were implicated in the same guilt with
him, when they arrived at Rome, were thrown immediately into prison. At
first, when brought before the people by the tribunes, they found no place
in their compassion, as their minds were previously engrossed by the sufferings
of the Locrians; but afterwards, being repeatedly brought before them,
and the hatred with which they were regarded subsiding, their resentment
was softened. Besides, the mutilated appearance of Pleminius, and their
recollections of the absent Scipio, operated in gaining them favor with
the people. Pleminius, however, died in prison, before the people had come
to a determination respecting him. Clodius Licinius, in the third book
of his Roman history, relates, that this Pleminius, during the celebration
of the votive games, which Africanus, in his second consulate, exhibited
at Rome, made an attempt, by means of certain persons whom he had corrupted
by bribes, to set fire to the city in several places, that he might have
an opportunity of breaking out of prison, and making his escape; and that
afterwards, the wicked plot having been discovered, he was consigned to
the Tullian dungeon, according to a decree of the senate. The case of Scipio
was considered no where but in the senate; where all the deputies and tribunes,
bestowing the highest commendations on the fleet, the army, and the general,
induced the senate to vote that he should cross over into Africa as soon
as possible; and that permission should be given him to select himself,
out of those armies which were in Sicily, those forces which he would carry
with him into Africa, and those which he would leave for the protection
of the province.
23. While the Romans were thus employed, the Carthaginians, on their part,
though they had passed an anxious winter, earnestly inquiring what was
going on, and terrified at the arrival of every messenger, with watch-towers
placed on every promontory, had gained a point of no small importance for
the defense of Africa, in adding to their allies king Syphax, in reliance
on whom chiefly they believed the Romans would cross over into Africa.
Hasdrubal, son of Gisgo, not only formed a connection of hospitality with
the before-named king, when Scipio and Hasdrubal happened to come to him
at the same time out of Spain, but mention had also been slightly made
of an affinity to take place between them, by the king's marrying the daughter
of Hasdrubal. Hasdrubal, who had gone for the purpose of completing this
business, and fixing a time for the nuptials, for the virgin was now marriageable,
perceiving that the king was inflamed with desire, for the Numidians are,
beyond all the other barbarians, violently addicted to love, sent for the
virgin from Carthage, and hastened the nuptials. Among the other proofs
of joy felt upon the occasion, and in order that a public connection might
be added to this private one, an oath was taken in confirmation of an alliance
between the Carthaginian people and the king, and faith reciprocally pledged
that they would have the same friends and enemies. But Hasdrubal, recollecting
both the alliance which had been entered into by the king and Scipio, and
how inconstant and changeable were the minds of the barbarians, was afraid
that, if Scipio were to invade Africa, that marriage would prove but a
slight bond of union, he therefore took advantage of the Numidian while
under the influence of the first transports of love, and calling to his
aid the caresses of the bride, prevailed upon him to send ambassadors into
Sicily to Scipio, and by them to warn him "not to cross over into
Africa in reliance upon his former promises. That he was united to the
Carthaginians both by a marriage with a Carthaginian citizen, the daughter
of Hasdrubal, whom he saw entertained at his house, and likewise by a public
treaty. That his first wish was that the Romans would carry on the war
with the Carthaginians at a distance from Africa, as they had hitherto
done, lest he should be compelled to interfere with their disputes, and
join one of the two contending parties, renouncing his alliance with the
other. If Scipio should not keep away from Africa, and should advance his
army to Carthage, it would be incumbent upon him to fight for the land
of Africa, which gave him birth, and for the country of his spouse, for
her parent, and household gods."
24. The ambassadors, sent to Scipio by the king with these instructions,
met him at Syracuse. Scipio, though disappointed in an affair which was
of the greatest importance with regard to his operations in Africa, and
in the sanguine expectations he had formed from it, sent the ambassadors
back into Africa speedily, before their business was made known, giving
them letters for the king, in which he warned him over and over again "not
to violate the laws of hospitality which bound them together; the obligation
of the alliance entered into with the Roman people; nor make light of justice,
honor, their right hands pledged, and the gods the witnesses and arbitrators
of compacts." But, as the coming of the Numidians could not be concealed,
for they lounged about the city, and had frequently appeared at the pavilion;
and as, if nothing were said about the object of their visit, there was
danger lest the truth, from the very circumstance of its being made a secret,
should spontaneously spread the more; and, in consequence, the troops become
alarmed lest they should have to wage war at once with the king and the
Carthaginians, Scipio endeavored to divert their attention from the truth
by preoccupying their minds with false information; and, summoning his
soldiers to an assembly, said, "that it was not expedient to delay
any longer. That the kings, their allies, urged them to cross over into
Africa with all speed. That Masinissa himself had before come to Laelius,
complaining that time was consumed in delays, and that now Syphax sent
ambassadors, expressing his astonishment on the same account, namely, what
could be the cause of such long delay; and requesting either that the army
would now at length be transported into Africa, or, if the plan was changed,
that he might be informed so that he might himself take measures for the
safety of himself and his dominions. Therefore, as every thing was now
ready and prepared, and as the business admitted of no further delay, he
was resolved, after having removed the fleet to Lilybaeum, and collected
here all his forces of foot and horse, with the blessing of the gods to
pass over into Africa the first day the ships could sail." He sent
a letter to Marcus Pomponius, directing him, if he thought proper, to come
to Lilybaeum, that they might consult together as to what legions, in preference
to any others, and how large a number of soldiers, they should convey into
Africa; he also sent round to every part of the sea-coast, with directions
that all the ships of burthen should be seized and collected at Lilybaeum.
When all the soldiers and ships in Sicily were assembled at Lilybaeum,
and neither the city could contain the multitude of men, nor the harbor
the ships, so ardent was the desire possessed by all of passing over to
Africa, that they did not appear as if going to wage war, but to reap the
certain rewards of victory. Particularly those who remained of the soldiers
who had fought at Cannae felt convinced that under Scipio, and no other
general, they would be enabled, by exerting themselves in the cause of
the state, to put an end to their ignominious service. Scipio was very
far from feeling contempt for that description of soldiers, inasmuch as
he knew that the defeat sustained at Cannae was not attributable to their
cowardice, and that there were no soldiers in the Roman army who had served
so long, or were so experienced not only in the various kinds of battles,
but in assaulting towns also. The legions which had fought at Cannae were
the fifth and sixth. After declaring that he would take these with him
into Africa, he inspected them man by man; and leaving those whom he considered
unfit for service, he substituted for them those whom he had brought from
Sicily, filling up those legions so that each might contain six thousand
two hundred infantry and three hundred horse. The horse and foot of the
allies, of the Latin confederacy, he also chose out of the army of Cannae.
25. There is a wide difference among historians as to the number of
men transported into Africa. In some I find ten thousand infantry and
two hundred horse; in others, sixteen thousand infantry and sixteen
hundred horse. In others, again, I find it stated that thirty-five
thousand infantry and cavalry were put on board the fleet, making the
number more than one half greater. Some have not added an account of
the number; among whom, as the matter is doubtful, I should rather
have myself ranked. Caelius, though he abstains from specifying the
number, increases the impression of their multitude indefinitely. He
says, that birds fell to the ground from the shout of the soldiers,
and that so great a multitude went on board the fleet, that it seemed
as if there was not a man left in Italy or Sicily. Scipio took upon
himself the care of seeing that the soldiers embarked orderly and
without confusion. The seamen, who were made to embark first, Caius
Laelius, the admiral of the fleet, kept in order on board the ships.
The task of the putting on board the provisions was assigned to Marcus
Pomponius, the praetor. Food for forty-five days, of which enough for
fifteen was cooked, was put on board. When they were all embarked, he
sent boats round with directions that the pilots and masters, with
two soldiers from each ship, should assemble in the forum to receive
orders. After they had assembled, he first asked them whether they had
put on board water for the men and cattle, sufficient to last as many
days as the corn would. When they answered that there was water on
board sufficient for five and forty days' consumption, he then charged
the soldiers that, conducting themselves submissively, and keeping
quiet, they would not make any noise or disturb the mariners in the
execution of their duties. He informed them, that he himself and
Lucius Scipio in the right wing, with twenty ships of war, and Caius
Laelius, admiral of the fleet, together with Marcus Porcius Cato, who
was then quaestor, with the same number of ships of war in the left
wing, would protect the transports. That the ships of war should carry
each a single light, the transports two each. That in the ship of the
commander-in-chief there would be three lights as a distinction by
night. He desired the pilots to make for Emporia, where the land is
remarkably fertile; and on that account the district abounds with
plenty of every thing, and the barbarous inhabitants are unwarlike,
which is usually the case where the soil is rich. It was supposed
that they might, therefore, be overpowered before assistance could be
brought them from Carthage. After these commands were delivered, they
were ordered to return to their ships, and the next day, with the
blessing of the gods, on the signal being given, to set sail.
26. Many Roman fleets had set sail from Sicily, and from that very harbor.
But not only during this war, nor is that surprising, (for most of the
fleets went out for the purpose of getting plunder,) but even in any former
war, never did a fleet on setting out exhibit so grand a spectacle. And
yet, if the estimate is to be formed with reference to the magnitude of
the fleet, it must be owned that two consuls with their armies had passed
from thence before, and there were almost as many ships of war in those
fleets as the transports with which Scipio was crossing. For, besides fifty
men of war, he conveyed his army over in four hundred transports. But what
made the Romans consider one war as more formidable than the other, the
second than the first, was, that it was carried on in Italy, and that so
many armies had been destroyed, and their commanders slain. The general,
Scipio, also, who enjoyed the highest degree of renown, partly from his
brave achievements, and partly from a peculiar felicity of fortune, which
conducted him to the acquisition of boundless glory, attracted extraordinary
regard. At the same time, the very project of passing over into the enemy's
country, which had not been formed by any general before during that war,
had made him an object of admiration; for he had commonly declared, that
he passed over with the object of drawing Hannibal out of Italy, of removing
the seat of war into Africa, and terminating it there. A crowd of persons
of every description had assembled in the harbor to view the spectacle;
not only the inhabitants of Lilybaeum, but all the deputies from Sicily,
who had come together out of compliment to witness the departure of Scipio,
and had followed Marcus Pomponius, the praetor of the province. Besides
these, the legions which were to be left in Sicily had come forth to do
honor to their comrades on the occasion; and not only did the fleet form
a grand sight to those who viewed it from the land, but the shore also,
crowded as it was all around, afforded the same to those who were sailing
away.
27. As soon as day appeared, silence having been obtained by a herald, Scipio thus spoke from the ship of the commander-in-chief: "Ye gods and goddesses who preside over the seas and lands, I pray and entreat you, that whatever things have been, are now, or shall be performed during my command, may turn out prosperously to myself, the state, and commons of Rome, to the allies and the Latin confederacy, and to all who follow my party and that of the Roman people, my command and auspices, by land, by sea, and on rivers. That you would lend your favorable aid to all those measures, and promote them happily. That you would bring these and me again to our homes, safe and unhurt; victorious over our vanquished enemies, decorated with spoils, loaded with booty, and triumphant. That you would grant us the opportunity of taking revenge upon our adversaries and foes, and put it in the power of myself and the Roman people to make the Carthaginian state feel those signal severities which they endeavored to inflict upon our state." After these prayers, he threw the raw entrails of a victim into the sea, according to custom, and, with the sound of a trumpet, gave the signal for sailing. Setting out with a favorable wind, which blew pretty strong, they were soon borne away out of sight of the land; and in the afternoon a mist came over them, so that they could with difficulty prevent the ships from running foul of each other. The wind abated when they got into the open sea. The following night the same haziness prevailed; but when the sun rose it was dispelled, and the wind blew stronger. They were now within sight of land, and, not long after, the pilot observed to Scipio, that "Africa was not more than five miles off; that he could discern the promontory of Mercury, and that if he gave orders to direct their course thither, the whole fleet would presently be in harbor."
Scipio, when the land was in sight, after praying that his seeing Africa
might be for the good of the state and himself, gave orders to make for
another place of landing, lower down. They were borne along by the same
wind; but a mist, arising nearly about the same time as on the preceding
day, hid the land from them; and the wind fell as the mist grew more dense.
Afterwards, the night coming on increased the confusion in every respect;
they therefore cast anchor, lest the ships should either run foul of each
other, or be driven on shore. At daybreak the wind, rising in the same
quarter, dispelled the mist and discovered the whole coast of Africa. Scipio
asked what was the name of the nearest promontory, and, on being told that
it was called the cape of Pulcher, he observed, "the omen pleases
me, direct your course to it." To this place the fleet ran down, and
all the troops were landed. I have adopted the accounts given by a great
many Greek and Latin authors, who state that the voyage was prosperous,
and unattended with any cause of alarm or confusion. Caelius alone, except
that he does not state that the ships were sunk in the waves, says that
they were exposed to all the terrors of the heavens and the sea, and that
at last the fleet was driven by tempest from Africa to the island Aegimurus,
from which, with great difficulty, they got into the right course; and
that, the ships almost foundering, the soldiers, without orders from their
general, got into boats, just as if they had suffered shipwreck, and escaped
to land without arms, and in the utmost disorder.
28. The troops being landed, the Romans marked out their camp on the nearest
rising grounds. By this time, not only the parts bordering on the sea were
filled with consternation and alarm, first in consequence of the fleet
being seen, and afterwards from the bustle of landing, but they had extended
to the cities also. For not only multitudes of men, mixed with crowds of
women and children, had filled up all the roads in every direction, but
the rustics also drove away their cattle before them, so that you would
say that Africa was being suddenly deserted. In the cities, indeed, they
occasioned much greater terror than they felt themselves. At Carthage,
particularly, the tumult was almost as great as if it had been captured.
For since the time of Marcus Atilius Regulus and Lucius Manlius, which
was almost fifty years ago, the Carthaginians had seen no Roman armament,
with the exception of fleets sent for plundering, from which troops had
made descents upon the lands bordering on the sea, and after carrying away
every thing which chance threw in their way, had always returned to their
ships before their noise had collected the peasantry. For this reason the
hurry and consternation in the city was, on the present occasion, the greater.
And, by Hercules, they had neither an efficient army at home, nor a general,
whom they could oppose to their enemy. Hasdrubal, son of Gisgo, was by
far the first man in their state in respect of birth, fame, opulence, and,
at that time, also by reason of an affinity with the king. But they recollected
that he had been routed in several battles and driven out of Spain by this
very Scipio; and that therefore, as a general, he was no more a match for
the general of the enemy than their tumultuary army was for that of the
Romans. Therefore they shouted to arms, as if Scipio were coming immediately
to attack the city; the gates were hastily closed, armed men placed upon
the walls, guards and outposts stationed in different places, and the following
night was spent in watching. The next day, five hundred horsemen, sent
to the coast to reconnoiter and interrupt the enemy while landing, fell
in with the advanced guards of the Romans; for by this time Scipio, having
sent his fleet to Utica, had proceeded a short distance from the sea, and
occupied the nearest heights. He had also placed outposts of cavalry in
proper situations, and sent troops through the country to plunder.
29. These, engaging the body of Carthaginian horse, slew a few of them
in the fight, and the greater part of them as they pursued them when they
were flying; among whom was Hanno, their captain, a young man of distinction.
Scipio not only devastated the lands in the country round him, but also
took a very wealthy city of the Africans which lay nearest to him; where,
besides other things which were immediately put on board the transports
and sent into Sicily, eight thousand free persons and slaves were captured.
But the most gratifying circumstance to the Romans was, the arrival of
Masinissa just at the commencement of their operations. Some say that he
came with not more than two hundred horse, but most authors say with a
body of two thousand cavalry. But, as this man was by far the greatest
king of his age, and rendered most essential service to the Romans, it
seems worth while to digress a little, to give a full account of the great
vicissitudes of fortune he experienced in the loss and recovery of his
father's kingdom.
While he was serving in Spain in the cause of the Carthaginians, his father, named Gala, died. The kingdom, according to the custom of the Numidians, came to Oesalces, the brother of the late king, who was very aged. Not long after, Oesalces also dying, the elder of his two sons, named Capusa, the other being quite a boy, succeeded to his father's kingdom. But, as he occupied the throne more by right of descent than from the esteem in which he was held among his countrymen, or the power he possessed, there stood forth a person named Mezetulus, not unrelated by blood to the kings, of a family which had always been hostile to them, and had continually contested the right to the throne with those who then occupied it, with various success. This man, having roused his countrymen to arms, over whom he possessed a great influence, from the hatred felt towards the kings, openly pitched his camp, and compelled the king to come into the field and fight for the throne. Capusa, with many of his nobles, falling in the action, the whole nation of the Massylians came under the dominion and rule of Mezetulus. He abstained, however, from assuming the title of king; and, contenting himself with the modest appellation of protector, gave the name of king to the boy Lacumaces, a surviving branch of the royal stock. In the hope of an alliance with the Carthaginians, he formed a matrimonial connection with a noble Carthaginian lady, daughter of Hannibal's sister, who had been lately married to the king Oesalces; and, sending ambassadors for that purpose, renewed an old connection of hospitality with Syphax, taking all these measures with a view to obtain assistance against Masinissa.
30. Masinissa, hearing of the death of his uncle, and afterwards that his cousin-german was slain, passed over out of Spain into Mauritania. Bocchar was king of the Moors at that time. Applying to him as a suppliant, he succeeded, by means of the most humble entreaties, in obtaining from him four thousand Moors to escort him on his march, since he could not procure his co-operation in the war. With these, after sending a messenger before him to his own and his father's friends, he arrived on the frontiers of the kingdom, when about five hundred Numidians came to join him. Having, therefore, sent back the Moors to their king, as had been agreed, though the numbers which joined him were much less than he had anticipated, not being such as to inspire him with sufficient confidence for so great an attempt, yet, concluding that by action, and by making some effort, he should collect sufficient strength to enable him to effect something, he threw himself in the way of the young king Lacumaces, at Thapsus, as he was going to Syphax. The troops which attended him having fled back to the town in consternation, Masinissa took it at the first assault. Of the royal party, some who surrendered themselves he received, others he slew while attempting resistance. The greater part, with the young king himself, escaped during the confusion and came to Syphax, to whom they intended to go at first. The fame of this success, in the commencement of his operations, though of no great magnitude, brought the Numidians over to the cause of Masinissa; and the veteran soldiers of Gala flocked to his standard from all quarters, from the country and the towns, inviting the youth to come and recover his paternal dominions. Mezetulus had somewhat the advantage in the number of his soldiers, for he had himself both the army with which he had conquered Capusa, and also some troops who had submitted to him after the king was slain; and the young king Lacumaces had brought him very large succors from Syphax. Mezetulus had fifteen thousand infantry, and ten thousand cavalry. With these Masinissa engaged in battle, though he had by no means so many horse or foot. The valor, however, of the veteran troops, and the skill of the general, who had been exercised in the war between the Romans and Carthaginians, prevailed. The young king, with the protector and a small body of Massylians, escaped into the territories of the Carthaginians. Masinissa thus recovered his paternal dominions; but, as he saw that there still remained a struggle considerably more arduous with Syphax, he thought it advisable to come to a reconciliation with his cousin-german. Having, therefore sent persons to give the young king hopes, that if he put himself under the protection of Masinissa, he would be held in the same honor by him as Oesalces had formerly been by Gala; and to promise Mezetulus, in addition to impunity, a faithful restitution of all his property; as both of them preferred a moderate share of fortune at home to exile, he brought them over to his side, notwithstanding the Carthaginians studiously exerted every means to prevent it.
31. It happened that Hasdrubal was with Syphax at the time these things
were taking place. He told the Numidian, who considered that it could make
very little difference to him whether the government of the Massylians
was in the hands of Lacumaces or Masinissa, that "he was very much
mistaken if he supposed that Masinissa would be content with the same power
which his father Gala or his uncle Oesalces enjoyed. That he possessed
a much greater degree of spirit, and a more enterprising turn of mind,
than had ever existed in any one of that race. That he had frequently,
when in Spain, exhibited proofs to his allies, as well as to his enemies,
of such valor as was rarely found among men. That both Syphax and the Carthaginians,
unless they smothered that rising flame, would soon find themselves enveloped
in a vast conflagration, when they could not help themselves. That as yet
his strength was feeble, and such as might easily be broken, while he was
trying to keep together a kingdom, which was not yet firmly cemented."
By continually urging and goading him on, he succeeded in inducing him
to lead an army to the frontiers of the Massylians, and to pitch his camp
in a country for which he had not only disputed verbally, but had fought
battles with Gala, as though it had been his own by uncontested right.
He alleged, that "if any one should attempt to dislodge him, which
was what he most wanted, he would have an opportunity of fighting; but,
if the ground were given up to him through fear, he must march into the
heart of the kingdom. That the Massylians would either submit to his authority
without a contest, or would be inferior to him in arms." Syphax, impelled
by these arguments, made war on Masinissa, and, in the first engagement,
routed and put him to flight. Masinissa, with a few horsemen, effected
his escape from the field to a mountain called by the natives Balbus. Several
families, with their tents and cattle, which form their wealth, followed
the king; the rest of the Massylian people submitted to Syphax. The mountain,
which the exiles had seized, had plenty of grass and water; and, as it
was well adapted for feeding cattle, afforded an abundant supply of food
for men who live upon flesh and milk. From this place they infested all
the surrounding country; at first with nightly and clandestine incursions,
but afterwards with open depredations. The lands of the Carthaginians suffered
the severest devastation, because there was not only a greater quantity
of booty there than among the Numidians, but their plunder would be safer.
And now they did it with so much boldness and defiance, that, carrying
their booty down to the sea, they sold it to merchants, who brought their
ships to land for that very purpose; while a greater number of Carthaginians
were slain and made prisoners, than frequently happens in a regular war.
The Carthaginians complained bitterly of these occurrences to Syphax, and
urged him strongly to follow up this remnant of the war, though he was
himself highly incensed at them. But he considered it hardly suitable to
the dignity of a king to pursue a vagabond robber through the mountains.
32. Bocchar, one of the king's generals, an enterprising and active officer,
was chosen for this service. Four thousand infantry and two thousand cavalry
were assigned him; and having been loaded with promises of immense rewards
if he brought back the head of Masinissa, or if, which would be a source
of incalculable joy, he took him alive; he unexpectedly attacked his party
while dispersed and carelessly employed, and after cutting off an immense
quantity of cattle and men from the troops which guarded them, drove Masinissa
himself with a small body of attendants to the summit of the mountain.
On this, considering the business as in a manner settled, he not only sent
the booty of cattle and the prisoners he had made to the king, but also
sent back a part of his forces, as being considerably more than were necessary
to accomplish what remained of the war; and then pursuing Masinissa, who
had come down from the top of the mountain with not more than five hundred
foot and two hundred horse, shut him up in a narrow valley, both the entrances
of which he blocked up. Here great slaughter was made of the Massylians.
Masinissa, with not more than fifty horsemen, disengaged himself from the
defile by passing through steep descents of the mountains, which were not
known to his pursuers. Bocchar, however, followed close upon him, and overtaking
him in the open plains near Clupea, so effectually surrounded him, that
he slew every one of his attendants except four horsemen. These, together
with Masinissa himself, who was wounded, he let slip, in a manner, out
of his hands during the confusion. The fugitives were in sight, and a body
of horse, dispersed over the whole plain, pursued the five horsemen of
the enemy, some of them pushing off in an oblique direction, in order to
meet them. The fugitives met with a very broad river, into which they unhesitatingly
plunged their horses, as they were pressed by greater danger from behind,
and carried away by the current were borne along obliquely. Two of them
having sunk in the rapid eddy in the sight of the enemy, Masinissa himself
was supposed to have perished; but he with the two remaining had emerged
among the bushes on the farther bank. Here Bocchar stopped his pursuit,
as he neither had courage to enter the river, nor believed that he now
had any one to pursue. Upon this he returned to the king, with the false
account of the death of Masinissa. Messengers were dispatched to Carthage
to convey this most joyful event, and all Africa rang with the news of
Masinissa's death; but the minds of men were variously affected by it.
Masinissa, while curing his wound by the application of herbs, was supported
for several days in a secret cave by what the two horsemen procured by
plunder. As soon as it was cicatrized, and he thought himself able to bear
the motion, with extraordinary resolution he set out to recover his kingdom;
and collecting not more than forty horsemen during his progress, when he
arrived among the Massylians, where he now made himself known, he produced
such a sensation among them, both by reason of their former regard for
him, and also from the unhoped-for joy they experienced at seeing him safe
whom they supposed to have perished, that within a few days six thousand
armed foot and four thousand horse came and joined him; and now he not
only was in possession of his paternal dominions, but was also laying waste
the lands of the states in alliance with the Carthaginians, and the frontiers
of the Massylians, the dominions of Syphax. Then, having provoked Syphax
to war, he took up a position between Cirta and Hippo, on the tops of mountains
which were conveniently situated for all his purposes.
33. Syphax, considering this an affair of too great importance to be managed by one of his generals, sent a part of his army with his son Vermina, a youth, with orders to march his troops round and attack the enemy in the rear, while he engaged their attention in front. Vermina set out by night, as he was to fall upon the enemy unawares; but Syphax decamped in the day-time and marched openly, intending to fight a pitched battle. When it was thought that sufficient time had elapsed for those who were sent round to have reached their destination, Syphax himself, relying upon his numbers and on the ambuscade prepared on the enemy's rear, led his troops up the mountain which lay before him, by a gentle acclivity which led towards the enemy. Masinissa, relying chiefly on the great superiority he would have over his opponents in respect of the ground, on his part also formed his troops. The battle was furious, and for a long time doubtful; Masinissa having the advantage in point of situation and the courage of his troops, and Syphax in respect of his numbers, which were much the greater of the two. His numerous troops, which were divided, some of them pressing upon the enemy in front, while others surrounded them on the rear, gave Syphax a decisive victory; and, enclosed as they were in front and rear, the enemy had not even a way to escape. Accordingly, all their troops, both horse and foot, were slain and made prisoners, except about two hundred horsemen, which Masinissa having collected round him in a compact body, and divided into three squadrons, ordered to force their way through, first naming a place where they were to meet after being separated in their flight. Masinissa himself escaped through the midst of the enemy's weapons in the quarter to which he had directed his course; two of the squadrons were unable to extricate themselves; one of them surrendered to the enemy through fear, the other, taking a more obstinate resistance, was overwhelmed with weapons and annihilated. Vermina followed Masinissa, treading almost in his steps; but he eluded him by continually turning out of one road into another, till at length he obliged him, wearied with the hopeless task, to desist from the pursuit, and arrived at the Lesser Syrtis with sixty horsemen. Here, in the country lying between the Carthaginian Emporia and the nation of the Garamantians, he passed all the time till the coming of Caius Laelius and the Roman fleet into Africa, with the proud consciousness of having made every exertion to recover his paternal dominions. These are the circumstances which incline me to the opinion, that afterwards also, when Masinissa came to Scipio, he brought with him a smallish rather than a large body of cavalry to succor him; for the large number would seem to suit only with the condition of a reigning king, while the small number corresponds with the circumstances of an exile.
34. The Carthaginians having lost a detachment of cavalry together with
the commander, got together another body by means of a new levy, and gave
the command of it to Hanno son of Hamilcar. They frequently sent for Hasdrubal
and Syphax by letters and messengers, and lastly even by ambassadors, ordering
Hasdrubal to bring assistance to his almost besieged country, and imploring
Syphax to bring relief to Carthage, nay to all Africa. At that time Scipio
had his camp about five miles from the city of Utica, having removed it
from the sea, where he had continued encamped for a few days near the fleet.
Hanno, having received the body of horse, which was far from being strong
enough, not only to attack the enemy, but even to protect the country from
devastation, made it his first business to augment the number of his cavalry
by pressing; and though he did not despise the men of other nations, he
enlisted principally from the Numidians, who are by far the first horsemen
in Africa. He had now as many as four thousand horsemen, when he took possession
of a town named Salera, about fifteen miles from the Roman camp. When Scipio
was told of this, he said, "What! cavalry lodging in houses during
the summer! Let them be even more in number while they have such a leader."
Concluding that the more dilatory they were in their operations, the more
active he ought to be, he sent Masinissa forward with the cavalry, directing
him to ride up to the gates of the enemy and draw them out to battle; and
when their whole force had poured out and pressed upon him with such impetuosity
in the contest that they could not easily be withstood, then to retire
by degrees, and he would himself come up and join in the battle in time.
Waiting only till he thought he had allowed sufficient time for the advanced
party to draw out the enemy, he followed with the Roman cavalry, proceeding
without being seen, as he was covered by some rising grounds, which lay
very conveniently between him and the enemy, round the windings of the
road. Masinissa, according to the plan laid down, at one time as if menacing
the enemy, at another as if he had been afraid, either rode up to the gates,
or else by retiring when his counterfeited fears had inspired them with
courage, tempted them to pursue him with inconsiderate ardor. They had
not as yet all gone out, and the general was wearying himself with various
occupations, compelling some who were oppressed with sleep and wine to
take arms and bridle their horses, and preventing others from running out
at all the gates in scattered parties and in disorder, without keeping
their ranks or following their standards. At first, those who incautiously
rushed out were overpowered by Masinissa; but then a greater number pouring
out of the gate at once in a dense body, placed the contest on an equal
footing; and at last the whole of their cavalry coming up and joining in
the battle, they could now no longer be withstood. Masinissa, however,
did not receive their charge in hasty flight, but retired slowly, until
he drew them to the rising grounds which covered the Roman cavalry. The
Roman cavalry then rising up, their own strength unimpaired and their horses
fresh, spread themselves round Hanno and the Africans, fatigued with the
fight and the pursuit, and Masinissa, suddenly turning his horses round,
came back to the battle. About a thousand who formed the first line and
could not easily retreat, together with Hanno their general, were surrounded
and slain. The victors pursuing the rest through a space of three miles,
as they fled with the most violent haste, being terrified, principally
on account of the death of their leader, either took or slew as many as
two thousand horsemen more. It appeared that there were not less than two
hundred Carthaginian horsemen among them, some of whom were distinguished
by birth and fortune.
35. It happened that the same day on which these events occurred, the ships which had carried the plunder to Sicily returned with provisions, as if divining that they came to take another cargo of booty. All the writers do not vouch for the fact that two generals of the Carthaginians bearing the same name were slain in the battles of the cavalry; fearing, I believe, lest the same circumstance related twice should lead them into error. Caelius, indeed, and Valerius, make mention of a Hanno also who was made prisoner. Scipio rewarded his officers and horsemen according to the service they had respectively rendered, but he presented Masinissa above all the rest with distinguished gifts. Leaving a strong garrison at Salera, he set out with the rest of his army; and having not only devastated the country wherever he marched, but taken some cities and towns, thus spreading the terrors of war far and wide, he returned to his camp on the seventh day after he set out, bringing with him an immense quantity of men and cattle, and booty of every description, and sent away his ships again loaded with the spoils of the enemy. Then giving up all expeditions of a minor kind, and predatory excursions, he directed the whole force of the war to the siege of Utica, that he might make it for the time to come, if he took it, a position from which he might set out for the execution of the rest of his designs. At one and the same time his marines attacked the city from the fleet in that part which is washed by the sea, and the land forces were brought up from a rising ground which almost immediately overhung the walls. He had also brought with him engines and machines which had been conveyed from Sicily with the stores, and fresh ones were made in the armory, in which he had for that purpose employed a number of artificers skilled in such works. The people of Utica, thus beset on all sides with so formidable a force, placed all their hopes in the Carthaginians, and the Carthaginians in the chance there was that Hasdrubal could induce Syphax to take arms. But all their movements were made too slowly for the anxiety felt by those who were in want of assistance. Hasdrubal, though he had by levies, conducted with the utmost diligence, made up as many as thirty thousand infantry and three thousand horse, yet dared not move nearer to the enemy before the arrival of Syphax. Syphax came with fifty thousand foot and ten thousand horse, and, immediately decamping from Carthage, took up a position not far from Utica and the Roman works. Their arrival produced, however, this effect, that Scipio, who had been besieging Utica for forty days, during which he had tried every expedient without effect, left the place without accomplishing his object; and as the winter was now fast approaching, fortified a camp for the winter upon a promontory, which being attached to the continent by a narrow isthmus, stretched out a considerable way into the sea. He included his naval camp also within one and the same rampart. The camp for the legions being stationed on the middle of the isthmus, the ships, which were drawn on land, and the mariners occupied the northern shore, the cavalry a valley on the south inclining towards the other shore. Such were the transactions in Africa up to the close of autumn.
36. Besides the corn collected from all parts of the surrounding
country by plunder, and the provisions imported from Italy and Sicily,
Cneius Octavius, propraetor, brought a vast quantity out of Sardinia
from Tiberius Claudius the praetor, whose province Sardinia was; and
not only were the granaries already built filled, but new ones were
erected. The army wanted clothing, and Octavius was instructed
to consult with the praetor in order to ascertain if any could
be procured and sent out of that province. This business was also
diligently attended to. One thousand two hundred gowns and twelve
thousand tunics were in a short time sent. During the summer in which
these operations were carried on in Africa, Publius Sempronius, the
consul, who had the province of Bruttium, fought an irregular kind
of battle with Hannibal in the Crotonian territory while actually on
march; they fought with their troops drawn more in order of march than
of battle. The Romans were driven back, and as many as twelve hundred
of the army of the consul were slain in this affair, which was more
a tumult than a battle. They returned in confusion to their camp. The
enemy, however, dared not assault it. But, during the silence of the
following night, the consul marched away, and having sent a messenger
before him to Publius Licinius, the proconsul, to bring up his
legions, united his forces with his. Thus two generals and two armies
returned to Hannibal. Nor did either party delay to fight, as the
forces of the consul were doubled, and the Carthaginian was inspirited
by recent victory. Sempronius led his legions into the front line;
those of Licinius were placed in reserve. The consul, in the beginning
of the battle, vowed a temple to Fortuna Primigenia if he routed
the enemy that day, and he obtained the object of that vow. The
Carthaginians were routed and put to flight; above four thousand armed
men were slain, a little under three hundred taken alive, with forty
horses and eleven military standards. Hannibal, dispirited by this
adverse battle, led his troops away to Croton. At the same time, in
another part of Italy, Etruria, almost the whole of which had
espoused the interest of Mago, and had conceived hopes of effecting
a revolution through his means, was kept in subjection by the consul
Marcus Cornelius, not so much by the force of his arms as the terror
of his judicial proceedings. In the trials he had instituted there,
in conformity with the decree of the senate, he had shown the utmost
impartiality; and many of the Tuscan nobles, who had either themselves
gone, or had sent others to Mago respecting the revolt of their
states, at first standing their trials, were condemned; but afterwards
others, who, from a consciousness of guilt, had gone into voluntary
exile, were condemned in their absence, and by thus withdrawing left
their effects only, which were liable to confiscation, as a pledge for
their punishment.
37. While the consuls were thus engaged in different quarters, in the mean time, at Rome, the censors, Marcus Livius and Caius Claudius, called over the senate roll. Quintus Fabius was again chosen chief of the senate; seven were stigmatized, of whom there was not one who had sat in the curule chair. They inquired into the business relating to the repair of public edifices with diligence and the most scrupulous exactness. They set by contract the making of a road out of the ox market to the temple of Venus, with public seats on each side of it, and a temple to be built in the palatium for the great mother. They established also a new tax out of the price of salt. Salt, both at Rome, and throughout all Italy, was sold at the sixth part of an as. They contracted for the supply of it at Rome at the same price, at a
higher price in the country towns and markets, and at different prices
in different places. They felt well convinced that this tax was invented
by one of the censors, out of resentment to the people because he had formerly
been condemned by an unjust sentence, and that in fixing the price of salt,
those tribes had been most burdened by whose means he had been condemned.
Hence Livius derived the surname of Salinator. The closing of the lustrum
was later than usual, because the censors sent persons through the provinces,
that a report might be made of the number of Roman citizens in each of
the armies. Including these, the number of persons returned in the census
was two hundred and fourteen thousand. Caius Claudius Nero closed the lustrum.
They then received a census of the twelve colonies, which had never been
done before, the censors of the colonies themselves presenting it, in order
that there might appear registers among the public records, stating the
extent of their resources, both in respect of furnishing soldiers and money.
The review of the knights then began to be made, and it happened that both
the censors had a horse at the public expense. When they came to the Pollian
tribe, in which was the name of Marcus Livius, and the herald hesitated
to cite the censor himself, Nero said, "Cite Marcus Livius;"
and whether it was that he was actuated by the remains of an old enmity,
or that he felt a ridiculous pride in this ill-timed display of severity,
he ordered Marcus Livius to sell his horse, because he had been condemned
by the sentence of the people. In like manner, when they came to the Narnian
tribe, and the name of his colleague, Marcus Livius ordered Caius Claudius
to sell his horse, for two reasons; one, because he had given false evidence
against him; the other, because he had not been sincere in his reconciliation
with him. Thus a disgraceful contest arose, in which each endeavored to
asperse the character of the other, though not without detriment to his
own. On the expiration of the office, when Caius Claudius had taken the
oath respecting the observance of the laws, and had gone up into the treasury,
he gave the name of his colleague among the names of those whom he left
disfranchised. Afterwards, Marcus Livius came into the treasury, and excepting
only the Maecian tribe, which had neither condemned him nor made him consul
or censor when condemned, left all the Roman people, four and thirty tribes,
disfranchised, because they had both condemned him when innocent, and when
condemned had made him consul and censor; and therefore could not deny
that they had been guilty of a crime, either once in his condemnation,
or twice at the elections. He said that the disfranchisement of Caius Claudius
would be included in that of the thirty-four tribes, but that if he were
in possession of a precedent for leaving the same person disfranchised
twice he would have left his name particularly among the disfranchised.
This contest between censors, endeavoring to brand each other, was highly
improper, while the correction applied to the inconstancy of the people
was suitable to the office of a censor, and worthy of the strict discipline
of the times. As the censors were laboring under odium, Cneius Babius,
tribune of the people, thinking this a favorable opportunity of advancing
himself at their expense, summoned them both to trial before the people.
This proceeding was quashed by the unanimous voice of the senate, lest
in future this office of censor should become subject to the caprice of
the people.
38. The same summer Clampetia in Bruttium was taken by the consul by
storm. Consentia and Pandosia, with some other inconsiderable states,
submitted voluntarily. As the time for the elections was now drawing
near, it was thought best that Cornelius should be summoned to Rome
from Etruria, as there was no war there. He elected, as consuls,
Cneius Servilius Caepio and Caius Servilius Geminus. The election of
praetors was then held. The persons elected were, Publius Cornelius
Lentulus, Publius Quinctilius Varus, Publius Aelius Paetus, and
Publius Villius Tappulus. The last two were plebeian aediles when
elected praetors. The elections finished, the consul returned into
Etruria to his army. The priests who died this year, and those who
were put in their places, were Tiberius Veturius Philo, flamen of
Mars, elected and inaugurated in the room of Marcus Aemilius Regillus,
who died the year before: in the room of Marcus Pomponius Matho,
augur and decemvir, were elected Marcus Aurelius Cotta, decemvir, and
Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus, augur, being then a very young man;
an instance of very rare occurrence in the disposal of the priests'
offices in those times. Golden four-horsed chariots were placed this
year in the Capitol by the curule aediles, Caius Livius and Marcus
Servilius Geminus. The Roman games were repeated during two days.
During two days also the plebeian games were repeated by the aediles,
Publius Aelius and Publius Villius. There was likewise a feast of
Jupiter on occasion of the games.
BOOK XXX.
Scipio, aided by Masinissa, defeats the Carthaginians, Syphax
and Hasdrubal, in several battles. Syphax taken by Laelius and
Masinissa. Masinissa espouses Sophonisba, the wife of Syphax,
Hasdrubal's daughter; being reproved by Scipio, he sends
her poison, with which she puts an end to her life. The
Carthaginians, reduced to great extremity by Scipio's
repeated victories, call Hannibal home from Italy; he holds a
conference with Scipio on the subject of peace, and is again
defeated by him in battle. The Carthaginians sue for peace,
which is granted them. Masinissa reinstated in his kingdom.
Scipio returns to Rome; his splendid triumph; is surnamed
Africanus.
1. Cneius Servilius and Caius Servilius Geminus, the consuls in
the sixteenth year of the Punic war, having consulted the senate
respecting the state, the war, and the provinces, they decreed that
the consuls should arrange between themselves, or draw lots, which of
them should have the province of Bruttium, to act against Hannibal,
and which that of Etruria and Liguria; that the consul to whose lot
Bruttium fell should receive the army from Publius Sempronius; that
Publius Sempronius, who was continued in command as proconsul for a
year, should succeed Publius Licinius, who was to return to Rome. In
addition to the other qualifications with which he was adorned in
a degree surpassed by no citizen of that time, for in him were
accumulated all the perfections of nature and fortune, Licinius was
also esteemed eminent in war. He was at once a man of noble family and
great wealth; possessing a fine person and great bodily strength.
He was considered an orator of the highest order, both in respect of
judicial eloquence, and also when engaged in promoting or opposing any
measure in the senate, or before the people. He was also
accurately skilled in the pontifical law. In addition to all these
recommendations, the consulship enabled him to acquire military glory.
The senate adopted the same course in the decree with respect to the
province of Etruria and Liguria as had been observed with regard to
Bruttium. Marcus Cornelius was ordered to deliver his army to the new
consul, and with continued command to hold himself the province of
Gaul, with those legions which the praetor Lucius Scribonius had
commanded the former year. The consuls then cast lots for their
provinces: Bruttium fell to the lot of Caepio, Etruria to the lot of
Servilius Geminus. The provinces of the praetors were then put to the
lot. Paetus Aelius obtained the city jurisdiction; Publius Lentulus,
Sardinia; Publius Villius, Sicily; Quinctilius Varus, Ariminum, with
two legions which had served under Lucretius Spurius. Lucretius also
was continued in command that he might complete the building of the
town of Genoa, which had been destroyed by Mago the Carthaginian.
Publius Scipio was continued in command for a period not limited in
point of time, but the object he had to achieve, namely, till the war
in Africa had been brought to a termination; and a decree was passed,
ordering a supplication to be made that the circumstance of his
crossing over into Africa might be beneficial to the Roman people, the
general himself, and his army.
2. Three thousand men were enlisted for Sicily, and lest any fleet should
go thither from Africa, as all the efficient troops that province had possessed
had been transported into Africa, it was resolved that the sea-coast of
that island should be guarded with forty ships. Villius took with him into
Sicily thirteen ships, the rest consisted of the old ones, which were repaired.
Marcus Pomponius, the praetor of the former year, who was continued in
command, having been placed at the head of this fleet, put on board the
fresh soldiers brought from Italy. The senate assigned by a decree an equal
number of ships to Cneius Octavius, who was also a praetor of the former
year, with a similar privilege of command, for the protection of the coast
of Sardinia. Lentulus the praetor was ordered to furnish two thousand soldiers
to put on board it. The protection of the coast of Italy was assigned to
Marcus Marcius, a praetor of the former year, with the same number of ships;
for it was uncertain to what quarter the Carthaginians would send a fleet,
though it was supposed that they would attack any quarter which was destitute
of defense. The consuls, in conformity with a decree of the senate, enlisted
three thousand soldiers for this fleet, and two city legions with a view
to the hazards of war. The Spains were assigned to the former generals,
Lucius Lentulus and Lucius Manlius Acidinus, who were continued in command,
and retained their former armies. The operations of the war on the part
of the Romans this year were carried on with twenty legions in all, and
one hundred and sixty ships of war. The praetors were ordered to proceed
to their provinces. Directions were given to the consuls, that before they
left the city they should celebrate the great games which Titus Manlius
Torquatus, when dictator, had vowed to exhibited in the fifth year, if
the condition of the state remained unaltered. Accounts of prodigies brought
from several places excited fresh superstitious fears in the minds of men.
It was believed that crows had not only torn with their beaks some gold
in the Capitol, but had even eaten it. At Antium mice gnawed a golden crown.
An immense quantity of locusts filled the whole country around Capua, nor
could it be made appear satisfactorily whence they came. At Reate a foal
was produced with five feet. At Anagnia at first scattered fires appeared
in the sky, afterwards a vast meteor blazed forth. At Frusino a circle
surrounded the sun with a thin line, which was itself afterwards included
within the sun's disc which extended beyond it. At Arpinum the earth sank
into an immense gulf, in a place where the ground was level. When one of
the consuls was immolating the first victim, the head of the liver was
wanting. These prodigies were expiated with victims of the larger kind.
The college of pontiffs gave out to what gods sacrifice was to be made.
3. After these matters were finished, the consuls and praetors set out for their provinces. All, however, made Africa the great object of their concern, as though it had been allotted to them; whether it was because they saw that the welfare of the state and the issue of the war turned upon the operations there, or that they might oblige Scipio, on whom the whole state was then intent. Accordingly, not only from Sardinia, as has been before mentioned, but from Sicily also and Spain, clothing and corn, and from Sicily arms also, together with every kind of stores, were conveyed thither. Nor did Scipio at any time during the winter relax in any of the various military operations in which he was engaged on all sides. He continued the siege of Utica. His camp was within sight of Hasdrubal. The Carthaginians had launched their ships, and had a fleet prepared and equipped to intercept his supplies. Amid these occupations he had not even lost sight of his endeavors to regain the friendship of Syphax, whose passion for his bride he thought might now perhaps have become satiated from unlimited enjoyment. From Syphax he received terms of peace with the Carthaginians, with proposals that the Romans should evacuate Africa, and the Carthaginians Italy, rather than any ground of hope that he would desert their cause if the war proceeded. For my part I am of opinion, and in this I am countenanced by the majority of writers, that these negotiations were carried on through messengers, rather than that Syphax himself came to the Roman camp to hold a conference, as Antias Valerius relates. At first the Roman general scarcely allowed these terms to be mentioned, but afterwards, in order that there might exist a plausible pretext for his emissaries to go frequently into the camp of the enemy, he rejected these same terms in a more qualified manner, holding out a hope that they might eventually come to an agreement by agitating the question on both sides. The winter huts of the Carthaginians, which were constructed from materials hastily collected out of the fields, were almost entirely of wood. The Numidians, particularly, lay for the most part in huts formed of interwoven reeds, and covered with mats, dispersed up and down without any regard to order; while some of them, having chosen the situations for their tents without waiting for orders, lay even without the trench and rampart. These circumstances having been reported to Scipio, gave him hopes that he might have an opportunity of burning the enemy's camp.
4. In company with the ambassadors whom he sent to Syphax, he also sent some centurions of the first rank, of tried valor and prudence, dressed as servants, in lieu of soldiers' drudges; in order that, while the ambassadors were engaged in conference, they might ramble through the camp, one in one direction and another in another, and thus observe all the approaches and outlets, the situation and form both of the camp in general and of its parts; where the Carthaginians lay, where the Numidians, and what was the distance between the camp of Hasdrubal and that of the king; and that they might at the same time acquaint themselves with their customary mode of stationing outposts and watches, and learn whether they were more open to stratagem by night or by day. During the frequent conferences which were held, several different persons were purposely sent, in order that every circumstance might be known to a greater number. When the more frequent agitation of the matter had given to Syphax a daily increasing hope of peace, and to the Carthaginians through him, the Roman ambassadors at length declared that they were forbidden to return to their general unless a decisive answer was given, and that, therefore, if his own determination was now fixed, he should declare it, or if Hasdrubal and the Carthaginians were to be consulted, he should consult them. That it was time either that an accommodation should be settled or the war vigorously prosecuted. While Hasdrubal was consulted by Syphax, and the Carthaginians by Hasdrubal, the spies had time to inspect every thing, and Scipio to get together what was necessary for the accomplishment of his project. In consequence of the mention and prospect of a peace, neglect arose among the Carthaginians and Numidians, as is usually the case, to take precautions in the mean time that they might not suffer an attack of the enemy. At length an answer was returned; and as the Romans appeared excessively eager for peace, advantage was taken of that circumstance to add certain unreasonable conditions, which afforded Scipio a very seasonable pretext for putting an end to the truce according to his wishes; and telling the king's messenger that he would refer the matter to his council, he answered him the next day. He said, that while he alone had in vain endeavored to restore peace, no one else had desired it. That he must, therefore, carry word back that Syphax must hope for peace on no other condition than his abandonment of the Carthaginians. Thus he put an end to the truce, in order that he might be free to execute his designs without breaking his faith; and, launching his ships, for it was now the beginning of spring, he put on board machines and engines, with the purpose of assaulting Utica from the sea. He also sent two thousand men to seize the eminence which commanded that place, and which he had before occupied, at once with the view of turning the attention of the enemy from the design he was endeavoring to effect to another object of concern, and to prevent any sally or attack which might be made from the city upon his camp, which would be left with a slight force to protect it, while he himself went against Syphax and Hasdrubal.
5. Having made these preparations, he called a council and after
ordering the spies to give an account of the discoveries they
had made, and requesting Masinissa, who was acquainted with every
circumstance relating to the enemy, to state what he knew, lastly, he
himself laid before the council the plan proposed for the following
night. He gave directions to the tribunes, that when, after the
breaking up of the council, the trumpets had sounded, they should
immediately march the legions out of the camp. Agreeably to his
commands, the standards began to be carried out about sun-set. About
the first watch they formed the troops in marching order. At midnight,
for it was seven miles' march, they came up at a moderate pace to the
camp of the enemy. Here Scipio assigned a part of his forces, together
with Masinissa and the Numidians, to Laelius, ordering them to fall
upon the camp of Syphax, and throw fire upon it. Then taking each
of the commanders, Masinissa and Laelius, aside, he implored them
separately to make up by diligence and care for the absence of that
foresight which the night rendered it impossible to exercise. He said,
that he should himself attack Hasdrubal and the Carthaginian camp; but
that he should not begin till he saw the fire in that of the king.
Nor did this delay him long; for when the fire thrown upon the nearest
huts had taken effect, immediately communicating with all those which
were within the shortest distance, and those connected with them in
regular succession, it spread itself throughout the whole camp. The
confusion and alarm which took place, in consequence of so widely
extended a fire breaking out during the night, were as great as might
naturally be expected; but as they concluded that it was the effect of
chance, and not produced by the enemy, or connected with the war, they
rushed out in a disorderly manner, without their arms, to extinguish
the flames, and fell in with armed enemies, particularly the
Numidians, who on account of their knowledge of the king's camp
were placed by Masinissa in convenient places at the openings of the
passes. Many perished in the flames in their beds while half asleep;
and many, tumbling over one another in their haste to escape, were
trampled to death in the narrow passages of the gates.
6. When first the Carthaginian sentinels, and afterwards the rest, roused
by the terrifying effects of a tumult by night, beheld the light emitted
from the flames, they also, laboring under the same delusion, imagined
that the fire had originated from accidental causes; while the shout raised
amidst the slaughter and wounds, being of a confused kind, prevented their
distinguishing whether it was occasioned by the trepidation of an alarm
by night. Accordingly, rushing out one and all at every gate, each man
taking the nearest road, without their arms, as not suspecting any hostile
attack, and carrying with them only such things as might be useful in extinguishing
the flames, they fell upon the Roman troops. After all these had been slain,
not only with the animosity of enemies, but also that no one might escape
as a messenger, Scipio immediately attacked the gates, which were unguarded
in consequence of the confusion; and, having thrown fire upon the nearest
huts, at first the flames blazed forth with great fury, in several places
at once, in consequence of the fire having been applied to different parts,
but afterwards extending themselves along the contiguous huts, they suddenly
enveloped the whole camp in one general conflagration. Men and cattle scorched
with the flames blocked up the passages of the gates, first in a terrible
rush to escape, and afterwards with their prostrate bodies. Those who got
out of the way of the fire were cut off by the sword, and the two camps
were involved in one common destruction. The two generals, however, and
out of so many thousand troops only two thousand foot and five hundred
horsemen, escaped, half armed, a great many of them being wounded and scorched.
Forty thousand men were either slain or destroyed by the flames, and above
five thousand captured. Among the captured were many Carthaginian nobles,
eleven senators, with a hundred and seventy-four military standards, above
two thousand seven hundred Numidian horses, and six elephants. Eight elephants
were destroyed either by fire or sword, and a great quantity of arms taken.
All the latter the general dedicated to Vulcan and burnt.
7. Hasdrubal, in his flight, had made for the nearest city of the Africans, accompanied by a few attendants; and hither all those who survived, following the footsteps of their general had betaken themselves. But afterwards, fearing lest he should be given up to Scipio, he quitted that city. Soon after the Romans were received there with open gates; nor was any act of hostility committed, because the inhabitants had surrendered voluntarily. Shortly after, two other cities were captured and plundered. The booty found there, together with what had been rescued from the camps when burning, and from the flames, was given up to the soldiers. Syphax took up a position in a fortified place about eight miles off. Hasdrubal hastened to Carthage, lest the apprehensions occasioned by the recent disaster should lead to any timorous measures. So great was the consternation created there on the first receipt of the news, that it was fully anticipated that Scipio, suspending his operations against Utica, would immediately lay siege to Carthage. The suffetes, therefore, who form with them an authority similar to the consular, summoned the senate, when the three following opinions were given. The first proposed, that a decree should be passed to the effect, that ambassadors should be sent to Scipio to treat of peace; the second, that Hannibal should be recalled to defend his country from a war which threatened its annihilation; the third breathed the spirit of Roman constancy under adversity; it recommended that the losses of the army should be repaired, and that Syphax should be exhorted not to abandon the war. The latter opinion prevailed, because it was that which Hasdrubal, who was present, and all the members of the Barcine faction, preferred. After this, the levy commenced in the city and country, and ambassadors were dispatched to Syphax, who was himself employing every effort to restore the war; for his wife had prevailed upon him, not, as heretofore, by caresses, powerful as they are in influencing the mind of a lover, but by prayers and appeals to his compassion, imploring him, with streaming eyes, not to betray her father and her country, nor suffer Carthage to be consumed by the same flames which had reduced the camps to ashes. In addition to this, the ambassadors informed him of a circumstance which had occurred very seasonably to raise their hopes; that they had met with four thousand Celtiberians in the neighborhood of a city named Abba, a fine body of young men who had been enlisted by their recruiting officers in Spain; and that Hasdrubal would very soon arrive with a body of troops by no means contemptible. Accordingly, he not only returned a kind answer to the ambassadors, but also showed them a multitude of Numidian rustics, whom he had lately furnished with arms and horses; and at the same time assured them that he would call out all the youth in his kingdom. He said, he well knew that the loss sustained had been occasioned by fire, and not by battle, and that he was inferior to his adversary in war who was overcome by force of arms. Such was the answer given to the ambassadors; and, after a few days, Hasdrubal and Syphax again united their forces. This army consisted of about thirty-five thousand fighting men.
8. Scipio, considering that Syphax and the Carthaginians could make no
further efforts, gave his whole attention to the siege of Utica, and was
now bringing up his engines to the walls, when he was diverted from his
purpose by a report of the renewal of the war; and, leaving small forces
merely to keep up the appearance of a siege by sea and land, he set out
himself with the main strength of his army to meet the enemy. At first
he took up his position on an eminence about five miles distant from the
king's camp. The next day, coming down with his cavalry into a place called
the great plains, which lay at the foot of that eminence, he spent the
day in advancing up to the outposts of the enemy, and provoking them by
skirmishing attacks. During the ensuing two days, irregular excursions
were made by both sides alternately, but nothing worthy of notice was achieved.
On the fourth day, both sides came down in battle-array. The Romans placed
their principes behind the spearmen, which latter formed the front line,
and the triarii they stationed in reserve; the Italian cavalry they opposed
to the enemy in the right wing, the Numidians and Masinissa on the left.
Syphax and Hasdrubal, placing the Numidians against the Italian cavalry,
and the Carthaginians opposite to Masinissa, received the Celtiberians
into the center of their line, to face the Roman legions. Thus arranged,
they then commenced the encounter. At the first charge, both the wings,
the Numidians and Carthaginians, were together driven from their ground;
for neither could the Numidians, who consisted principally of rustics,
sustain the shock of the Roman cavalry, nor the Carthaginians, who were
also raw soldiers, withstand Masinissa, who, in addition to other circumstances,
was rendered formidable by his recent victory. The Celtiberian line, though
stript of the support of both the wings, stood their ground; for neither
did any hope of safety by flight present itself, as they were ignorant
of the country, nor could they expect pardon from Scipio, against whom,
though he had deserved well both of them and their nation, they had come
into Africa to fight for hire. Surrounded therefore, on all sides by the
enemy, they died with obstinate resolution, falling one upon another; and,
while the attention of all was turned upon them, Syphax and Hasdrubal gained
a considerable space of time to effect their escape. The victors, fatigued
with the slaughter, which had continued for a greater length of time than
the battle, were interrupted by the night.
9. The next day Scipio sent Laelius and Masinissa, with all the Roman and Numidian cavalry, and the light infantry, to pursue Syphax and Hasdrubal. He himself, with the main strength of the army, reduced the neighboring towns, which were all subject to the Carthaginians, some by holding out hopes to them, some by threats, and others by force. At Carthage, indeed, the consternation was extreme; and it was fully anticipated there, that Scipio, who was carrying his arms to the different places around, would, after having rapidly subdued all the neighboring parts, suddenly attack Carthage itself. Their walls were repaired and protected with outworks; and every man individually exerted himself to the utmost in collecting from the country the requisites for holding out against a protracted siege. Mention was seldom made of peace, but not so seldom of sending deputies to recall Hannibal. The majority of them urged that the fleet, which had been equipped to intercept the convoys of the enemy, should be sent to surprise the ships stationed near Utica, which were lying in an unguarded state. It was also urged that they might perhaps overpower the naval camp, which was left under the protection of a trifling force. They chiefly inclined to the latter plan, though they thought, nevertheless, that deputies should be sent to Hannibal; for should the operations of the fleet succeed in the highest degree, the siege of Utica would be partially raised, but they had no general remaining but Hannibal, and no army but his which could defend Carthage itself. The ships were therefore launched the following day, and, at the same time, the deputies set out for Italy; and, their position stimulating them, every thing was done with the greatest expedition; each man considering, that the safety of all was betrayed in whatever degree he remitted his own individual exertions. Scipio, who drew after him an army now encumbered with the spoils of many cities, sent his prisoners, and other booty, to his old camp at Utica, and, as his views were now fixed on Carthage, he seized on Tunes, which was abandoned in consequence of the flight of the garrison. This city is about fifteen miles distant from Carthage, being a place secured both by works, and also by its own natural position; it may be seen from Carthage, and itself affords a prospect both of that city and of the sea which washes it.
10. From this place the Romans, while diligently employed in raising a
rampart, descried the fleet of the enemy, on its way to Utica from Carthage.
Desisting from their work, therefore, orders for marching were given, and
the troops began to move with the utmost haste, lest the ships which were
turned towards the land, and occupied with the siege, and which were far
from being in a condition for a naval battle, should be surprised and overpowered.
For how could ships, carrying engines and machines, and either converted
to the purposes of transports, or brought up to the walls so as to afford
the means of mounting up, in lieu of a mound and bridges, resist a fleet,
with nothing to impede its movements, furnished with every kind of naval
implement, and prepared for action. Scipio, therefore, contrary to his
usual practice in naval engagements, drew the ships of war, which might
have been employed in defending the rest, into the rear, and formed them
into a line near the land; opposing to the enemy a row of transports, four
deep, to serve as a wall; and, lest these same transports should be thrown
into disorder during the confusion of the battle, he bound them together
by placing masts and yard-arms across them, from one vessel to the other;
and, by means of strong ropes, fastened them together, as it were, by one
uninterrupted bond. He also laid planks upon them, so as to form a free
passage along the line, leaving spaces under these bridges of communication
by which the vessels of observation might run out towards the enemy, and
retreat with safety. Having hastily made these arrangements as well as
the time would permit, he put on board the transports about a thousand
picked men, to keep off the enemy, with a very large store of weapons,
particularly missiles, that they might hold out, however long the contest
lasted. Thus prepared, and on the watch, they waited the approach of the
enemy. The Carthaginians, who, if they had made haste would, on the first
assault, have surprised their adversaries while every thing was in a state
of confusion, from the hurry and bustle attending the preparations, were
so dismayed at their losses by land, and thereby had lost so much confidence
even in their strength by sea, in which they had the advantage, that, after
consuming the day, in consequence of the slow rate at which they sailed,
about sun-set they put in to a harbor which the Africans call Ruscino.
The following day, at sun-rise, they drew up their ships towards the open
sea, as for a regular naval battle, and with the expectation that the Romans
would come out to engage them. After they had continued stationary for
some time, and saw that no movement was made on the part of the enemy,
then, at length, they attacked the transports. The affair bore no resemblance
to a naval fight, but rather had the appearance of ships attacking walls.
The transports had considerably the advantage in respect of height; and
as the Carthaginians had to throw their weapons upward, against a mark
which was above them, most of them failed of taking effect; while the weapons
thrown from the transports from above fell with increased force, and derived
additional impetus from their very weight. The vessels of observation,
and even the lighter kind of barks, which went out through the spaces left
under the flooring, which formed a communication between the ships, were
at first run down by the mere momentum and bulk of the ships of war; and
afterwards they proved a hindrance to the troops appointed to keep the
enemy off; for as they mixed with the ships of the enemy, they were frequently
under the necessity of withholding their weapons for fear, by a misdirected
effort, they should fall on their friends. At length, beams with iron hooks
at their ends, called harpoons, began to be thrown from the Carthaginian
upon the Roman ships; and, as they could not cut the harpoons themselves,
nor the chains suspended by which they were thrown upon their ships, as
each of the ships of war of the enemy, being pulled back, drew with it
a transport, connected with it by a harpoon, you might see the fastenings
by which the transports were joined together rent asunder, and in another
part a series of many vessels dragged away together. In this manner chiefly
were all the bridges of communication torn to pieces, and scarcely had
the troops who fought in front time to leap to the second line of ships.
About six transports were towed away to Carthage, where the joy felt was
greater than the occasion warranted; but their delight was increased from
the reflection, that, in the midst of so many successive disasters and
woes, one event, however trifling, which afforded matter of joy, had unexpectedly
occurred; besides which, it was manifest that the Roman fleet would have
been well nigh annihilated, had not their own commanders been wanting in
diligence, and had not Scipio come up to its assistance in time.
11. It happened about the same time, that Laelius and Masinissa having arrived in Numidia after a march of about fifteen days, the Massylians, Masinissa's hereditary kingdom, placed themselves under the protection of their king with the greatest joy, as they had long wished him among them. After the commanders and garrisons of Syphax had been expelled from thence, that prince kept himself within the limits of his original dominions, but without any intention of remaining quiet. Subdued by the power of love, he was spurred on by his wife and father-in-law; and he possessed such an abundance of men and horses, that a review of the resources of his kingdom, which had flourished for so many years, was calculated to infuse spirit into a mind even less barbarous and impetuous than his. Wherefore, collecting together all who were fit for service, he distributed among them horses, armor, and weapons. He divided his horsemen into troops, and his infantry into cohorts, as he had formerly learnt from the Roman centurions. With an army not less than that which he had before, but almost entirely raw and undisciplined, he set out to meet the enemy, and pitched his camp at a short distance from them. At first a few horsemen advanced cautiously from the outposts to reconnoiter, and being compelled to retire, from a discharge of javelins, they ran back to their friends. Then skirmishing parties were sent out from both sides, and the vanquished, fired with indignation, returned to the encounter with increased numbers. This is the usual incitement of battles between cavalry, when the victors are joined by more of their party from hope, and the vanquished from resentment. Thus, on the present occasion, the action commencing with a few, at last the whole body of the cavalry on both sides poured out to join in it from the zeal excited by the contest. While the cavalry only were engaged, it was scarcely possible to withstand the numbers of the Masaesylians, which Syphax sent out in immense bodies. But afterwards, when the Roman infantry, suddenly coming up between the troops of horse which made way for them, gave stability to their line, and checked the enemy, who were charging furiously, at first the barbarians slackened their speed, then halted, and were in a manner confounded at this novel kind of battle. At length, they not only retired before the infantry, but were unable to sustain the shock even of the cavalry, who had assumed courage from the support of the infantry. By this time the legions also were approaching; when, indeed, the Masaesylians not only dared not await their first charge, but could not bear even the sight of the standards and arms; so powerful was either the recollection of their former defeats, or their present fears.
12. It was then that Syphax, while riding up to the troops of the enemy
to try if, either by shame or by exposing his own person to danger, he
could stop their flight, being thrown from his horse, which was severely
wounded, was overpowered, and being made prisoner, was dragged alive into
the presence of Laelius; a spectacle calculated to afford peculiar satisfaction
to Masinissa. Cirta was the capital of the dominions of Syphax; to which
a great number of men fled. The number of the slain in this battle was
not so great as the victory was important, because the cavalry only had
been engaged. Not more than five thousand were slain, and less than half
that number were made prisoners in an attack upon the camp, to which the
multitude, dismayed at the loss of their king, had fled. Masinissa declared
that nothing could be more highly gratifying to him than, having gained
this victory, to go now and visit his hereditary dominions, which he had
regained after having been kept out of them so long a time; but it was
not proper in prosperity any more than in adversity to lose any time. That
if Laelius would allow him to go before him to Cirta with the cavalry and
the captive Syphax, he should overpower the enemy while all was in a state
of consternation and dismay; and that Laelius might follow with the infantry
at a moderate rate. Laelius assenting, he advanced to Cirta, and ordered
the principal inhabitants to be called out to a conference. But as they
were not aware of what had befallen their king, he was unable to prevail
upon them, either by laying before them what had passed, by threats, or
by persuasion, until the king was presented to their view in chains. A
general lamentation arose at this shocking exhibition, and while some deserted
the walls in a panic, others, who sought to ingratiate themselves with
the victor, suddenly came to an agreement to throw open the gates. Masinissa,
having sent troops to keep guard near the gates, and at such parts of the
wall as required it, that no one might have a passage out to escape by,
galloped off to seize the palace. While entering the porch, Sophonisba,
the wife of Syphax and daughter of Hasdrubal the Carthaginian, met him
in the very threshold, and seeing Masinissa in the midst of the armed band,
for he was distinguished both by his arms and also by his habiliments,
she concluded, as was really the case, that he was the king; and, falling
down at his knees, thus addressed him: "The gods, together with your
own valor and good fortune, have given you the power of disposing of us
as you please. But if a captive may be allowed to give utterance to the
voice of supplication before him who is the sovereign arbiter of her life
or death; if she may be permitted to touch his knees and his victorious
right hand, I entreat and beseech, you by the majesty of royalty, which
we also a short time ago possessed; by the name of the Numidian race, which
was common to Syphax and yourself; by the guardian deities of this palace,
(and O! may they receive you more auspiciously than they sent Syphax from
it!) that you would indulge a suppliant by determining yourself whatever
your inclination may suggest respecting your captive, and not suffer me
to be placed at the haughty and merciless disposal of any Roman. Were I
nothing more than the wife of Syphax, yet would I rather make trial of
the honor of a Numidian, one born in Africa, the same country which gave
me birth than of a foreigner and an alien. You know what a Carthaginian,
what the daughter of Hasdrubal, has to fear from a Roman. If you cannot
effect it by any other means, I beg and beseech you that you will by my
death rescue me from the power of the Romans." She was remarkably
beautiful, and in the full bloom of youth. Accordingly, while she pressed
his right hand, and only implored him to pledge himself that she should
not be delivered up to any Roman, her language assuming the character of
amorous blandishment rather than entreaty, the heart of the conqueror not
only melted with compassion, but, as the Numidians are an excessively amorous
race, he became the slave of his captive; and giving his right hand as
a pledge for the performance of her request, withdrew into the palace.
He then set upon reflecting in what manner he could make good his promise;
and not being able to hit upon any expedient, his passion suggested to
him an inconsiderate and barefaced alternative. He ordered that preparations
should be instantly made for celebrating the nuptials that very day; in
order that he might not leave it at all open to Laelius, or Scipio himself,
to adopt any measure respecting her as a captive who had become the wife
of Masinissa. After the nuptials were concluded, Laelius came up: and so
far was he from dissembling his disapprobation of the proceeding, that
at first he would even have had her dragged from the marriage bed and sent
with Syphax and the rest of the captives to Scipio: but afterwards, having
been prevailed upon by the entreaties of Masinissa, who begged of him to
leave it to Scipio to decide which of the two kings should have his fortunes
graced by the accession of Sophonisba he sent away Syphax and the prisoners;
and, aided by Masinissa, employed himself in reducing the rest of the cities
of Numidia, which were occupied by the king's garrisons.
13. When it was announced that Syphax was being brought into the camp,
the whole multitude poured out, as if to behold a triumphal pageant. The
king himself walked first in chains, and a number of Numidian nobles followed.
On this occasion every one strove to the utmost to increase the splendor
of their victory, by magnifying the greatness of Syphax and the renown
of his nation. "That was the king," they said, "to whose
dignity the two most powerful nations in the world the Roman and the Carthaginian,
had paid so much deference, that their own general, Scipio, leaving his
province of Spain and his army, sailed into Africa with only two quinqueremes
to solicit his friendship; while Hasdrubal, the Carthaginian general, not
only visited him in his dominions, but gave him his daughter in marriage.
That he had in his power two commanders, one a Roman and the other a Carthaginian,
at the same time. That as both the contending parties sought the favor
of the immortal gods by the immolation of victims, so had they both equally
solicited his friendship. That he had lately possessed such great power,
that after expelling Masinissa from his kingdom, he reduced him to such
a state, that his life was protected by a report of his death, and by concealment,
while he supported himself in the woods on prey after the manner of wild
beasts." Thus signalized by the observations of the surrounding multitude,
the king was brought into the pavilion before Scipio, who was moved by
the former condition of the man compared with his present, and particularly
by the recollection of their relation of hospitality, his right hand pledged,
and the public and private connection which had been formed between them.
These same considerations inspired Syphax also with confidence in addressing
the conqueror; for when Scipio asked what had been his object in not only
renouncing his alliance with the Romans, but in making war against them
without provocation, he fully admitted "that he had indeed done wrong,
and acted like a madman; but not at that time only when he took up arms
against the Roman people; that was the consummation of his frenzy, not
its commencement. Then it was that he is mad; then it was that he banished
from his mind all regard for private friendship and public treaties, when
he received a Carthaginian wife into his house. It was by the flames kindled
by those nuptial torches that his palace had been consumed. That fury and
pest had by every kind of fascination engrossed his affections and obscured
his reason; nor had she rested till she had with her own hands clad him
with impious arms against his guest and friend. Yet ruined and fallen as
he was, he derived some consolation in his misfortunes when he saw that
that same pest and fury had been transferred to the dwelling and household
gods of the man who was of all others his greatest enemy. That Masinissa
was neither more prudent nor more firm than Syphax; but even more incautious
by reason of his youth. Doubtless he had shown greater folly and want of
self-control in marrying her than he himself had."
14. These words, dictated not merely by the hatred naturally felt towards an enemy, but also by the anguish of jealousy, on seeing the object of his affections in the possession of his rival, affected the mind of Scipio with no ordinary degree of anxiety. His accusations against Masinissa derived credibility from the fact of the nuptials having, been celebrated in the most violent hurry, almost amid the clash of arms, without consulting or waiting for Laelius, and with such precipitate haste, that on the very day on which he saw the captive enemy he united himself with her in matrimony, and performed the nuptial rite in the presence of the household gods of his enemy. This conduct appeared the more heinous to Scipio, because when a very young man in Spain he had not allowed himself to be influenced by the beauty of any captive. While ruminating on these circumstances, Laelius and Masinissa came up. Without making any distinction between them he received them both with a cheerful countenance, and having bestowed upon them the highest commendations before a full assembly of his officers, he took Masinissa aside and thus addressed him: "I suppose, Masinissa, that it was because you saw in me some good qualities that you at first came to me when in Spain, for the purpose of forming a friendship with me, and that afterwards in Africa you committed yourself and all your hopes to my protection. But of all those virtues, on account of which I seemed to you worthy of your regard, there is not one in which I gloried so much as temperance and the control of my passions. I could wish that you also, Masinissa, had added this to your other distinguished qualities. There is not, believe me, there is not so much danger to be apprehended by persons at our time of life from armed foes, as from the pleasures which surround us on all sides. The man who by temperance has curbed and subdued his appetite for them, has acquired for himself much greater honor and a much more important victory than we now enjoy in the conquest of Syphax. I have mentioned with delight, and I remember with pleasure, the instances of fortitude and courage which you displayed in my absence. As to other matters, I would rather that you should reflect upon them in private, than that you should be put to the blush by my reciting them. Syphax was subdued and captured under the auspices of the Roman people; therefore he himself, his wife his kingdom, his territories, his towns and their inhabitants, in short, every thing which belonged to him, is the booty of the Roman people, and it was proper that the king himself and his consort, even though she had not been a citizen of Carthage, even though we did not see her father commanding the armies of our enemies, should be sent to Rome, and that the senate and people of Rome should judge and determine respecting her who is said to have alienated from us a king in alliance with us, and to have precipitated him into war with us. Subdue your passions. Beware how you deform many good qualities by one vice, and mar the credit of so many meritorious deeds by a degree of guilt more than proportioned to the value of its object."
15. While Masinissa heard these observations, he not only became suffused
with blushes, but burst into tears; and after declaring that he would submit
to the discretion of the general, and imploring him that, as far as circumstances
would permit, he would consider the obligation he had rashly imposed upon
himself, for he had promised that he would not deliver her into the power
of any one, he retired in confusion from the pavilion into his own tent.
There, dismissing his attendants, he spent a considerable time amid frequent
sighs and groans, which could be distinctly heard by those who stood around
the tent. At last, heaving a deep groan, he called one of his servants
in whom he confided, in whose custody poison was kept, according to the
custom of kings, as a remedy against the unforeseen events of fortune,
and ordered him to mix some in a cup and carry it to Sophonisba; at the
same time informing her that Masinissa would gladly have fulfilled the
first obligation which as a husband he owed to her his wife; but since
those who had the power of doing so had deprived him of the exercise of
that right, he now performed his second promise, that she should not come
alive into the power of the Romans. That, mindful of her father the general,
of her country, and of the two kings to whom she had been married, she
would take such measures as she herself thought proper. When the servant
came to Sophonisba bearing this message and the poison, she said, "I
accept this nuptial present; nor is it an unwelcome one, if my husband
can render me no better service. Tell him, however, that I should have
died with greater satisfaction had I not married so near upon my death."
The spirit with which she spoke was equalled by the firmness with which
she took and drained the chalice, without exhibiting any symptom of perturbation.
When Scipio was informed of this event, fearful lest the high-spirited
young man should in the distempered state of his mind adopt some desperate
resolution, he immediately sent for him, and at one time endeavored to
solace him, at another gently rebuked him for expiating one act of temerity
with another, and rendering the affair more tragical than was necessary.
The next day, in order to divert his mind from his present affliction,
he ascended his tribunal and ordered an assembly to be summoned, in which
having first saluted Masinissa with the title of king, and distinguished
him with the highest encomiums, he presented him with a golden goblet,
a curule chair, an ivory scepter, an embroidered gown, and a triumphal
vest. He increased the honor by observing, that among the Romans there
was nothing more magnificent than a triumph; and that those who triumphed
were not arrayed with more splendid ornaments than those with which the
Roman people considered Masinissa alone, of all foreigners, worthy. He
then bestowed the highest commendations upon Laelius also, and presented
him with a golden crown, and gave presents to the other military characters
proportioned to their respective merits. By these honors the king's mind
was soothed, and encouraged to hope that he would speedily become master
of all Numidia, now that Syphax was removed.
16. Scipio, having sent Caius Laelius with Syphax and the rest of the prisoners to Rome, with whom went also ambassadors from Masinissa, led his troops back again to Tunes, and completed the fortifications which he had before begun. The Carthaginians, who had experienced not only a short-lived but almost groundless joy, from their attack upon the fleet, which, under existing circumstances, was tolerably successful, were so dismayed at the account of the capture of Syphax, in whom they reposed almost greater confidence than in Hasdrubal and his army, that now listening no longer to any who advocated war, they sent thirty of their principal elders as deputies to solicit peace. With them the council of elders is held in the highest reverence, and has supreme power even to control the senate itself. When they came into the Roman camp and entered the pavilion, they prostrated themselves after the manner of those who pay profound adoration to kings, adopting the custom, I suppose, from the country from which they derived their origin. Their language corresponded with such abject humiliation, for they did not endeavor to deny their guilt, but charged Hannibal and the favorers of his violent measures with being the originators of it. They implored pardon for their state, which had been now twice brought to the brink of ruin by the temerity of its citizens, and would again owe its safety to the indulgence of its enemies. They said, the object the Roman people aimed at in the subjugation of their enemies was dominion, and not their destruction; that he might enjoin what he pleased upon them, as being prepared submissively to obey. Scipio replied, "that he had come into Africa with the hope, and that hope had been increased by the success he had experienced in his operations, that he should carry home victory and not terms of peace. Still, though he had victory in a manner within his grasp, he would not refuse all accommodation, that all the nations of the world may know that the Roman people both undertake and conclude wars with justice." The terms of peace which he prescribed were these: "That they should restore the prisoners, deserters, and fugitives; withdraw their armies from Italy and Gaul; give up all claim to Spain; retire from all the islands between Italy and Africa; deliver up all their ships of war except twenty, and furnish five hundred thousand pecks of wheat, and three hundred thousand of barley." Authors are not agreed as to the sum of money he demanded. In some I find five thousand talents; in others five thousand pounds' weight of silver; in others, that double pay for the troops was required. "Three days," he said, "shall be allowed to deliberate whether you accept of peace on these terms. If you do accept it, make a truce within me, and send deputies to Rome to the senate." The Carthaginians being thus dismissed, as they thought it proper to accept of any conditions of peace, for their only object was to gain time for Hannibal to cross over into Africa, sent some ambassadors to Scipio to conclude a truce, and others to Rome to solicit peace; the latter taking with them a few prisoners, deserters, and fugitives, in order to facilitate the attainment of peace.
17. Laelius with Syphax and the principal Numidian prisoners arrived at
Rome several days before, and laying before the senate all the transactions
which had occurred in Africa in order, the greatest joy was felt for the
present, and the most sanguine anticipations formed of the future. The
sense of the senate being then taken upon the subject, they resolved that
the king should be sent to Alba to be kept in custody, and that Laelius
should be detained until the arrival of the Carthaginian ambassadors. A
supplication for four days was decreed. The senate breaking up and an assembly
of the people being then called, Publius Aelius the praetor accompanied
by Caius Laelius, mounted the rostrum. There, on hearing that the armies
of the Carthaginians had been routed, that a king of the greatest renown
had been vanquished and made prisoner, that all Numidia had been overrun
with brilliant success, the people were unable to refrain from expressing
their delight, but manifested their transports by shouts and all the other
means usually resorted to by the multitude. The praetor, therefore, immediately
issued orders that the keepers should open all the temples throughout the
city, and that the people should be allowed during the whole day to go
round and make their adoration to the gods, and return their thanks. The
next day he brought the ambassadors of Masinissa before the senate. They
in the first place congratulated the senate on the successes of Scipio
in Africa, and then thanked them, not only for having saluted him with
the title of king, but for having made him one, by reinstating him in his
paternal dominions, where, now that Syphax was removed, he would reign,
if it was the pleasure of the senate, without fear or opposition. Next,
for having bestowed upon him the highest commendations in the assembly,
and decorated him with the most magnificent presents, of which Masinissa
had endeavored, and would in future endeavor, to render himself worthy.
They requested that the senate would by a decree confirm the title of king
with the other favors and benefits conferred by Scipio, and, if it were
not troublesome, they said, that Masinissa further Requested that they
would send home the Numidian captives who were detained at Rome; for that
this boon would procure him the esteem and honor of his countrymen. On
these points the senate replied to the ambassadors, "that they reciprocated
the congratulations of the king on the successes in Africa. That Scipio
was considered to have acted properly and regularly in saluting him with
the title of king, and that the senate applauded and approved of every
thing else he had done which was gratifying to Masinissa." They appointed
by a decree what presents the ambassadors should carry to the king; they
were, two purple cloaks, each having a golden clasp, and each accompanied
with vests and broad purple borders, two horses arrayed with trappings,
two suits of equestrian armor with coats of mail, together with tents and
other military apparatus such as those usually provided for a consul. These
the praetor was directed to send for the king. The ambassadors were severally
presented with not less than five thousand asses, their attendants with one thousand. Two suits of apparel were presented to each of the ambassadors, and one to each of their attendants and to the Numidians, who were discharged from custody and given back to the king. In addition to these, dwellings, reserved by the state for such purposes, grounds, and entertainment, were assigned to the ambassadors.
18. The same summer during which these decrees were passed at Rome, and
these transactions took place in Africa, Publius Quinctilius Varus, the
praetor, and Marcus Cornelius, the proconsul, fought a pitched battle with
Mago the Carthaginian in the territories of the Insubrian Gauls. The legions
of the praetor were in the first line; Cornelius kept his in reserve, riding
forward into the front himself, and the praetor and proconsul, leading
on the two wings, exhorted the soldiers to attack the enemy with the utmost
vigor. Finding they produced no impression upon the enemy, Quinctilius
said to Cornelius: "The battle, as you perceive, does not proceed
with spirit, the enemy, having succeeded in their resistance beyond expectation,
have become callous to fear, and there is danger lest it should be converted
into boldness. We must stir up a tempest of cavalry if we wish to disorder
and drive them from their ground; therefore, either do you sustain the
fight in front, and I will lead the cavalry into the action; or else, I
will act in the front line and you send out the cavalry of the four legions
against the enemy." The proconsul offering to take whichever part
of the service the praetor pleased, Quinctilius the praetor, with his son,
surnamed Marcus, a spirited youth, went off to the cavalry, and desiring
them to mount, instantly led them to the charge. The confusion on occasioned
by these was increased by a shout raised by the legions; nor would the
line of the enemy have stood unbroken, had not Mago, as soon as he saw
the cavalry in motion, immediately brought into the action his elephants,
which he kept in readiness. The horses were so terrified at the snorting,
the smell, and appearance of these animals, that the aid of the cavalry
was rendered ineffectual. As the Roman horseman had the advantage in point
of efficiency in a close fight, when he could use his javelin and sword
hand to hand, so the Numidians had the advantage when throwing their darts
from a distance upon enemies borne away from them by their terrified horses.
At the same time the twelfth legion, though a great number of them were
slain, maintained their ground through shame rather than a reliance on
their strength; but they would not have continued to do so longer, had
not the thirteenth legion, brought up into the front line from the reserve,
taken up the doubtful conflict. Mago, also, bringing up the Gauls from
his reserve, opposed them to the fresh legion. The Gauls being routed without
any great effort, the spearmen of the eleventh legion formed themselves
into a circular body and charged the elephants, which were now disordering
the line of infantry; and as scarcely one of the javelins which they threw
upon them failed of taking effect, as they were close together, they turned
them all upon the line of their own party. Four of them fell overpowered
with wounds. It was then that the front line of the enemy gave ground,
the whole body of the Roman infantry at the same time rushing forward to
increase the panic and confusion, on seeing the elephants turn their backs.
As long as Mago stood in front, the troops stepped back slowly, preserving
their ranks and not relaxing their ardor in fighting; but when they saw
him falling, from a wound in his thigh, which was transfixed, and carried
off the field almost lifeless, in an instant they all betook themselves
to flight. As many as five thousand of the enemy were slain, and twenty-two
military standards captured on that day. Nor did the Romans obtain a bloodless
victory. Two thousand three hundred of the army of the praetor, by far
the greater part of whom belonged to the twelfth legion, were lost. Two
military tribunes, Marcus Cosconius and Marcus Maenius, of the same legion;
and of the thirteenth legion also, which joined in the action at its close,
Cneius Helvius, a military tribune, fell in restoring the fight; and about
twenty-two distinguished horsemen, together with several centurions, were
trampled upon and killed by the elephants. The contest would have continued
longer, had not the enemy conceded the victory, in consequence of the wound
of their general.
19. Mago, setting out during the silence of the succeeding night, and marching
as far at a time as his wounds would allow him, reached the sea-coast in
the territory of the Ingaunian Ligurians. Here ambassadors from Carthage,
who had put into the Gallic bay a few days before, came to him with directions
to cross over into Africa with all speed; informing him that his brother
Hannibal, for to him also they said ambassadors had gone with similar directions,
would do the same, for the affairs of the Carthaginians were not in a condition
to admit of their occupying Gaul and Italy with armies. Mago, not only
influenced by the command of the senate and the danger which threatened
his country, but fearful also lest the victorious enemy should be upon
him if he delayed, and lest the Ligurians themselves, seeing that the Carthaginians
were leaving Italy, should pass over to those under whose power they were
likely soon to be placed; at the same time hoping that his wound would
be less irritated by the motion of sailing than marching, and that he would
have greater facilities for the cure of it, put his troops on board and
set sail. But he had scarcely cleared Sardinia when he died of his wound.
Several also of his ships, which had been dispersed in the main sea, were
captured by the Roman fleet which lay near Sardinia. Such were the transactions
by sea and land in that part of Italy which is adjacent to the Alps. The
consul, Caius Servilius, without having performed any memorable achievement
in Etruria, his province, and in Gaul, for he had advanced thither also,
but having rescued from slavery, which they had endured for now the sixteenth
year, his father, Caius Servilius, and his uncle, Caius Lutatius, who had
been taken by the Boians at the village of Tanetum, returned to Rome with
his father on one side of him and his uncle on the other, distinguished,
by family, rather than by public, honors. It was proposed to the people,
that Caius Servilius should be indemnified for having filled the offices
of plebeian tribune and plebeian aedile contrary to what was established
by the laws, while his father, who had sat in the curule chair, was still
alive, he being ignorant of that circumstance. This proposition having
been carried, he returned to his province. The towns Consentia, Uffugum,
Vergae, Besidiae, Hetriculum, Sypheum, Argentanum, Clampetia, and many
other inconsiderable states, perceiving that the Carthaginian cause was
declining, went over to Cneius Servilius the consul in Bruttium. The same
consul fought a battle with Hannibal, in the territory of Croto. The accounts
of this battle are not clear. Valerius Antias states that five thousand
men were slain. But this is an event of such magnitude, that either it
must be an impudent fiction, or negligently omitted. It is certain that
nothing further was done by Hannibal in Italy; for ambassadors from Carthage,
recalling him into Africa, came to him, as it happened, at the same time
that they came to Mago.
20. It is said that when Hannibal heard the message of the ambassadors
he gnashed with his teeth, groaned, and scarcely refrained from shedding
tears. After they had delivered the commands with which they were charged,
he said: "Those who have for a long time been endeavoring to drag
me home, by forbidding the sending of supplies and money to me, now recall
me, not indirectly, but openly. Hannibal, therefore, hath been conquered,
not by the Roman people, who have been so often slain and routed, but by
the Carthaginian senate, through envy and detraction; nor will Publius
Scipio exult and glory in this unseemly return so much as Hanno, who has
crushed our family, since he could not effect it by any other means, by
the ruins of Carthage." Already had his mind entertained a presentiment
of this event, and he had accordingly prepared ships beforehand. Having,
therefore, sent a crowd of useless soldiers under pretense of garrisons
into the towns in the Bruttian territory, a few of which continued their
adherence to him, more through fear than attachment, he transported the
strength of his army into Africa. Many natives of Italy who, refusing to
follow him into Africa had retired to the shrine of Juno Lacinia, which
had never been violated up to that day, were barbarously massacred in the
very temple. It is related, that rarely any person leaving his country
to go into exile exhibited deeper sorrow than Hannibal did on departing
from the land of his enemies; that he frequently looked back upon the shores
of Italy, and, arraigning both gods and men, cursed himself and his own
head that he did not lead his troops, while reeking with blood from the
victory at Cannae, to Rome. Scipio, who since his appointment to the office
of consul had not looked at the Carthaginian enemy in Italy, had dared,
he said, to go and attack Carthage, while he, after slaying a hundred thousand
fighting men at Trasimenus and Cannae, had suffered his strength to wear
away around Casilinum, Cumae, and Nola. Amid these reproaches and complaints
he was borne away from his long occupation of Italy.
21. At the same time intelligence was brought to Rome that both Mago and
Hannibal had taken their departure. But the delight occasioned by this
twofold source of joy was diminished by the reflection that their commanders
had wanted either spirit or strength sufficient to detain them, for they
had been charged by the senate to do so; and also in consequence of the
anxiety they felt for the issue of a contest, in which the whole weight
of the war rested on the efforts of one general and his army. About the
same time ambassadors from Saguntum arrived, bringing with them some Carthaginians
who had crossed over into Spain for the purpose of hiring auxiliaries,
having seized them and the money they had with them. They laid down in
the vestibule of the senate-house two hundred and fifty pounds' weight
of gold, and eight hundred of silver. After the men had been received and
thrown into prison, and the gold and silver returned, the ambassadors were
thanked, and received, besides, presents and ships to convey them back
into Spain. Some of the older senators then observed, that men were less
powerfully affected by prosperity than adversity. That they themselves
remembered what terror and consternation had been occasioned by the passage
of Hannibal into Italy; what disasters and what lamentations had followed
that event. When the camp of the enemy was seen from their walls, what
vows were poured forth by each and all! How often, extending their hands
to heaven, exclamations were heard in their assemblies. Oh! will that day
ever arrive when we shall behold Italy cleared of her enemies and enjoying
the blessings of peace! The gods, they said, had at length, in the sixteenth
year, granted that favor and yet there was no one who proposed that thanks
should be returned to them for it. That if men received a present blessing
so ungratefully, they would not be very mindful of it when it was past.
In consequence of this a general shout was raised from every part of the
senate-house, that Publius Aelius the praetor, should lay the matter before
the senate, and a decree was passed, that a supplication should be performed
at all the shrines for the space of five days, and that a hundred and twenty
victims of the larger sort should be immolated. Laelius and the ambassadors
of Masinissa having been by this time dismissed, and intelligence having
arrived that ambassadors of the Carthaginians, who were coming to the senate
to treat about peace, had been seen at Puteoli, and would proceed thence
by land, it was resolved, that Caius Laelius should be recalled, that the
negotiations respecting the peace might take place in his presence. Quintus
Fulvius Gillo, a lieutenant-general of Scipio, conducted the Carthaginians
to Rome; and as they were forbidden to enter the city, they were lodged
in a country-house belonging to the state, and admitted to an audience
of the senate at the temple of Bellona.
22. They addressed the senate in nearly the same terms as they
had employed before Scipio; laying the whole blame of the war upon
Hannibal, and exculpating their state. They declared, that he had not
only crossed the Alps, but the Iberus also, without the sanction
of the senate; and that he had made war not only on the Romans,
but previously on the Saguntines also, on his own individual
responsibility. That, if the question were viewed in its proper light,
it would be found that the league between the senate and people of
Carthage and the Romans remained unbroken up to that day. Accordingly,
all they had in charge to solicit was, that they might be allowed to
continue in the enjoyment of that peace which was last entered into
with the consul Caius Lutatius. When the praetor, according to
the custom handed down from their ancestors, had given the fathers
permission to ask the ambassadors any questions they might be pleased
to put, and the older members who had been present at the making
of the treaties had put some one question and others another, the
ambassadors declared that they were not old enough to recollect, for
they were nearly all of them young men. Upon this every part of the
senate-house resounded with exclamations, that with Carthaginian
knavery men had been chosen to solicit a renewal of the old peace who
did not recollect its terms.
23. After this, the ambassadors having been removed out of the senate-house,
the senators began to be asked their opinions. Marcus Livius recommended,
that Caius Servilius, the consul nearest home, should be sent for, that
he might be present at the proceedings relative to the peace; for as it
was impossible that any subject of deliberation could occur of greater
importance than the present, he did not see how it could be discussed,
consistently with the dignity of the Roman people, in the absence of one
or both of the consuls. Quintus Metellus, who three years before had been
consul, and had filled the office of dictator, said that, since Publius
Scipio, by destroying the armies and by devastating the lands of the enemy,
had reduced them to such a state that they were compelled as supplicants
to sue for peace; and as no one could estimate with more truth the intentions
with which it was solicited, than he who was prosecuting the war before
the gates of Carthage; the peace should be rejected or adopted on the advice
of none other than Scipio. Marcus Valerius Laevinus, who had been twice
consul, endeavored to show that those who had come were spies, and not
ambassadors; that they ought to be ordered to depart from Italy; that guards
should be sent with them to their very ships, and that Scipio should be
written to not to relax in prosecuting the war. Laelius and Fulvius added,
that Scipio had grounded his hopes of effecting a peace on Hannibal and
Mago not being recalled from Italy. He considered that the Carthaginians
would practice every species of dissimulation, in expectation of the arrival
of those generals and their armies, and then, forgetful of all treaties,
however recent, and all gods, would proceed with the war. For these reasons
they were the more disposed to adopt the opinion of Laevinus. The ambassadors
were dismissed without having accomplished the peace, and almost without
an answer.
24. About the same time Cneius Servilius, the consul, not doubting but
that he should enjoy the glory of having restored Italy to a state of
peace, pursued Hannibal, whom he considered had fled before him, and
crossed over into Sicily, with the intention of proceeding thence into
Africa. As soon as this became known at Rome, at first the fathers
gave it as their opinion, that the praetor should inform the consul
by letter that the senate thought it proper that he should return into
Italy; but afterwards, the praetor declaiming that he would not heed
his letter, Publius Sulpicius, who was created dictator for this
very purpose, recalled the consul to Italy, in virtue of his superior
authority. The remainder of the year he employed in conjunction with
Marcus Servilius, his master of the horse, in going round to the
cities of Italy, which had been alienated from the Romans during the
war, and in taking cognizance of the cases of each. During the time of
the truce, Lentulus the praetor sent over into Africa, from Sardinia,
a hundred transports with stores, under a convoy of twenty ships of
war, without meeting with any injury either from the enemy or storms.
The same good fortune did not attend Cneius Octavius, while crossing
over from Sicily with two hundred transports and thirty men of war.
Having experienced a prosperous voyage until he arrived almost within
sight of Africa, at first the wind dropped, but afterwards changing to
the south-west, it dispersed his ships in every direction. He himself
with the ships of war, having struggled through the opposing billows
by the extraordinary exertions of his rowers, made the promontory of
Apollo. The greater part of the transports were driven to Aegimurus,
an island filling the mouth of the bay on which Carthage stands,
and about thirty miles from the city; the rest were driven on shore
directly opposite the city, near the warm baths. The whole occurrence
was within sight of Carthage, and, accordingly, the people ran in
crowds to the forum, from every part of the city. The magistrates
summoned the senate, and the people were yelling in the vestibule of
the senate-house, lest so great a booty should escape from their hands
and their sight. Though some urged as an objection the obligation
imposed upon them by having solicited peace, and others the restraint
occasioned by the existence of a truce, the period of which had not
yet expired, it was agreed in an assembly, made up almost of a
mixture of the senate and people, that Hasdrubal should cross over to
Aegimurus with fifty ships, and, proceeding thence, pick up the Roman
ships scattered along the coasts and in the different ports. First the
transports from Aegimurus, and then those from the baths, abandoned by
the crews, were towed to Carthage.
25. The ambassadors had not as yet returned from Rome, nor was it known
whether the Roman senate had pronounced in favor of peace or war; nor as
yet had the period of the truce expired. Scipio, therefore, considering
that the malignity of their offense was heightened by the fact, that, though
they had solicited peace and a truce, they had cut off all hopes of the
former and violated the latter, immediately dispatched Lucius Baebius,
Lucius Sergius, and Lucius Fabius, as ambassadors to Carthage. These, having
narrowly escaped violence from the assembled multitude, and perceiving
that they would be exposed to similar danger on their return, requested
of the magistrates, by whose aid they had been protected from violence,
to send ships to escort them. Two triremes were assigned them, which, when
they had come to the river Bagradas, whence the Roman camp could be seen,
returned to Carthage. The Carthaginian fleet was stationed at Utica, and
from this three quadriremes were dispatched, which suddenly attacked the
Roman quinquereme from the main sea, while doubling the promontory, either
owing to a message sent from Carthage that this should be done, or that
Hasdrubal, who commanded the fleet, perpetrated the atrocity without public
connivance. But neither could they strike it with their beaks from the
rapidity with which it evaded them, nor could the fighting men board the
higher from lower vessels. The quinquereme was gallantly defended as long
as their weapons lasted; but these failing, and there being now nothing
which could save them but the nearness of the land, and the multitude which
had poured out from the camp upon the shore, they communicated a rapid
motion to the vessel by means of their oars, and running her against the
shore with all the force they could, they escaped themselves without injury,
and only lost the vessel. Thus when the truce had been unequivocally violated
by repeated acts of villainy, Laelius and Fulvius arrived from Rome with
the Carthaginian ambassadors. Scipio told them, that although the Carthaginians
had not only broken their faith pledged in the truce, but had also violated
the laws of nations in the persons of his ambassadors, yet he would not
in their case do any thing unworthy of the maxims of the Roman people or
his own principles; after saying which, he dismissed the ambassadors and
prepared for war. When Hannibal was now drawing near land, one of the sailors,
who was ordered to climb the mast to see what part of the country they
were making, said the prow pointed toward a demolished sepulcher, when
Hannibal, recognizing the inauspicious omen, ordered the pilot to steer
by that place, and putting in his fleet at Leptis, landed his forces there.
26. Such were the transactions in Africa this year. Those which followed extended themselves into that year in which Marcus Servilius Geminus, who was then master of the horse and Tiberius Claudius Nero were consuls. However, at the close of the former year, deputies from the allied states in Greece having arrived with complaints that their lands had been devastated by the king's garrisons, and that their ambassadors, who had gone into Macedonia to demand restitution had not been admitted into the presence of Philip; and having also brought information that four thousand men were said to have been conveyed over into Africa, under the conduct of Sopater, to assist the Carthaginians, and that a considerable quantity of money had been sent with them; the senate resolved that ambassadors should be sent to the king to inform him that the fathers considered that these acts were contrary to the treaty. The persons sent were Caius Terentius Varro, Caius Mamilius, and Marcus Aurelius. Three quinqueremes were assigned to them. This year was rendered remarkable by a most extensive fire, by which the buildings on the Publician hill were burned to the ground, and by the greatness of the floods. But still provisions were cheap, not only because, as it was a time of peace, supplies could be obtained from every part of Italy, but also because Marcus Valerius Falto and Marcus Fabius Buteo, the curule aediles, distributed to the people, so much for each street, at the rate of four asses a bushel, a great quantity of corn which had been sent out of Spain. The same year died Quintus Fabius Maximus at an advanced age, if, indeed, it be true that he was augur sixty-two years, which some historians relate. He was a man unquestionably worthy of the high surname which he bore, even had it begun with him. He surpassed the honors of his father, and equalled those of his grandfather. His grandfather, Rullus, was distinguished by a greater number of victories and more important battles; but one antagonist like Hannibal is sufficient to counterbalance them all. He was esteemed rather cautious than spirited; and though it may be questioned whether he was naturally dilatory, or whether he adopted that kind of conduct because it was peculiarly suited to the war which he was carrying on, yet nothing can be more clear that he was that one man who by his delay retrieved our affairs, as Ennius says. Quintus Fabius Maximus, his son, was consecrated augur in his room. In the room of the same, for he held two priesthoods, Servius Sulpicius Galba was consecrated pontiff. The Roman games were repeated for one day, the plebeian were thrice repeated entire by the aediles, Marcus Sextius Sabinus and Cneius Tremellius Flaccus. Both these were elected praetors, and with them Caius Livius Salinator and Caius Aurelius Cotta. The difference in the accounts of historians renders it uncertain whether Caius Servilius the consul presided in the elections this year, or Publius Sulpicius, nominated dictator by him, because business detained him in Etruria; being engaged, according to a decree of the senate, in making inquisitions respecting the conspiracies of the principal inhabitants.
27. In the beginning of the following year, Marcus Servilius and Tiberius
Claudius, having assembled the senate, consulted them respecting the provinces.
As both were desirous of having Africa, they wished Italy and Africa to
be disposed of by lots; but, principally in consequence of the exertions
of Quintus Metellus, Africa was neither assigned to any one nor withheld.
The consuls were ordered to make application to the tribunes of the people,
to the effect, that, if they thought proper, they should put it to the
people to decide whom they wished to conduct the war in Africa. All the
tribes nominated Publius Scipio. Nevertheless, the consuls put the province
of Africa to the lot, for so the senate had decreed. Africa fell to the
lot of Tiberius Claudius, who was to cross over into Africa with a fleet
of fifty ships, all quinqueremes, and have an equal command with Scipio.
Marcus Servilius obtained Etruria. Caius Servilius was continued in command
in the same province, in case the senate resolved that the consul should
remain at the city. Of the praetors, Marcus Sextus obtained Gaul; which
province, together with two legions, Publius Quinctilius Varus was to deliver
to him; Caius Livius obtained Bruttium, with the two legions which Publius
Sempronius, the proconsul, had commanded the former year; Cneius Tremellius
had Sicily, and was to receive the province and two legions from Publius
Villius Tappulus, a praetor of the former year; Villius, as propraetor,
was to protect the coast of Sicily with twenty men of war, and a thousand
soldiers; and Marcus Pomponius was to convey thence to Rome one thousand
five hundred soldiers, with the remaining twenty ships. The city jurisdiction
fell to Caius Aurelius Cotta; and the rest of the praetors were continued
in command of the respective provinces and armies which they then had.
Not more than sixteen legions were employed this year in the defense of
the empire. And, that they might have the gods favorably disposed towards
them in all their undertakings and proceedings, it was ordered that the
consuls, before they set out to the war, should celebrate those games,
and sacrifice those victims of the larger sort, which, in the consulate
of Marcus Claudius Marcellus and Titus Quinctius, Titus Manlius, the dictator,
had vowed, provided the commonwealth should continue in the same state
for the next five years. The games were exhibited in the circus during
four days, and the victims sacrificed to those deities to whom they had
been vowed.
28. Meanwhile, hope and anxiety daily and simultaneously increased; nor could the minds of men be brought to any fixed conclusion, whether it was a fit subject for rejoicing, that Hannibal had now at length, after the sixteenth year, departed from Italy, and left the Romans in the unmolested possession of it, or whether they had not greater cause to fear, from his having transported his army in safety into Africa. They said that the scene of action certainly was changed, but not the danger. That Quintus Fabius, lately deceased, who had foretold how arduous the contest would be, was used to predict, not without good reason, that Hannibal would prove a more formidable enemy in his own country than he had been in a foreign one; and that Scipio would have to encounter not Syphax, a king of undisciplined barbarians, whose armies Statorius, a man little better than a soldier's drudge, was used to lead; nor his father-in-law, Hasdrubal, that most fugacious general; nor tumultuary armies hastily collected out of a crowd of half-armed rustics, but Hannibal, born in a manner in the pavilion of his father, that bravest of generals, nurtured and educated in the midst of arms, who served as a soldier formerly, when a boy, and became a general when he had scarcely attained the age of manhood; who, having grown old in victory, had filled Spain, Gaul, and Italy, from the Alps to the strait, with monuments of his vast achievements; who commanded troops who had served as long as he had himself; troops hardened by the endurance of every species of suffering, such as it is scarcely credible that men could have supported; stained a thousand times with Roman blood, and bearing with them the spoils not only of soldiers but of generals. That many would meet the eyes of Scipio in battle who had with their own hands slain Roman praetors, generals, and consuls; many decorated with crowns, in reward for having scaled walls and crossed ramparts; many who had traversed the captured camps and cities of the Romans. That the magistrates of the Roman people had not then so many fasces as Hannibal could have carried before him, having taken them from generals whom he had slain. While their minds were harassed by these apprehensions, their anxiety and fears were further increased from the circumstance, that, whereas they had been accustomed to carry on war for several years, in different parts of Italy, and within their view, with languid hopes, and without the prospect of bringing it to a speedy termination, Scipio and Hannibal had stimulated the minds of all, as generals prepared for a final contest. Even those persons whose confidence in Scipio and hopes of victory were great, were affected with anxiety, increasing in proportion as they saw their completion approaching. The state of feeling among the Carthaginians was much the same; for, when they turned their eyes on Hannibal, and the greatness of his achievements, they repented having solicited peace; but when again they reflected that they had been twice defeated in a pitched battle, that Syphax had been made prisoner, that they had been driven out of Spain and Italy, and that all this had been effected by the valor and conduct of Scipio alone, they regarded him with horror, as a general marked out by destiny, and born, for their destruction.
29. Hannibal had by this time arrived at Adrumetum; from which place, after
employing a few days there in refreshing his soldiers, who had suffered
from the motion by sea, he proceeded by forced marches to Zama, roused
by the alarming statements of messengers, who brought word, that all the
country around Carthage was filled with armed troops. Zama is distant from
Carthage a five days' journey. Some spies, whom he sent out from this place,
being intercepted by the Roman guard, and brought before Scipio, he directed
that they should be handed over to the military tribunes, and after having
been desired fearlessly to survey every thing, to be conducted through
the camp wherever they chose; then, asking them whether they had examined
every thing to their satisfaction, he assigned them an escort, and sent
them back to Hannibal. Hannibal received none of the circumstances which
were reported to him with feelings of joy; for they brought word that,
as it happened, Masinissa had joined the enemy that very day, with six
thousand infantry and four thousand horse; but he was principally dispirited
by the confidence of his enemy, which, doubtless, was not conceived without
some ground. Accordingly, though he himself was the originator of the war,
and by his coming had upset the truce which had been entered into, and
cut off all hopes of a treaty, yet concluding that more favorable terms
might be obtained if he solicited peace while his strength was unimpaired,
than when vanquished, he sent a message to Scipio, requesting permission
to confer with him. I have no means of affirming whether he did this on
his own spontaneous suggestion, or by the advice of his state. Valerius
Antias says, that after having been beaten by Scipio in a battle, in which
twelve thousand armed men were slain, and one thousand seven hundred made
prisoners, he came himself with ten other deputies into the camp to Scipio.
However, as Scipio did not decline the proposal for a conference, both
the generals, by concert, brought their camps forward in order to facilitate
their meeting by shortening the distance. Scipio took up his position not
far from the city Naragara, in a situation convenient not only for other
purposes, but also because there was a watering place within a dart's throw.
Hannibal took possession of an eminence four miles thence, safe and convenient
in every respect, except that he had a long way to go for water. Here,
in the intermediate space, a place was chosen, open to view from all sides,
that there might be no opportunity for treachery.
30. Their armed attendants having retired to an equal distance, they met, each attended by one interpreter, being the greatest generals not only of their own times, but of any to be found in the records of the times preceding them, and equal to any of the kings or generals of any nation whatever. When they came within sight of each other they remained silent for a short time, thunderstruck, as it were, with mutual admiration. At length Hannibal thus began: "Since fate hath so ordained it, that I, who was the first to wage war upon the Romans, and who have so often had victory almost within my reach, should voluntarily come to sue for peace, I rejoice that it is you, above all others, from whom it is my lot to solicit it. To you, also, amid the many distinguished events of your life, it will not be esteemed one of the least glorious, that Hannibal, to whom the gods had so often granted victory over the Roman generals, should have yielded to you; and that you should have put an end to this war, which has been rendered remarkable by your calamities before it was by ours. In this also fortune would seem to have exhibited a disposition to sport with events, for it was when your father was consul that I first took up arms; he was the first Roman general with whom I engaged in a pitched battle; and it is to his son that I now come unarmed to solicit peace. It were indeed most to have been desired, that the gods should have put such dispositions into the minds of our fathers, that you should have been content with the empire of Italy, and we with that of Africa: nor, indeed, even to you, are Sicily and Sardinia of sufficient value to compensate you for the loss of so many fleets, so many armies, so many and such distinguished generals. But what is past may be more easily censured than retrieved. In our attempts to acquire the possessions of others we have been compelled to fight for our own; and not only have you had a war in Italy, and we also in Africa, but you have beheld the standards and arms of your enemies almost in your gates and on your walls, and we now, from the walls of Carthage, distinctly hear the din of a Roman camp. What, therefore, we should most earnestly deprecate, and you should most devoutly wish for, is now the case: peace is proposed at a time when you have the advantage. We who negotiate it are the persons whom it most concerns to obtain it, and we are persons whose arrangements, be they what they will, our states will ratify. All we want is a disposition not averse from peaceful counsels. As far as relates to myself, time, (for I am returning to that country an old man which I left a boy,) and prosperity, and adversity, have so schooled me, that I am more inclined to follow reason than fortune. But I fear your youth and uninterrupted good fortune, both of which are apt to inspire a degree of confidence ill comporting with pacific counsels. Rarely does that man consider the uncertainty of events whom fortune hath never deceived. What I was at Trasimenus, and at Cannae, that you are this day. Invested with command when you had scarcely yet attained the military age, though all your enterprises were of the boldest description, in no instance has fortune deserted you. Avenging the death of your father and uncle, you have derived from the calamity of your house the high honor of distinguished valor and filial duty. You have recovered Spain, which had been lost, after driving thence four Carthaginian armies. When elected consul, though all others wanted courage to defend Italy, you crossed over into Africa; where having cut to pieces two armies, having at once captured and burnt two camps in the same hour; having made prisoner Syphax, a most powerful king, and seized so many towns of his dominions and so many of ours, you have dragged me from Italy, the possession of which I had firmly held for now sixteen years. Your mind, I say, may possibly be more disposed to conquest than peace. I know the spirits of your country aim rather at great than useful objects. On me, too, a similar fortune once shone. But if with prosperity the gods would also bestow upon us sound judgment, we should not only consider those things which have happened, but those also which may occur. Even if you should forget all others, I am myself a sufficient instance of every vicissitude of fortune. For me, whom a little while ago you saw advancing my standards to the walls of Rome, after pitching my camp between the Anio and your city, you now behold here, bereft of my two brothers, men of consummate bravery, and most renowned generals, standing before the walls of my native city, which is all but besieged, and deprecating, in behalf of my own city, those severities with which I terrified yours. In all cases, the most prosperous fortune is least to be depended upon. While your affairs are in a favorable and ours in a dubious state, you would derive honor and splendor from granting peace; while to us who solicit it, it would considered as necessary rather than honorable. A certain peace is better and safer than a victory in prospect; the former is at your own disposal, the latter depends upon the gods. Do not place at the hazard of a single hour the successes of so many years. When you consider your own strength, then also place before your view the power of fortune, and the fluctuating nature of war. On both sides there will be arms, on both sides human bodies. In nothing less than in war do events correspond (with men's calculations). Should you be victorious in a battle, you will not add so much to that renown which you now have it in your power to acquire by granting peace, as you will detract from it should any adverse event befall you. The chance of a single hour may at once overturn the honors you have acquired and those you anticipate. Every thing is at your own disposal in adjusting a peace; but, in the other case, you must be content with that fortune which the gods shall impose upon you. Formerly, in this same country, Marcus Atilius would have formed one among the few instances of good fortune and valor, if, when victorious, he had granted a peace to our fathers when they requested it; but by not setting any bounds to his success, and not checking good fortune, which was elating him, he fell with a degree of ignominy proportioned to his elevation. It is indeed the right of him who grants, and not of him who solicits it, to dictate the terms of peace; but perhaps we may not be unworthy to impose upon ourselves the fine. We do not refuse that all those possessions on account of which the war was begun should be yours; Sicily, Sardinia, Spain, with all the islands lying in any part of the sea, between Africa and Italy. Let us Carthaginians, confined within the shores of Africa, behold you, since such is the pleasure of the gods, extending your empire over foreign nations, both by sea and land. I cannot deny that you have reason to suspect the Carthaginian faith, in consequence of their insincerity lately in soliciting a peace and while awaiting the decision. The sincerity with which a peace will be observed, depends much, Scipio, on the person by whom it is sought. Your senate, as I hear, refused to grant a peace in some measure because the deputies were deficient in respectability. It is I, Hannibal, who now solicit peace; who would neither ask for it unless I believed it expedient, nor will I fail to observe it for the same reason of expedience on account of which I have solicited it. And in the same manner as I, because the war was commenced by me, brought it to pass that no one regretted it till the gods began to regard me with displeasure; so will I also exert myself that no one may regret the peace procured by my means."
31. In answer to these things the Roman general spoke nearly to the following
effect: "I was aware that it was in consequence of the expectation
of your arrival, that the Carthaginians violated the existing faith of
the truce and broke off all hope of a peace. Nor, indeed, do you conceal
the fact; inasmuch as you artfully withdraw from the former conditions
of peace every concession except what relates to those things which have
for a long time been in our own power. But as it is your object, that your
countrymen should be sensible how great a burden they are relieved from
by your means, so it is incumbent upon me to endeavor that they may not
receive, as the reward of their perfidy, the concessions which they formerly
stipulated, by expunging them now from the conditions of the peace. Though
you do not deserve to be allowed the same conditions as before, you now
request even to be benefited by your treachery. Neither did our fathers
first make war respecting Sicily, nor did we respecting Spain. In the former
case the danger which threatened our allies the Mamertines, and in the
present the destruction of Saguntum, girded us with just and pious arms.
That you were the aggressors, both you yourselves confess, and the gods
are witnesses, who determined the issue of the former war, and who are
now determining and will determine the issue of the present according to
right and justice. As to myself, I am not forgetful of the instability
of human affairs, but consider the influence of fortune, and am well aware
that all our measures are liable to a thousand casualties. But as I should
acknowledge that my conduct would savor of insolence and oppression, if
I rejected you on your coming in person to solicit peace, before I crossed
over into Africa, you voluntarily retiring from Italy, and after you had
embarked your troops; so now, when I have dragged you into Africa almost
by manual force, notwithstanding your resistance and evasions, I am not
bound to treat you with any respect. Wherefore, if in addition to those
stipulations on which it was considered that a peace would at that time
have been agreed upon, and what they are you are informed, a compensation
is proposed for having seized our ships, together with their stores, during
a truce, and for the violence offered to our ambassadors, I shall then
have matter to lay before my council. But if these things also appear oppressive,
prepare for war, since you could not brook the conditions of peace."
Thus, without effecting an accommodation, when they had returned from the
conference to their armies, they informed them that words had been bandied
to no purpose, that the question must be decided by arms, and that they
must accept that fortune which the gods assigned them.
32. When they had arrived at their camps, they both issued orders that
their soldiers should get their arms in readiness, and prepare their minds
for the final contest; in which, if fortune should favor them, they would
continue victorious, not for a single day, but for ever. "Before to-morrow
night," they said, "they would know whether Rome or Carthage
should give laws to the world; and that neither Africa nor Italy, but the
whole world, would be the prize of victory. That the dangers which threatened
those who had the misfortune to be defeated, were proportioned to the rewards
of the victors." For the Romans had not any place of refuge in an
unknown and foreign land, and immediate destruction seemed to await Carthage,
if the troops which formed her last reliance were defeated. To this important
contest, the day following, two generals, by far the most renowned of any,
and belonging to two of the most powerful nations in the world, advanced,
either to crown or overthrow, on that day, the many honors they had previously
acquired. Their minds, therefore, were agitated with the opposite feelings
of hope and fear; and while they contemplated at one time their own troops,
at another those of their enemy, estimating their powers more by sight
than by reason, they saw in them at once the grounds for joy and grief.
Those circumstances which did not occur to the troops themselves spontaneously,
their generals suggested by their admonitions and exhortations. The Carthaginian
recounted his achievements in the land of Italy during sixteen years the
many Roman generals and armies annihilated, reminding each individually
of the honors he had acquired as he came to any soldier who had obtained
distinction in any of his battles. Scipio referred to Spain, the recent
battles in Africa and the enemy's own confession, that they could not through
fear but solicit peace, nor could they, through their inveterate perfidy,
abide by it. In addition to this he gave what turn he pleased to his conference
with Hannibal, which was held in private, and was therefore open to misrepresentation.
He augured success that the gods had exhibited the same omens to them on
going out to battle on the present occasion, as they had to their fathers
when they fought at the islands Aegates. He told them that the termination
of the war, and their hardships, had arrived; that they had within their
grasp the spoils of Carthage, and the power of returning home to their
country, their parents, their children, their wives, and their household
gods. He delivered these observations with a body so erect, and with a
countenance so full of exultation, that one would have supposed that he
had already conquered. He then drew up his troops, posting the hastati
in front, the principes behind them, and closing his rear line with the
triarii.
33. He did not draw up his cohorts in close order, but each before their
respective standards; placing the companies at some distance from each
other, so as to leave a space through which the elephants of the enemy
passing might not at all break their ranks. Laelius, whom he had employed
before as lieutenant-general, but this year as quaestor, by special appointment,
according to a decree of the senate, he posted with the Italian cavalry
in the left wing, Masinissa and the Numidians in the right. The open spaces
between the companies of those in the van he filled with velites, which
then formed the Roman light-armed troops, with an injunction, that on the
charge of the elephants they should either retire behind the files, which
extended in a right line, or, running to the right and left and placing
themselves by the side of those in the van, afford a passage by which the
elephants might rush in between weapons on both sides. Hannibal, in order
to terrify the enemy, drew up his elephants in front, and he had eighty
of them, being more than he had ever had in any battle; behind these his
Ligurian and Gallic auxiliaries, with Balearians and Moors intermixed.
In the second line he placed the Carthaginians, Africans, and a legion
of Macedonians; then, leaving a moderate interval, he formed a reserve
of Italian troops, consisting principally of Bruttians, more of whom had
followed him on his departure from Italy by compulsion and necessity than
by choice. His cavalry also he placed in the wings, the Carthaginian occupying
the right, the Numidian the left. Various were the means of exhortation
employed in an army consisting of a mixture of so many different kinds
of men; men differing in language, customs laws, arms, dress, and appearance,
and in the motives for serving. To the auxiliaries, the prospect both of
their present pay, and many times more from the spoils, was held out. The
Gauls were stimulated by their peculiar and inherent animosity against
the Romans. To the Ligurians the hope was held out of enjoying the fertile
plains of Italy, and quitting their rugged mountains, if victorious. The
Moors and Numidians were terrified with subjection to the government of
Masinissa, which he would exercise with despotic severity. Different grounds
of hope and fear were represented to different persons. The view of the
Carthaginians was directed to the walls of their city, their household
gods, the sepulchers of their ancestors, their children and parents, and
their trembling wives; they were told, that either the destruction of their
city and slavery or the empire of the world awaited them; that there was
nothing intermediate which they could hope for or fear. While the general
was thus busily employed among the Carthaginians, and the captains of the
respective nations among their countrymen, most of them employing interpreters
among troops intermixed with those of different nations, the trumpets and
cornets of the Romans sounded; and such a clamor arose, that the elephants,
especially those in the left wing, turned round upon their own party, the
Moors and Numidians. Masinissa had no difficulty in increasing the alarm
of the terrified enemy, and deprived them of the aid of their cavalry in
that wing. A few, however, of the beasts which were driven against the
enemy, and were not turned back through fear, made great havoc among the
ranks of the velites, though not without receiving many wounds themselves;
for when the velites, retiring to the companies, had made way for the elephants,
that they might not be trampled down, they discharged their darts at them,
exposed as they were to wounds on both sides, those in the van also keeping
up a continual discharge of javelins; until, driven out of the Roman line
by the weapons which fell upon them from all quarters, these elephants
also put to flight even the cavalry of the Carthaginians posted in their
right wing. Laelius, when he saw the enemy in disorder, struck additional
terror into them in their confusion.
34. The Carthaginian line was deprived of the cavalry on both sides, when
the infantry, who were now not a match for the Romans in confidence or
strength, engaged. In addition to this there was one circumstance, trifling
in itself, but at the same time producing important consequences in the
action. On the part of the Romans the shout was uniform, and on that account
louder and more terrific; while the voices of the enemy, consisting as
they did of many nations of different languages, were dissonant. The Romans
used the stationary kind of fight, pressing upon the enemy with their own
weight and that of their arms; but on the other side there was more of
skirmishing and rapid movement than force. Accordingly, on the first charge,
the Romans immediately drove back the line of their opponents; then pushing
them with their elbows and the bosses of their shields, and pressing forward
into the places from which they had pushed them, they advanced a considerable
space, as though there had been no one to resist them, those who formed
the rear urging forward those in front when they perceived the line of
the enemy giving way; which circumstance itself gave great additional force
in repelling them. On the side of the enemy, the second line, consisting
of the Africans and Carthaginians, were so far from supporting the first
line when giving ground, that, on the contrary, they even retired, lest
their enemy, by slaying those who made a firm resistance, should penetrate
to themselves also. Accordingly, the auxiliaries suddenly turned their
backs, and facing about upon their own party, fled, some of them into the
second line, while others slew those who did not receive them into their
ranks, since before they did not support them, and now refused to receive
them. And now there were, in a manner, two contests going on together,
the Carthaginians being compelled to fight at once with the enemy and with
their own party. Not even then, however, did they receive into their line
the terrified and exasperated troops; but, closing their ranks, drove them
out of the scene of action to the wings and the surrounding plain, lest
they should mingle these soldiers, terrified with defeat and wounds, with
that part of their line which was firm and fresh. But such a heap of men
and arms had filled the space in which the auxiliaries a little while ago
had stood, that it was almost more difficult to pass through it than through
a close line of troops. The spearmen, therefore, who formed the front line,
pursuing the enemy as each could find a way through the heap of arms and
men, and streams of blood, threw into complete disorder the battalions
and companies. The standards also of the principes had begun to waver when
they saw the line before them driven from their ground. Scipio, perceiving
this, promptly ordered the signal to be given for the spearmen to retreat,
and, having taken his wounded into the rear, brought the principes and
triarii to the wings, in order that the line of spearmen in the center
might be more strong and secure. Thus a fresh and renewed battle commenced,
inasmuch as they had penetrated to their real antagonists, men equal to
them in the nature of their arms, in their experience in war, in the fame
of their achievements, and the greatness of their hopes and fears. But
the Romans were superior both in numbers and courage, for they had now
routed both the cavalry and the elephants, and having already defeated
the front line, were fighting against the second.
35. Laelius and Masinissa, who had pursued the routed cavalry through a
considerable space, returning very opportunely, charged the rear of the
enemy's line. This attack of the cavalry at length routed them. Many of
them, being surrounded, were slain in the field; and many, dispersed in
flight through the open plain around, were slain on all hands, as the cavalry
were in possession of every part. Of the Carthaginians and their allies,
above twenty thousand were slain on that day; about an equal number were
captured, with a hundred and thirty-three military standards, and eleven
elephants. Of the victors as many as two thousand fell. Hannibal, slipping
off during the confusion, with a few horsemen came to Adrumetum, not quitting
the field till he had tried every expedient both in the battle and before
the engagement; having, according to the admission of Scipio, and every
one skilled in military science, acquired the fame of having marshalled
his troops on that day with singular judgment. He placed his elephants
in the front, in order that their desultory attack, and insupportable violence,
might prevent the Romans from following their standards, and preserving
their ranks, on which they placed their principal dependence. Then he posted
his auxiliaries before the line of Carthaginians, in order that men who
were made up of the refuse of all nations and who were not bound by honor
but by gain, might not have any retreat open to them in case they fled;
at the same time that the first ardor and impetuosity might be exhausted
upon them, and, if they could render no other service, that the weapons
of the enemy might be blunted in wounding them. Next he placed the Carthaginian
and African soldiers, on whom he placed all his hopes, in order that, being
equal to the enemy in every other respect, they might have the advantage
of them, inasmuch as, being fresh and unimpaired in strength themselves,
they would fight with those who were fatigued and wounded. The Italians
he removed into the rear, separating them also by an intervening space,
as he knew not, with certainty, whether they were friends or enemies. Hannibal,
after performing this as it were his last work of valor, fled to Adrumetum,
whence, having been summoned to Carthage, he returned thither in the six
and thirtieth year after he had left it when a boy; and confessed in the
senate-house that he was defeated, not only in the battle, but in the war,
and that there was no hope of safety in any thing but in obtaining peace.
36. Immediately after the battle, Scipio, having taken and plundered the enemy's camp, returned to the sea and his ships, with an immense booty, news having reached him that Publius Lentulus had arrived at Utica with fifty men of war, and a hundred transports laden with every kind of stores. Concluding that he ought to bring before Carthage every thing which could increase the consternation already existing there, after sending Laelius to Rome to report his victory, he ordered Cneius Octavius to conduct the legions thither by land; and, setting out himself from Utica with the fresh fleet of Lentulus, added to his former one, made for the harbor of Carthage. When he had arrived within a short distance, he was met by a Carthaginian ship decked with fillets and branches of olive. There were ten deputies, the leading men in the state, sent at the instance of Hannibal to solicit peace; to whom, when they had come up to the stern of the general's ship, holding out the badges of suppliants, entreating and imploring the protection and compassion of Scipio, the only answer given was, that they must come to Tunes, to which place he would move his camp. After taking a view of the site of Carthage, not so much for the sake of acquainting himself with it for any present object, as to dispirit the enemy, he returned to Utica, having recalled Octavius to the same place. As they were proceeding thence to Tunes, they received intelligence that Vermina, the son of Syphax, with a greater number of horse than foot, was coming to the assistance of the Carthaginians. A part of his infantry, with all the cavalry, having attacked them on their march on the first day of the Saturnalia, routed the Numidians with little opposition; and as every way by which they could escape in flight was blocked up, for the cavalry surrounded them on all sides, fifteen thousand men were slain, twelve hundred were taken alive, with fifteen hundred Numidian horses, and seventy-two military standards. The prince himself fled from the field with a few attendants during the confusion. The camp was then pitched near Tunes in the same place as before, and thirty ambassadors came to Scipio from Carthage. These behaved in a manner even more calculated to excite compassion than the former, in proportion as their situation was more pressing; but from the recollection of their recent perfidy, they were heard with considerably less pity. In the council, though all were impelled by just resentment to demolish Carthage, yet, when they reflected upon the magnitude of the undertaking, and the length of time which would be consumed in the siege of so well fortified and strong a city, while Scipio himself was uneasy in consequence of the expectation of a successor, who would come in for the glory of having terminated the war, though it was accomplished already by the exertions and danger of another, the minds of all were inclined to peace.
37. The next day the ambassadors being called in again, and with
many rebukes for their perfidy, warned that, instructed by so many
disasters, they would at length believe in the existence of the gods,
and the obligation of an oath, these conditions of the peace were
stated to them: "That they should enjoy their liberty and live under
their own laws; that they should possess such cities and territories
as they had enjoyed before the war, and with the same boundaries, and
that the Romans should on that day desist from devastation. That they
should restore to the Romans all deserters and fugitives, giving up
all their ships of war except ten triremes, with such tamed elephants
as they had, and that they should not tame any more. That they should
not carry on war in or out of Africa without the permission of the
Roman people. That they should make restitution to Masinissa, and
form a league with him. That they should furnish corn, and pay for the
auxiliaries until the ambassadors had returned from Rome. That they
should pay ten thousand talents of silver, in equal annual instalments
distributed over fifty years. That they should give a hundred
hostages, according to the pleasure of Scipio, not younger than
fourteen nor older than thirty. That he would grant them a truce on
condition that the transports, together with their cargoes, which had
been seized during the former truce, were restored. Otherwise they
would have no truce, nor any hope of a peace." When the ambassadors
who were ordered to bear these conditions home reported them in an
assembly, and Gisgo had stood forth to dissuade them from the
terms, and was being listened to by the multitude, who were at once
indisposed for peace and unfit for war, Hannibal, indignant that such
language should be held and listened to at such a juncture, laid
hold of Gisgo with his own hand, and dragged him from his elevated
position. This unusual sight in a free state having raised a murmur
among the people, the soldier, disconcerted at the liberties which the
citizens took, thus addressed them: "Having left you when nine years
old, I have returned after a lapse of thirty-six years. I flatter
myself I am well acquainted with the qualifications of a soldier,
having been instructed in them from my childhood, sometimes by my own
situation, and sometimes by that of my country. The privileges, the
laws, and customs of the city and the forum you ought to teach me."
Having thus apologized for his indiscretion, he discoursed largely
concerning the peace, showing how inoppressive the terms were, and how
necessary it was. The greatest difficulty was, that of the ships which
had been seized during the truce nothing was to be found except the
ships themselves: nor was it easy to collect the property, because
those who were charged with having it were opposed to the peace. It
was resolved that the ships should be restored, and that the men at
least should be looked up; and as to whatever else was missing, that
it should be left to Scipio to put a value upon it, and that the
Carthaginians should make compensation accordingly in money. There
are those who say that Hannibal went from the field of battle to the
sea-coast; whence he immediately sailed in a ship, which he had ready
for the purpose, to king Antiochus; and that when Scipio demanded
above every thing that Hannibal should be given up to him, answer was
made that Hannibal was not in Africa.
38. After the ambassadors returned to Scipio, the quaestors were
ordered to give in an account, made out from the public registers,
of the public property which had been in the ships; and the owners
to make a return of the private property. For the amount of the value
twenty-five thousand pounds of silver were required to be paid down;
and a truce for three months was granted to the Carthaginians. It
was added, that during the time of the truce they should not
send ambassadors any where else than to Rome; and that, whatever
ambassadors came to Carthage, they should not dismiss them before
informing the Roman general who they were, and what they sought. With
the Carthaginian ambassadors, Lucius Veturius Philo, Marcus Marcius
Ralla, and Lucius Scipio, brother of the general, were sent to Rome.
At the time in which these events took place, the supplies sent from
Sicily and Sardinia produced such cheapness of provisions, that the
merchant gave up the corn to the mariners for their freight. At
Rome alarm was excited at the first intelligence of the renewal of
hostilities by the Carthaginians; and Tiberius Claudius was directed
to conduct the fleet with speed into Sicily, and cross over from that
place into Africa. The other consul, Marcus Servilius, was directed to
stay at the city until the state of affairs in Africa was ascertained.
Tiberius Claudius, the consul, proceeded slowly with every thing
connected with the equipment and sailing of the fleet, because the
senate had decided that it should be left to Scipio, rather than to
the consul, to determine the conditions on which the peace should be
granted. The accounts also of prodigies which arrived just at the time
of the news of the revival of the war, had occasioned great alarm.
At Cumae the orb of the sun seemed diminished, and a shower of stones
fell; and in the territory of Veliternum the earth sank in great
chasms, and trees were swallowed up in the cavities. At Aricia the
forum and the shops around it, at Frusino a wall in several places,
and a gate, were struck by lightning; and in the Palatium a shower of
stones fell. The latter prodigy, according to the custom handed down
by tradition, was expiated by a nine days' sacred rite; the rest
with victims of the larger sort. Amid these events an unusually great
rising of the waters was converted into a prodigy; for the Tiber
overflowed its banks to such a degree, that as the circus was under
water, the Apollinarian games were got up near the temple of Venus
Erycina, without the Colline gate. However, the weather suddenly
clearing up on the very day of the celebration, the procession, which
had begun to move at the Colline gate, was recalled and transferred to
the circus, on its being known that the water had retired thence. The
joy of the people and the attraction of the games were increased by
the restoration of this solemn spectacle to its proper scene.
39. The consul Claudius, having set out at length from the city, was placed in the most imminent danger by a violent tempest, which overtook him between the ports of Cosa and Laurentum. Having reached Populonii, where he waited till the remainder of the tempest had spent itself, he crossed over to the island Ilva. From Ilva he went to Corsica, and from Corsica to Sardinia. Here, while sailing round the Montes Insani, a tempest much more violent in itself, and in a more dangerous situation, dispersed his fleet. Many of his ships were shattered and stripped of their rigging, and some were wrecked. His fleet thus weather-beaten and shattered arrived at Carales, where the winter came on while the ships were drawn on shore and refitted. The year having elapsed, and no one proposing to continue him in command, Tiberius Claudius brought back his fleet to Rome in a private capacity. Marcus Servilius set out for his province, having nominated Caius Servilius Geminus as dictator, that he might not be recalled to the city to hold the elections. The dictator appointed Publius Aelius Paetus master of the horse. It frequently happened, that the elections could not be held on account of bad weather, though the days were fixed for them; and, therefore, as the magistrates of the former year retired from their offices on the day before the ides of March, and fresh ones were not appointed to succeed them, the state was without curule magistrates. Lucius Manlius Torquatus, a pontiff, died this year. Caius Sulpicius Galba was elected in his room. The Roman games were thrice repeated by the curule aediles, Lucius Licinius Lucullus and Quintus Fulvius. Some scribes and runners belonging to the aediles were found, on the testimony of an informer, to have privately conveyed money out of the treasury, and were condemned, not without disgrace to the aedile Lucullus. Publius Aelius Tubero and Lucius Laetorius, plebeian aediles, on account of some informality in their creation, abdicated their office, after having celebrated the games, and the banquet on occasion of the games, in honor of Jupiter, and after having placed in the Capitol three statues made out of silver paid as fines. The dictator and master of the horse celebrated the games in honor of Ceres, in conformity with a decree of the senate.
40. The Roman, together with the Carthaginian ambassadors, having arrived
at Rome from Africa, the senate was assembled at the temple of Bellona;
when Lucius Veturius Philo stated, to the great joy of the senate, that
a battle had been fought with Hannibal, which was decisive of the fate
of the Carthaginians, and that a period was at length put to that calamitous
war. He added what formed a small accession to their successes, that Vermina,
the son of Syphax, had been vanquished. He was then ordered to go forth
to the public assembly, and impart the joyful tidings to the people. Then,
a thanksgiving having been appointed, all the temples in the city were
thrown open, and supplications for three days were decreed. The ambassadors
of the Carthaginians, and those of king Philip, for they also had arrived,
requesting an audience of the senate, answer was made by the dictator,
by order of the fathers, that the new consuls would give them an audience.
The elections were then held. The consuls elected were Cneius Cornelius
Lentulus and Publius Aelius Paetus. The praetors elected were Marcus Junius
Pennus, to whose lot the city jurisdiction fell, Marcus Valerius Falto,
who received Bruttium, Marcus Fabius Buteo, who received Sardinia, and
Publius Aelius Tubero, who received Sicily. It was the pleasure of the
senate that nothing should be done respecting the provinces of the consuls,
till the ambassadors of king Philip and the Carthaginians had been heard;
for they foresaw the termination of one war and the commencement of another.
Cneius Lentulus, the consul, was inflamed with a strong desire to have
the province of Africa, looking forward to an easy victory if there was
still war, or, if it was on the point of being concluded, to the glory
of having it terminated in his consulate. He therefore refused to allow
any business to be transacted before the province of Africa was assigned
him; his colleague, who was a moderate and prudent man, giving up his claim
to it, for he clearly saw that a contest with Scipio for that honor would
be not only unjust but unequal. Quintus Minucius Thermus, and Manius Acilius
Glabrio, tribunes of the people, said that Cneius Cornelius was endeavoring
to effect the same object which had been attempted in vain by the consul
Tiberius Claudius the former year. That, by the direction of the senate,
it had been proposed to the people to decide whom they wished to have the
command in Africa, and all the thirty-five tribes had concurred in assigning
that command to Publius Scipio. After many discussions, both in the senate
and popular assembly, it was at length determined to leave it to the senate.
The fathers, therefore, on oath, for so it had been agreed, voted, that
as to the provinces, the consuls should settle between themselves, or determine
by lots, which of them should have Italy, and which a fleet of fifty ships.
That he to whose lot the fleet fell should sail to Sicily, and if peace
could not be concluded with the Carthaginians, that he should cross over
into Africa. That the consul should act by sea, and Scipio by land, with
the same right of command as heretofore. If an agreement should be come
to, as to the terms of the peace, that then the plebeian tribunes should
consult the commons as to whether they ordered the consul or Publius Scipio
to grant the peace; and if the victorious army was to be brought home out
of Africa, whom they ordered to bring it. That if they ordered that the
peace should be granted by Publius Scipio, and that the army should be
brought home likewise by him, then the consul should not pass out of Sicily
into Africa. That the other consul, to whose lot Italy fell, should receive
two legions from Marcus Sextius the praetor.
41. Publius Scipio was continued in command in the province of Africa,
with the armies which he then had. To the praetor Marcus Valerius
Falto the two legions in Bruttium, which Caius Livius had commanded
the preceding year, were assigned. Publius Aelius, the praetor, was to
receive two legions in Sicily from Cneius Tremellius. To Marcus Fabius
was assigned one legion, which Publius Lentulus, propraetor, had
commanded, to be employed in Sardinia; Marcus Servilius, the consul of
the former year, was continued in command in Etruria, with his own
two legions likewise. As to Spain, it appeared that Lucius Cornelius
Lentulus and Lucius Manlius Acidinus had been there for now several
years. It was resolved, therefore, that the consuls should make
application to the plebeian tribunes to take the opinion of the
people, if they thought proper, as to whom they ordered to have
command in Spain; that the person so ordered should form one legion of
Roman soldiers out of the two armies, and also fifteen cohorts of
the allies of the Latin confederacy, with which he should occupy the
province. That Lucius Cornelius Lentulus and Lucius Manlius Acidinus
should convey the old soldiers into Italy. To Cornelius, the consul,
was assigned a fleet of fifty ships formed out of the two fleets, one
of which was under Cneius Octavius in Africa, the other employed
in protecting the coast of Sicily, under Publius Villius. He was to
select such ships as he pleased. That Publius Scipio should still
have the forty ships of war which he before had, or if he wished that
Cneius Octavius should command it, as he had commanded a fleet there
before, that Octavius should be continued in command for a year as
propraetor; but if he appointed Laelius to the command of it, Octavius
should retire to Rome, and bring with him the ships which the consul
did not want. To Marcus Fabius also ten men of war were assigned for
Sardinia. The consuls were directed to enlist two city legions, so
that the operations of the state might be carried on this year with
fourteen legions, and one hundred men of war.
42. Then the business relating to the ambassadors of Philip and the
Carthaginians was considered. It was resolved that the Macedonians
should be brought before the senate first. Their address comprehended
a variety of subjects, being employed partly in clearing themselves
from the charges relative to the depredations committed against the
allies, which the deputies sent to the king from Rome had brought
against them; and partly in preferring accusations themselves against
the allies of the Roman people, but particularly against Marcus
Aurelius, whom they inveighed against with much greater acrimony; for
they said that, being one of the three ambassadors sent to them,
he had staid behind, and levying soldiers, had assailed them with
hostilities contrary to the league, and frequently fought pitched
battles with their prefects; and partly in preferring a request that
the Macedonians and their general, Sopater, who had served in the
army of Hannibal for hire, and having been made prisoners were kept
in bondage, should be restored to them. In opposition to these things
Marcus Furius, who had been sent from Macedonia for the express
purpose by Aurelius, thus argued: he said, "that Aurelius, having
been left behind, lest the allies of the Roman people, wearied by
devastations and injuries, should revolt to the king, had not gone
beyond the boundaries of the allies; but had taken measures to prevent
plundering parties from crossing over into their lands with impunity.
That Sopater was one of those who wore purple, and was related to
the king; that he had been lately sent into Africa with four
thousand Macedonians and a sum of money to assist Hannibal and the
Carthaginians." The Macedonians, on being interrogated on these
points, proceeded to answer in a subtle and evasive manner; but
without waiting for the conclusion of their reply they were told,
"that the king was seeking occasion for war, and that if he persisted
he would soon obtain his object. That the treaty had been doubly
violated by him, both by offering insults to the allies of the Roman
people, by assaulting them with hostilities and arms, and also by
aiding their enemies with auxiliaries and money. That Publius Scipio
was deemed to have acted properly and regularly in keeping in chains,
as enemies, those who had been made prisoners while bearing arms
against the Romans; and that Marcus Aurelius had consulted the
interest of the state, and the senate were thankful to him for it, in
protecting the allies of the Roman people by arms, since he could not
do it by the obligation of the treaty." The Macedonian ambassadors
having been dismissed with this unpleasant answer, the Carthaginian
ambassadors were called. On observing their ages and dignified
appearance, for they were by far the first men of the state, all
promptly declared their conviction, that now they were sincere in
their desire to effect a peace. Hasdrubal, however, surnamed by his
countrymen Haedus, who had invariably recommended peace, and was
opposed to the Barcine faction, was regarded with greater interest
than the rest. On these accounts the greater weight was attached to
him when transferring the blame of the war from the state at large to
the cupidity of a few. After a speech of varied character, in which he
sometimes refuted the charges which had been brought, at other times
admitted some, lest by impudently denying what was manifestly
true their forgiveness might be the more difficult; and then, even
admonishing the conscript fathers to be guided by the rules of decorum
and moderation in their prosperity, he said, that if the Carthaginians
had listened to himself and Hanno, and had been disposed to make a
proper use of circumstances, they would themselves have dictated
terms of peace, instead of begging it as they now did. That it rarely
happened that good fortune and a sound judgment were bestowed upon
men at the same time. That the Roman people were therefore invincible,
because when successful they forgot not the maxims of wisdom and
prudence; and indeed it would have been matter of astonishment did
they act otherwise. That those persons to whom success was a new and
uncommon thing, proceeded to a pitch of madness in their ungoverned
transports in consequence of their not being accustomed to it. That to
the Roman people the joy arising from victory was a matter of common
occurrence, and was now almost become old-fashioned. That they
had extended their empire more by sparing the vanquished than by
conquering. The language employed by the others was of a nature more
calculated to excite compassion; they represented from what a height
of power the Carthaginian affairs had fallen. That nothing, besides
the walls of Carthage, remained to those who a little time ago held
almost the whole world in subjection by their arms; that, shut up
within these, they could see nothing any where on sea or land which
owned their authority. That they would retain possession of their city
itself and their household gods only, in case the Roman people should
refrain from venting their indignation upon these, which is all that
remains for them to do. When it was manifest that the fathers were
moved by compassion, it is said that one of the senators, violently
incensed at the perfidy of the Carthaginians, immediately asked with
a loud voice, by what gods they would swear in striking the league,
since they had broken their faith with those by whom they swore in
striking the former one? By those same, replied Hasdrubal, who have
shown such determined hostility to the violators of treaties.
43. The minds of all being disposed to peace, Cneius Lentulus, whose
province the fleet was, protested against the decree of the senate.
Upon this, Manius Acilius and Quintus Minucius, tribunes of the
people, put the question to the people, whether they willed and
ordered that the senate should decree that peace should be made with
the Carthaginians? whom they ordered to grant that peace, and whom to
conduct the army out of Africa? All the tribes ordered respecting
the peace according as the question had been put. That Publius Scipio
should grant the peace, and that he also should conduct the army
home. Agreeably to this order, the senate decreed that Publius Scipio,
acting according to the opinion of the ten deputies, should make
peace with the Carthaginian people on what terms he pleased. The
Carthaginians then returned thanks to the senate, and requested
that they might be allowed to enter the city and converse with their
countrymen who had been made prisoners and were in custody of the
state; observing, that some of them were their relations and friends,
and men of rank, and some, persons to whom they were charged with
messages from their relations. Having obtained these requests, they
again asked permission to ransom such of them as they pleased; when
they were desired to give in their names. Having given in a list of
about two hundred, a decree of the senate was passed to the effect,
that the Carthaginian ambassadors should be allowed to take away into
Africa to Publius Cornelius Scipio two hundred of the Carthaginian
prisoners, selecting whom they pleased; and that they should convey
to him a message, that if the peace were concluded, he should restore
them to the Carthaginians without ransom. The heralds being; ordered
to go into Africa to strike the league, at their own desire the senate
passed a decree that they should take with them flint stones of their
own, and vervain of their own; that the Roman praetor should command
them to strike the league, and that they should demand of him herbs.
The description of herb usually given to the heralds is taken from the
Capitol. Thus the Carthaginians, being allowed to depart from Rome,
when they had gone into Africa to Scipio concluded the peace on the
terms before mentioned. They delivered up their men-of-war, their
elephants, deserters, fugitives, and four thousand prisoners, among
whom was Quintus Terentius Culleo, a senator. The ships he ordered to
be taken out into the main and burnt. Some say there were five hundred
of every description of those which are worked with oars, and that the
sudden sight of these, when burning, occasioned as deep a sensation
of grief to the Carthaginians as if Carthage had been in flames. The
measures adopted respecting the deserters were more severe than those
respecting the fugitives. Those who were of the Latin confederacy were
decapitated; the Romans were crucified.
44. The last peace with the Carthaginians was made forty years before this, in the consulate of Quintus Lutatius and Aulus Manlius. The war commenced twenty-three years afterwards, in the consulate of Publius Cornelius and Tiberius Sempronius. It was concluded in the seventeenth year, in the consulate of Cneius Cornelius and Publius Aelius Paetus. It is related that Scipio frequently said afterwards, that first the ambition of Tiberius Claudius, and afterwards of Cneius Cornelius, were the causes which prevented his terminating the war by the destruction of Carthage. The Carthaginians, finding difficulty in raising the first sum of money to be paid, as their finances were exhausted by a protracted war, and in consequence great lamentation and grief arising in the senate-house, it is said that Hannibal was observed laughing; and when Hasdrubal Haedus rebuked him for laughing amid the public grief, when he himself was the occasion of the tears which were shed, he said: "If, as the expression of the countenance is discerned by the sight, so the inward feelings of the mind could be distinguished, it would clearly appear to you that that laughter which you censure came from a heart not elated with joy, but frantic with misfortunes. And yet it is not so ill-timed as those absurd and inconsistent tears of yours. Then you ought to have wept, when our arms were taken from us, our ships burnt, and we were forbidden to engage in foreign wars, for that was the wound by which we fell. Nor is it just that you should suppose that the measures which the Romans have adopted towards you have been dictated by animosity. No great state can remain at rest long together. If it has no enemy abroad it finds one at home, in the same manner as over-robust bodies seem secure from external causes, but are encumbered with their own strength. So far, forsooth, we are affected with the public calamities as they reach our private affairs; nor is there any circumstance attending them which is felt more acutely than the loss of money. Accordingly, when the spoils were torn down from vanquished Carthage, when you beheld her left unarmed and defenseless amid so many armed nations of Africa, none heaved a sigh. Now, because a tribute is to be levied from private property, you lament with one accord, as though at the funeral of the state. How much do I dread lest you should soon be made sensible that you have shed tears this day for the lightest of your misfortunes!" Such were the sentiments which Hannibal delivered to the Carthaginians. Scipio, having summoned an assembly, presented Masinissa, in addition to his paternal dominions, with the town of Cirta, and the other cities and territories which had passed from the kingdom of Syphax into the possession of the Romans. He ordered Cneius Octavius to conduct the fleet to Sicily and deliver it to Cneius Cornelius the consul, and directed the Carthaginian ambassadors to go to Rome, that the arrangements he had made, with the advice of the ten deputies, might be ratified by the sanction of the fathers and the order of the people.
45. Peace having been established by sea and land, he embarked his troops
and crossed over to Lilybaeum in Sicily; whence, having sent a great part
of his soldiers by ships, he himself proceeded through Italy, which was
rejoicing, not less on account of the peace than the victory; while not
only the inhabitants of the cities poured out to show him honor, but crowds
of rustics thronged the roads. He arrived at Rome and entered the city
in a triumph of unparalleled splendor. He brought into the treasury one
hundred and twenty-three thousand pounds of silver. He distributed to each
of his soldiers four hundred asses out of the spoils. By the death of Syphax,
which took place but a short time before at Tibur, whither he had been
removed from Alba, a diminution was occasioned in the interest of the pageant
rather than in the glory of him who triumphed. His death, however, was
attended with circumstances which produced a strong sensation, for he was
buried at the public expense. Polybius, an author by no means to be despised,
asserts that this king was led in the triumph. Quintus Terentius Culleo
followed Scipio in his triumph with a cap of liberty on his head, and during
the remainder of his life treated him with the respect due to him as the
author of his freedom. I have not been able to ascertain whether the partiality
of the soldiers or the favor of the people fixed upon him the surname of
Africanus, or whether in the same manner as Felix was applied to Sulla,
and Magnus to Pompey, in the memory of our fathers, it originated in the
flattery of his friends. He was, doubtless, the first general who was distinguished
by a name derived from the nation which he had conquered. Afterwards, in
imitation of his example, some, by no means his equals in his victories,
affixed splendid inscriptions on their statues and gave honorable surnames
to their families.
BOOK XXXI.
Renewal of the war with Philip, king of Macedon. Successes
of Publius Sulpicius, consul, who had the conduct of that war.
The Abydenians, besieged by Philip, put themselves to death,
together with their wives and children. Lucius Furius,
praetor, defeats the Insubrian Gauls who had revolted; and
Hamilcar, who stirred up the insurrection, is slain, with
thirty-five thousand men. Further operations of Sulpicius,
Attalus, and the Rhodians against Philip.
1. It is delightful even to me to have come to the end of the Punic war, as if I myself had borne a share of the toil and danger. For though it by no means becomes a person, who has ventured to promise an entire history of all the Roman affairs, to be fatigued by any particular parts of so extensive a work; yet when I reflect that sixty-three years (for so many there are from the first Punic war to the end of the second) have occupied as many of my volumes, as the four hundred and eighty-seven years, from the building of the city to the consulate of Appius Claudius, who first made war on the Carthaginians, I plainly perceive that, like those who, tempted by the shallows near the shore, walk into the sea, the farther I advance, I am carried, as it were, into a greater depth and abyss; and that my work almost increases on my hands which seemed to be diminished by the completion of each of its earlier portions. The peace with Carthage was quickly followed by a war with Macedonia: a war, not to be compared to the former, indeed, either in danger, or in the abilities of the commander, or the valor of the soldiers; but almost more remarkable with regard to the renown of their former kings, the ancient fame of that nation, and the vast extent of their empire, in which they had formerly comprehended a large part of Europe, and the greater part of Asia. The contest with Philip, which had begun about ten years before, had been intermitted for the three last years; the Aetolians having been the occasion both of the war and the peace. The entreaties of the Athenians whom, having ravaged their lands, Philip had driven into their city, excited the Romans to a renewal of the war, left, as they were, disengaged by the Carthaginian peace, and incensed against him as well for his treacherous negotiation of peace with the Aetolians and the other allies in that region, as on account of the auxiliaries sent by him with money into Africa to Hannibal and the Carthaginians.
2. About the same time, ambassadors arrived both from king Attalus, and
from the Rhodians, with information that the Macedonian was tampering with
the states of Asia. To these embassies an answer was given, that the senate
would give attention to the affairs of Asia. The determination with regard
to the making war on him, was left open to the consuls, who were then in
their provinces. In the mean time, three ambassadors were sent to Ptolemy,
king of Egypt, namely, Caius Claudius Nero, Marcus Aemilius Lepidus, and
Publius Sempronius Tuditanus, to announce their conquest of Hannibal and
the Carthaginians; to give thanks to the king for his faithful adherence
to his engagements in the time of their distress, when even the nearest
allies of the Romans abandoned them; and to request that if, compelled
by ill treatment, they should undertake a war with Philip, he would preserve
his former disposition towards the Roman people. In Gaul, about this time,
the consul, Publius Aelius, having heard that, before his arrival, the
Boians had made inroads on the territories of the allies, levied two occasional
legions on account of this disturbance; and adding to them four cohorts
from his own army, ordered Caius Oppius, the praefect, to march with this
tumultuary band through Umbria, (which is called the Sappinian district,)
and to invade the territories of the Boians. He himself led his own troops
thither openly, over the intervening mountains. Oppius, on entering the
same, for some time committed depredations with tolerable success and safety.
But afterwards, having pitched on a place near a fort called Mutilum, convenient
enough for cutting down the corn, (for the crops were now ripe,) and setting
out without having reconnoitered around, and without establishing armed
posts of sufficient strength to protect those who were unarmed and intent
on their work, he was suddenly surrounded, together with his foragers,
by an unexpected invasion of the Gauls. On this, panic and flight seized
even on those who were furnished with weapons. Seven thousand men, dispersed
through the corn fields, were put to the sword, among whom was the commander
himself, Caius Oppius. The rest were driven by terror into the camp; from
whence, in consequence of a resolution of the soldiers, they set out on
the following night, without any particular commander; and, leaving behind
a great part of their baggage, made their way, through woods almost impassable,
to the consul, who returned to Rome without having performed any thing
in his province worth notice, except that he ravaged the lands of the Boians,
and made a treaty with the Ingaunian Ligurians.
3. The first time he assembled the senate, it was unanimously ordered that
he should propose no other business before that which related to Philip
and the complaints of the allies. It was immediately taken into consideration,
and a numerous senate decreed, that Publius Aelius, consul, should send
such person as he might think proper, vested with command, to receive the
fleet which Cneius Octavius was bringing home from Sicily, and pass over
to Macedonia. Accordingly Marcus Valerius Laevinus, propraetor, was sent;
and, receiving thirty-eight ships from Cneius Octavius, near Vibo, he sailed
to Macedonia, where, when Marcus Aurelius, the ambassador, had come to
him and informed him what numerous forces and what large fleets the king
had prepared, and how he was arousing the inhabitants to arms, partly by
visiting them himself and partly by ambassadors, not only through all the
cities of the continent, but even in the islands, (Laevinus was convinced)
that the war ought to be undertaken by the Romans with greater vigor; lest,
if they were dilatory, Philip might attempt that which had been formerly
undertaken by Pyrrhus, who possessed not such large dominions. He therefore
desired Aurelius to convey this intelligence by letter to the consuls and
to the senate.
4. Towards the end of this year the senate, taking into consideration the lands to be given to the veteran soldiers, who, under the conduct and auspices of Publius Scipio, had finished the war in Africa, decreed that Marcus Tunius, praetor of the city, should, if he thought proper, appoint ten commissioners to survey, and distribute among them, that part of the Samnite and Apulian lands which was the property of the Roman people. For this purpose were appointed, Publius Servilius, Quintus Caecilius Metellus, Caius and Marcus Servilius, both surnamed Geminus, Lucius and Aulus Hostilius Cato, Publius Villius Tappulus, Marcus Fulvius Flaccus, Publius Aelius Paetus, and Quintus Flaminius. At the same time, Publius Aelius presiding at the election of consuls, Publius Sulpicius Galba and Caius Aurelius Cotta were elected. Then were chosen praetors, Quintus Minucius Rufus, Lucius Furius Purpureo, Quintus Fulvius Gillo, Cneius Sergius Plancus. The Roman stage-games were exhibited, in a sumptuous and elegant manner, by the curule aediles, Lucius Valerius Flaccus, and Lucius Quintius Flaminius, and repeated for two days; and a vast quantity of corn, which Scipio had sent from Africa, was distributed by them to the people, with strict impartiality and general satisfaction, at the rate of four asses a peck. The plebeian games were thrice repeated entire by the plebeian aediles, Lucius Apustius Fullo, and Quintus Minucius Rufus; the latter of whom was, from the aedileship, elected praetor. There was also a feast of Jove on occasion of the games.
5. In the year five hundred and fifty-two from the building of the
city, Publius Sulpicius Galba and Caius Aurelius being consuls, within
a few months after the conclusion of the peace with the Carthaginians,
the war was entered upon against king Philip. This was the first
business introduced by the consul, Publius Sulpicius, on the ides of
March, the day on which, in those times, the consulship commenced; and
the senate decreed, that the consul should perform sacrifices with
the greater victims, to such gods as they should judge proper, with
prayers to this purpose,--that "the business which the senate and
people of Rome had then under deliberation, concerning the state, and
the entering on a new war, might issue prosperously and happily to the
Roman people, the allies, and the Latin confederacy;" and that, after
the sacrifices and prayers, they should consult the senate on the
state of public affairs, and the provinces. At this time, very
opportunely for exciting their minds to war, the letters were brought
from Marcus Aurelius, the ambassador, and Marcus Valerius Laevinus,
propraetor. A fresh embassy, likewise, arrived from the Athenians, to
acquaint them that the king was approaching their frontiers, and that
in a short time, not only their lands, but their city also, must fall
into his hands, unless they received aid from the Romans. When the
consuls had made their report, that the sacrifices had been duly
performed, and that the gods had accepted their prayers; that the
aruspices had declared that the entrails showed good omens, and that
enlargement of territory, victory, and triumph were portended; the
letters of Valerius and Aurelius were read, and audience given to the
ambassadors of the Athenians. After which, a decree of the senate was
passed, that thanks should be given to their allies, because, though
long solicited, they had not, even when in fear of a siege, renounced
their fidelity. With regard to sending assistance to them, they
resolved, that an answer should be given as soon as the consuls should
have cast lots for the provinces; and when the consul to whose lot
Macedonia fell should have proposed to the people, that war should be
declared against Philip, king of the Macedonians.
6. The province of Macedonia fell by lot to Publius Sulpicius; and he
proposed to the people to declare, "that they chose and ordered,
that on account of the injuries and hostilities committed against
the allies of the Roman people, war should be proclaimed against king
Philip, and the Macedonians under his government." The province of
Italy fell to the lot of the other consul, Aurelius. The praetors then
cast lots: to Cneius Sergius Plancus fell the city jurisdiction; to
Quintus Fulvius Gillo, Sicily; to Quintus Minucius Rufus, Bruttium;
and to Lucius Furius Purpureo, Gaul. At the first meeting of the
people, the proposal concerning the Macedonian war was rejected by
almost all the tribes. This was done partly spontaneously, as the
people were wearied by the length and severity of the late war, and
disgusted with toils and dangers; and partly by Quintus Baebius,
tribune of the people, who, pursuing the old practice of criminating
the patricians, charged them with multiplying wars one after another,
so that the people could never enjoy peace. This proceeding the
patricians with difficulty brooked, and the tribune was severely
reprehended in the senate; where each severally urged the consul
to call a new assembly, for passing the proposal; to rebuke the
backwardness of the people; and to prove to them how much loss and
disgrace the delay of this war would occasion.
7. The consul, having assembled the people in the field of Mars, before he dismissed the centuries to the vote, required their attention, and addressed them thus: "Citizens, you seem to me not to understand that the question before you is not whether you choose to have peace or war: for Philip, having already commenced hostilities with a formidable force, both on land and sea, allows you not that option. The question is, Whether you must transport your legions to Macedonia, or admit the enemy into Italy? How important the difference is, if you never experienced it before, you certainly did in the late Punic war. For who entertains a doubt, but if, when the Saguntines were besieged, and implored our protection, we had assisted them with vigor, as our fathers did the Mamertines, we should have averted the whole weight of the war upon Spain; which, by our dilatory proceedings, we suffered to our extreme loss to fall upon Italy? Nor does it admit a doubt, that we confined this same Philip in Macedonia, (after he had entered into an engagement with Hannibal by ambassadors and letters, to cross over into Italy,) by sending Laevinus with a fleet to make war aggressively upon him. And what we did at that time, when we had Hannibal to contend with in Italy, do we hesitate to do now, after Hannibal has been expelled Italy, and the Carthaginians subdued? Suppose that we allow the king to experience the same inactivity on our part, while he is taking Athens, as we suffered Hannibal to experience while he was taking Saguntum: it will not be in the fifth month, as Hannibal came from Saguntum, but on the fifth day after he sets sail from Corinth, that he will arrive in Italy. Perhaps you may not consider Philip as equal to Hannibal; or the Macedonians to the Carthaginians: certainly, however, you will allow him equal to Pyrrhus. Equal, do I say? what a vast superiority has the one man over the other, the one nation over the other! Epirus ever was, and is at this day, deemed but an inconsiderable accession to the kingdom of Macedonia. Philip has the entire Peloponnesus under his dominion; even Argos itself, not more celebrated for its ancient glory than for the death of Pyrrhus. Now compare our situation. How much more nourishing was Italy, how much greater its strength, with so many commanders, so many armies unimpaired, which the Punic war afterwards consumed, when Pyrrhus attacked and shook it, and advanced victorious almost to the Roman capital! and not the Tarentines only, and the inhabitants of that tract of Italy which they call the greater Greece, whom you may suppose to have been led by the similarity of language and name, but the Lucanian, the Bruttian, and the Samnite revolted from us. Do you believe that these would continue quiet and faithful, if Philip should come over to Italy? They subsequently continued faithful, forsooth, during the Punic war! Be assured those states will never fail to revolt from us, except when there is no one to whom they can go over. If you had been annoyed at passing into Africa, you would this day have had Hannibal and the Carthaginians to contend with in Italy. Let Macedonia, rather than Italy, be the seat of war. Let the cities and lands of the enemy be wasted with fire and sword. We have already found by experience, that our arms are more powerful and more successful abroad than at home. Go to the vote with the blessing of the gods; and what the senate have voted, do you ratify by your order. This resolution is recommended to you, not only by your consul, but even by the immortal gods themselves; who, when I offered sacrifice, and prayed that the issue of this war might be happy and prosperous to me and to the senate, to you and the allies and Latin confederates, to our fleets and armies, portended all joyful and prosperous results."
8. After this speech of Sulpicius, being sent to give their votes,
they declared for the war as he had proposed. On which, in pursuance
of a decree of the senate, a supplication for three days was
proclaimed by the consuls; and prayers were offered to the gods at all
the shrines, that the war which the people had ordered against Philip
might turn out well and happily. The consul Sulpicius inquiring of the
heralds, whether they would direct the declaration of the war against
king Philip to be made to himself in person, or whether it would be
sufficient to publish it in the nearest garrison, within the frontiers
of his kingdom, they answered, that they would do rightly whichever
course they should adopt. The consul received authority from the
senate to send any person whom he thought proper, not being a senator,
as ambassador, to denounce war against the king. They then arranged
for the armies of the consuls and praetors. The consuls were ordered
to levy two legions, and to disband the veteran troops. Sulpicius,
to whom the management of this new and highly important war had been
decreed, was allowed permission to carry with him as many volunteers
as he could procure out of the army which Publius Scipio had brought
home from Africa; but he was not empowered to take with him any
veteran soldier against his will. They ordered that the consul should
give to the praetors, Lucius Furius Purpureo and Quintus Minucius
Rufus, five thousand of the allies of the Latin confederacy; with
which forces they should hold, one, the province of Gaul, the other,
Bruttium. Quintus Fulvius Gillo was ordered, in like manner, to select
out of the army which Publius Aelius, late consul, had commanded, such
as had been the shortest time in the service, until he also made up
five thousand of the allies and Latin confederates; that this was to
be the protection of the province of Sicily. To Marcus Valerius Falto,
who, during the former year, had held the province of Campania, as
praetor, the command was continued for a year; in order that he might
go over, as propraetor, to Sardinia, and choose out of the army there
five thousand of the allies of the Latin confederacy, who had served
the fewest campaigns. The consuls were at the same time ordered to
levy two legions for the city, which might be sent wherever occasions
should require; as there were many states in Italy infected with an
attachment to the Carthaginians, which they had formed during the war,
and, in consequence, swelling with resentment. The state was to employ
during that year six Roman legions.
9. In the midst of the preparations for war, ambassadors came from king Ptolemy, who delivered a message; that "the Athenians had petitioned the king for aid against Philip; but that although they were their common allies, yet the king would not, except with the sanction of the Roman people, send either fleet or army into Greece, for the purpose of defending or attacking any person. That he would either remain quiet in his kingdom, if the Romans were at leisure to protect their allies; or, if more agreeable to them to be at rest, would himself send such aid as might easily secure Athens against Philip." Thanks were returned to the king by the senate, and this answer: that "it was the intention of the Roman people to protect their allies; that if they should have occasion for any assistance towards carrying on the war, they would acquaint the king; and that they were fully sensible, that the resources of his kingdom were the sure and faithful support of their own state." Presents were then, by order of the senate, sent to the ambassadors, of five thousand asses to each. While the consuls were engaged in the levy, and preparing what
was necessary for the war, the people, prone to religious observances,
especially at the beginning of new wars, after supplications had been already
performed, and prayers offered up at all the shrines, lest any thing should
be omitted that had ever been practiced, ordered, that the consul who was
to have the province of Macedonia should vow games and a present to Jove.
Licinius, the chief pontiff, occasioned some delay to this public vow,
alleging, that "it ought not to be fulfilled from promiscuous funds.
For as the sum to be named should not be applied to the uses of the war,
it should be immediately set apart, and not to be intermixed with other
money; and that, unless this were done, the vow could not be properly performed."
Although the objection and the author of it were influential, yet the consul
was ordered to consult the college of pontiffs, whether a vow could be
undertaken at an indeterminate expense? The pontiffs determined, that it
could; and that it would be even more in order to do it in that way. The
consul, therefore, repeating after the chief pontiff, made the vow in the
same words in which those made for five years of safety used to be expressed;
only that he engaged to perform the games, and make the offerings, at such
expense as the senate should direct by their vote, at the time when the
vow was performed. Before this, the great games so often vowed, were constantly
rated at a certain expense: these first at an unspecified amount.
10. While every one's attention was turned to the Macedonian war, and at
a time when people apprehended nothing less, a sudden account was brought
of an inroad of the Gauls. The Insubrians, Caenomanians, and Boians, having
been joined by the Salyans, Ilvatians, and other Ligurian states, and putting
themselves under the command of Hamilcar, a Carthaginian, who, having been
in the army of Hasdrubal, had remained in those parts, had fallen upon
Placentia; and, after plundering the city, and, in their rage, burning
a great part of it, leaving scarcely two thousand men among the flames
and ruins, passed the Po, and advanced to plunder Cremona. The news of
the calamity which had fallen on a city in their neighborhood, having reached
thither, the inhabitants had time to shut their gates, and place guards
on the walls, that they might, at least, be besieged before they were taken,
and send messengers to the Roman praetor. Lucius Furius Purpureo, who had
then the command of the province, had, in pursuance of the decree of the
senate, disbanded the army, excepting five thousand of the allies and Latin
confederacy; and had remained, with these troops, in the nearest district
of the province about Ariminum. He immediately informed the senate, by
letter, in what confusion the province was. That, "of the two colonies
which had escaped in the dreadful storm of the Punic war, one was taken
and sacked by the present enemy, and the other besieged. Nor was his army
capable of affording sufficient protection to the distressed colonists,
unless he chose to expose five thousand allies to be slaughtered by forty
thousand invaders (for so many there were in arms); and by such a loss,
on his side, to augment the courage of the enemy, already elated on having
destroyed one Roman colony."
11. This letter having been read they decreed, that the consul Aurelius
should order the army which he had appointed to assemble on a certain day
in Etruria, to attend him on the same day at Ariminum; and should either
go in person, if the public business would permit, to suppress the tumult
of the Gauls, or write to the praetor Lucius Furius, that, as soon as the
legions from Etruria came to him, he should send five thousand of the allies
to guard that place in the mean time, and should himself proceed to relieve
the colony from the siege. They also determined, that ambassadors should
be sent to Carthage, and also into Numidia, to Masinissa: to Carthage,
to announce that "their countryman, Hamilcar, having been left in
Gaul, (either with a part of the army formerly commanded by Hasdrubal,
or with that of Mago--they did not with certainty know which,) was waging
war, contrary to the treaty. That he had excited the armies of the Gauls
and Ligurians to arms against the Roman people. That, if they wished for
peace, they must recall him, and give him up to the Roman people."
They were ordered at the same time to tell them, that "all the deserters
had not been sent back; that a great part of them were said to appear openly
in Carthage, who ought to be sought after, and surrendered according to
the treaty." Such was the message to the Carthaginians. To Masinissa
they were charged with congratulations, on his "having not only recovered
the kingdom of his father, but enlarged it by the acquisition of the most
flourishing parts of Syphax's territories." They were ordered also
to acquaint him, that "a war had been undertaken against Philip, because
he had given aid to the Carthaginians, while, by the injuries which he
offered to the allies of the Roman people, he had obliged them to send
fleets and armies into Greece, while Italy was blazing with war; and that
by thus making them separate their forces, had been the principal cause
of their being so late passing over into Africa; and to request him to
send to that war supplies of Numidian horsemen." Ample presents were
given them to be carried to the king; vases of gold and silver, a purple
robe, and a tunic adorned with palms of purple, an ivory scepter, and a
robe of state, with a curule chair. They were also directed to assure him,
that if he deemed any thing further requisite to confirm and enlarge his
kingdom, the Roman people, in return for his good services, would exert
their utmost zeal to effect it. At this time, too, ambassadors from Vermina,
son of Syphax, came to the senate apologizing for his mistaken conduct,
on account of his youth and want of judgment, and throwing all the blame
on the deceitful policy of the Carthaginians: adding, "that as Masinissa
had from an enemy become a friend to the Romans, so Vermina would also
use his best endeavors that he should not be outdone in offices of friendship
to the Roman people either by Masinissa, or by any other; and requesting
that he might receive from the senate the title of king, friend, and ally."
The answer given to these ambassadors was, that "not only his father
Syphax, from a friend and ally, had on a sudden, without any reason, become
an enemy to the Roman people, but that he himself had made his first essay
of manhood in bearing arms against them. He must, therefore, sue to the
Roman people for peace, before he could expect to be acknowledged king,
ally, and friend; that it was the practice of that people to bestow the
honor of such title, in return for great services performed by kings towards
them; that the Roman ambassadors would soon be in Africa, to whom the senate
would give instructions to regulate conditions of peace with Vermina, if
he would leave the terms of it entirely to the will of the Roman people;
and that, if he wished that any thing should be added, left out, or altered,
he must make a second application to the senate." The ambassadors
sent to Africa on those affairs, were Caius Terentius Varro, Publius Lucretius,
and Cneius Octavius, each of whom had a quinquereme assigned him.
12. A letter was then read in the senate, from Quintus Minucius, the praetor, who held the province of Bruttium, that "the money had been privately carried off by night out of the treasury of Proserpine at Locri; and that there were no traces to those to whom the charge applied." The senate was highly incensed at finding that the practice of sacrilege continued, and that even the fate of Pleminius, an example so recent and so conspicuous both of the guilt and of the punishment, did not deter men from it. They ordered the consul, Cneius Aurelius, to signify to the praetor in Bruttium, that "it was the pleasure of the senate, that an inquiry be made concerning the robbery of the treasury, according to the method used by Marcus Pomponius, praetor, three years before; that the money which could be discovered should be restored, that what was not found should be made up, and that if he thought proper, atonements should be made for the purpose of expiating the violation of the temple, in the manner formerly prescribed by the pontiffs." At the same time, also, prodigies were announced as having happened in many places. It was said, that in Lucania the sky had been seen in a blaze; that at Privernum, in clear weather, the sun had been of a red color during a whole day; that at Lanuvium, in the temple of Juno Sospita, a very loud noise had been heard in the night. Besides, monstrous births of animals were related to have occurred in many places: in the country of the Sabines, an infant was born whose sex was doubtful; and another was found, sixteen years old, of doubtful sex. At Frusino a lamb was born with a swine's head; at Sinuessa, a pig with a human head; and in Lucania, in the land belonging to the state, a foal with five feet. All these were considered as horrid and abominable, and as if nature were straying to strange productions. Above all, the people were particularly shocked at the hermaphrodites, which were ordered to be immediately thrown into the sea, as had been lately done with a production of the same monstrous kind, in the consulate of Caius Claudius and Marcus Livius. Notwithstanding they ordered the decemvirs to inspect the books in regard of that prodigy; and the decemvirs, from the books, directed the same religious ceremonies which had been performed on an occasion of the same kind. They ordered, besides, a hymn to be sung through the city by thrice nine virgins, and an offering to be made to imperial Juno. The consul, Caius Aurelius, took care that all these matters were performed according to the direction of the decemvirs. The hymn was composed by Publius Licinius Tegula, as a similar one had been, in the memory of their fathers, by Livius.
13. All religious scruples were fully removed by expiations; at Locri, too, the affair of the sacrilege had been thoroughly investigated by Quintus Minucius, and the money replaced in the treasury out of the effects of the guilty. When the consuls wished to set out to their provinces, a number of private persons, to whom the third payment became due that year, of the money which they had lent to the public in the consulate of Marcus Valerius and Marcus Claudius, applied to the senate. The consuls, however, declared that the treasury being scarcely sufficient for the exigencies of a new war, in which a great fleet and great armies must be employed, there were no means of paying them at present. The senate could not stand against them when they complained, that "if the state intended to use, for the purpose of the Macedonian war, the money which had been lent for the Punic war, as one war constantly arose after another, what would be the issue, but that, in return for their generosity, their property would be confiscated as for some crime?" The demands of the private creditors being equitable, and the state being in no capacity of discharging the debt, they decreed a middle course between equity and convenience; resolving that "whereas many of them mentioned that lands were frequently exposed to sale, and that they themselves wished to become purchasers, they should, therefore, have liberty to purchase any belonging to the public, and which lay within fifty miles of the city. That the consuls should make a valuation of these, and impose on each acre one as, as an acknowledgment that the land was the property of the public, in order that, when the people should become able to pay, if any one chose rather to have the money than the land, he might restore it." The private creditors accepted the terms with joy; and that land was called Trientius and Tabulius, because it was given in lieu of the third part of their money.
14. Publius Sulpicius, after making his vows in the Capitol, set out robed
from the city with his lictors, and arrived at Brundusium; where, having
formed into legions the veteran soldiers of the African army who were willing
to follow him, and chosen his ships out of the fleet of the late consul,
Cornelius, he crossed and arrived in Macedonia the day after he had set
sail from Brundusium. There he was met by ambassadors from the Athenians,
entreating him to relieve them from the siege. Immediately, Caius Claudius
Centho was despatched to Athens, with twenty ships of war, and a thousand
of land forces. For it was not the king himself who carried on the siege
of Athens; he was at that time besieging Abydus, after having tried his
strength in naval contests against Attalus, and against the Rhodians, without
success in either engagement. But, besides the natural presumptuousness
of his temper, he acquired confidence from a treaty which he had formed
with Antiochus, king of Syria, in which they had divided the wealth of
Egypt between them; on which, on hearing of the death of Ptolemy, they
were both intent. The Athenians now had entangled themselves in a war with
Philip on too trifling an occasion, and at a time when they retained nothing
of their former condition but their pride. During the celebration of the
mysteries, two young men of Acarnania, who were not initiated, unapprized
of its being an offense against religion, entered the temple of Ceres along
with the rest of the crowd: their discourse readily betrayed them, by their
asking some absurd questions; whereupon, being carried before the presidents
of the temple, although it was evident that they went in through mistake,
yet they were put to death, as if for a heinous crime. The Acarnanian nation
made complaint to Philip of this barbarous and hostile act, and prevailed
on him to grant them some aid of Macedonian soldiers, and to allow them
to make war on the Athenians. At first this army, after ravaging the lands
of Attica with fire and sword, retired to Acarnania with booty of all kinds.
This was the first provocation to hostilities. The Athenians afterwards,
on their side, entered into a regular war, and proclaimed it by order of
the state. For king Attalus and the Rhodians, having come to Aegina in
pursuit of Philip, who was retiring to Macedonia, the king crossed over
to Piraeus, for the purpose of renewing and confirming his alliance with
the Athenians. On entering the city, the whole inhabitants received him,
pouring forth with their wives and children to meet him; the priests, with
their emblems of religion; and in a manner the gods themselves, called
forth from their abodes.
15. Immediately the people were summoned to an assembly, that the king
might treat with them in person on such subjects as he chose; but afterwards
it was judged more suitable to his dignity to explain his sentiments in
writing, than, being present, to be forced to blush, either at the recital
of his favors to the state, or at the immoderate applause of the multitude,
which would overwhelm his modesty with acclamations and other signs of
approbation. In the letter which he sent, and which was read to the assembly,
was contained first, a recapitulation of his acts of kindness to the state,
as his ally; then, of the actions which he had performed against Philip;
and lastly, an exhortation to "enter immediately on the war; while
they had himself, the Rhodians, and the Romans also to assist them;"
not omitting to warn them that "if they were backward now, they would
hereafter wish in vain for the opportunity which they neglected."
They then gave audience to the ambassadors of the Rhodians, to whom they
were under a recent obligation for having retaken, and sent home, four
of their ships of war, which had been lately seized by the Macedonians.
War was determined upon against Philip with universal consent. Unbounded
honors were conferred on king Attalus, and then on the Rhodians. At that
time, mention was made of adding a tribe, which they were to call Attalus,
to the ten ancient tribes; the Rhodian state was presented with a golden
crown, as an acknowledgment of its bravery, and the freedom of the city
was given to the inhabitants, in like manner as the Rhodians had formerly
given it to the Athenians. After this, king Attalus returned to his fleet
at Aegina. From Aegina, the Rhodians sailed to Cia, and thence to Rhodes,
through the islands, all of which they brought to join in the alliance,
except Andros, Paros, and Cythnus, which were held by Macedonian garrisons.
Attalus, having sent messengers to Aetolia, and expecting ambassadors from
thence, was detained at Aegina for some time in a state of inaction; failing
also in his endeavors to excite the Aetolians to arms, for they were rejoiced
at having made peace with Philip on any terms. Had Attalus and the Rhodians
pressed Philip vigorously, they might have acquired the illustrious title
of the deliverers of Greece, but by suffering him to pass over again into
Hellespontus, and to strengthen himself by seizing the advantageous posts
in Greece, they increased the difficulties of the war, and yielded up to
the Romans the glory of having conducted and finished it.
16. Philip acted with a spirit more becoming a king; for, though he
had found himself unequal to the forces of Attalus and the Rhodians,
yet he was not dismayed, even by the Roman war with which he was
threatened. Sending Philocles, one of his generals, with two thousand
foot and two hundred horse, to ravage the lands of the Athenians, he
gave the command of his fleet to Heraclides, to make for Maronea,
and marched thither himself by land, with two thousand foot lightly
equipped, and two hundred horse. Maronea he took at the first assault;
and afterwards, with a good deal of trouble, got possession of Aenus,
which was at last betrayed to him by Ganymede, the lieutenant of
Ptolemy. He then seized on other forts, Cypselus, Doriscos, and
Serrheus; and, advancing from thence to the Chersonesus, received
Elaeus and Alopeconnesus, which were surrendered by the inhabitants.
Callipolis also, and Madytos, were given up to him, with several
forts of but little consequence. The people of Abydus shut their gates
against him, not admitting the ambassadors. This siege detained Philip
a long time; and it might have been relieved, had not Attalus and the
Rhodians been dilatory. The king sent only three hundred men for a
garrison, and the Rhodians one quadrireme from their fleet, although
it was lying idle at Tenedos: and afterwards, when the besieged could
with difficulty hold out any longer, Attalus, going over in person,
did nothing more than show them some hope of relief being near, giving
no assistance to these his allies either by land or sea.
17. At first the people of Abydus, by means of engines placed along the
walls, not only prevented the approaches by land, but annoyed the enemy's
ships in their station. Afterwards a part of the wall being thrown down,
and the assailants having penetrated by mines to an inner wall, which had
been hastily raised to oppose their entrance, they sent ambassadors to
the king about the conditions of the surrender of the city. They demanded
permission to send away the Rhodian quadrireme, with the crew, and the
troops of Attalus in the garrison; and that they themselves might depart
from the city, each with one suit of apparel. When Philip's answer afforded
no hopes of accommodation, unless they surrendered at discretion, this
repudiation of their embassy so exasperated them, at once through indignation
and despair, that, seized with the same kind of fury which had possessed
the Saguntines, they ordered all the matrons to be shut up in the temple
of Diana, and the free-born youths and virgins, and even the infants with
their nurses, in the place of exercise; the gold and silver to be carried
into the forum; their valuable garments to be put on board the Rhodian
ship, and another from Cyzicum, which lay in the harbor; the priests and
victims to be brought, and altars to be erected in the midst. There they
appointed a select number, who, as soon as they should see the army of
their friends cut off in defending the breach, were instantly to slay their
wives and children; to throw into the sea the gold, silver, and apparel
that was on board the ships, and to set fire to the buildings, public and
private: and to the performance of this deed they were bound by an oath,
the priests repeating before them the verses of execration. Those who were
of an age capable of fighting then swore that they would not leave their
ranks alive unless victorious. These, regardful of the gods, (by whom they
had sworn,) maintained their ground with such obstinacy, that although
the night would soon have put a stop to the fight, yet the king, terrified
by their fury, first desisted from the fight. The chief inhabitants, to
whom the more shocking part of the plan had been given in charge, seeing
that few survived the battle, and that these were exhausted by fatigue
and wounds, sent the priests (having their heads bound with the fillets
of suppliants) at the dawn of the next day to surrender the city to Philip.
18. Before the surrender, one of the Roman ambassadors, who had been
sent to Alexandria, Marcus Aemilius, being the youngest of them, on
the joint resolution of the three, on hearing of the present siege,
came to Philip, and complained of his having made war on Attalus and
the Rhodians; and particularly that he was then besieging Abydus; and
on Philip's saying that he had been forced into the war by Attalus and
the Rhodians commencing hostilities against him,--"Did the people of
Abydus, too," said he, "commence hostilities against you?" To him, who
was unaccustomed to hear truth, this language seemed too arrogant to
be used to a king, and he answered,--"Your youth, the beauty of your
form, and, above all, the name of Roman, render you too presumptuous.
However, my first desire is, that you would observe the treaties, and
continue in peace with me; but if you begin an attack, I am, on my
part, determined to prove that the kingdom and name of the Macedonians
is not less formidable in war than that of the Romans." Having
dismissed the ambassador in this manner, Philip got possession of the
gold and silver which had been thrown together in a heap, but lost his
booty with respect to prisoners: for such violent frenzy had seized
the multitude, that, on a sudden, taking up a persuasion that those
who had fallen in the battle had been treacherously sacrificed, and
upbraiding one another with perjury, especially the priests, who would
surrender alive to the enemy those persons whom they themselves had
devoted, they all at once ran different ways to put their wives and
children to death; and then they put an end to their own lives
by every possible method. The king, astonished at their madness,
restrained the violence of his soldiers, and said, "that he would
allow the people of Abydus three days to die in;" and, during this
space, the vanquished perpetrated more deeds of cruelty on themselves
than the enraged conquerors would have committed; nor did any one of
them come into his hands alive, except such as chains, or some other
insuperable restraint, forbade to die. Philip, leaving a garrison in
Abydus, returned to his kingdom; and, just when he had been encouraged
by the destruction of the people of Abydus to proceed in the war
against Rome, as Hannibal had been by the destruction of Saguntum, he
was met by couriers, with intelligence that the consul was already in
Epirus, and had drawn his land forces to Apollonia, and his fleet to
Corcyra, into winter quarters.
19. In the mean time, the ambassadors who had been sent into Africa,
on the affair of Hamilcar, the leader of the Gallic army, received
from the Carthaginians this answer: that "it was not in their power
to do more than to inflict on him the punishment of exile, and to
confiscate his effects; that they had delivered up all the deserters
and fugitives, whom, on a diligent inquiry, they had been able to
discover, and would send ambassadors to Rome, to satisfy the senate on
that head." They sent two hundred thousand measures of wheat to
Rome, and the same quantity to the army in Macedonia. From thence
the ambassadors proceeded into Numidia, to the king; delivered
to Masinissa the presents and the message according to their
instructions, and out of two thousand Numidian horsemen, which he
offered, accepted one thousand. Masinissa superintended in person
the embarkation of these, and sent them, with two hundred thousand
measures of wheat, and the same quantity of barley, into Macedonia.
Their third commission was with Vermina. He advanced to meet them as
far as the utmost limits of his kingdom, and left it to themselves to
prescribe such conditions of peace as they thought proper, declaring,
that "he should consider any peace with the Roman people as just and
advantageous." The terms were then settled, and he was ordered to send
ambassadors to Rome to procure a ratification of the treaty.
20. About the same time, Lucius Cornelius Lentulus, proconsul, came
home from Spain; and having laid before the senate an account of
his brave and successful conduct, during the course of many years,
demanded that he might be allowed to enter the city in triumph. The
senate gave their opinion that "his services were, indeed, deserving
of a triumph; but that they had no precedent left them by their
ancestors of any person enjoying a triumph, who had not performed the
service either of dictator, consul, or praetor; that he had held
the province of Spain in quality of proconsul, and not of consul, or
praetor." They determined, however, that he might enter the city in
ovation. Against this, Tiberius Sempronius Longus, tribune of the
people, protested, alleging, that such proceedings would be no more in
accordance with the custom of their ancestors, or with any precedent,
than the other; but, overcome at length by the unanimous desire of
the senate, the tribune withdrew his opposition, and Lucius Lentulus
entered the city in ovation. He carried to the treasury forty-four
thousand pounds weight of silver, and two thousand four hundred pounds
weight of gold. To each of the soldiers he distributed, of the spoil,
one hundred and twenty asses.
21. The consular army had, by this time, been conducted from Arretium to
Ariminum, and the five thousand Latin confederates had crossed from Gaul
into Etruria. Lucius Furius, therefore, advanced from Ariminum, by forced
marches, against the Gauls, who were then besieging Cremona, and pitched
his camp at the distance of one mile and a half from the enemy. Furius
had an opportunity of performing a splendid exploit, had he, without halting,
led his troops directly to attack their camp; scattered hither and thither,
they were wandering through the country; and the guard, which they had
left, was not sufficiently strong; but he was apprehensive that his men
were too much fatigued by their hasty march. The Gauls, recalled from the
fields by the shouts of their party, returned to the camp without seizing
the booty within their reach, and, next day, marched out to offer battle.
The Roman did not decline the combat, but had scarcely time to draw up
his forces, so rapidly did the enemy advance to the fight. The right brigade
(for he had the troops of the allies divided into brigades) was placed
in the first line, the two Roman legions in reserve. Marcus Furius was
at the head of the right brigade, Marcus Caecilius of the legions, and
Lucius Valerius Flaccus of the cavalry; these were all lieutenant-generals.
Two other lieutenant-generals, Cneius Laetorius and Publius Titinnius,
the praetor kept near himself, that, with their assistance, he might observe
and take proper measures against all sudden attempts of the enemy. At first,
the Gauls, bending their whole force to one point, were in hopes of being
able to overwhelm, and trample under foot, the right brigade, which was
in the van; but not succeeding, they endeavored to turn round the flanks,
and to surround their enemy's line, which, considering the multitude of
their forces, and the small number of the others, seemed easy to be done.
On observing this, the praetor, in order to extend his own line, brought
up the two legions from the reserve, and placed them on the right and left
of the brigade which was engaged in the van; vowing a temple to Jupiter,
if he should rout the enemy on that day. To Lucius Valerius he gave orders,
to make the horsemen of the two legions on one flank, and the cavalry of
the allies on the other, charge the wings of the enemy, and not suffer
them to come round to his rear. At the same time, observing that the center
of the line of the Gauls was weakened, from having extended the wings,
he directed his men to make an attack there in close order, and to break
through their ranks. The wings were routed by the cavalry, and, at the
same time, the center by the foot; and suddenly, being worsted in all parts
with great slaughter, the Gauls turned their backs, and fled to their camp
in hurry and confusion. The cavalry pursued them as they fled; and the
legions, coming up in a short time after, assaulted the camp, from whence
there did not escape so many as six thousand men. There were slain and
taken above thirty-five thousand, with seventy standards, and above two
hundred Gallic wagons laden with much booty. Hamilcar, the Carthaginian
general, fell in that battle, and three distinguished generals of the Gauls.
The prisoners taken at Placentia, to the number of two thousand freemen,
were restored to the colony.
22. This was an important victory, and caused great joy at Rome. On receipt
of the praetor's letter, a supplication for three days was decreed. In
that battle, there fell of the Romans and allies two thousand, most of
them in the right brigade, against which, in the first onset, the most
violent efforts of the enemy had been directed. Although the praetor had
brought the war almost to a conclusion, yet the consul, Cneius Aurelius,
having finished the business which was necessary to be done at Rome, set
out for Gaul, and received the victorious army from the praetor. The other
consul, arriving in his province towards the end of autumn, passed the
winter in the neighborhood of Apollonia. Caius Claudius, and the Roman
triremes which had been sent to Athens from the fleet that was laid up
at Corcyra, as was mentioned above, arriving at Piraeus, greatly revived
the hopes of their allies, who were beginning to give way to despair. For
not only did those inroads by land cease, which used to be made from Corinth
through Megara, but the ships of the pirates from Chalcis, who had been
accustomed to infest both the Athenian sea and coast, were afraid not only
to venture round the promontory of Sunium, but even to trust themselves
out of the straits of the Euripus. In addition to these came three quadriremes
from Rhodes, the Athenians having three open ships, which they had equipped
for the protection of their lands on the coast. While Claudius thought,
that if he were able with his fleet to give security to the Athenians it
was as much as could be expected at present, a fortunate opportunity was
thrown in his way of accomplishing a much more important enterprise.
23. Some exiles driven from Chalcis, by ill treatment received from the
king's party, brought intelligence, that the place might be taken without
even a contest; for that both the Macedonians, being under no immediate
apprehension from an enemy, were straying idly about the country; and that
the townsmen, depending on the Macedonian garrison, neglected the guard
of the city. Claudius, on this authority, set out and though he arrived
at Sunium early enough to have sailed forward to the entrance of the strait
of Euboea, yet fearing that, on doubling the promontory, he might be descried
by the enemy, he lay by with the fleet until night. As soon as it grew
dark he began to move, and, favored by a calm, arrived at Chalcis a little
before day; and then, approaching the city, on a side where it was thinly
inhabited, with a small party of soldiers, and by means of scaling ladders,
he got possession of the nearest tower, and the wall on each side; the
guards being asleep in some places, and in others no one being on the watch.
Thence they advanced to the more populous parts of the town, and having
slain the sentinels, and broke open a gate, they gave an entrance to the
main body of the troops. These immediately spread themselves throughout
the whole city, and increased the tumult by setting fire to the buildings
round the forum, by which means both the granaries belonging to the king,
and his armory, with a vast store of machines and engines, were reduced
to ashes. Then commenced a general slaughter of those who fled, as well
as of those who made resistance; and after having either put to the sword
or driven out every one who was of an age fit to bear arms, (Sopater also,
the Acarnanian, who commanded the garrison, being slain,) they first collected
all the spoils in the forum, and then carried it on board the ships. The
prison, too, was forced open by the Rhodians, and those prisoners whom
Philip had shut up there, as in the safest custody, were set at liberty.
They next pulled down and mutilated the statues of the king; and then,
on a signal being given for a retreat, re-embarked and returned to Piraeus,
from whence they had set out. If there had been so large a force of Roman
soldiers that Chalcis might have been retained and the protection of Athens
not neglected, Chalcis and Euripus might have been taken from the king;--a
most important advantage at the commencement of the war. For as the pass
of Thermopylae is the principal barrier of Greece by land, so is the strait
of the Euripus by sea.
24. Philip was then at Demetrias, and as soon as the news arrived there
of the calamity which had befallen the city of his allies, although it
was too late to carry assistance to those who were already ruined, yet
anxious to accomplish what was next to assistance, revenge, he set out
instantly with five thousand foot lightly equipped, and three hundred horse.
With a speed almost equal to that of racing, he hastened to Chalcis, not
doubting but that he should be able to surprise the Romans. Being disappointed
in this expectation, and having arrived, with no other result than a melancholy
view of the smoking ruins of that friendly city, (so few being left, that
they were scarcely sufficient to bury those who had fallen in the conflict,)
with the same rapid haste which he had used in coming, he crossed the Euripus
by the bridge, and led his troops through Boeotia to Athens, in hopes that
a similar issue would correspond to a similar attempt. And it would have
corresponded, had not a scout, (one of those whom the Greeks call day-runners,
because they run through a journey of great length in one day,) descrying
from his post of observation the king's army in its march, set out at midnight
and arrived before them at Athens. The same sleep, and the same negligence,
prevailed there which had proved the ruin of Chalcis a few days before.
Roused, however, by the alarming intelligence, the praetor of the Athenians,
and Dioxippus, commander of a cohort of mercenary auxiliaries, called the
soldiers together in the forum, and ordered the trumpets to sound an alarm
from the citadel, that all might be informed of the approach of the enemy.
On which the people ran from all quarters to the gates, and afterwards
to the walls. In a few hours after, and still some time before day, Philip
approached the city, and observing a great number of lights, and hearing
the noise of the men hurrying to and fro, as usual on such an alarm, he
halted his troops, and ordered them to sit down and take some rest; resolving
to use open force, since his stratagem had not succeeded. Accordingly he
advanced on the side of Dipylos. This gate, being situated in the principal
approach of the city, is somewhat larger and wider than the rest. Both
within and without the streets are wide, so that the townsmen could form
their troops from the forum to the gate, while on the outside a road of
about a mile in length, leading to the school of the academy, afforded
open room to the foot and horse of the enemy. The Athenians, who had formed
their troops within the gate, marched out with Attalus's garrison, and
the cohort of Dioxippus, along that road. Which, when Philip observed,
thinking that he had the enemy in his power, and was now about to sate
himself with their long wished for destruction, (being more incensed against
them than any of the Grecian states,) he exhorted his men to keep their
eyes on him during the fight, and to take notice, that wherever the king
was, there the standards and the army ought to be. He then spurred on his
horse against the enemy, animated not only with resentment, but with a
desire of gaining honor, for he reckoned it a glorious thing to be beheld
fighting from the walls, which were filled with an immense multitude, for
the purpose of witnessing the engagement. Advancing far before the line,
and with a small body of horse, rushing into the midst of the enemy, he
inspired his men with great ardor, and the Athenians equally with terror.
Having wounded many with his own hand, both in close fight and with missive
weapons, and driven them back within the gate, he still pursued them closely;
and having made greater slaughter among them while embarrassed in the narrow
pass, rash as the attempt was, he yet had an unmolested retreat, because
those who were in the towers withheld their weapons lest they should hit
their friends, who were mingled in confusion among their enemies. The Athenians,
after this, confining their troops within the walls, Philip sounded a retreat,
and pitched his camp at Cynosarges, a temple of Hercules, and a school
surrounded by a grove. But Cynosarges, and Lycaeum, and whatever was sacred
or pleasant in the neighborhood of the city, he burned to the ground, and
levelled not only the houses, but sepulchers, nor was any thing either
in divine or human possession preserved amidst the violence of his rage.
25. Next day, the gates having at first been shut, and afterwards suddenly thrown open, in consequence of a body of Attalus's troops from Aegina, and the Romans from Piraeus, having entered the city, the king removed his camp to the distance of about three miles. From thence he proceeded to Eleusis, in hopes of surprising the temple, and a fort which overlooks and surrounds it; but, finding that the watches had not been neglected, and that the fleet was coming from Piraeus to support them, he laid aside the design, and led his troops, first to Megara, and then to Corinth; where, on hearing that the council of the Achaeans was then sitting at Argos, he went and joined the assembly, unexpected by the Achaeans. They were at the time consulting about a war against Nabis, tyrant of the Lacedaemonians; who, on the command being transferred from Philopoemen to Cycliades, a general by no means his equal, perceiving that the confederates of the Achaeans were falling off, had renewed the war, was ravaging the territories of his neighbors, and had become formidable even to the cities. While they were deliberating what number of men should be raised out of each of the states to oppose this enemy, Philip promised that he would relieve them of that care, as far as concerned Nabis and the Lacedaemonians; and that he would not only secure the lands of their allies from devastation, but transfer the whole terror of the war on Laconia itself, by leading his army thither instantly. This discourse being received with general approbation, he added,--"It is but reasonable, however, that while I am employed in protecting your property by my arms, my own should not be deprived of protection; therefore, if you think proper, provide such a number of troops as will be sufficient to secure Orcus, Chalcis, and Corinth; that my affairs being in a state of safety behind me, I may without anxiety make war on Nabis and the Lacedaemonians." The Achaeans were not ignorant of the tendency of this so kind promise, and of his proffered assistance against the Lacedaemonians; that his purpose was to draw the Achaean youth out of Peloponnesus as hostages, in order to implicate the nation in a war with the Romans. Cycliades, the Achaean praetor, thinking that it was irrelevant to develop the matter by argument, said nothing more than that it was not allowable, according to the laws of the Achaeans, to take any matters into consideration except those on which they had been called together: and the decree for levying an army against Nabis being passed, he dismissed the assembly, after having presided in it with much resolution and public spirit, and until that day having been reckoned among the partisans of the king. Philip, disappointed in a high expectation, after having collected a few voluntary soldiers, returned to Corinth, and from thence into the territories of Athens.
26. In those days in which Philip was in Achaia, Philocles, one of the king's generals, marching from Euboea with two thousand Thracians and Macedonians, in order to lay waste the territories of the Athenians, crossed the forest of Cithaeron opposite to Eleusis. Dispatching half of his troops, make depredations in all parts of the country, he himself lay concealed with the remainder in a place convenient for an ambush; in order that, if any attack should be made from the fort at Eleusis on his men employed in plundering, he might suddenly fall upon the enemy unawares, and while they were in disorder. His stratagem did not escape discovery: wherefore calling back the soldiers, who had gone different ways in pursuit of booty, and drawing them up in order, he advanced to assault the fort at Eleusis; but being repulsed from thence with many wounds, he formed a junction with Philip on his return from Achaia. The storming of this fort was also attempted by the king in person: but the Roman ships coming from Piraeeus, and a body of forces thrown into the fort, compelled him to relinquish the design. On this the king, dividing his army, sent Philocles with one part to Athens, and went himself with the other to Piraeeus; that, while his general, by advancing to the walls and threatening an assault, might keep the Athenians within the city, he might be able to make himself master of the harbor, when left with only a slight garrison. But he found the attack of Piraeeus no less difficult than that of Eleusis, the same persons for the most part acting in its defense. He therefore hastily led his troops to Athens, and being repulsed by a sudden sally of both foot and horse, who engaged him in the narrow ground, enclosed by the half-ruined wall, which, with two arms, joins Piraeus to Athens, he desisted from the assault of the city, and, dividing his forces again with Philocles, set out to complete the devastation of the country. As, in his former ravages, he had employed himself in levelling the sepulchers round the city, so now, not to leave any thing unviolated, he ordered the temples of the gods, of which they had one consecrated in every village, to be demolished and burned. The country of Attica afforded ample matter for the exercise of this barbarous rage: being highly embellished with works of that kind, having plenty of indigenous marble, and abounding with artists of exquisite ingenuity. Nor was he satisfied with merely destroying the temples themselves, and overthrowing the images, but he ordered even the stones to be broken, lest, remaining whole, they should give stateliness to the ruins; and then, his rage not being satiated, but no object remaining on which it could be exercised, he retired from the country of the enemy into Boeotia, without having performed in Greece any thing else worth mention.
27. The consul, Sulpicius, who was at that time encamped; on the river
Apsus, between Apollonia and Dyrrachium, having ordered Lucius Apustius,
lieutenant-general, thither, sent him with part of the forces to lay waste
the enemy's territory. Apustius, after ravaging the frontiers of Macedonia,
and having, at the first assault, taken the forts of Corragos, Gerrunios,
and Orgessos, came to Antipatria, a city situated in a narrow gorge; where,
at first inviting the leading men to a conference, he endeavored to entice
them to commit themselves to the good faith of the Romans; but finding
that from confidence in the size, fortifications, and situation of their
city, they paid no regard to his discourse, he attacked the place by force
of arms, and took it by assault: then, putting all the young men to death,
and giving up the entire spoil to his soldiers, he razed the walls and
burned the city. This proceeding spread such terror, that Codrion, a strong
and well-fortified town, surrendered to the Romans without a struggle.
Leaving a garrison there, he took Ilion by force, a name better known than
the town, on account of that of the same name in Asia. As the lieutenant-general
was returning to the consul with a great quantity of spoil, Athenagoras,
one of the king's generals, falling on his extreme rear, in its passage
over a river, threw the hindmost into disorder. On hearing the shouting
and tumult, Apustius rode back in full speed, ordered the troops to face
about, and drew them up in order, arranging the baggage in the center.
The king's troops could not support the onset of the Roman soldiers, many
of them were slain, and more made prisoners. The lieutenant-general, having
brought back the army without loss to the consul, was despatched immediately
to the fleet.
28. The war commencing thus brilliantly with this successful expedition,
several petty kings and princes, neighbors of the Macedonians, came to
the Roman camp: Pleuratus, son of Scerdilaedus, and Amynander, king of
the Athamanians; and from the Dardanians, Bato, son of Longarus. This Longarus
had, in his own quarrel, supported a war against Demetrius, father of Philip.
To their offers of aid, the consul answered, that he would make use of
the assistance of the Dardanians, and of Pleuratus, when he should lead
his troops into Macedonia. To Amynander he allotted the part of exciting
the Aetolians to war. To the ambassadors of Attalus, (for they also had
come at the same time,) he gave directions that the king should wait at
Aegina, where he wintered, for the arrival of the Roman fleet; and when
joined by that, he should, as before, harass Philip with attacks by sea.
To the Rhodians, also, an embassy was sent, to engage them to contribute
their share towards carrying on the war. Nor was Philip, who had by this
time arrived in Macedonia, remiss in his preparations for the campaign.
He sent his son Perseus, then very young, with part of his forces to block
up the pass near Pelagonia, appointing persons out of the number of his
friends to direct his inexperienced age. Sciathus and Peparethus, no inconsiderable
cities, he demolished, lest they should become a prey and prize to the
enemy's fleet; dispatching at the same time ambassadors to the Aetolians,
lest that restless nation might change sides on the arrival of the Romans.
29. The assembly of the Aetolians, which they call Panaetolium, was to meet on a certain day. In order to be present at this, the king's ambassadors hastened their journey, and Lucius Furius Purpureo also arrived, deputed by the consul. Ambassadors from the Athenians, likewise, came to this assembly. The Macedonians were first heard, as with them the latest treaty had been made; and they declared, that as no change of circumstances had occurred, they had nothing new to introduce: for the same reasons which had induced them to make peace with Philip, after experiencing the unprofitableness of an alliance with the Romans, should engage them to preserve it now that it was established. "Do you rather choose," said one of the ambassadors, "to imitate the inconsistency, or levity, shall I call it, of the Romans, who ordered this answer to be given to your ambassadors at Rome: 'Why, Aetolians, do you apply to us, when, without our approbation, you have made peace with Philip?' Yet these same people now require that you should, in conjunction with them, wage war against Philip. Formerly, too, they pretended that they took arms on your account, and in your defense against Philip: now they do not allow you to continue at peace with him. To assist Messana, they first embarked for Sicily; and a second time, that they might redeem Syracuse to freedom when oppressed by the Carthaginians. Both Messana and Syracuse, and all Sicily, they hold in their own possession, and have reduced it into a tributary province under their axes and rods. You imagine, perhaps, that in the same manner as you hold an assembly at Naupactus, according to your own laws, under magistrates created by yourselves, at liberty to choose allies and enemies, and to have peace or war at your own option, so the assembly of the states of Sicily is summoned, to Syracuse, or Messana, or Lilybaeum. No, a Roman praetor presides at the meeting; summoned by his command they assemble; they behold him, attended by his lictors seated on a lofty throne, issuing his haughty edicts. His rods are ready for their backs, his axes for their necks, and every year they are allotted a different master. Neither ought they nor can they, wonder at this, when they see all the cities of Italy bending under the same yoke,--Rhegium, Tarentum Capua, not to mention those in their own neighborhood, out of the ruins of which their city of Rome grew into power. Capua indeed subsists, the grave and monument of the Campanian people, that entire people having been either cut off or driven into banishment; the mutilated carcass of a city, without senate, without commons, without magistrates; a sort of prodigy, the leaving which to be inhabited, showed more cruelty than if it had been utterly destroyed. If foreigners who are separated from us to a greater distance by their language, manners, and laws, than by the distance by sea and land, are allowed to get footing here, it is madness to hope that any thing will continue in its present state. Does the sovereignty of Philip seem in any degree incompatible with your freedom, who, at a time when he was justly incensed against you, demanded nothing more of you than peace; and at present requires no more than the observance of the peace which he agreed to? Accustom foreign legions to these countries, and receive the yoke; too late, and in vain, will you look for Philip as an ally, when you shall have the Roman as a master. Trifling causes occasionally unite and disunite the Aetolians, Acarnanians, and Macedonians, men speaking the same language. With foreigners, with barbarians, all Greeks have, and ever will have, eternal war: because they are enemies by nature, which is always the same, and not from causes which change with the times. My discourse shall conclude with the same argument with which it began. Three years since, the same persons, assembled in this same place, determined on peace with the same Philip, contrary to the inclinations of the same Romans, who now wish that the peace should be broken, after it has been adjusted and ratified. In the subject of your deliberation, fortune has made no change; why you should make any, I do not see."
30. Next, after the Macedonians, with the consent and at the desire of
the Romans, the Athenians were introduced; who, having suffered grievously,
could, with the greater justice, inveigh against the cruelty and inhumanity
of the king. They represented, in a deplorable light, the miserable devastation
and spoliation of their fields; adding, that "they did not complain
on account of having, from an enemy, suffered hostile treatment; for there
were certain rights of war, according to which, as it was just to act,
so it was just to endure. Their crops being burned, their houses demolished,
their men and cattle carried off as spoil, were to be considered rather
as misfortunes to the sufferer than as ill-treatment. But of this they
had good reason to complain, that he who called the Romans foreigners and
barbarians, had himself so atrociously violated all rights, both divine
and human, as, in his former inroad, to have waged an impious war against
the infernal gods, in the latter, against those above. That the sepulchers
and monuments of all within their country had been demolished, the graves
laid open, and the bones left unprotected by the soil. There had been several
temples, which, in former times, when their ancestors dwelt in the country
in their separate districts, had been consecrated in each of their little
forts and villages, and which, even after they were incorporated into one
city, they did not neglect or forsake. That around all these temples Philip
had scattered his destructive flames, and left the images of the gods lying
scorched and mutilated among the prostrated pillars of their fanes. Such
as he had rendered the country of Attica, formerly opulent and adorned,
such, if he were suffered, would he render Aetolia and the whole of Greece.
That the mutilation of their own city, also, would have been similar, if
the Romans had not come to its relief: for he had shown the same wicked
rage against the gods who are the guardians of the city, and Minerva who
presides over the citadel; the same against the temple of Ceres at Eleusis;
the same against Jupiter and Minerva at Piraeeus. In a word, having been
repelled by force of arms not only from their temples, but even from their
walls, he had vented his fury on those sacred edifices which were protected
by religion alone. They therefore entreated and besought the Aetolians,
that, compassionating the Athenians, and with the immortal gods for their
leaders, and, under them, the Romans, who, next to the gods, possessed
the greatest power they would take part in the war."
31. The Roman ambassador then replied: "The Macedonians first, and afterwards the Athenians, have obliged me to change entirely the method of my discourse. For, on the one hand, the Macedonians, by aggressively introducing charges against the Romans, when I had come prepared to make complaint of the injuries committed by Philip against so many cities in alliance with us, have obliged me to think of defense rather than accusation; and, on the other hand, what have the Athenians, after relating his inhuman and impious crimes against the gods both celestial and infernal, left for me, or any one else, which I can further urge against him. You are to suppose, that the same complaints are made by the Cianians, Abydenians, Aeneans, Maronites, Thasians, Parians, Samians, Larissenians, Messenians, on the side of Achaia; and complaints, still heavier and more grievous, by those whom he had it more in his power to injure. For as to those proceedings which he censures in us, if they are not deserving of honor, I will admit that they cannot be defended at all. He has objected to us, Rhegium, and Capua, and Syracuse. As to Rhegium, during the war with Pyrrhus, a legion which, at the earnest request of the Rhegians themselves, we had sent thither as a garrison, wickedly possessed themselves of the city which they had been sent to defend. Did we then approve of that deed? or did we exert the force of our arms against that guilty legion, until we reduced them under our power; and then, after making them give satisfaction to the allies, by their stripes and the loss of their heads, restore to the Rhegians their city, their lands, and all their effects, together with their liberty and laws? To the Syracusans, when oppressed, and that by foreign tyrants, which was a still greater indignity, we lent assistance; and after enduring great fatigues in carrying on the siege of so strong a city, both by land and sea, for almost three years, (although the Syracusans themselves chose to continue in slavery to the tyrants rather than be taken to us,) yet, becoming masters of the place, and by exertion of the same force setting it at liberty, we restored it to the inhabitants. At the same time, we do not deny that Sicily is our province, and that the states which sided with the Carthaginians, and, in conjunction with them, waged war against us, pay us tribute and taxes; on the contrary, we wish that you and all nations should know, that the condition of each is such as it has deserved at our hands: and ought we to repent of the punishment inflicted on the Campanians, of which even they themselves cannot complain? These men, after we had on their account carried on war against the Samnites for near seventy years, with great loss on our side; had united them to ourselves, first by treaty, and then by intermarriages, and the relationships arising thence; and lastly, by the right of citizenship; yet, in the time of our adversity, were the first of all the states of Italy which revolted to Hannibal, after basely putting our garrison to death, and afterwards, through resentment at being besieged by us, sent Hannibal to attack Rome. If neither their city nor one man of them had been left remaining, who could take offense, or consider them as treated with more severity than they had deserved? From consciousness of guilt, greater numbers of them perished by their own hands, than by the punishments inflicted by us. And while from the rest we took away the town and the lands, still we left them a place to dwell in, we suffered the city which partook not of the guilt to stand uninjured; so that he who should see it this day would find no trace of its having been besieged or taken. But why do I speak of Capua, when even to vanquished Carthage we granted peace and liberty? The greatest danger is, that, by our too great readiness to pardon the conquered, we may encourage others to try the fortune of war against us. Let so much suffice in our defense, and against Philip, whose domestic crimes, whose parricides and murders of his relations and friends, and whose lust, more disgraceful to human nature, if possible, than his cruelty, you, as being nearer to Macedonia, are better acquainted with. As to what concerns yourselves, Aetolians, we entered into a war with Philip on your account: you made peace with him without consulting us. Perhaps you will say, that while we were occupied in the Punic war, you were constrained by fear to accept terms of pacification, from him who at that time possessed superior power; and that on our side, pressed by more urgent affairs we suspended our operations in a war which you had laid aside. At present, as we, having, by the favor of the gods brought the Punic war to a conclusion, have fallen on Macedonia with the whole weight of our power, so you have an opportunity offered you of regaining a place in our friendship and alliance, unless you choose to perish with Philip, rather than to conquer with the Romans."
32. When these things had been said by the ambassador the minds of
all leaning towards the Romans, Damocritus, praetor of the Aetolians,
(who, it was reported, had received money from the king,) assenting in
no degree to one party or the other, said,--that "in consultations of
great and critical importance, nothing was so injurious as haste. That
repentance, indeed, generally followed, and that quickly but yet too
late and unavailing; because designs carried on with precipitation
could not be recalled, nor matters brought back to their original
state. The time, however, for determining the point under
consideration, which, for his part, he thought should not be too
early, might yet immediately be fixed in this manner. As it had been
provided by the laws, that no determination should be made concerning
peace or war, except in the Panaetolic or Pylaic councils; let them
immediately pass a decree, that the praetor, when he chooses to treat
respecting war and peace, may have full authority to summon a council,
and that whatever shall be then debated and decreed, shall be, to all
intents and purposes, legal and valid, as if it had been transacted
in the Panaetolic or Pylaic assembly." And thus dismissing the
ambassadors, with the matter undetermined, he said, that therein
he had acted most prudently for the interest of the state; for the
Aetolians would have it in their power to join in alliance with
whichever of the parties should be more successful in the war. Such
were the proceedings in the council of the Aetolians.
33. Meanwhile Philip was making vigorous preparations for carrying on the
war both by sea and land. His naval forces he drew together at Demetrias
in Thessaly; supposing that Attalus, and the Roman fleet, would move from
Aegina in the beginning of the spring. He gave the command of the fleet
and of the sea-coast to Heraclides, to whom he had formerly entrusted it.
The equipment of the land forces he took care of in person; considering
that he had deprived the Romans of two powerful auxiliaries, the Aetolians
on the one side and the Dardanians on the other, by making his son Perseus
block up the pass at Pelagonia. The consul was employed, not in preparations,
but in the operations of war. He led his army through the country of the
Dassaretians, conveying the corn untouched which he had brought from his
winter quarters, for the fields afforded supplies sufficient for the consumption
of the troops. The towns and villages surrendered to him, some through
inclination, others through fear; some were taken by assault, others were
found deserted, the barbarians flying to the neighboring mountains. He
fixed a standing camp at Lycus near the river Bevus, and from thence sent
to bring in corn from the magazines of the Dassaretians. Philip saw the
whole country filled with consternation, and not knowing the designs of
the consul, he sent a party of horse to discover whither he was directing
his course. The same state of uncertainty possessed the consul; he knew
that the king had moved from his winter quarters, but in what direction
he had proceeded he knew not: he also had sent horsemen to gain intelligence.
These two parties, having set out from opposite quarters, after wandering
a long time among the Dassaretians, through unknown roads, fell at length
into the same track. Neither doubted, as soon as the noise of men and horses
was heard at a distance, that the enemy was approaching, therefore, before
they came within sight of each other, they got their arms in readiness,
nor, when they saw their foe, was there any delay in engaging. As they
happened to be nearly equal in number and valor, being picked men on both
sides, they fought during several hours with vigor, until fatigue, both
of men and horses, put an end to the fight, without deciding the victory.
Of the Macedonians there fell forty horsemen; of the Romans thirty-five.
Still, however, neither did the one party carry back to the king, nor the
other to the consul, any certain information in what quarter the camp of
his enemy lay. But this was soon made known to them by deserters, whom
their recklessness of disposition supplies in all wars in sufficient number
to discover the affairs of the contending parties.
34. Philip, judging that he should make some progress towards conciliating
the affections of his men, and induce them to face danger more readily
on his account, if he bestowed some pains on the burial of the horsemen
who fell in that expedition, ordered them to be conveyed into the camp,
in order that all might be spectators of the honors paid them at their
funeral. Nothing is so uncertain, or so difficult to form a judgment of,
as the minds of the multitude. That which seems calculated to increase
their alacrity, in exertions of every sort, often creates in them fear
and inactivity. Accordingly, those who, being always accustomed to fight
with Greeks and Illyrians, had only seen wounds made with javelins and
arrows, seldom even by lances, came to behold bodies dismembered by the
Spanish sword, some with their arms lopped off, with the shoulder or the
neck entirely cut through, heads severed from the trunk, and the bowels
laid open, with other frightful exhibitions of wounds: they therefore perceived,
with horror, against what weapons and what men they were to fight. Even
the king himself was seized with apprehensions, having never yet engaged
the Romans in a regular battle. Wherefore, recalling his son, and the guard
posted at the pass of Pelagonia, in order to strengthen his army by the
addition of those troops, he thereby opened a passage into Macedonia for
Pleuratus and the Dardanians. Then, taking deserters for guides, he marched
towards the enemy with twenty thousand foot and four thousand horse, and
at the distance of somewhat more than a thousand paces from the Roman camp,
and near Ithacus, he fortified a hill with a trench and rampart. From this
place, taking a view of the Roman station in the valley beneath, he is
said to have been struck with admiration, both at the general appearance
of the camp, and the regular disposition of each particular part; then
with the disposition of the tents, and the intervals of the passages; and
to have declared, that, certainly, that could not be regarded by any as
the camp of barbarians. For two days, the consul and the king, each waiting
for the other's making some attempt, kept their troops within the ramparts.
On the third day, the Roman led out all his forces, and offered battle.
35. But the king, not daring to risk so hastily a general engagement, sent
four hundred Trallians, who are a tribe of the Illyrians, as we have said
in another place, and three hundred Cretans; adding to this body of infantry
an equal number of horse, under the command of Athenagoras, one of his
nobles honored with the purple, to make an attack on the enemy's cavalry.
When these troops arrived within a little more than five hundred paces,
the Romans sent out the light infantry, and two cohorts of horse, that
both cavalry and infantry might be equal in number to the Macedonians.
The king's troops expected that the method of fighting would be such as
they had been accustomed to; that the horsemen, pursuing and retreating
alternately, would at one time use their weapons, at another time turn
their backs; that the agility of the Illyrians would be serviceable for
excursions and sudden attacks, and that the Cretans might discharge their
arrows against the enemy, as they advanced eagerly to the charge. But the
onset of the Romans, which was not more vigorous than persevering, entirely
disconcerted this method of fighting: for the light infantry, as if they
were fighting with their whole line of battle, after discharging their
javelins, carried on a close fight with their swords; and the horsemen,
when they had once made a charge, stopping their horses, fought, some on
horseback, while others dismounted and intermixed themselves with the foot.
By this means neither were the king's cavalry, who were unaccustomed to
a steady fight, a match for the others; nor were the infantry, who were
only skirmishing and irregular troops, and were besides but half covered
with the kind of harness which they used, at all equal to the Roman infantry,
who carried a sword and buckler, and were furnished with proper armor,
both to defend themselves and to annoy the enemy: nor did they sustain
the combat, but fled to their camp, trusting entirely to their speed for
safety.
36. After an interval of one day, the king, resolving to make an attack
with all his forces of cavalry and light-armed infantry, had, during the
night, placed in ambush, in a convenient place between the two camps, a
body of targeteers, whom they call Peltastae, and given orders to Athenagoras
and the cavalry, if they found they had the advantage in the open fight,
to pursue their success; if otherwise, that they should retreat leisurely,
and by that means draw on the enemy to the place where the ambush lay.
The cavalry accordingly did retreat; but the officers of the body of targeteers,
by bringing forward their men before the time, and not waiting for the
signal, as they ought, lost an opportunity of performing considerable service.
The Romans, having gained the victory in open fight, and also escaped the
danger of the ambuscade, retired to their camp. Next day the consul marched
out with all his forces, and offered battle, placing his elephants in the
front of the foremost battalions. Of this resource the Romans then for
the first time availed themselves; having a number of them which had been
taken in the Punic war. Finding that the enemy kept himself quiet behind
his entrenchments, he advanced close up to them, upbraiding him with cowardice;
and as, notwithstanding, no opportunity of an engagement was afforded,
the consul, considering how dangerous foraging must be while the camps
lay so near each other, where the cavalry were ready at any moment to attack
the soldiers, when dispersed through the country, removed his camp to a
place called Ortholophus, distant about eight miles, where by reason of
the intervening distance he could forage with more safety. While the Romans
were collecting corn in the adjacent fields, the king kept his men within
the trenches, in order to increase both the negligence and confidence of
the enemy. But, when he saw them scattered, he set out with all his cavalry,
and the auxiliary Cretans, and marching with such speed that the swiftest
footmen could, by running, but just keep up with the horse, he planted
his standards between the camp of the Romans and their foragers. Then,
dividing the forces, he sent one part of them in quest of the marauders,
with orders to leave not one alive; with the other, he himself halted,
and placed guards on the roads through which the enemy seemed likely to
fly back to their camp. And now carnage and flight prevailed in all directions,
and no intelligence of the misfortune had yet reached the Roman camp, because
those who fled towards the camp fell in with the guards, which the king
had stationed to intercept them, and greater numbers were slain by those
who were placed in the roads, than by those who had been sent out to attack
them. At length, a few effected their escape, through the midst of the
enemy's posts, but were so filled with terror, that they excited a general
consternation in the camp, rather than brought intelligible information.
37. The consul, ordering the cavalry to carry aid to those who were in
danger, in the best manner they could, drew out the legions from
the camp, and led them drawn up in a square towards the enemy. The
cavalry, taking different ways through the fields, missed the road,
being deceived by the various shouts raised in several quarters. Some
of them met with the enemy, and battles began in many places at once.
The hottest part of the action was at the station where the king
commanded; for the guard there was, in numbers both of horse and foot,
almost a complete army; and, as they were posted on the middle road,
the greatest number of the Romans fell in with them. The Macedonians
had also the advantage in this, that the king himself was present to
encourage them; and the Cretan auxiliaries, fighting in good
order, and in a state of preparation, against troops disordered
and irregular, wounded many at a distance, where no such danger was
apprehended. If they had acted with prudence in the pursuit, they
would have secured an advantage of great importance, not only in
regard to the glory of the present contest, but to the general
interest of the war; but, greedy of slaughter, and following with too
much eagerness, they fell in with the advanced cohorts of the Romans
under the military tribunes. The horsemen who were flying, as soon as
they saw the ensigns of their friends, faced about against the enemy,
now in disorder; so that in a moment's time the fortune of the battle
was changed, those now turning their backs who had lately been the
pursuers. Many were slain in close fight, many in the pursuit; nor was
it by the sword alone that they perished; several, being driven into
morasses, were, together with their horses, swallowed up in the
deep mud. The king himself was in danger; for his horse falling, in
consequence of a wound, threw him headlong to the ground, and he very
narrowly escaped being overpowered while prostrate. He owed his safety
to a trooper, who instantly leaped down and mounted the affrighted
king on his horse; himself, as he could not on foot keep up with the
flying horsemen, was slain by the enemy, who had collected about the
place where Philip fell. The king, in his desperate flight, rode about
among the morasses, some of which were easily passed, and others not;
at length, when most men despaired of his ever escaping in safety,
he arrived in safety at his camp. Two hundred Macedonian horsemen
perished in that action; about one hundred were taken: eighty horses,
richly caparisoned, were led off the field; at the same time the
spoils of arms were also carried off.
38. There were some who found fault with the king, as guilty of rashness on that day; and with the consul, for want of energy. For Philip, they say, on his part, ought to have avoided coming to action, knowing that in a few days the enemy, having exhausted all the adjacent country, must be reduced to the extremity of want; and that the consul, after having routed the Macedonian cavalry and light infantry, and nearly taken the king himself, ought to have led on his troops directly to the enemy's camp, where, dismayed as they were, they would have made no stand, and that he might have finished the war in a moment's time. This, like most other matters, was easier to be talked about than to be done. For, if the king had brought the whole of his infantry into the engagement, then, indeed, during the tumult, and while, vanquished and struck with dismay, they fled from the field into their entrenchments, (and even continued their flight from thence on seeing the victorious enemy mounting the ramparts,) the king might have been deprived of his camp. But as some forces of infantry had remained in the camp, fresh and free from fatigue, with outposts before the gates, and guard properly disposed, what would he have done but imitated the rashness of which the king had just now been guilty, by pursuing the routed horse? On the other side, the king's first plan of an attack on the foragers, while dispersed through the fields, would not have been a subject of censure, could he have satisfied himself with a moderate degree of success: and it is the less surprising that he should have made a trial of fortune, as there was a report, that Pleuratus and the Dardanians had set out from home with very numerous forces, and had already passed into Macedonia; so that if he should be surrounded on all sides by these forces, there was reason to think that the Roman might put an end to the war without stirring from his seat. Philip, however, considered, that after his cavalry had been defeated in two engagements, he could with much less safety continue in the same post; accordingly, wishing to remove from thence, and, at the same time, to keep the enemy in ignorance of his design, he sent a herald to the consul a little before sun-set, to demand a truce for the purpose of burying the horsemen; and thus imposing on him, he began his march in silence, about the second watch, leaving a number of fires in all parts of his camp.
39. The consul was now taking refreshment, when he was told that the herald
had arrived, and on what business; he gave him no other answer, than that
he should be admitted to an audience early the next morning: by which means
Philip gained what he wanted--the length of that night, and part of the
following day, during which he might get the start on his march. He directed
his route towards the mountains, a road which he knew the Romans with their
heavy baggage would not attempt. The consul, having, at the first light,
dismissed the herald with a grant of a truce, in a short time after discovered
that the enemy had gone off; but not knowing what course to take in pursuit
of them, he remained in the same camp for several days, which he employed
in collecting forage. He then marched to Stubera, and brought thither,
from Pelagonia, the corn that was in the fields. From thence he advanced
to Pluvina, not having yet discovered to what quarter the Macedonian had
bent his course. Philip, having at first fixed his camp at Bryanium, marched
thence through cross-roads, and gave a sudden alarm to the enemy. The Romans,
on this, removed from Pluvina, and pitched their camp near the river Osphagus.
The king also sat down at a small distance, forming his entrenchment on
the bank of a river which the inhabitants call Erigonus. Having there received
certain information that the Romans intended to proceed to Eordaea, he
marched away before them, in order to take possession of the defiles, and
prevent the enemy from making their way, where the roads are confined in
narrow straits. There, with great haste, he fortified some places with
a rampart, others with a trench, others with stones heaped up instead of
walls, others with trees laid across, according as the situation required,
or as materials lay convenient; and thus a road, in its own nature difficult,
he rendered, as he imagined, impregnable by the works which he drew across
every pass. The adjoining ground, being mostly covered with woods, was
exceedingly incommodious to the phalanx of the Macedonians, which is of
no manner of use, except when they extend their very long spears before
their shields, forming as it were a palisade; to perform which, they require
an open plain. The Thracians, too, were embarrassed by their lances, which
also are of a great length, and were entangled among the branches that
stood in their way on every side. The body of Cretans alone was not unserviceable;
and yet even these, though, in case of an attack made on them, they could
to good purpose discharge their arrows against the horses or riders, where
they were open to a wound, yet against the Roman shields they could do
nothing, because they had neither strength sufficient to pierce through
them, nor was there any part exposed at which they could aim. Perceiving,
therefore, that kind of weapon to be useless, they annoyed the enemy with
stones, which lay in plenty in all parts of the valley: the strokes made
by these on their shields, with greater noise than injury, for a short
time retarded the advance of the Romans; but quickly disregarding these
missiles also, some, closing their shields in form of a tortoise, forced
their way through the enemy in front; others having, by a short circuit,
gained the summit of the hill, dislodged the dismayed Macedonians from
their guards and posts, and even slew the greater part of them, their retreat
being embarrassed by the difficulties of the ground.
40. Thus, with less opposition than they had expected to meet, the defiles were passed, and they came to Eordaea; then, having laid waste the whole country, the consul withdrew into Elimea. From thence he made an eruption into Orestis, and attacked the city Celetrum, situated in a peninsula: a lake surrounds the walls; and there is but one entrance from the main land along a narrow isthmus. Relying on their situation, the townsmen at first shut the gates, and refused to submit; but afterwards, when they saw the troops in motion, and advancing in the tortoise method, and the isthmus covered by the enemy marching in, they surrendered in terror rather than hazard a struggle. From Celetrum he advanced into the country of the Dassaretians, took the city Pelium by storm, carried off the slaves with the rest of the spoil, and discharging the freemen without ransom, restored the city to them, after placing a strong garrison in it, for it was very conveniently situated for making inroads into Macedonia. Having thus traversed the enemy's country, the consul led back his forces into those parts which were already reduced to obedience near Apollonia, from whence the campaign had commenced. Philip's attention had been drawn to other quarters by the Aetolians, Athamanians, and Dardanians: so many were the wars that started up on different sides of him. Against the Dardanians, who were now retiring out of Macedonia, he sent Athenagoras with the light infantry and the greater part of the cavalry, and ordered him to hang on their rear as they retreated; and, by cutting off their hindmost troops, make them more cautious for the future of leading out their armies from home. As to the Aetolians, Damocritus, their praetor, the same who at Naupactum had persuaded them to defer passing a decree concerning the war, had in the next meeting roused them to arms, after the report of the battle between the cavalry at Ortholophus; the eruption of the Dardanians and of Pleuratus, with the Illyrians, into Macedonia; of the arrival of the Roman fleet, too, at Oreus; and that Macedonia, besides being beset on all sides by so many nations, was in danger of being invested by sea also.
41. These reasons had brought back Damocritus and the Aetolians to the
interest of the Romans. Marching out, therefore, in conjunction with
Amynander, king of the Athamanians, they laid siege to Cercinium. The
inhabitants here had shut their gates, whether of their own choice or
by compulsion is unknown, as they had a garrison of the king's troops.
However, in a few days Cercinium was taken and burned; and after great
slaughter had been made, those who survived, both freemen and slaves,
were carried off amongst other spoil. This caused such terror, as made
all those who dwelt round the lake Baebius abandon their cities and
fly to the mountains: and the Aetolians, in the absence of booty,
turned away from thence, and proceeded into Perrhaebia. There they
took Cyretiae by storm and sacked it unmercifully. The inhabitants of
Mallaea, making a voluntary submission, were received into alliance.
From Perrhaebia, Amynander advised to march to Gomphi, because that
city lies close to Athamania, and there was reason to think that it
might be reduced without any great difficulty. But the Aetolians,
for the sake of plunder, directed their march to the rich plains of
Thessaly. Amynander following, though he did not approve either of
their careless method of carrying on their depredations, or of their
pitching their camp in any place which chance presented, without
choice, and without taking any care to fortify it. Therefore, lest
their rashness and negligence might be the cause of some misfortune
to himself and his troops, when he saw them forming their camp in low
grounds, under the city Phecadus, he took possession, with his own
troops, of an eminence about five hundred paces distant, which could
be rendered secure by a slight fortification. The Aetolians seemed to
have forgotten that they were in an enemy's country, excepting that
they continued to plunder, some straggling about half-armed, others
spending whole days and nights alike in drinking and sleeping in the
camp, neglecting even to fix guards, when Philip unexpectedly came
upon them. His approach being announced by those who had fled out of
the fields in a fright, Damocritus and the rest of the officers were
thrown into great confusion. It happened to be mid-day, and when most
of the men after a hearty meal lay fast asleep. Their officers
roused them, however, as fast as possible; ordered them to take arms;
despatched some to recall those who were straggling through the fields
in search of plunder; and so violent was their hurry, that many of
the horsemen went out without their swords, and but few of them put
on their corslets. After marching out in this precipitate manner, (the
whole horse and foot scarcely making up six hundred,) they met the
king's cavalry, superior in number, in spirit, and in arms. They were,
therefore, routed at the first charge; and having scarcely attempted
resistance, returned to the camp in shameful flight. Several were
slain; and some taken, having been cut off from the main body of the
fugitives.
42. Philip, when his troops had advanced almost to the rampart, ordered
a retreat to be sounded, because both men and horses were fatigued, not
so much by the action, as at once by the length of their march, and the
extraordinary celerity with which they had made it. He therefore despatched
the horsemen by troops, and the companies of light infantry in turn, to
procure water and take refreshment. The rest he kept on guard, under arms,
waiting for the main body of the infantry, which had marched with less
expedition, on account of the weight of their armor. As soon as these arrived,
they also were ordered to fix their standards, and, laying down their arms
before them, to take food in haste; sending two, or at most three, out
of each company, to provide water. In the mean time the cavalry and light
infantry stood in order, and ready, in case the enemy should make any movement.
The Aetolians, as if resolved to defend their fortifications, (the multitude
which had been scattered about the fields having, by this time, returned
to the camp,) posted bodies of armed men at the gates, and on the rampart,
and from this safe situation looked with a degree of confidence on the
enemy, as long as they continued quiet. But, as soon as the troops of the
Macedonians began to move, and to advance to the rampart, in order of battle,
and ready for an assault, they all quickly abandoned their posts, and fled
through the opposite part of the camp, to the eminence where the Athamanians
were stationed. During their flight in this confusion, many of the Aetolians
were slain, and many made prisoners. Philip doubted not that, had there
been daylight enough remaining, he should have been able to make himself
master of the camp of the Athamanians also; but the day having been spent
in the fight, and in plundering the camp afterwards, he sat down under
the eminence, in the adjacent plain, determined to attack the enemy at
the first dawn of the following day. But the Aetolians, under the same
apprehensions which had made them desert their camp, dispersed, and fled
during the following night. Amynander was of the greatest service; for,
by his directions, the Athamanians, who were acquainted with the roads,
conducted them into Aetolia, whilst the Macedonians pursued them over the
highest mountains, through unknown paths. In this disorderly flight, a
few, missing their way, fell into the hands of the Macedonian horsemen,
whom Philip, at the earliest dawn, on seeing the eminence abandoned, had
sent to harass the marching body of the enemy.
43. About the same time also Athenagoras, one of the king's generals, overtaking
the Dardanians in their retreat homeward, at first threw their rear into
disorder; but these unexpectedly facing about, and forming their line,
the fight became like a regular engagement. When the Dardanians began again
to advance, the Macedonian cavalry and light infantry harassed those who
had no troops of that kind to aid them, and were, besides, burdened with
unwieldy arms. The ground, too, favored the assailants: very few were slain,
but many wounded; none were taken, because they rarely quit their ranks,
but both fight and retreat in a close body. Thus Philip, having checked
the proceedings of those two nations by these well-timed expeditions, gained
reparation for the damages sustained from the operations of the Romans;
the enterprise being as spirited as the issue was successful. An occurrence
which accidentally happened to him lessened the number of his enemies on
the side of Aetolia. Scopas, a man of considerable influence in his own
country, having been sent from Alexandria by king Ptolemy, with a great
sum of gold, hired and carried away to Egypt six thousand foot and four
hundred horse; nor would he have suffered one of the young Aetolians to
remain at home, had not Damocritus, (it is not easy to say, whether out
of zeal for the good of the nation, or out of opposition to Scopas, for
not having secured his interest by presents,) by sometimes reminding them
of the war which threatened them, at other times, of the solitary condition
in which they would be, detained some of them at home by severe reproaches.
Such were the actions of the Romans, and of Philip, during that summer.
44. In the beginning of the same summer, the fleet under Lucius Apustius,
lieutenant-general, setting sail from Corcyra, and passing by Malea, formed
a junction with king Attalus, off Scyllaeum, which lies in the district
of Hermione. The Athenian state, which had for a long time, through fear,
restrained their animosity against Philip within some bounds, in the expectation
of approaching aid afforded them, gave full scope to it all. There are
never wanting in that city orators, who are ready on every occasion to
inflame the people; a kind of men, who, in all free states, and more particularly
in that of Athens, where eloquence flourishes in the highest degree, are
maintained by the favor of the multitude. These immediately proposed a
decree, and the commons passed it, that "all the statues and images
of Philip, with their inscriptions, and likewise those of all his ancestors,
male and female, should be taken down and destroyed; that the festal days,
solemnities, and priests, which had been instituted in honor of him or
of his predecessors, should all be abolished; and that even the ground
where any such statue had been set up, and inscribed to his honor, should
be held abominable." And it was resolved, that, "for the future,
nothing which ought to be erected or dedicated in a place of purity should
be there erected; and that the public priests, as often as they should
pray for the people of Athens, for their allies, armies, and fleets, so
often should they utter curses and execrations against Philip, his offspring,
his kingdom, his forces by sea and land, and the whole race and name of
the Macedonians." It was added to the decree, that, "if any person
in future should make any proposal tending to throw disgrace and ignominy
on Philip, the people of Athens would ratify it in its fullest extent:
if, on the contrary, any one should, by word or deed, endeavor to lessen
his ignominy, or to do him honor, that whoever slew him who should have
so said or done, should be justified in so doing." Lastly, a clause
was annexed, that "all the decrees, formerly passed against the Pisistratidae,
should be in full force against Philip." Thus the Athenians waged
war against Philip with writings and with words, in which alone their power
consisted.
45. Attalus and the Romans, having, from Hermione, proceeded first to Piraeus,
and staid there a few days, after being loaded with decrees of the Athenians,
(in which the honors paid to their allies were as extravagant as the expressions
of their resentment against their enemy had been,) sailed from Piraeus
to Andros, and, coming to an anchor in the harbor called Gaureleos, sent
persons to sound the inclinations of the townsmen, whether they chose voluntarily
to surrender their city, rather than run the hazard of an assault. On their
answering, that they were not at their own disposal, but that the citadel
was occupied by the king's troops, Attalus and the Roman lieutenant-general,
landing their forces, with every thing requisite for attacking towns, made
their approaches to the city on different sides. The Roman standards and
arms, which they had never seen before, together with the spirit of the
soldiers, so briskly approaching the walls, were particularly terrifying
to the Greeks. A retreat was immediately made into the citadel, and the
enemy took possession of the city. After holding out for two days in the
citadel, relying more on the strength of the place than on their arms,
on the third both they and the garrison surrendered the city and citadel,
on condition of their being transported to Delium in Boeotia, and being
each of them allowed a single suit of apparel. The island was yielded up
by the Romans to king Attalus; the spoil, and the ornaments of the city,
they themselves carried off. Attalus, desirous that the island, of which
he had got possession, might not be quite deserted, persuaded almost all
the Macedonians, and several of the Andrians, to remain there: and, in
some time after, those who, according to the capitulation, had been transported
to Delium, were induced to return from thence by the promises made them
by the king, in which they were disposed the more readily to confide, by
the ardent affection which they felt for their native country. From Andros
they passed over to Cythnus; there they spent several days, to no purpose,
in assaulting the city; when, at length, finding it scarcely worth the
trouble, they departed. At Prasiae, a place on the main land of Attica,
twenty barks of the Issaeans joined the Roman fleet. These were sent to
ravage the lands of the Carystians, the rest of the fleet lying at Geraestus,
a noted harbor in Euboea, until the Issaeans returned from Carystus: on
which, setting sail all together, and steering their course through the
open sea, until they passed by Scyrus, they arrived at the island of Icus.
Being detained there for a few days by a violent northerly wind, as soon
as the weather was fair, they passed over to Sciathus, a city which had
been lately plundered and desolated by Philip. The soldiers, spreading
themselves over the country, brought back to the ships corn and what other
kinds of provisions could be of use to them. Plunder there was none, nor
had the Greeks deserved to be plundered. Directing their course thence
to Cassandrea, they first came to Mendis, a village on the coast of that
state; and, intending from thence to double the promontory, and bring round
the fleet to the very walls of the city, a violent tempest arising, they
were near being buried in the waves. However, after being dispersed, and
a great part of the ships having lost their rigging, they escaped on shore.
This storm at sea was an omen of the kind of success which they were to
meet on land; for, after collecting their vessels together, and landing
their forces, having made an assault on the city, they were repulsed with
many wounds, there being a strong garrison of the king's troops in the
place. Being thus obliged to retreat without accomplishing their design,
they passed over to Canastrum in Pallene, and from thence, doubling the
promontory of Torona, conducted the fleet to Acanthus. There they first
laid waste the country, then stormed the city itself, and plundered it.
They proceeded no farther, for their ships were now heavily laden with
booty, but went back to Sciathus, and from Sciathus to Euboea, whence they
had first set out.
46. Leaving the fleet there, they entered the Malian bay with ten light ships, in order to confer with the Aetolians on the method of conducting the war. Sipyrrhicas, the Aetolian, was at the head of the embassy that came to Heraclea, to hold a consultation with the king and the Roman lieutenant-general. They demanded of Attalus, that, in pursuance of the treaty, he should supply them with one thousand soldiers, which number he had engaged for on condition of their taking part in the war against Philip. This was refused to the Aetolians, because on their part they had formerly showed themselves unwilling to march out to ravage Macedonia, at a time when Philip, being employed near Pergamus in destroying by fire every thing sacred and profane, they might have compelled him to retire from thence, in order to preserve his own territories. Thus, instead of aid, the Aetolians were dismissed with hopes, the Romans making them large promises. Apustius with Attalus returned to the ships, where they began to concert measures for the siege of Oreus. This city was well secured by fortifications; and also, as an attempt had formerly been made on it, by a strong garrison. After the taking of Andros, twenty Rhodian ships, all decked vessels, had formed a junction with them, under the command of Agesimbrotus. This squadron they sent to the station off Zelasium, a promontory of Isthmia, very conveniently situate beyond Demetrias, in order that, if the ships of the Macedonians should attempt any movement, they might act as a defensive force. Heraclides, the king's admiral, kept his fleet there, rather with a view of laying hold of any advantage which the negligence of the enemy might afford him, than with a design of attempting any thing by open force. The Romans and king Attalus carried on their attacks against Oreus on different sides; the Romans against the citadel next to the sea, the king's troops against the lower part of the town, lying between the two citadels, where the city is also divided by a wall. As their posts were different, so were their methods of attack: the Romans made their approaches by means of covered galleries, applying also the ram to the walls; the king's troops, by throwing in weapons with the balista, catapulta, and every other kind of engine, and stones also of immense weight. They formed mines, too, and made use of every expedient, which, on trial, had been found useful in the former siege. On the other side, not only did more Macedonians protect the town and the citadels, than on the former occasion, but they exerted themselves with greater spirit, in consequence of the reprimands which they had received from the king for the misconduct they had committed, and also from remembrance both of his threats and promises with regard to the future. Thus, when time was being consumed there, contrary to their expectation, and there was more hope from a siege and works than from a sudden assault, the lieutenant-general thought that in the mean time some other business might be accomplished; wherefore, leaving such a number of men as seemed sufficient to finish the works, he passed over to the nearest part of the continent, and, arriving unexpectedly, made himself master of Larissa, except the citadel,-- not that celebrated city in Thessaly, but another, which they call Cremaste. Attalus also surprised Aegeleos, where nothing was less apprehended than such an enterprise during the siege of another city. The works at Oreus had now begun to take effect, while the garrison within were almost spent with unremitted toil, (keeping watch both by day and night,) and also with wounds. Part of the wall, being loosened by the strokes of the ram, had fallen down in many places; and the Romans, during the night, broke into the citadel through the breach which lay over the harbor. Attalus, likewise, at the first light, on a signal given from the citadel by the Romans, himself also assaulted the city, where great part of the walls had been levelled; on which the garrison and townsmen fled into the other citadel, and a surrender was made two days after. The city fell to the king, the prisoners to the Romans.
47. The autumnal equinox now approached, and the Euboean gulf, called
Coela, is reckoned dangerous by mariners. Choosing, therefore, to
remove thence before the winter storms came on, they returned to
Piraeus, from whence they had set out for the campaign. Apustius,
leaving there thirty ships, sailed by Malea to Corcyra. The king was
delayed during the celebration of the mysteries of Ceres, that he
might assist at the solemnities, immediately after which he also
retired into Asia, sending home Agesimbrotus and the Rhodians. Such,
during that summer, were the proceedings, by sea and land, of
the Roman consul and lieutenant-general, aided by Attalus and the
Rhodians, against Philip and his allies. The other consul, Caius
Aurelius, on coming into his province and finding the war there
already brought to a conclusion, did not dissemble his resentment
against the praetor, for having proceeded to action in his absence;
wherefore, sending him away to Etruria, he led on the legions into the
enemy's country, and, by laying it waste, carried on the war with more
spoil than glory. Lucius Furius, finding nothing in Etruria that
could give him employment, and at the same time intent on obtaining a
triumph for his success against the Gauls, which he considered would
be more easily accomplished in the absence of the consul, who envied
and was enraged against him, came to Rome unexpectedly, and called a
meeting of the senate in the temple of Bellona; where, after making
a recital of the services which he had performed, he demanded to be
allowed to enter the city in triumph.
48. With a great part of the senate he prevailed, owing to private
interest and the importance of his services. The elder part refused
him a triumph, both "because the army, with which he had acted,
belonged to another; and because he had left his province through
an ambitious desire of snatching that opportunity of procuring a
triumph,--but that he had taken this course without any precedent."
The senators of consular rank particularly insisted, that "he ought
to have waited for the consul; for that he might, by pitching his camp
near the city, and thereby securing the colony without coming to an
engagement, have protracted the affair until his arrival; and that,
what the praetor had not done, the senate ought to do; they should
wait for the consul. After hearing the business discussed by the
consul and praetor in their presence, they would be able, more
correctly, to form judgment on the case." Great part were of opinion,
that the senate ought to consider nothing but the service performed,
and whether he had performed it while in office, and under his own
auspices. For, "when of two colonies, which had been opposed, as
barriers, to restrain the tumultuous inroads of the Gauls, one had
been already sacked and burned, the flames being ready to spread (as
if from an adjoining house) to the other colony, which lay so near,
what ought the praetor to have done? For if it was improper to enter
on any action without the consul, then the senate had acted wrong
in giving the army to the praetor; because, if they chose that the
business should be performed, not under the praetor's auspices, but
the consul's, they might have limited the decree in such a manner,
that not the praetor, but the consul, should manage it; or else the
consul had acted wrong, who, after ordering the army to remove from
Etruria into Gaul, did not meet it at Ariminum, in order to be present
at operations, which were not allowed to be performed without him. But
the exigencies of war do not wait for the delays and procrastinations
of commanders; and battles must be sometimes fought, not because
commanders choose it, but because the enemy compels it. The fight
itself, and the issue of the fight, is what ought to be regarded now.
The enemy were routed and slain, their camp taken and plundered,
the colony relieved from a siege, the prisoners taken from the other
colony recovered and restored to their friends, and an end put to the
war in one battle. And not only men rejoiced at this victory, but the
immortal gods also had supplications paid to them, for the space of
three days, on account of the business of the state having been wisely
and successfully, not rashly and unfortunately, conducted by Lucius
Furius, praetor. Besides, the Gallic wars were, by some fatality,
destined to the Furian family."
49. By means of discourses of this kind, made by him and his friends,
the interest of the praetor, who was present, prevailed over the
dignity of the absent consul, and the majority decreed a triumph to
Lucius Furius. Lucius Furius, praetor, during his office, triumphed
over the Gauls. He carried into the treasury three hundred and twenty
thousand asses, and one hundred and seventy thousand pounds' weight of silver. There
were neither any prisoners led before his chariot, nor spoils carried before
him, nor did any soldiers follow him. It appeared that every thing, except
the victory, belonged to the consul. The games which Publius Scipio had
vowed when consul in Africa, were then celebrated, in a magnificent manner
and with respect to the lands for his soldiers, it was decreed, that whatever
number of years each of them had served in Spain or in Africa, he should,
for every year, receive two acres; and that ten commissioners should distribute
that land. Three commissioners were then appointed to fill up the number
of colonists at Venusia, because the strength of that colony had been reduced
in the war with Hannibal: Caius Terentius Varro, Titus Quintius Flamininus,
Publius Cornelius, son of Cneius Scipio, enrolled the colonists for Venusia.
During the same year, Caius Cornelius Cethegus, who in the capacity of
proconsul commanded in Spain, routed a numerous army of the enemy in the
territory of Sedeta; in which battle, it is said, that fifteen thousand
Spaniards were slain, and seventy-eight military standards taken. The consul
Caius Aurelius, on returning from his province to Rome to hold the elections,
made heavy complaints, not on the subject on which they had supposed he
would, that the senate had not waited for his coming, nor allowed him an
opportunity of arguing the matter with the praetor; but, that "the
senate had decreed a triumph in such a manner, without hearing the report
of any one of those who had taken part in the war, except the person who
was to enjoy the triumph: that their ancestors had made it a rule that
the lieutenant-generals, the military tribunes, the centurions, and even
the soldiers, should be present at the triumph, in order that the Roman
people might ascertain the reality of his exploits, to whom so high an
honor was paid." Now, of that army which fought with the Gauls, had
any one soldier, or even a soldier's servant, been present, of whom the
senate could inquire how much of truth or falsehood was in the praetor's
narrative? He then appointed a day for the elections, at which were chosen
consuls, Lucius Cornelius Lentulus and Publius Villius Tappulus. The praetors
were then appointed, Lucius Quintius Flamininus, Lucius Valerius Flaccus,
Lucius Villius Tappulus, and Cneius Baebius Tamphilus.
50. During that year provisions were remarkably cheap. The curule
aediles, Marcus Claudius Marcellus and Sextus Aelius Paetus,
distributed among the people a vast quantity of corn, brought from
Africa, at the rate of two asses a peck. They also celebrated the
Roman games in a magnificent manner, repeating them a second day; and
erected in the treasury five brazen statues out of the money paid as
fines. The plebeian games were thrice repeated entire, by the aediles,
Lucius Terentius Massa, and Cneius Baebius Tamphilus, who was elected
praetor. There were also funeral games exhibited that year in the
forum, for the space of four days, on occasion of the death of Marcus
Valerius Laevinus, by his sons Publius and Marcus, who gave also a
show of gladiators, in which twenty-five pairs fought. Marcus Aurelius
Cotta, one of the decemviri of the sacred books, died, and Manius
Acilius Glabrio was substituted in his room. It happened that both the
curule aediles, who had been created at the elections, were persons
who could not immediately undertake the office: for Caius Cornelius
Cethegus was elected in his absence, when he was occupying Spain
as his province; and Caius Valerius Flaccus, who was present, being
flamen Dialis, could not take the oath of observing the laws; and no
person was allowed to hold any office longer than five days without
taking the oath. Flaccus petitioned to be excused from complying with
the law, on which the senate decreed, that if the aedile produced a
person approved of by the consuls, who would take the oath for him,
the consuls, if they thought proper, should make application to the
tribunes, that it might be proposed to the people. Lucius Valerius
Flaccus, praetor elect, was produced to swear for his brother. The
tribunes proposed to the commons, and the commons ordered that this
should be as if the aedile himself had sworn. With regard to the other
aedile, likewise, an order of the commons was made. On the tribunes
putting the question, what two persons they chose should go and take
the command of the armies in Spain, in order that Caius Cornelius,
curule aedile, might come home to execute his office, and that Lucius
Manlius Acidinus might, after many years, retire from the province;
the commons ordered Cneius Cornelius Lentulus and Lucius Stertinius,
proconsuls, to command in Spain.
BOOK XXXII.
Successes of Titus Quinctius Flamininus against Philip; and
of his brother Lucius with the fleet, assisted by Attalus
and the Rhodians. Treaty of friendship with the Achaeans.
Conspiracy of the slaves discovered and suppressed. The number
of the praetors augmented to six. Defeat of the Insubrian
Gauls by Cornelius Cethegus. Treaty of friendship with Nabis,
tyrant of Lacedaemon. Capture of several cities in Macedonia.
1. The consuls and praetors, having entered upon office on the ides
of March, cast lots for the provinces. Italy fell to Lucius Cornelius
Lentulus, Macedonia to Publius Villius. Of the praetors, the city
jurisdiction fell to Lucius Quinctius, Ariminum to Cneius Baebius,
Sicily to Lucius Valerius, Sardinia to Lucius Villius. The consul
Lentulus was ordered to levy new legions; Villius, to receive the army
from Publius Sulpicius; and, to complete its number, power was given
him to raise as many men as he thought proper. To the praetor Baebius
were decreed the legions which Caius Aurelius, late consul, had
commanded, with directions that he should keep them in their present
situation, until the consul should come with the new army to supply
their place; and that, on his arriving in Gaul, all the soldiers who
had served out their time should be sent home, except five thousand
of the allies, which would be sufficient to protect the province round
Ariminum. The command was continued to the praetors of the former
year; to Cneius Sergius, that he might superintend the distribution of
land to the soldiers who had served for many years in Spain, Sicily,
and Sardinia; to Quintus Minucius, that he might finish the inquiries
concerning the conspiracies in Bruttium, which, while praetor, he had
managed with care and fidelity. That he should also send to Locri, to
suffer punishment, those who had been convicted of sacrilege, and
who were then in chains at Rome; and that he should take care, that
whatever had been carried away from the temple of Proserpine should be
replaced with expiations. The Latin festival was repeated in pursuance
of a decree of the pontiffs, because ambassadors from Ardea had
complained to the senate, that during the said solemnity they had not
been supplied with meat as usual on the Alban mount. From Suessa an
account was brought, that two of the gates, and the wall between them,
had been struck with lightning. Messengers from Formiae related, that
the temple of Jupiter had also been struck by lightning; from Ostia,
likewise, news came of the like accident having happened to the temple
of Jupiter there; it was said, too, that the temples of Apollo and
Sancus, at Veliternum, were struck in like manner; and that in the
temple of Hercules, hair had grown (on the statue). A letter was
received from Quintus Minucius, propraetor, from Bruttium, that a foal
had been born with five feet, and three chickens with three feet
each. Afterwards a letter was brought from Macedonia, from Publius
Sulpicius, proconsul, in which, among other matters, it was mentioned,
that a laurel tree had sprung up on the poop of a ship of war. On
occasion of the former prodigies, the senate had voted, that the
consuls should offer sacrifices with the greater victims to such gods
as they thought proper. On account of the last prodigy, alone, the
aruspices were called before the senate, and, in pursuance of
their answer, the people were ordered by proclamation to perform
a supplication for one day, and worship was solemnized at all the
shrines.
2. This year, the Carthaginians brought to Rome the first payment of the silver imposed on them as a tribute; and the quaestors having reported, that it was not of the proper standard, and that, on the assay, it wanted a fourth part, they made up the deficiency with money borrowed at Rome. On their requesting that the senate would be pleased to order their hostages to be restored to them, a hundred were given up, and hopes were held out with relation to the rest, if they remained in fidelity (to the treaty). They then further requested, that the remaining hostages might be removed from Norba, where they were ill accommodated, to some other place, and they were permitted to remove to Signia and Ferentinum. The request of the people of Gades was likewise complied with: that a governor should not be sent to their city; being contrary to what had been agreed with them by Lucius Marcius Septimus, when they came under the protection of the Roman people. Deputies from Narnia, complaining that they had not their due number of settlers, and that several who were not of their community, had crept in among them, and were conducting themselves as colonists, Lucius Cornelius, the consul, was ordered to appoint three commissioners to adjust those matters. The three appointed were, Publius and Sextus Aelius, both surnamed Paetus, and Caius Cornelius Lentulus. The favor granted to the Narnians, of filling up their number of colonists, was refused to the people of Cossa, who applied for it.
3. The consuls, having finished the business that was to be done at Rome,
set out for their provinces. Publius Villius, on coming into Macedonia,
found the soldiers in a violent mutiny, which had been previously excited,
and not sufficiently repressed at the commencement. They were the two thousand
who, after Hannibal had been vanquished, had been transported from Africa
to Sicily, and then, in about a year after, into Macedonia, as volunteers;
they denied, however, that this was done with their consent, affirming,
that "they had been put on board the ships, by the tribunes, contrary
to their remonstrances; but, in what manner soever they had become engaged
in that service, whether it had been voluntarily undertaken or imposed
on them, the time of it was now expired, and it was reasonable that some
end should be put to their warfare. For many years they had not seen Italy,
but had grown old under arms in Sicily, Africa, and Macedonia; they were
now, in short, worn out with labor and fatigue, and were exhausted of their
blood by the many wounds they had received." The consul told them,
that "the grounds on which they demanded their discharge, appeared
to him to be reasonable, if the demand had been made in a moderate manner;
but that neither that, nor any other ground, was a justifying cause of
mutiny. Wherefore, if they were contented to adhere to their standards,
and obey orders, he would write to the senate concerning their release;
and that what they desired would more easily be obtained by moderation
than by turbulence."
4. At this time, Philip was pushing on the siege of Thaumaci, with the utmost vigor, by means of mounds and engines, and was ready to bring up the ram to the walls, when he was obliged to relinquish the undertaking by the sudden arrival of the Aetolians, who, under the command of Archidamus, having made their way into the town between the posts of the Macedonians, never ceased, day or night, making continual sallies, sometimes against the guards, sometimes against the works of the besiegers. They were at the same time favored by the very nature of the place: for Thaumaci stands near the road from Thermopylae, and the Malian bay as you go through Lamia, on a lofty eminence, hanging immediately over the narrow pass which the Thessalians call Caela [Hollows]. After passing through the craggy grounds of Thessaly, the roads are rendered intricate by the windings of the valleys, and on the near approach to the city, such an immense plain opens at once to view, like a vast sea, that the eye can scarcely reach the bounds of the expanse beneath From this surprising prospect it was called Thaumaci. [From 'thumazein,' to wonder.] The city itself is secured, not only by the height of its situation, but by its standing on a rock, the stone of which had been cut away on all sides. These difficulties, and the prize not appearing sufficient to recompense so much toil and danger, caused Philip to desist from the attempt. The winter also was approaching; he therefore retired from thence, and led back his troops into winter quarters, in Macedonia.
5. There, whilst others, glad of any interval of rest, consigned both body
and mind to repose, Philip, in proportion as the season of the year had
relieved him from the incessant fatigues of marching and fighting, found
his care and anxiety increase the more, when he turned his thoughts towards
the general issue of the war. He dreaded, not only his enemies, who pressed
him hard by land and sea, but also the dispositions, sometimes of his allies,
at others of his own subjects, lest the former might be induced, by hopes
of friendship with the Romans, to revolt, and the Macedonians themselves
be seized with a desire of innovation. Wherefore, he despatched ambassadors
to the Achaeans, both to require their oath, (for it had been made an article
of their agreement that they should take an oath prescribed by Philip every
year,) and at the same time to restore to them Orchomenes, Heraea, and
Triphylia. To the Eleans he delivered up Aliphera; which city, they insisted,
had never belonged to Triphylia, but ought to be restored to them, having
been one of those that were incorporated by the council of the Arcadians
for the founding of Megalopolis. These measures had the effect of strengthening
his connection with the Achaeans. The affections of the Macedonians he
conciliated by his treatment of Heraclides: for, finding that his having
countenanced this man had been the cause to him of the utmost unpopularity,
he charged him with a number of crimes, and threw him into chains, to the
great joy of the people. It was now, if at any time, that he made preparations
for the war with especial energy. He exercised both the Macedonian and
mercenary troops in arms, and in the beginning of spring sent Athenagoras,
with all the foreign auxiliaries and what light-armed troops there were,
through Epirus into Chaonia, to seize the pass at Antigonia, which the
Greeks called Stena. He followed, in a few days, with the heavy troops:
and having viewed every situation in the country, he judged that the most
advantageous post for fortifying himself was on the river Aous. This river
runs in a narrow vale, between two mountains, one of which the natives
call Aeropus, and the other Asnaus, affording a passage of very little
breadth along the bank. He ordered Athenagoras, with the light infantry,
to take possession of Asnaus, and to fortify it. His own camp he pitched
on Aeropus. Those places where the rocks were steep, were defended by guards
of a few soldiers only; the less secure he strengthened, some with trenches,
some with ramparts, and others with towers. A great number of engines,
also, were disposed in proper places, that, by means of weapons thrown
from these, they might keep the enemy at a distance. The royal pavilion
was pitched on the outside of the rampart, on the most conspicuous eminence,
in order, by this show of confidence, to dishearten the foe, and raise
the hopes of his own men.
6. The consul having received intelligence from Charopus of Epirus, on
what pass the king had taken his position with his army, as soon as the
spring began to open, left Corcyra, where he had passed the winter, and,
sailing over to the continent, led on his army against the enemy. When
he came within about five miles of the king's camp, leaving the legions
in a strong post, he went forward in person with some light troops, to
view the nature of the country; and, on the day following, held a council,
in order to determine whether he should attempt a passage through the defiles
occupied by the enemy, notwithstanding the great labor and danger which
the proposal involved, or lead round his forces by the same road through
which Sulpicius had penetrated into Macedonia the year before. The deliberations
on this question had lasted several days, when news arrived, that Titus
Quinctius had been elected consul; that he had obtained, by lot, Macedonia
as his province; and that, hastening his journey, he had already come over
to Corcyra. Valerius Antias says, that Villius marched into the defile,
and that, as he could not proceed straight forward, because every pass
was occupied by the king, he followed the course of a valley, through the
middle of which the river Aous flows, and having hastily constructed a
bridge, passed over to the bank where the king's camp was, and fought a
battle with him; that the king was routed and driven out of his camp; that
twelve thousand of the enemy were killed, and two thousand two hundred
taken, together with a hundred and thirty-two military standards, and two
hundred and thirty horses. He adds, that, during the battle, a temple was
vowed to Jupiter in case of success. The other historians, both Greek and
Latin, (all those at least whose accounts I have read,) affirm that nothing
memorable was done by Villius, and that Titus Quinctius, the consul who
succeeded him, received from him a war which had yet to be commenced.
7. During the time of these transactions in Macedonia, the other
consul, Lucius Lentulus, who had stayed at Rome, held an assembly
for the election of censors. Out of many illustrious men who stood
candidates, were chosen Publius Cornelius Scipio Africanus and Publius
Aelius Paetus. These, acting together in perfect harmony, read the
list of the senate, without passing a censure on any one member; they
also let to farm the port-duties at Capua, and at Puteoli, and of the
fort situate were the city now stands; enrolling for this latter place
three hundred colonists, that being the number fixed by the senate;
they also sold the lands of Capua, which lie at the foot of Mount
Tifata. About the same time, Lucius Manlius Acidinus, on his return
from Spain, was hindered from entering the city in ovation by Marcus
Portius Laeca, plebeian tribune, notwithstanding he had obtained
permission of the senate: coming, then, into the city in a private
character, he conveyed to the treasury one thousand two hundred
pounds' weight of silver, and about thirty pounds' weight of gold.
During this year, Cneius Baebius Tamphilus, who had succeeded to the
government of the province of Gaul, in the room of Caius Aurelius,
consul of the year preceding, having, without proper caution, entered
the territories of the Insubrian Gauls, was surprised with almost the
whole of his army. He lost above six thousand six hundred men,--so
great a loss was received from a war which had now ceased to be an
object of apprehension. This event called away the consul, Lucius
Lentulus, from the city; who, arriving in the province, which was
filled with confusion, and taking the command of the army, which he
found dispirited by its defeat, severely reprimanded the praetor, and
ordered him to quit the province and return to Rome. Neither did the
consul himself perform any considerable service, being called home to
preside at the elections, which were obstructed by Marcus Fulvius and
Manius Curius, plebeian tribunes, who wished to hinder Titus Quinctius
Flamininus from standing candidate for the consulship, after passing
through the office of quaestor. They alleged, that "the aedileship and
praetorship were now held in contempt, and that the nobility did not
make their way to the consulship through the regular gradations of
offices, thus affording a trial of themselves; but, passing over the
intermediate steps, pushed at once from the lowest to the highest."
From a dispute in the Field of Mars, the affair was brought before
the senate, where it was voted, "that when a person sued for any post,
which by the laws he was permitted to hold, the people had the right
of choosing whoever they thought proper." To this decision of the
senate the tribunes submitted, and thereupon Sextus Aelius Paetus and
Titus Quinctius Flamininus were elected consuls. Then was held the
election of praetors. The persons chosen were, Lucius Cornelius
Merula, Marcus Claudius Marcellus, Marcus Porcius Cato, and Caius
Helvius, who had been plebeian aediles. By these the plebeian games
were repeated, and, on occasion of the games, a feast of Jupiter was
celebrated. The curule aediles, also, Caius Valerius Flaccus, who was
flamen of Jupiter, and Caius Cornelius Cethegus, celebrated the Roman
games with great magnificence. Servius and Caius Sulpicius Galba,
pontiffs, died this year; in their room were substituted Marcus
Aemilius Lepidus and Cneius Cornelius Scipio, as pontiffs.
8. The new consuls, Sextus Aelius Paetus and Titus Quinctius Flamininus, on assuming the administration, convened the senate in the Capitol, and the fathers decreed, that "the consuls should settle between themselves or cast lots for the provinces, Macedonia and Italy. That he to whom Macedonia fell should enlist, as a supplement to the legions, three thousand Roman footmen and three hundred horse, and also five thousand footmen and five hundred horsemen belonging to the Latin confederacy." The army assigned to the other consul was to consist entirely of newly-raised men. Lucius Lentulus, consul of the preceding year, was continued in command, and was ordered not to depart from the province, nor to remove the old army, until the consul should arrive with the new legions. The consuls cast lots for the provinces, and Italy fell to Aelius, Macedonia to Quintius. Of the praetors, the lots gave to Lucius Cornelius Merula the city jurisdiction; to Marcus Claudius, Sicily; to Marcus Porcius, Sardinia; and to Caius Helvius, Gaul. The levying of troops was then begun, for besides the consular armies, the praetors had been ordered also to enlist men: for Marcellus, in Sicily, four thousand foot and three hundred horse of the Latin confederates; for Cato, in Sardinia, three thousand foot and two hundred horse of the same class of soldiers; with directions, that both these praetors, on their arrival in their provinces, should disband the veterans, both foot and horse. The consuls then introduced to the senate ambassadors from king Attalus. These, after representing that their king gave every assistance to the Roman arms on land and sea, with his fleet and all his forces, and had up to that day executed with zeal and obedience every order of the consuls, added, that "they feared it would not be in his power to continue so to do by reason of king Antiochus, for that Antiochus had invaded the kingdom of Attalus, when destitute of protective forces by sea and land. That Attalus, therefore, entreated the conscript fathers, if they chose to employ his army and navy in the Macedonian war, then to send a body of forces to protect his territories; or if that were not agreeable, to allow him to go home to defend his own possessions, with his fleet and troops." The following answer was ordered to be given to the ambassadors: that "it was a cause of gratitude to the senate that Attalus had assisted the Roman commanders with his fleet and other forces. That they would neither send succors to Attalus, against Antiochus, the ally and friend of the Roman people; nor would they detain the auxiliary troops longer than would be convenient to the king. That it was ever a constant rule with the Roman people, to use the aid of others so far only as was agreeable to the will of those who gave it; and even to leave the commencement and the termination of that aid at the discretion of those who desired that the Romans should be benefited by their help. That they would send ambassadors to Antiochus, to represent to him, that Attalus, with his fleet and army, were, at the present, employed by the Roman people against Philip, their common enemy; and that Antiochus would do that which was gratifying to the senate if he abstained from the kingdom of Attalus and desisted from the war; for that it was much to be wished, that kings who were allies and friends to the Roman people should maintain friendship between themselves also."
9. When the consul Titus Quinctius had finished the levies, in making which
he chose principally such as had served in Spain or Africa, that is, soldiers
of approved courage, and when hastening to set forward to his province,
he was delayed by reports of prodigies, and the expiations of them. There
had been struck by lightning the public road at Veii, a temple of Jupiter
at Lanuvium, a temple of Hercules at Ardea, with a wall and towers at Capua,
also the edifice which is called Alba. At Arretium, the sky appeared as
on fire; at Velitrae, the earth, to the extent of three acres, sunk down
so as to form a vast chasm. From Suessa Aurunca, an account was brought
of a lamb born with two heads; from Sinuessa, of a swine with a human head.
On occasion of these ill omens, a supplication of one day's continuance
was performed; the consuls gave their attention to divine services, and,
as soon as the gods were appeased, set out for their provinces. Aelius,
accompanied by Caius Helvius, praetor, went into Gaul, where he put under
the command of the praetor the army which he received from Lucius Lentulus,
and which he ought to have disbanded, intending to carry on his own operations
with the new troops, which he had brought with him; but he effected nothing
worth recording. The other consul, Titus Quinctius, setting sail from Brundusium
earlier than had been usual with former consuls, reached Corcyra, with,
eight thousand foot and eight hundred horse. From this place, he passed
over, in a quinquereme, to the nearest part of Epirus, and proceeded, by
long journeys, to the Roman camp. Here, having dismissed Villius, and waiting
a few days, until the forces from Corcyra should come up and join him,
he held a council, to determine whether he should endeavor to force his
way straight forward through the camp of the enemy; or whether, without
attempting an enterprise of so great difficulty and danger, he should not
rather take a circuitous and safe road, so as to penetrate into Macedonia
by the country of the Dassaretians and Lycus. The latter plan would have
been adopted, had he not feared that, in removing to a greater distance
from the sea, the enemy might slip out of his hands; and that if the king
should resolve to secure himself in the woods and wilds, as he had done
before, the summer might be spun out without any thing being effected.
It was therefore determined, be the event what it might, to attack the
enemy in their present post, disadvantageous as it was. But they more easily
resolved on this measure, than devised any safe or certain method of accomplishing
it.
10. Forty days were passed in view of the enemy, without making any kind of effort. Hence Philip conceived hopes of bringing about a treaty of peace, through the mediation of the people of Epirus; and a council, which was held for the purpose, having appointed Pausanias, the praetor, and Alexander, the master of the horse, as negotiators, they brought the consul and the king to a conference, on the banks of the river Aous, where the channel was narrowest. The sum of the consul's demands was, that the king should withdraw his troops from the territories of the several states; that, to those whose lands and cities he had plundered, he should restore such of their effects as could be found; and that the value of the rest should be estimated by a fair arbitration. Philip answered, that "the cases of the several states differed widely from each other. That such as he himself had seized on, he would set at liberty; but he would not divest himself of the hereditary and just possessions which had been conveyed down to him from his ancestors. If those states, with whom hostilities had been carried on, complained of any losses in the war, he was ready to submit the matter to the arbitration of any state with whom both parties were at peace." To this the consul replied, that "the business required neither judge nor arbitrator: for to whom was it not evident that every injurious consequence of the war was to be imputed to him who first took up arms. And in this case Philip, unprovoked by any, had first commenced hostilities against all." When they next began to treat of those nations which were to be set at liberty, the consul named, first, the Thessalians: on which the king, fired with indignation, exclaimed, "What harsher terms, Titus Quinctius, could you impose on me if I were vanquished?" With these words he retired hastily from the conference, and they were with difficulty restrained by the river which separated them from assaulting each other with missile weapons. On the following day many skirmishes took place between parties sallying from the outposts, in a plain sufficiently wide for the purpose. Afterwards the king's troops drew back into narrow and rocky places, whither the Romans, keenly eager for fighting, penetrated also. These had in their favor order and military discipline, while their arms were of a kind well calculated for protecting their persons. In favor of the enemy were the advantage of ground, and their balistas and catapultas disposed on almost every rock as on walls. After many wounds given and received on both sides, and numbers being slain, as in a regular engagement, darkness put an end to the fight.
11. While matters were in this state, a herdsman, sent by Charopus, prince
of the Epirots, was brought to the consul. He said, that "being accustomed
to feed his herd in the forest, then occupied by the king's camp, he knew
every winding and path in the neighboring mountains; and that if the consul
thought proper to send some troops with him, he would lead them by a road,
neither dangerous nor difficult, to a spot over the enemy's head."
When the consul heard these things, he sent to Charopus to inquire if he
considered that confidence might be placed in the rustic in so important
a matter. Charopus ordered an answer to be returned, that he should give
just so much credit to this man's account, as should still leave every
thing rather in his own power than in that of the other. Though the consul
rather wished than dared to give the intelligence full belief, and though
his mind was possessed by mingled emotions of joy and fear, yet being moved
by the confidence due to Charopus, he resolved to put to trial the prospect
that was held out to him. In order to prevent all suspicion of the matter,
during the two following days he carried on attacks against the enemy without
intermission, drawing out troops against them in every quarter, and sending
up fresh men to relieve the wearied. Then, selecting four thousand foot
and three hundred horse, he put them under the command of a military tribune,
with directions to advance the horse as far as the nature of the ground
allowed; and when they came to places impassable to cavalry, then to post
them in some plain; that the infantry should proceed by the road which
the guide would show, and that when, according to his promise, they arrived
on the height over the enemy's head, then they should give a signal by
smoke, but raise no shout, until the tribune should have reason to think
that, in consequence of the signal received from him, the battle was begun.
He ordered that the march should take place by night, (the moon shining
through the whole of it,) and employ the day in taking food and rest. The
most liberal promises were made to the guide, provided he fulfilled his
engagement; he bound him, nevertheless, and delivered him to the tribune.
Having thus sent off this detachment, the Roman general exerted himself
only the more vigorously in every part to make himself master of the posts
of the enemy.
12. On the third day, the Roman party made the signal by smoke, to notify
that they had gained possession of the eminence to which they had been
directed; and then the consul, dividing his forces into three parts, marched
up with the main strength of his army, through a valley in the middle,
and made the wings on right and left advance to the camp of the enemy.
Nor did these advance to meet him with less alacrity. The Roman soldiers,
in the ardor of their courage, long maintained the fight on the outside
of their works, for they had no small superiority in bravery, in skill,
and in the nature of their arms; but when the king's troops, after many
of them were wounded and slain, retreated into places secured either by
entrenchments or situation, the danger reverted on the Romans, who pushed
forward, inconsiderately, into disadvantageous grounds and defiles, out
of which a retreat was difficult. Nor would they have extricated themselves
without suffering for their rashness, had not the Macedonians, first, by
a shout heard in their rear, and then by an attack begun on that quarter,
been utterly dismayed and confounded at the unforeseen danger. Some betook
themselves to a hasty flight: some, keeping their stand, rather because
they could find no way for flight than that they possessed spirit to support
the engagement, were cut off by the Romans, who pressed them hard both
on front and rear. Their whole army might have been destroyed, had the
victors continued their pursuit of the fugitives; but the cavalry were
obstructed by the narrowness of the passes and the ruggedness of the ground;
and the infantry, by the weight of their armor. The king at first fled
with precipitation, and without looking behind him; but afterwards, when
he had proceeded as far as five miles, he began, from recollecting the
unevenness of the road, to suspect, (what was really the case,) that the
enemy could not follow him; and halting, he despatched his attendants through
all the hills and valleys to collect the stragglers together. His loss
was not more than two thousand men. The rest of his army, coming to one
spot, as if they had followed some signal, marched off, in a compact body,
towards Thessaly. The Romans, after having pursued the enemy as far as
they could with safety, killing such as they overtook, and despoiling the
slain, seized and plundered the king's camp; which, even when it had no
defenders, was difficult of access. The following night they were lodged
within their own trenches.
13. Next day, the consul pursued the enemy through the same defiles
through which the river winds its way among the valleys. The king
came on the first day to the camp of Pyrrhus, a place so called in
Triphylia, a district of Melotis; and on the following day he reached
Mount Lingos, an immense march for his army, but his fear impelled
him. This ridge of mountains belongs to Epirus, and stretches along
between Macedonia and Thessaly; the side next to Thessaly faces the
east, that next to Macedonia the north. These hills are thickly
clad with woods, and on their summits have open plains and perennial
streams. Here Philip remained encamped for several days, being unable
to determine whether he should continue his retreat until he arrived
in his own dominions, or whether he might venture back into Thessaly.
At length, his decision leaned to leading down his army into Thessaly;
and, going by the shortest roads to Tricca, he made hasty excursions
from thence to all the cities within his reach. The inhabitants who
were able to accompany him he summoned from their habitations, and
burned the towns, allowing the owners to take with them such of their
effects as they were able to carry; the rest became the prey of the
soldiers; nor was there any kind of cruelty which they could have
suffered from an enemy, that they did not suffer from these their
confederates. These acts were painful to Philip even while he executed
them; but as the country was soon to become the property of the foe,
he wished to rescue out of it at least the persons of his allies. In
this manner were ravaged the towns of Phacium, Iresiae, Euhydrium,
Eretria, and Palaepharsalus. On his coming to Pherae, the gates were
shut against him, and as it would necessarily occasion a considerable
delay if he attempted to take it by force, and as he could not spare
time, he dropped the design, and crossed over the mountains into
Macedonia; for he had received intelligence, that the Aetolians too
were marching towards him. These, on hearing of the battle fought on
the banks of the river of Aous, first laid waste the nearest tracts
round Sperchia, and Long Come, as they call it, and then, passing
over into Thessaly, got possession of Cymine and Angeae at the first
assault. From Metropolis they were repulsed by the inhabitants, who,
while a part of their army was plundering the country, assembled in a
body to defend the city. Afterwards, making an attempt on Callithera,
they were attacked by the townsmen in a like manner; but withstood
their onset with more steadiness, drove back into the town the party
which had sallied, and content with that success, as they had no
prospect whatever of taking the place by storm, retired. They then
took by assault and sacked the towns of Theuma and Calathas. Acharrae
they gained by surrender. Xyniae, through similar apprehensions, was
abandoned by the inhabitants. These having forsaken their homes, and
going together in a body, fell in with a party which was being marched
to Thaumacus for the purpose of protecting their foragers; all of
whom, an irregular and unarmed multitude, incapable of any resistance,
were put to the sword by the troops. The deserted town of Xyniae
was plundered. The Aetolians then took Cyphara, a fort conveniently
situated on the confines of Dolopia. All this the Aetolians performed
within the space of a few days.
14. Nor did Amynander and the Athamanians, when they heard of the victory
obtained by the Romans, continue inactive. Amynander, having little confidence
in his own troops, requested a slight auxiliary force from the consul;
and then advancing towards Gomphi, he stormed on his march a place called
Pheca, situate between that town and the narrow pass which separates Thessaly
from Athamania. He then attacked Gomphi, and though the inhabitants defended
it for several days with the utmost vigor, yet, as soon as he had raised
the scaling ladders to the walls, the same apprehension (which had operated
on others) at length compelled them to surrender. This capture of Gomphi
spread the greatest consternation among the Thessalians: their fortresses
of Argenta, Pherinus, Thimarus, Lisinae, Stimon, and Lampsus surrendered,
one after another, with several other garrisons equally inconsiderable.
While the Athamanians and Aetolians, delivered from fear of the Macedonians,
converted to their own profit the fruits of another's victory; and Thessaly,
ravaged by three armies at once, knew not which to believe its foe or its
friend; the consul marched on, through the pass which the enemy's flight
had left open, into the country of Epirus. Though he well knew which party
the Epirots, excepting their prince Charopus, were disposed to favor, yet
as he saw that, even from the motive of atoning for past behavior, they
obeyed his orders with diligence, he regulated his treatment of them by
the standard of their present rather than of their former temper, and by
this readiness to pardon conciliated their affection for the future. Then,
sending orders to Corcyra for the transport ships to come into the Ambrician
bay, he advanced by moderate marches, and on the fourth day pitched his
camp on Mount Cercetius. Hither he ordered Amynander to come with his auxiliary
troops; not so much as being in want of his forces, as that he might avail
himself of them as his guides into Thessaly. With the same purpose, many
volunteers of the Epirots also were admitted into the corps of auxiliaries.
15. Of the cities of Thessaly, the first which he attacked was Phaloria.
The garrison here consisted of two thousand Macedonians, who at first resisted
with the utmost vigor so far as their arms and fortifications could protect
them. The assault was carried on without intermission or relaxation either
by day or by night, because the consul thought that it would have a powerful
effect on the spirits of the rest of the Thessalians, if the first who
made trial of the Roman strength were unable to withstand it; and this
at the same time subdued the obstinacy of the Macedonians. On the reduction
of Phaloria, deputies came from Metropolis and Piera, surrendering those
cities. To them, on their petition, pardon was granted: Phaloria was sacked,
and burned. He then proceeded to Aeginium; but finding this place so circumstanced,
that, even with a moderate garrison, it was safe, after discharging a few
weapons against the nearest advanced guard he directed his march towards
the territory of Gomphi; and thence descended into the plains of Thessaly.
His army was now in want of every thing, because he had spared the lands
of the Epirots; he therefore despatched messengers to learn whether the
transports had reached Leucas and the Ambracian bay; sending the cohorts,
in turn, to Ambracia for corn. Now, the road from Gomphi to Ambracia, although
difficult and embarrassed, is very short; so that in a few days, provisions
having been conveyed from the sea, his camp was filled with an abundant
supply of all necessaries. He then marched to Atrax, which is about ten
miles from Larissa, on the river Peneus. The inhabitants came originally
from Perrhaebia. The Thessalians, here, were not in the least alarmed at
the first coming of the Romans; and Philip, although he durst not himself
advance into Thessaly, yet, keeping his stationary camp in the vale of
Tempe, whenever any place was attempted by the enemy, he sent up reinforcements
as occasion required.
16. About the time that Quinctius first pitched his camp opposite to Philip's,
at the entrance of Epirus, Lucius, the consul's brother, whom the senate
had commissioned both to the naval command and to the government of the
coast, sailed over with two quinqueremes to Corcyra; and when he learned
that the fleet had departed thence, thinking that no delay ought to be
incurred, he followed, and overtook it at the island of Zama. Here he dismissed
Lucius Apustius, in whose room he had been appointed, and then proceeded
to Malea, but at a slow rate, being obliged, for the most part, to tow
the vessels which accompanied him with provisions. From Malea, after ordering
the rest to follow with all possible expedition, himself, with three light
quinqueremes, hastened forward to the Piraeus, and took under his command
the ships left there by Lucius Apustius, lieutenant-general, for the protection
of Athens. At the same time, two fleets set sail from Asia; one of twenty-four
quinqueremes, under king Attalus; the other belonging to the Rhodians,
consisting of twenty decked ships, and commanded by Agesimbrotus. These
fleets, joining near the island of Andros, sailed for Euboea, which was
separated from them only by a narrow strait. They first ravaged the lands
belonging to Carystus; but, judging that city too strong, in consequence
of a reinforcement hastily sent from Chalcis, they bent their course to
Eretria. Lucius Quinctius also, on hearing of the arrival of king Attalus,
came thither with the ships which had lain at the Piraeus; having left
orders, that his own ships should, as they arrived, follow him to Euboea.
The siege of Eretria was now pushed forward with the utmost vigor; for
the three combined fleets carried machines and engines, of all sorts, for
the demolition of towns, and the adjacent country offered abundance of
timber for the construction of new works. At the beginning the townsmen
defended their walls with a good degree of spirit; afterwards, when they
felt the effects of fatigue, a great many being likewise wounded, and a
part of the wall demolished by the enemy's works, they became disposed
to capitulate. But they had a garrison of Macedonians, of whom they stood
in no less dread than of the Romans; and Philocles, the king's general,
sent frequent messages from Chalcis, that he would bring them succor in
due time, if they could hold out the siege. The hope of this, in conjunction
with their fears, obliged them to protract the time longer than was consistent
either with their wishes or their strength. However, having learned soon
after that Philocles had been repulsed in the attempt, and forced to fly
back, in disorder, to Chalcis, they instantly sent deputies to Attalus,
to beg pardon and protection. While intent on the prospect of peace, they
executed with less energy the duties of war, and kept armed guards in that
quarter only where the breach had been made in the wall, neglecting all
the rest; Quinctius made an assault by night on the side where it was least
apprehended, and carried the town by scalade. The whole multitude of the
townsmen, with their wives and children, fled into the citadel, but soon
after surrendered themselves prisoners. The quantity of money, of gold
and silver, taken was not great. Of statues and pictures, the works of
ancient artists, and other ornaments of that kind, a greater number was
found than was proportionate either to the size of the city, or its opulence
in other particulars.
17. The design on Carystus was then resumed, and the fleets sailed thither;
on which the whole body of the inhabitants, before the troops were disembarked,
deserted the city and fled into the citadel, whence they sent deputies
to beg protection from the Roman general. To the townspeople life and liberty
were immediately granted; and it was ordered, that the Macedonians should
pay a ransom of three hundred drachmas a head, deliver up their arms, and
quit the country. After being ransomed for the said amount, they were transported,
unarmed, to Boeotia. The combined fleets having, in the space of a few
days, taken these two important cities of Euboea, sailed round Sunium,
a promontory of Attica, and steered their course to Cenchreae, the grand
mart of the Corinthians. In the mean time, the consul found the siege of
Atrax more tedious and severe than had been universally expected, and the
enemy resisted in the way which they had least anticipated. He had supposed
that the whole of the trouble would be in demolishing the wall, and that
if he could once open a passage for his soldiers into the city, the consequence
would then be, the flight and slaughter of the enemy, as usually happens
on the capture of towns. But when, on a breach being made in the wall by
the rams, and when the soldiers, by mounting over the ruins, had entered
the place, this proved only the beginning, as it were, of an unusual and
fresh labor. For the Macedonians in garrison, who were both chosen men
and many in number, supposing that they would be entitled to extraordinary
honor if they should maintain the defense of the city by means of arms
and courage, rather than by the help of walls, formed themselves in a compact
body, strengthening their line by an uncommon number of files in depth.
These, when they saw the Romans entering by the breaches, drove them back,
so that they were entangled among the rubbish, and with difficulty could
effect a retreat. This gave the consul great uneasiness; for he considered
such a disgrace, not merely as it retarded the reduction of a single city,
but as likely to affect materially the whole process of the war, which
in general depends much on the influence of events in themselves unimportant.
Having therefore cleared the ground, which was heaped up with the rubbish
of the half-ruined wall, he brought up a tower of extraordinary height,
consisting of many stories, and which carried a great number of soldiers.
He likewise sent up the cohorts in strong bodies one after another, to
force their way, if possible, through the wedge of the Macedonians, which
is called a phalanx. But in such a confined space, (for the wall was thrown
down to no great extent,) the enemy had the advantage, both in the kind
of weapons which they used, and in the manner of fighting. When the Macedonians,
in close array, stretched out before them their long spears against the
target fence which was formed by the close position of their antagonists'
shields, and when the Romans, after discharging their javelins without
effect, drew their swords, these could neither press on to a closer combat,
nor cut off the heads of the spears; and if they did cut or break off any,
the shaft, being sharp at the part where it was broken, filled up its place
among the points of those which were unbroken, in a kind of palisade. Besides
this, the parts of the wall still standing rendered both the flanks of
the Macedonians secure, who were not obliged, either in retreating or in
advancing to an attack, to pass through a long space, which generally occasions
disorder in the ranks. An accidental circumstance also helped to confirm
their courage: for as the tower was moved along a bank of not sufficiently
solid soil, one of the wheels sinking into a rut, made the tower lean in
such a manner that it appeared to the enemy as if falling, and threw the
soldiers posted on it into consternation and affright.
18. As none of his attempts met any success, the consul was very
unwilling to allow such a comparison to be exhibited between the two
classes of soldiery and their respective weapons; at the same time, he
could neither see any prospect of reducing the place speedily, nor any
means of subsisting in winter, at such a distance from the sea, and
in regions desolated by the calamities of war. He therefore raised the
siege; and as, along the whole coast of Acarnania and Aetolia, there
was no port capable of containing all the transports that brought
supplies to the army, nor any place which afforded lodgings to the
legions, he pitched on Anticyra, in Phocis on the Corinthian gulf, as
most commodiously situated for his purpose. There the legions would
be at no great distance from Thessaly, and the places belonging to
the enemy; while they would have in front Peloponnesus, separated from
them by a narrow sea; on their rear, Aetolia and Acarnania; and on
their sides, Locris and Boeotia. Phanotea in Phocis he took without
resistance at the first assault. The siege of Anticyra gave him not
much delay. Then Ambrysus and Hyampolis were taken. Daulis, being
situated on a lofty eminence, could not be reduced either by scalade
or works: he therefore provoked the garrison, by missile weapons, to
make sallies from out the town. Then by flying at one time, pursuing
at another, and engaging in slight skirmishes, he led them into such a
degree of carelessness, and such a contempt of him, that at length the
Romans, mixing with them as they ran back, entered by the gates,
and stormed the town. Six other fortresses in Phocis, of little
consequence, came into his hands, through fear rather than by force of
arms. Elatia shut its gates, and the inhabitants seemed determined
not to admit within their walls either the army or the general of the
Romans, unless compelled by force.
19. While the consul was employed in the siege of Elatia, a prospect opened to him of effecting a business of much more importance; namely, of drawing away the Achaeans from their alliance with Philip to that of the Romans. Cycliades, the head of the faction that favored the interest of Philip, they had now banished; and Aristaenus, who wished for a union between his countrymen and the Romans, was praetor. The Roman fleet, with Attalus and the Rhodians, lay at Cenchreae, and were preparing to lay siege to Corinth with their whole combined force. The consul therefore judged it prudent, that, before they entered on that affair, ambassadors should be sent to the Achaean state, with assurances, that if they came over from the king to the side of the Romans, the latter would consign Corinth to them, and annex it to the old confederacy of their nation. Accordingly, by the consul's direction, ambassadors were sent to the Achaeans, by his brother Lucius Quinctius, by Attalus, and by the Rhodians and Athenians--a general assembly being summoned to meet at Sicyon to give them audience. Now, the state of feeling of the Achaeans was by no means uniform. Nabis the Lacedaemonian, their constant and inveterate enemy, was the object of their dread; they dreaded the arms of the Romans; they were under obligations to the Macedonians, for services both of ancient and recent date; but the king himself, on account of his perfidy and cruelty, they looked upon with jealous fear, and not judging from the behavior which he then assumed for the time, they knew that, on the conclusion of the war, they should find him a more tyrannical master. So that every one of them was not only at a loss what opinion he should support in the senate of his own particular state, or in the general diets of the nation; but, even when they deliberated within themselves, they could not, with any certainty, determine what they ought to wish, or what to prefer. Such was the unsettled state of mind of the members of the assembly, when the ambassadors were introduced and liberty of speaking afforded them. The Roman ambassador, Lucius Calpurnius, spoke first; next the ambassadors of king Attalus; after them those of the Rhodians; and then Philip's. The Athenians were heard the last, that they might refute the discourses of the Macedonians. These inveighed against the king with the greatest acrimony of any, for no others had suffered from him so many and so severe hardships. So great a number of speeches of the ambassadors succeeding each other took up the whole of the day; and about sun-set the council was adjourned.
20. Next day the council was convened again; and when the magistrates,
according to the custom of the Greeks, gave leave, by their herald,
to any person who chose to offer advice, not one stood forth; but they
sat a long time, looking on each other in silence. It was no wonder
that men, revolving in their minds matters of such contradictory
natures, and who found themselves puzzled and confounded, should be
involved in additional perplexity by the speeches continued through
the whole preceding day; in which the difficulties, on all sides,
were brought into view, and stated in their full force. At length
Aristaenus, the praetor of the Achaeans, not to dismiss the council
without any business being introduced, said:--"Achaeans, where are
now those violent disputes, in which, at your feasts and meetings,
whenever mention was made of Philip and the Romans, you scarcely
refrained from blows? Now, in a general assembly, summoned on that
single business, when you have heard the arguments of the ambassadors
on both sides, when the magistrates demand your opinions, when the
herald calls you to declare your sentiments, you are struck dumb.
Although your concern for the common safety be insufficient for
determining the matter, cannot the party zeal which has attached you
to one side or the other extort a word from any one of you? especially
when none is so obtuse as not to perceive, that the time for declaring
and recommending what each either wishes or thinks most advisable,
must be at the present moment; that is, before we make any decree.
When a decree shall have been once passed, every man even such as
previously may have disapproved the measure, must then support it
as good and salutary." These persuasions of the praetor, so far from
prevailing on any one person to declare his opinion, did not excite,
in all that numerous assembly, collected out of so many states, so
much as a murmur or a whisper.
21. Then the praetor, Aristaenus, again spoke as follows:-- "Chiefs
of Achaea, you are not more at a loss for advice, than you are for words;
but every one is unwilling to promote the interest of the public at a risk
of danger to himself. Were I in a private character, perhaps I too should
be silent; but, as praetor, it is my duty to declare, that I see evidently,
either that an audience of the council ought not to have been accorded
to the ambassadors, or that they ought not to be dismissed from it without
an answer. Yet how can I give them an answer, unless by a decree of yours?
And, since not one of you who have been called to this assembly either
chooses or dares to make known his sentiments, let us examine (as if they
were opinions proposed to our consideration) the speeches of the ambassadors
delivered yesterday; supposing the speakers not to have required what was
useful to themselves, but to have recommended what they thought most conducive
to our advantage. The Romans, the Rhodians and Attalus, request an alliance
and friendship with us; and they demand to be assisted by us in the war
in which they are now engaged against Philip. Philip reminds us of our
league with him, and of the obligation of our oath; he requires only, that
we declare ourselves on his side; and says, he will be satisfied if we
do not intermeddle in the operations of the war. Does not the reason occur
to the mind of any one of you why those, who are not yet our allies, require
more than he who is? This arises not from modesty in Philip, nor from the
want of it in the Romans. It is fortune, which, while it bestows confidence
to requisitions on one side, precludes it on the other. We see nothing
belonging to Philip but his ambassador: the Roman fleet lies at Cenchreae,
exhibiting to our view the spoils of the cities of Euboea. We behold the
consul and his legions, at the distance of a small tract of sea, overrunning
Phocis and Locris. You were surprised at Philip's ambassador, Cleomedon,
showing such diffidence yesterday in his application to us to take arms
on the side of the king against the Romans. But if we, in pursuance of
the same treaty and oath, the sacredness of which he inculcated on us,
were to ask of him, that Philip should protect us, both from Nabis and
his Lacedaemonians, and also from the Romans, he would be utterly unable
to find, not only a force with which to protect us, but even an answer
to return. As much so in truth as was Philip himself, who endeavored, by
promises of waging war against Nabis, to draw away our youth into Euboea;
but finding that we would neither decree such assistance to him, nor choose
to be embroiled in a war with Rome, forgot that alliance on which he now
lays such stress, and left us to Nabis and the Lacedaemonians to be spoiled
and plundered. Besides, to me the arguments of Cleomedon appeared utterly
inconsistent. He made light of the war with the Romans; and asserted, that
the issue of it would be similar to that of the former, which they waged
against Philip. If such the case, why does he, at a distance, solicit our
assistance; rather than come hither in person, and defend us, his old allies,
both from Nabis and from the Romans? Us, do I say? Why, on this showing,
has he suffered Eretria and Carystus to be taken? Why so many cities of
Thessaly? Why Locris and Phocis? Why does he at present suffer Elatia to
be besieged? Did he, either through compulsion, or fear, or choice, quit
the straits of Epirus, and those impregnable fastnesses on the river Aous;
and why, abandoning the pass which he was occupying, did he retire altogether
into his own kingdom? If of his own will he gave up so many allies to the
ravages of the enemy, what objection can he make to these allies consulting
for their own safety? If through fear, he ought to pardon the like fear
in us. If he retired defeated by force of arms, let me ask you, Cleomedon,
shall we, Achaeans, be able to withstand the Roman arms, which you, Macedonians,
have not withstood? Are we to give credit to your assertion, that the Romans
do not employ, in the present war, greater forces or greater strength than
they did in the former, rather than regard the facts themselves? In the
first instance, they aided the Aetolians with a fleet; they sent not to
the war either a consul as commander, or a consular army. The maritime
cities of Philip's allies were in terror and confusion; but the inland
places were so secure against the Roman arms, that Philip ravaged the country
of the Aetolians, while they in vain implored succor from those arms. Whereas,
in the present case, the Romans, after bringing to a final conclusion the
Punic war, which they had supported for sixteen years in the bowels, as
it were, of Italy, sent not auxiliaries to the Aetolians in their quarrels,
but, being themselves principals, made a hostile invasion on Macedonia
with land and sea forces at once. Their third consul is now pushing forward
the war with the utmost vigor. Sulpicius, engaging the king within the
territory of Macedonia itself, has overthrown and put him to flight; and
afterwards despoiled the most opulent part of his kingdom. Then, again,
when he was in possession of the strait of Epirus, where, from the nature
of the ground, his fortifications, and the strength of his army, he thought
himself secure, Quinctius drove him out of his camp; pursued him, as he
fled into Thessaly; and, almost in the view of Philip himself, stormed
the royal garrisons and the cities of his allies. Supposing that there
were no truth in what the Athenian ambassadors mentioned yesterday, respecting
the cruelty, avarice, and lust of the king; supposing the crimes committed,
in the country of Attica, against the gods, celestial and infernal, concerned
us not all; that we had less to complain of than what the people of Cius
and Abydos, who are far distant from us, have endured: let us then, if
you please, forget even our own wounds; let the murders and ravages committed
at Messana, and in the heart of Peloponnesus, the killing of his host Garitenes
at Cyparissia, almost in the very midst of a feast, in contempt of laws
divine and human; the murder of the two Aratuses of Sicyon, father and
son, though he was wont to call the unfortunate old man his parent; his
carrying away the son's wife into Macedonia for the gratification of his
vicious appetites, and all his violations of virgins and matrons;--let
all these, I say, be consigned to oblivion. Let us suppose our business
were not with Philip, through dread of whose cruelty you are all thus struck
dumb; for what other cause could keep you silent, when you have been summoned
to a council? Let us imagine that we are treating with Antigonus, a prince
of the greatest mildness and equity, to whose kindness we have all been
highly indebted; would he require us to perform what at the time was impossible?
Peloponnesus is a peninsula, united to the continent by the narrow passage
of an isthmus particularly exposed and open to the attacks of naval armaments.
Now, if a hundred decked ships, and fifty lighter open ones, and thirty
Issean barks, shall begin to lay waste our coasts, and attack the cities
which stand exposed, almost on the very shore, shall we then retreat into
the inland towns, as if we were not afflicted with an intestine war, though
in truth it is rankling in our very bowels? When Nabis and the Lacedaemonians
by land, and the Roman fleet by sea, shall press us, whence must I implore
the support due from the king's alliance, whence the succors of the Macedonians?
Shall we ourselves, with our own arms, defend, against the Roman forces,
the cities that will be attacked? Truly, in the former war, we defended
Dymae excellently well! The calamities of others afford us abundant examples;
let us not seek how we may render ourselves an example to others. Do not,
because the Romans voluntarily desire your friendship, contemn that which
you ought to have prayed for, nay, labored with all your might to obtain.
But, it is insinuated, that they are impelled by fear, in a country to
which they are strangers; and that, wishing to shelter themselves under
your assistance, they have recourse to your alliance in the hope of being
admitted into your harbors, and of there finding supplies of provisions.
Now, at sea they are absolute masters; and instantly reduce to subjection
every place at which they land. What they request, they have power to enforce.
Because they wish to treat you with tenderness they do not allow you to
take steps that must lead you to ruin. Cleomedon lately pointed out, as
the middle and safest way, to remain inactive, and abstain from taking
up arms But that is not a middle way; it is no way at all. For, besides
the necessity of either embracing or rejecting the Roman alliance, what
other consequence can ensue from such conduct, than that, while we show
no steady attachment to either side, as if we waited the event with design
to adapt our counsels to fortune, we shall become the prey of the conqueror?
Contemn not then, when it is spontaneously offered to your acceptance,
what you ought to have solicited with your warmest prayers. The free option
between the two, which you have this day, you will not always have. The
same opportunity will not last long, nor will it frequently recur. You
have long wished to deliver yourselves out of the hands of Philip, although
you have not dared to make the attempt. Those have now crossed the sea,
with large fleets and armies, who are able to rescue you to a state of
freedom, without any trouble or danger to yourselves. If you reject such
persons as allies, you can scarcely be of sane mind; but you must unavoidably
have to deal with them, either as allies or as enemies."
22. This speech of the praetor was followed by a general murmur; some
declaring their approbation, and others vehemently rebuking those who
did so. And now, not only individuals, but whole states were engaged
in altercation among themselves; and at length among the magistrates,
called Demiurgi, who are ten in number, the dispute was taken up with
as much warmth as among the multitude. Five of them declared, that
they would propose the question concerning an alliance with Rome,
and would take the votes on it; while five insisted, that it had been
provided by law that neither the magistrates should have power to
propose nor the council to pass any decree injurious to the alliance
with Philip. This day, also, was spent in contention, and there
remained now but one day more of the regular time of sitting; for,
according to the rule, the decree must be passed on the third day: and
as that approached, the zeal of the parties was kindled into such a
flame, that scarcely did parents refrain from offering violence to
their own sons. There was present a man of Pallene, named Rhisiasus,
whose son, Memnon, was a demiurgus, and was of that party which
opposed the reading of the decree and taking the votes. This man, for
a long time, entreated his son to allow the Achaeans to take proper
measures for their common safety, and not, by his obstinacy, to bring
ruin on the whole nation; but, finding that his entreaties had no
effect, he swore that he would treat him, not as a son, but as an
enemy, and would put him to death with his own hand. By these threats
he forced him, next day, to join the party that voted for the question
being proposed. These, having now become the majority, proposed the
question accordingly, while almost every one of the states, openly
approving the measure, showed plainly on which side they would vote.
Whereupon the Dymaeans, Megalopolitans, with several of the Argives,
rose up, and withdrew from the council; which step excited neither
wonder nor disapprobation. For when, in the memory of their
grandfathers, the Megalopolitans had been expelled their country by
the Lacedaemonians, Antigonus had reinstated them in their native
residence; and, at a later period, when Dymae was taken and sacked by
the Roman troops, Philip ordered that the inhabitants, wherever they
were in servitude, should be ransomed, and not only restored them to
their liberty, but their country. As to the Argives, besides believing
that the royal family of Macedonia derived its origin from them, the
greater part were attached to Philip by personal acts of kindness
and familiar friendship. For these reasons, when the council appeared
disposed to order an alliance to be concluded with Rome, they
withdrew; and their secession was readily excused, in consideration of
the many and recent obligations by which they were bound to the king
of Macedon.
23. The rest of the Achaean states, on their opinions being demanded, ratified,
by an immediate decree, the alliance with Attalus and the Rhodians. That
with the Romans, as it could not be perfected without an order from the
people, they deferred until such time as ambassadors could be sent to Rome.
For the present, it was resolved, that three ambassadors should be sent
to Lucius Quinctius; and that the whole force of the Achaeans should be
brought up to Corinth, which city Quinctius, after taking Cenchreae, was
then besieging. The Achaeans accordingly pitched their camp opposite to
the gate that leads to Sicyon. The Romans made their approaches on the
side of the city which faces Cenchreae; Attalus having drawn his army across
the isthmus, towards Lechaeum, the port on the opposite sea. At first,
they did not push forward their operations with any great degree of vigor,
because they had hopes of a dissension breaking out between the townsmen
and the king's troops. But afterwards, learning that they all were of one
mind; that the Macedonians exerted themselves as if in defense of their
common country; and that the Corinthians submitted to the orders of Androsthenes,
commander of the garrison, as if he were their countryman, and elected
by their own suffrages; the assailants had no other hopes but in force,
arms, and their works. They therefore brought up their mounds to the walls,
though by very difficult approaches. On that side where the Romans attacked,
their ram had demolished a considerable part of the wall; and the Macedonians
having run together to defend the place thus stripped of its works, a furious
conflict ensued between themselves and the Romans. At first, by reason
of the enemy's superiority in number, the Romans were quickly repulsed;
but being joined by the auxiliary troops of Attalus and the Achaeans, they
restored the fight to an equality; so that there was no doubt that they
would easily drive the Macedonians and Greeks from their ground. But there
were in the town a great multitude of Italian deserters; some of whom,
having been in Hannibal's army, had, through fear of being punished by
the Romans, followed Philip; others, having been sailors, had lately quitted
the fleets, and gone over, in hopes of more honorable employment: despair
of safety, therefore, in case of the Romans getting the better, inflamed
these to a degree which might rather be called madness than courage. Opposite
to Sicyon is the promontory of Juno Acraea, as she is called, stretching
out into the main, the passage to Corinth being about seven miles. To this
place Philocles, one of the king's generals, led, through Boeotia, fifteen
hundred soldiers; and there were barks from Corinth ready to take these
troops on board, and carry them over to Lechaeum. Attalus, on this, advised
to burn the works, and raise the siege immediately; Quinctius was for persisting
more obstinately in the attempt. However, when he saw the king's troops
posted at the gates, and that the sallies of the besieged could not easily
be withstood, he came over to the opinion of Attalus. Thus, their design
proving fruitless, they dismissed the Achaeans, and returned to their ships.
Attalus steered to Piraeus, the Romans to Corcyra.
24. While the naval forces were thus employed, the consul, having encamped
before Elatia, in Phocis, first endeavored, by conferring with the principal
inhabitants, to bring them over, and by their means to effect his purpose;
but on their answering that they had nothing in their power, because the
king's troops were more numerous and stronger than the townsmen, he assaulted
the city on all sides at once with arms and engines. A battering-ram having
been brought up, shattered a part of the wall that reached from one tower
to another, and this falling with a prodigious noise and crash, left much
of the town exposed. On this a Roman cohort made an assault through the
breach, while at the same time the townsmen, quitting their several posts,
ran together from all parts to the place, which was endangered by the attack
of the enemy. At the same time others of the Romans climbed over the ruins
of the wall, and brought up scaling-ladders to the parts that were standing.
As the conflict attracted the eyes and attention of the enemy to one particular
spot, the walls were scaled in several places, by which means the soldiers
easily entered the town. The noise and tumult which ensued so terrified
the enemy, that quitting the place, which they had crowded together to
defend, they all fled in panic to the citadel, accompanied by the unarmed
multitude. The consul having thus become master of the town, gave it up
to be plundered, and then sent messengers into the citadel, offering the
king's troops their lives, on condition of their laying down their arms,
and departing. To the Elatians he offered their liberty; which terms being
agreed to, in a few days after he got possession of the citadel.
25. In consequence of Philocles, the king's general, coming into Achaia,
not only Corinth was delivered from the siege, but the city of Argos was
betrayed into his hands by some of the principal inhabitants, after they
had first sounded the minds of the populace. They had a custom, that, on
the first day of assembly, their praetors, for the omen's sake, should
pronounce the names, Jupiter, Apollo, and Hercules; in addition to which,
a rule had been made, that, along with these they should join the name
of king Philip. After the conclusion of the alliance with the Romans, the
herald did not make that addition; on which a murmur spread through the
multitude, who would add the name of Philip, and insisting that the respect,
due by law, should be paid as before; until at length the name was given
out amidst universal approbation. On the encouragement afforded by this
favorable disposition, Philocles was invited, who seized in the night a
strong post called Larissa, seated on a hill which overhangs the city,
and in which he placed a garrison. At the dawn of day, however, and as
he was proceeding in order of battle to the forum, at the foot of the hill
he was met by a line of troops, drawn up to oppose him. This was a body
of Achaeans, lately posted there, consisting of about five hundred young
men, selected out of all the states. Their commander was Aenesidemus, of
Dymae. The king's general sent a person to recommend to them to evacuate
the city, because they were not a match for the townsmen alone, who held
the same sentiments as the Macedonians; much less when these were joined
by the Macedonians, whom even the Romans had not withstood at Corinth.
This at first had no effect, either on the commander, or his men: and when
they, soon after, perceived the Argives also in arms, coming, in a great
body, from the opposite side, perceiving that their destruction was inevitable,
they yet seemed determined to run every hazard, if their leader would persevere.
But Aenesidemus, unwilling that the flower of the Achaean youth should
be lost, together with the city, made terms with Philocles, that they should
have liberty to retire, while himself remained armed with a few of his
dependents, in the position which he had occupied. To a person sent by
Philocles to inquire what he meant, he only answered, standing with his
shield held out before him, that he meant to die in arms in defense of
the city entrusted to his charge. Philocles then ordered some Thracians
to throw their javelins at him and his attendants; and they were all put
to death. Thus, notwithstanding the alliance concluded by the Achaeans
with the Romans, two of their cities, and those of the greatest consequence,
Argos and Corinth, were still in the hands of Philip. Such were the services
performed during that summer by the land and sea forces of Rome employed
in Greece.
26. In Gaul, the consul Sextus Aelius did nothing worth mention, though he had two armies in the province: one, which he had retained under their standards, although it ought to have been disbanded; and of this, which had served under Lucius Cornelius, proconsul, he had given the command to Caius Helvius, the praetor: the other he had brought with him into the province. He spent nearly the whole summer in compelling the people of Cremona and Placentia to return to their colonies, from whence they had been driven to various places by the calamities of war. While Gaul, beyond expectation, remained quiet through the whole year, an insurrection of the slaves was very near taking place in the neighborhood of the city. The hostages, given by the Carthaginians, were kept in custody at Setia: as they were the children of the principal families, they were attended by a great multitude of slaves; to this number many were added, in consequence of the late African war, and by the Setians themselves having bought, from among the spoil, several of those which had been captured. Having conspired together, they sent some of their number to engage in the cause the slaves of the country round Setia, and then those at Norba and Circeii. When every thing was fully prepared, they determined, during the games which were soon to be solemnized at the first-mentioned place, to attack the people while intent on the show, and when Setia had been taken in the midst of the slaughter and unexpected turmoil, then to seize on Norba and Circeii. Information of this atrocious plot was brought to Rome, to Lucius Cornelius Merula, the city praetor. Two slaves came to him before daylight, and disclosed to him in order the whole proceedings and intentions of the conspirators. The praetor, ordering them to be guarded in his own house, summoned a meeting of the senate; and having laid before them the information of the discoverers, he was ordered to go himself to the spot, and examine into and crush the conspiracy. Setting out, accordingly, with five lieutenant-generals, he compelled such as he found in the country to take the military oath, to arm, and follow him. Having by this tumultuary kind of levy armed about two thousand men, while all were ignorant of his destination, he came to Setia. There the leaders of the conspiracy were instantly apprehended; on which, the remainder fled from the city; but parties were sent through the country to search them out. The services of the two who made the discovery, and of one free person employed, were highly meritorious. The senate ordered a present to the latter of a hundred thousand asses; to the slaves, twenty-five thousand asses each, and
their freedom. The price was paid to their owners out of the treasury.
Not long after, intelligence was received, that other slaves,
belonging to the remains of the conspiracy, had formed a design of
seizing Praeneste. The praetor, Lucius Cornelius, went thither, and
inflicted punishment on near five hundred persons concerned in
that wicked scheme. The public were under apprehensions that the
Carthaginian hostages and prisoners fomented these plots: watches
were, therefore, kept at Rome in all the streets, which the inferior
magistrates were ordered to go round and inspect; while the triumvirs
of the prison, called the Quarry, were to keep a stricter guard than
usual. Circular letters were also sent by the praetor to all the Latin
states, directing that the hostages should be confined within doors,
and not at any time allowed the liberty of going into public; and that
the prisoners should be kept bound with fetters, of not less than
ten pounds weight, and confined in no other place of custody than the
common jail.
27. In this year, ambassadors from king Attalus made an offering, in
the Capitol, of a golden crown of two hundred and fifty-six pounds'
weight, and returned thanks to the senate, because Antiochus,
influenced by the authority of the Romans, had withdrawn his troops
out of the territories of Attalus. During the same summer, two hundred
horsemen, ten elephants, and two hundred thousand pecks of wheat,
arrived from king Masinissa for the army in Greece. From Sicily also,
and Sardinia, large supplies of provisions were sent, with clothing
for the troops. Sicily was then governed by Marcus Marcellus, Sardinia
by Marcus Porcius Cato, a man of acknowledged integrity and purity
of conduct, but deemed too severe in punishing usury. He drove the
usurers entirely out of the island; and restricted or abolished the
contributions, usually paid by the allies, for maintaining the dignity
of the praetors. The consul, Sextus Aelius, coming home from Gaul to
Rome to hold the elections, elected consuls, Caius Cornelius Cethegus
and Quintus Minucius Rufus. Two days after was held the election
of praetors; and this year, for the first time, six praetors were
appointed, in consequence of the increase of the provinces, and the
extension of the bounds of the empire. The persons elected were,
Lucius Manlius Vulso, Caius Sempronius Tuditanus, Marcus Sergius
Silus, Marcus Helvius, Marcus Minucius Rufus, and Lucius Atilius. Of
these Sempronius and Helvius were, at the time, plebeian aediles. The
curule aediles were Quintus Minucius Thermus and Tiberius Sempronius
Longus. The Roman games were four times repeated during this year.
28. On Caius Cornelius and Quintus Minucius becoming consuls, the
first business of all was the arrangement of the provinces of the
consuls and praetors. Those of the praetors were the first settled,
because that could be transacted by the lots. The city jurisdiction
fell to Sergius; the foreign to Minucius; Atilius obtained Sardinia;
Manlius, Sicily; Sempronius, the Hither Spain; and Helvius, the
Farther. When the consuls were preparing to cast lots for Italy and
Macedonia, Lucius Oppius and Quintus Fulvius, plebeian tribunes, stood
in their way, alleging, that "Macedonia was a very distant province,
and that the principal cause which had hitherto retarded the progress
of the war, was, that when it was scarcely entered upon, and just at
the commencement of operations, the former consul was always recalled.
This was the fourth year since the declaration of war against
Macedonia. The greater part of one year Sulpicius spent in seeking the
king and his army; Villius, on the point of engaging the enemy, was
recalled without any thing having been done. Quinctius was detained
at Rome, for the greater part of his year, by business respecting
religion; nevertheless, he had so conducted affairs, that had he come
earlier into the province, or had the cold season been at a greater
distance, he might have put an end to hostilities. He was then just
going into winter quarters; but, it was stated that he had brought the
war into such a state, that if he were not prevented by a intercessor,
he seemed likely to complete it in the course of the ensuing summer."
By such arguments the tribunes so far prevailed, that the consuls
declared that they would abide by the directions of the senate, if the
tribunes would agree to do the same. Both parties having, accordingly,
left the consultation perfectly free, a decree was passed, appointing
the two consuls to the government of the province of Italy. Titus
Quinctius was continued in command, until a successor should accede
by a decree of the senate. To each, two legions were decreed; and
they were ordered, with these, to carry on the war with the Cisalpine
Gauls, who had revolted from the Romans. A reinforcement of five
thousand foot and three hundred horse was ordered to be sent into
Macedonia to Quinctius, together with three thousand seamen. Lucius
Quinctius Flamininus was continued in the command of the fleet. To
each of the praetors for the two Spains were granted eight thousand
foot, of the allies and Latins, and four hundred horse; so that they
might discharge the veteran troops in their provinces. They were
further directed to fix the bounds which should divide the hither from
the farther province. Two additional lieutenant-generals were sent to
the army in Macedonia, Publius Sulpicius and Publius Villius, who had
been consuls in that province.
29. It was thought necessary, that before the consuls and praetors went abroad, some prodigies should be expiated. For the temples of Vulcan and Summanus [Pluto], at Rome, and a wall and a gate at Fregellae, had been struck by lightning. At Frusino, light had shone forth during the night. At Asculum, a lamb had been born with two heads and five feet. At Formiae, two wolves entering the town had torn several persons who fell in their way; and, at Rome, a wolf had made its way, not only into the city, but into the Capitol. Caius Acilius, plebeian tribune, caused an order to be passed, that five colonies should be led out to the sea-coast; two to the mouths of the rivers Vulturnus and Liternus; one to Puteoli and one to the fort of Salernum. To these was added Buxentum. To each colony three hundred families were ordered to be sent. The commissioners appointed to conduct them thither, and who were to hold the office for three years, were Marcus Servilius Geminus, Quintus Minucius Thermus, and Tiberius Sempronius Longus. As soon as the levies, and such other business, religious and civil, as required their personal attendance, was finished, both the consuls set out for Gaul. Cornelius took the direct road towards the Insubrians, who were then in arms, and had been joined by the Caenomanians. Quintus Minucius turned his route to the left side of Italy, and leading away his army to the lower sea, to Genoa, opened the campaign with an invasion of Liguria. Two towns, Clastidium and Litubium, both belonging to the Ligurians, and two states of the same nation, Celela and Cerdicium, surrendered to him. And now, all the states on this side of the Po, except the Boians among the Gauls and the Ilvatians among the Ligurians, were reduced to submission: no less, it is said, than fifteen towns and twenty thousand men surrendered themselves. He then led his legions into the territory of the Boians.
30. The Boian army had, not very long before, crossed the Po and joined the Insubrians and Caenomanians; for, having heard that the consuls intended to act with their forces united, they wished to increase their own strength by this junction. But when information reached them that one of the consuls was ravaging the country of the Boians, a dispute instantly arose. The Boians demanded, that all, in conjunction, should carry succor to those who were attacked; while the Insubrians positively refused to leave their country defenseless. In consequence of this dissension, the armies separated; the Boians went to defend their own territory, and the Insubrians, with the Caenomanians, encamped on the banks of the river Mincius. About five miles below this spot, the consul Cornelius pitched his camp close to the same river. Sending emissaries hence into the villages of the Caenomanians, and to Brixia, the capital of their tribe, he learned with certainty that their young men had taken arms without the approbation of the elders; and that the Caenomanians had not joined in the revolt of the Insubrians by any public authority. On which he invited to him the principal of the natives, and endeavored to contrive and concert with them that the Caenomanians should separate from the Insubrians; and either march away and return home, or come over to the side of the Romans. This he was not able to effect; but so far, he received solemn assurances that, in case of a battle, they would either stand inactive, or, should any occasion offer, would even assist the Romans. The Insubrians knew not that such an agreement had been concluded, but they harbored in their minds some kind of suspicion, that the fidelity of their confederates was wavering. Wherefore, in forming their troops for battle, not daring to entrust either wing to them, lest, if they should treacherously give ground, they might cause a total defeat, they placed them in reserve behind the line. At the beginning of the fight, the consul vowed a temple to Juno Sospita, provided the enemy should, on that day, be routed and driven from the field; on which the soldiers raised a shout, declaring, that they would insure to their commander the completion of his vow, and at the same time an attack was made on the enemy. The Insubrians did not stand even the first onset. Some writers affirm, that the Caenomanians, falling on their rear during the heat of the engagement, caused as much disorder there as prevailed in their front: and that, thus assailed on both sides, thirty-five thousand of them were slain, five thousand seven hundred taken prisoners, among whom was Hamilcar, a Carthaginian general, who had been the cause of the war; and that a hundred and thirty military standards and above two hundred wagons were taken. On this, the towns of the Gauls, which had joined in the revolt of the Insubrians, surrendered to the Romans.
31. The other consul, Minucius, had at first traversed the territories
of the Boians, with wide-spread ravaging parties; but afterwards, when
that people left the Insubrians, and came home to defend their own
property, he kept his men within their camp, expecting to come to a
regular engagement with the enemy. Nor would the Boians have declined
a battle, if their spirits had not been depressed by hearing of the
defeat of the Insubrians. Upon this, deserting their commander and
their camp, they dispersed themselves through the several towns, each
wishing to take care of his own effects. Thus they changed the enemy's
method of carrying on the war: for, no longer hoping to decide the
matter by a single battle, he began again to lay waste the lands,
burn the houses, and storm the villages. At this time, Clastidium
was burned, and the legions were led thence against the Ilvatian
Ligurians, who alone refused to submit. That state, also, on learning
that the Insubrians had been defeated in battle, and the Boians so
terrified that they had not dared to try the fortune of an engagement,
made a submission. Letters from the consuls, containing accounts
of their successes, came from Gaul to Rome at the same time. Marcus
Sergius, city praetor, read them in the senate, and afterwards, by
direction of the fathers, in an assembly of the people; on which a
supplication, of four days' continuance, was decreed.
32. It was by this time winter; and while Titus Quinctius, after the reduction
of Elatia, had his winter quarters distributed in Phocis and Locris, a
violent dissension broke out at Opus. One faction invited to their assistance
the Aetolians who were nearest at hand; the other, the Romans. The Aetolians
arrived first; but the other party, which was the more powerful, refused
them admittance, and, despatching a courier to the Roman general, held
the city until his arrival. The citadel was possessed by a garrison belonging
to the king, and they could not be prevailed on to retire from thence,
either by the threats of the people of Opus, or by the authority of the
Roman consul's commands. What prevented their being immediately attacked
was, the arrival of an envoy from the king, to solicit the appointing of
a time and place for a conference. This was granted to the king with great
reluctance; not that Quinctius did not wish to see war concluded under
his own auspices, partly by arms, and partly by negotiation: for he knew
not, yet, whether one of the new consuls would be sent out as his successor,
or whether he should be continued in the command; a point which he had
charged his friends and relations to labor for with all their might. But
he thought that a conference would answer this purpose; that it would put
it in his power to give matters a turn towards war, in case he remained
in the province, or towards peace, if he were to be removed. They chose
for the meeting a part of the sea-shore, in the Malian gulf, near Nicaea.
Thither Philip came from Demetrias, with five barks and one ship of war:
he was accompanied by some principal Macedonians, and an Achaean exile,
name Cycliades, a man of considerable note. With the Roman general, were
king Amynander, Dionysidorus, ambassador from king Attalus, Agesimbrotus,
commander of the Rhodian fleet, Phaeneas, praetor of the Aetolians, and
two Achaeans, Aristaenus and Xenophon. Attended by these, the Roman general
advanced to the brink of the shore, when the king had come forward to the
prow of his vessel, as it lay at anchor; and said, "If you will come
on the shore, we shall mutually speak and hear with more convenience."
This the king refused; and on Quinctius asking him, "Whom do you fear?"
With the haughty spirit of royalty, he replied, "Fear I have none,
but of the immortal gods; but I have no confidence in the faith of those
whom I see about you, and least of all in the Aetolians." "That
danger," said the Roman, "is equal to all in common who confer
with an enemy, if no confidence subsists." "But, Titus Quinctius,"
replied the king, "if treachery be intended, the prizes of perfidy
are not equal, namely, Philip and Phaeneas. For it will not be so difficult
for the Aetolians to find another praetor, as for the Macedonians to find
another king in my place."--Silence then ensued.
33. The Roman expected that he who solicited the conference should open it; and the king thought that he who was to prescribe, not he who received, terms of peace, ought to begin the conference. At length the Roman said, that "his discourse should be very simple; for he would only mention those articles, without which there could be no conditions of peace. These were, that the king should withdraw his garrisons from all the cities of Greece. That he should deliver up to the allies of the Roman people the prisoners and deserters; should restore to the Romans those places in Illyricum of which he had possessed himself by force, since the peace concluded in Epirus; and to Ptolemy, king of Egypt, the cities which he had seized since the death of Ptolemy Philopater." These were the terms which he required, on behalf of himself and the Roman people: but it was proper that the demands of the allies, also, should be heard. The ambassador of king Attalus demanded "restitution of the ships and prisoners taken in the sea-fight at Cius; and that Nicephorium, and the temple of Venus, which Philip had pillaged and defaced, should be restored as though they had not been injured." The Rhodians laid claim to Peraea, a tract on the continent, lying opposite to their island, which from early times had been under their jurisdiction; and they required that "the garrisons should be withdrawn from Tassus, Bargylii, and Euroma, and from Sestus and Abydos on the Hellespont; that Perinthus should be restored to the Byzantians, in right of their ancient title, and that all the sea-port towns and harbors of Asia should be free." The Achaeans demanded the restoration of Corinth and Argos. Phaeneas nearly repeated the demands made by the Romans, that the troops should withdraw out of Greece, and the Aetolians be put in possession of the cities which had formerly been under their dominion. He was followed by Alexander, a man of eminence among the Aetolians, and, considering his country, not uneloquent. He said, that "he had long kept silence, not because he expected that any business would be effected in that conference, but because he was unwilling to interrupt any of the allies in their discourse." He asserted, that "Philip was neither treating for peace with sincerity; and that he had never waged war with true courage, at any time: that in negotiating, he was insidious and fraudulent; while in war he never fought on equal ground, nor engaged in regular battles; but, skulking about, burned and pillaged towns, and, when worsted, destroyed the prizes of victory. But not in that manner did the ancient kings of Macedon behave; they decided the fate of the war in the field, and spared the towns as far as they were able, in order to possess the more opulent empire. For what sort of conduct was it, to destroy the objects for the possession of which the contest was waged, and thereby leave nothing to himself but fighting? Philip had, in the last year, desolated more cities of his allies in Thessaly, than all the enemies that Thessaly ever had. On the Aetolians themselves he had made greater depredations, when he was in alliance with them, than since he became their enemy. He had seized on Lysimachia, after dislodging the praetor and garrison of the Aetolians. Cius also, a city belonging to their government, he razed from the foundation. With the same injustice he held possession of Thebes in Phthiotis, of Echinus, Larissa, and Pharsalus."
34. Philip, provoked by this discourse of Alexander, pushed his ship nearer
to the land, that he might be the better heard, and began to speak with
much violence, particularly against the Aetolians. But Phaeneas, interrupting
him, said that "the business depended not upon words; he must either
conquer in war, or submit to his superiors." "That, indeed, is
evident," said Philip, "even to the blind," reflecting on
Phaeneas, who had a disorder in his eyes: for he was naturally fonder of
such pleasantries than became a king; and even in the midst of serious
business, did not sufficiently restrain himself from ridicule. He then
began to express great indignation at the "Aetolians assuming as much
importance as the Romans, and insisting on his evacuating Greece; people
who could not even tell what were its boundaries. For, of Aetolia itself,
a large proportion, consisting of the Agraeans, Apodeotians, and Amphilochians,
was no part of Greece. Have they just ground of complaint against me for
not refraining from war with their allies, when themselves, from the earliest
period, follow, as an established rule, the practice of suffering their
young men to carry arms against those allies, withholding only the public
authority of the state; while very frequently contending armies have Aetolian
auxiliaries on both sides? I did not seize on Cius by force, but assisted
my friend and ally, Prusias, who was besieging it, and Lysimachia I rescued
from the Thracians. But since necessity diverted my attention from the
guarding of it to this present war, the Thracians have possession of it.
So much for the Aetolians. To Attalus and the Rhodians I in justice owe
nothing; for not to me, but to themselves, is the commencement of hostilities
to be attributed. However, out of respect to the Romans, I will restore
Peraea to the Rhodians, and to Attalus his ships, and such prisoners as
can be found. As to what concerns Nicephorium, and the temple of Venus,
what other answer can I make to those who require their restoration, than
that I will take on myself the trouble and expense of replanting them--the
only way in which woods and groves which have been cut down can be restored,--since
it is thought fit that, between kings, such kinds of demands should be
made and answered." The last part of his speech was directed to the
Achaeans, wherein he enumerated, first, the kindnesses of Antigonus; then,
his own towards their nation, desiring them to consider the decrees themselves
had passed concerning him, which comprehended every kind of honor, divine
and human; and to these he added their late decree, by which they had confirmed
the resolution of deserting him. He inveighed bitterly against their perfidy,
but told them, that nevertheless he would give them back Argos. "With
regard to Corinth, he would consult with the Roman general; and would,
at the same time, inquire from him, whether he thought it right, that he
(Philip) should evacuate only those cities which, being captured by himself,
were held by the right of war; or those, also, which he had received from
his ancestors."
35. The Achaeans and Aetolians were preparing to answer, but, as the
sun was near setting, the conference was adjourned to the next day;
and Philip returned to his station whence he came, the Romans and
allies to their camp. On the following day, Quinctius repaired to
Nicaea, which was the place agreed on, at the appointed time; but
neither Philip, nor any messenger from him, came for several hours. At
length, when they began to despair of his coming, his ships suddenly
appeared. He said, that "the terms enjoined were so severe and
humiliating, that, not knowing what to determine, he had spent the day
in deliberation." But the general opinion was, that he had purposely
delayed the business until late, that the Achaeans and Aetolians might
not have time to answer him: and this opinion he himself confirmed, by
desiring that time might not be consumed in altercation, and, to bring
the affair to some conclusion, that the others should retire, and
leave him to converse with the Roman general. For some time this was
not admitted, lest the allies should appear to be excluded from the
conference. Afterwards, on his persisting in his desire, the Roman
general, with the consent of all, taking with him Appius Claudius,
a military tribune, advanced to the brink of the coast, and the rest
retired. The king, with the two persons whom he had brought the day
before, came on shore, where they conversed a considerable time in
private. What account of their proceedings Philip gave to his people
is not well known: what Quinctius told the allies was, that "Philip
was willing to cede to the Romans the whole coast of Illyricum, and
to give up the deserters and prisoners, if there were any. That he
consented to restore to Attalus his ships, and the seamen taken with
them; and to the Rhodians the tract which they call Peraea. That he
refused to evacuate Iassus and Bargylii. To the Aetolians he was ready
to restore Pharsalus and Larissa; Thebes he would not restore: and
that he would give back to the Achaeans the possession, not only of
Argos, but of Corinth also." This arrangement pleased none of the
parties; neither those to whom the concessions were to be made, nor
those to whom they were refused; "for on that plan," they said, "more
would be lost than gained; nor could the grounds of contention ever be
removed, but by his withdrawing his forces from every part of Greece."
36. These expressions, delivered with eagerness and vehemence by every
one in the assembly, reached the ears of Philip, though he stood at a distance.
He therefore requested of Quinctius, that the whole business might be deferred
until the next day; and then he would, positively, either prevail on the
allies, or suffer himself to be prevailed on by them. The shore at Thronium
was appointed for their meeting, and there they assembled early. Philip
began with entreating Quinctius, and all who were present, not to harbor
such sentiments as must embarrass a negotiation of peace; and then desired
time, while he could send ambassadors to Rome, to the senate, declaring,
that "he would either obtain a peace on the terms mentioned, or would
accept whatever terms the senate should prescribe." None by any means
approved of this; they said, he only sought a delay, and leisure to collect
his strength. But Quinctius observed, "that such an objection would
have been well founded, if it were then summer and a season fit for action;
as matters stood, and the winter being just at hand, nothing would be lost
by allowing him time to send ambassadors. For, without the authority of
the senate, no agreement which they might conclude with the king would
be valid; and besides, they would by this means have an opportunity, while
the winter itself would necessarily cause a suspension of arms, to learn
the authoritative decision of the senate." The other chiefs of the
allies came over to this opinion: and a cessation of hostilities for two
months being granted, they resolved that each of their states should send
an ambassador with the necessary information to the senate, and in order
that it should not be deceived by the misrepresentations of Philip. To
the above agreement for a truce, was added an article, that all the king's
troops should be immediately withdrawn from Phocis and Locris. With the
ambassadors of the allies, Quinctius sent Amynander, king of Athamania;
and, to add a degree of splendor to the embassy, a deputation from himself,
composed of Quintus Fabius, the son of his wife's sister, Quintus Fulvius,
and Appius Claudius.
37. On their arrival at Rome, the ambassadors of the allies were
admitted to audience before those of the king. Their discourse, in
general, was filled up with invectives against Philip. What produced
the greatest effect on the minds of the senate was, that, by pointing
out the relative situations of the lands and seas in that part of
the world, they made it manifest to every one, that if the king held
Demetrias in Thessaly, Chalcis in Euboea, and Corinth in Achaia,
Greece could not be free; and they added, that Philip himself, with
not more insolence than truth, used to call these the fetters of
Greece. The king's ambassadors were then introduced, and when they
were beginning a long harangue, a short question cut short
their discourse:--Whether he was willing to yield up the three
above-mentioned cities? They answered, that they had received no
specific instructions on that head: on which they were dismissed,
the negotiation being left unsettled. Full authority was given to
Quinctius to determine every thing relative to war and peace. As this
demonstrated clearly that the senate were not weary of the war, so
he, who was more earnestly desirous of conquest than of peace, never
afterwards consented to a conference with Philip; and even gave him
notice that he would not admit any embassy from him, unless it came
with information that he was retiring from the whole of Greece.
38. Philip now perceived that he must decide the matter in the
field, and collect his strength about him from all quarters. Being
particularly uneasy in respect to the cities of Achaia, a country
so distant from him, and also of Argos, even more, indeed, than of
Corinth, he resolved, as the most advisable method, to put the former
into the hands of Nabis, tyrant of Lacedaemon, in trust, as it were,
on the terms, that if he should prove successful in the war, Nabis
should re-deliver it to him; if any misfortune should happen, he
should keep it himself. Accordingly, he wrote to Philocles, who had
the command in Corinth and Argos, to have a meeting with the tyrant.
Philocles, besides coming with a valuable present, added to that
pledge of future friendship between the king and the tyrant, that it
was Philip's wish to unite his daughters in marriage to the sons of
Nabis. The tyrant, at first, refused to receive the city on any other
conditions than that of being invited to its protection by a decree
of the Argives themselves: but afterwards, hearing that in a full
assembly they had treated the name of the tyrant not only with scorn,
but even with abhorrence, he thought he had now a sufficient excuse
for plundering them, and he accordingly desired Philocles to give him
possession of the place as soon as he pleased. Nabis was admitted into
the city in the night, without the privity of any of the inhabitants,
and, at the first light, seized on the higher parts of it, and shut
the gates. A few of the principal people having made their escape,
during the first confusion, the properties of all who were absent were
seized as booty: those who were present were stripped of their gold
and silver, and loaded with exorbitant contributions. Such as paid
these readily were discharged, without personal insult and laceration
of their bodies; but such as were suspected of hiding or reserving
any of their effects, were mangled and tortured like slaves. He then
summoned an assembly, in which he promulgated two measures; one for
an abolition of debts, the other for a distribution of the land, in
shares, to each man--two fire-brands in the hands of those who were
desirous of revolution, for inflaming the populace against the higher
ranks.
39. The tyrant, when he had the city of Argos in his power, never
considering from whom or on what conditions he had received it, sent
ambassadors to Elatia, to Quinctius, and to Attalus, in his winter
quarters at Aegina, to tell them, that "he was in possession of Argos;
and that if Quinctius would come hither, and consult with him, he
had no doubt but that every thing might be adjusted between them."
Quinctius, in order that he might deprive Philip of that stronghold,
along with the rest, consented to come; accordingly, sending a message
to Attalus, to leave Aegina, and meet him at Sicyon, he set sail from
Anticyra with ten quinqueremes, which his brother, Lucius Quinctius,
happened to have brought a little before from his winter station at
Corcyra, and passed over to Sicyon. Attalus was there before him, who,
representing that the tyrant ought to come to the Roman general, not
the general to the tyrant, brought Quinctius over to his opinion,
which was, that he should not enter the city of Argos. Not far from
it, however, was a place called Mycenica; and there the parties agreed
to meet. Quinctius came, with his brother and a few military tribunes;
Attalus, with his royal retinue; and Nicostratus the praetor of the
Achaeans, with a few of the auxiliary officers: and they there found
Nabis waiting with his whole army. He advanced, armed, and attended
by his armed guards, almost to the middle of the interjacent plain;
Quinctius unarmed, with his brother and two military tribunes; the
king was accompanied by one of his nobles, and the praetor of the
Achaeans, unarmed likewise. The tyrant, when he saw the king and the
Roman general unarmed, opened the conference, with apologizing for
having come to the meeting armed himself, and surrounded with armed
men. "He had no apprehensions," he said, "from them; but only from
the Argive exiles." When they then began to treat of the conditions of
their friendship, the Roman made two demands: one, that the war with
the Achaeans should be put an end to; the other, that he should send
him aid against Philip. He promised the aid required; but, instead of
a peace with the Achaeans, a cessation of hostilities was obtained, to
last until the war with Philip should be concluded.
40. A debate concerning the Argives, also, was set on foot by king Attalus,
who charged Nabis with holding their city by force, which was put into
his hands by the treachery of Philocles; while Nabis insisted, that he
had been invited by the Argives themselves to afford them protection. The
king required a general assembly of the Argives to be convened, that the
truth of that matter might be known. To this the tyrant did not object;
but the king alleged, that the Lacedaemonian troops ought to be withdrawn
from the city, in order to render the assembly free; and that the people
should be left at liberty to declare their real sentiments. The tyrant
refused to withdraw them, and the debate produced no effect. To the Roman
general, six hundred Cretans were given by Nabis, who agreed with the praetor
of the Achaeans to a cessation of arms for four months, and thus they departed
from the conference. Quinctius proceeded to Corinth, advancing to the gates
with the cohort of Cretans, in order that it might be evident to Philocles,
the governor of the city, that the tyrant had deserted the cause of Philip.
Philocles himself came out to confer with the Roman general; and, on the
latter exhorting him to change sides immediately, and surrender the city
he answered in such a manner as showed an inclination rather to defer than
to refuse the matter. From Corinth, Quinctius sailed over to Anticyra,
and sent his brother thence, to sound the disposition of the people of
Acarnania. Attalus went from Argos to Sicyon. Here, on one side, the state
added new honors to those formerly paid to the king; and, on the other,
the king, besides having on a former occasion, redeemed for them, at a
vast expense, a piece of land sacred to Apollo, unwilling to pass by the
city of his friends and allies without a token of munificence, made them
a present of ten talents of silver, and ten thousand bushels of corn, and
then returned to Cenchreae to his fleet. Nabis, leaving a strong garrison
at Argos, returned to Lacedaemon; and, as he himself had pillaged the men,
he sent his wife to Argos to pillage the women. She invited the females
to her house, sometimes singly, and sometimes several together, who were
united by family connection; and partly by fair speeches, partly by threats,
stripped them, not only of their gold, but, at last, even of their garments,
and every article of female attire.
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