21.1
I consider myself at liberty to commence what is only a section of my history
with a prefatory remark such as most writers have placed at the very beginning
of their works, namely, that the war I am about to describe is the most
memorable of any that have ever been waged, I mean the war which the Carthaginians,
under Hannibal's leadership, waged with Rome. No states, no nations ever
met in arms greater in strength or richer in resources; these Powers themselves
had never before been in so high a state of efficiency or better prepared
to stand the strain of a long war; they were no strangers to each other's
tactics after their experience in the first Punic War; and so variable
were the fortunes and so doubtful the issue of the war that those who were
ultimately victorious were in the earlier stages brought nearest to ruin.
And yet, great as was their strength, the hatred they felt towards each
other was almost greater. The Romans were furious with indignation because
the vanquished had dared to take the offensive against their conquerors;
the Carthaginians bitterly resented what they regarded as the tyrannical
and rapacious conduct of Rome. The prime author of the war was Hamilcar.
There was a story widely current that when, after bringing the African
War to a close, he was offering sacrifices before transporting his army
to Spain, the boy Hannibal, nine years old, was coaxing his father to take
him with him, and his father led him up to the altar and made him swear
with his hand laid on the victim that as soon as he possibly could he would
show himself the enemy of Rome. The loss of Sicily and Sardinia vexed the
proud spirit of the man, for he felt that the cession of Sicily had been
made hastily in a spirit of despair, and that Sardinia had been filched
by the Romans during the troubles in Africa, who, not content with seizing
it, had imposed an indemnity as well.
21.2
Smarting under these wrongs, he made it quite clear from his conduct of
the African War which followed immediately upon the conclusion of peace
with Rome, and from the way in which he strengthened and extended the rule
of Carthage during the nine years' war with Spain, that he was meditating
a far greater war than any he was actually engaged in, and that had he
lived longer it would have been under his command that the Carthaginians
effected the invasion of Italy, which they actually carried out under Hannibal.
The death of Hamilcar, occurring as it did most opportunely, and the tender
years of Hannibal delayed the war. Hasdrubal, coming between father and
son, held the supreme power for eight years. He is said to have become
a favourite of Hamilcar's owing to his personal beauty as a boy; afterwards
he displayed talents of a very different order, and became his son-in-law.
Through this connection he was placed in power by the influence of the
Barcine
party, which was unduly preponderant with the soldiers and the common people,
but his elevation was utterly against the wishes of the nobles. Trusting
to policy rather than to arms, he did more to extend the empire of Carthage
by forming connections with the petty chieftains and winning over new tribes
by making friends of their leading men than by force of arms or by war.
But peace brought him no security. A barbarian whose master he had put
to death murdered him in broad daylight, and when seized by the bystanders
he looked as happy as though he had escaped. Even when put to the torture,
his delight at the success of his attempt mastered his pain and his face
wore a smiling expression. Owing to the marvellous tact he had shown in
winning over the tribes and incorporating them into his dominions, the
Romans had renewed the treaty with Hasdrubal. Under its terms, the River
Ebro was to form the boundary between the two empires, and Saguntum, occupying
an intermediate position between them, was to be a free city.
21.3
There was no hesitation shown in filling his place. The soldiers led the
way by bringing the young Hannibal forthwith to the palace and proclaiming
him their commander-in-chief amidst universal applause. Their action was
followed by the plebs. Whilst little more than a boy, Hasdrubal had written
to invite Hannibal to come to him in Spain, and the matter had actually
been discussed in the senate. The Barcines wanted Hannibal to become familiar
with military service; Hanno, the leader of the opposite party, resisted
this. "Hasdrubal's request," he said, "appears a reasonable one, and yet
I do not think we ought to grant it" This paradoxical utterance aroused
the attention of the whole senate. He continued: "The youthful beauty which
Hasdrubal surrendered to Hannibal's father he considers he has a fair claim
to ask for in return from the son. It ill becomes us, however, to habituate
our youths to the lust of our commanders, by way of military training.
Are we afraid that it will be too long before Hamilcar's son surveys the
extravagant power and the pageant of royalty which his father assumed,
and that there will be undue delay in our becoming the slaves of the despot
to whose son-in-law our armies have been bequeathed as though they were
his patrimony? I, for my part, consider that this youth ought to be kept
at home and taught to live in obedience to the laws and the magistrates
on an equality with his fellow-citizens; if not, this small fire will some
day or other kindle a vast conflagration."
21.4
Hanno's proposal received but slight support, though almost all the best
men in the council were with him, but as usual, numbers carried the day
against reason. No sooner had Hannibal landed in Spain than he became a
favourite with the whole army. The veterans thought they saw Hamilcar restored
to them as he was in his youth; they saw the same determined expression
the same piercing eyes, the same cast of features. He soon showed, however,
that it was not his father's memory that helped him most to win the affections
of the army. Never was there a character more capable of the two tasks
so opposed to each other of commanding and obeying; you could not easily
make out whether the army or its general were more attached to him. Whenever
courage and resolution were needed Hasdrubal never cared to entrust the
command to any one else; and there was no leader in whom the soldiers placed
more confidence or under whom they showed more daring. He was fearless
in exposing himself to danger and perfectly self-possessed in the presence
of danger. No amount of exertion could cause him either bodily or mental
fatigue; he was equally indifferent to heat and cold; his eating and drinking
were measured by the needs of nature, not by appetite; his hours of sleep
were not determined by day or night, whatever time was not taken up with
active duties was given to sleep and rest, but that rest was not wooed
on a soft couch or in silence, men often saw him lying on the ground amongst
the sentinels and outposts, wrapped in his military cloak. His dress was
in no way superior to that of his comrades; what did make him conspicuous
were his arms and horses. He was by far the foremost both of the cavalry
and the infantry, the first to enter the fight and the last to leave the
field. But these great merits were matched by great vices-inhuman cruelty,
a perfidy worse than Punic, an utter absence of truthfulness, reverence,
fear of the gods, respect for oaths, sense of religion. Such was his character,
a compound of virtues and vices. For three years he served under Hasdrubal,
and during the whole time he never lost an opportunity of gaining by practice
or observation the experience necessary for one who was to be a great leader
of men.
21.5
From the day when he was proclaimed commander-in-chief, he seemed to regard
Italy as his assigned field of action, and war with Rome as a duty imposed
upon him. Feeling that he ought not to delay operations, lest some accident
should overtake him as in the case of his father and afterwards of Hasdrubal,
he decided to attack the Saguntines. As an attack on them would inevitably
set the arms of Rome in motion, he began by invading the Olcades, a tribe
who were within the boundaries but not under the dominion of Carthage.
He wished to make it appear that Saguntum was not his immediate object,
but that he was drawn into a war with her by the force of circumstances,
by the conquest, that is, of all her neighbours and the annexation of their
territory. Cartala, a wealthy city and the capital of the tribe, was taken
by storm and sacked; the smaller cities, fearing a similar fate, capitulated
and agreed to pay an indemnity. His victorious army enriched with plunder
was marched into winter quarters in New Carthage. Here, by a lavish distribution
of the spoils and the punctual discharge of all arrears of pay, he secured
the allegiance of his own people and of the allied contingents.
At the beginning of spring he extended his operations to the Vaccaei,
and two of their cities, Arbocala and Hermandica, were taken by assault.
Arbocala held out for a considerable time, owing to the courage and numbers
of its defenders; the fugitives from Hermandica joined hands with those
of the Olcades who had abandoned their country-this tribe had been subjugated
the previous year-and together they stirred up the Carpetani to war. Not
far from the Tagus an attack was made upon Hannibal as he was returning
from his expedition against the Vaccaei, and his army, laden as it was
with plunder, was thrown into some confusion. Hannibal declined battle
and fixed his camp by the side of the river; as soon as there was quiet
and silence amongst the enemy, he forded the stream. His entrenchments
had been carried just far enough to allow room for the enemy to cross over,
and he decided to attack them during their passage of the river. He instructed
his cavalry to wait until they had actually entered the water and then
to attack them; his forty elephants he stationed on the bank. The Carpetani
together with the contingents of the Olcades and Vaccaei numbered altogether
100,000 men, an irresistible force had they been fighting on level ground.
Their innate fearlessness, the confidence inspired by their numbers, their
belief that the enemy's retreat was due to fear, all made them look on
victory as certain, and the river as the only obstacle to it. Without any
word of command having been given, they raised a universal shout and plunged,
each man straight in front of him, into the river. A huge force of cavalry
descended from the opposite bank, and the two bodies met in mid-stream.
The struggle was anything but an equal one. The infantry, feeling their
footing insecure, even where the river was fordable, could have been ridden
down even by unarmed horsemen, whereas the cavalry, with their bodies and
weapons free and their horses steady even in the midst of the current,
could fight at close quarters or not, as they chose. A large proportion
were swept down the river, some were carried by cross currents to the other
side where the enemy were, and were trampled to death by the elephants.
Those in the rear thought it safest to return to their own side, and began
to collect together as well as their fears allowed them, but before they
had time to recover themselves Hannibal entered the river with his infantry
in battle order and drove them in flight from the bank. He followed up
his victory by laying waste their fields, and in a few days was able to
receive the submission of the Carpetani There was no part of the country
beyond the Ebro which did not now belong to the Carthaginians, with the
exception of Saguntum.
21.6
War had not been formally declared against this city, but there were already
grounds for war. The seeds of quarrel were being sown amongst her neighbours,
especially amongst the Turdetani. When the man who had sown the seed showed
himself ready to aid and abet the quarrel, and his object plainly was not
to refer the question to arbitration, but to appeal to force, the Saguntines
sent a deputation to Rome to beg for help in a war which was inevitably
approaching. The consuls for the time being were P. Cornelius Scipio and
Tiberius Sempronius Longus. After introducing the envoys they invited the
senate to declare its opinion as to what policy should be adopted. It was
decided that commissioners should be sent to Spain to investigate the circumstances,
and if they considered it necessary they were to warn Hannibal not to interfere
with the Saguntines, who were allies of Rome; then they were to cross over
to Africa and lay before the Carthaginian council the complaints which
they had made. But before the commission was despatched news came that
the siege of Saguntum had, to every one's surprise, actually commenced.
The whole position of affairs required to be reconsidered by the senate;
some were for assigning Spain and Africa as separate fields of action for
the two consuls, and thought that the war ought to be prosecuted by land
and sea; others were for confining the war solely to Hannibal in Spain;
others again were of opinion that such an immense task ought not to be
entered upon hastily, and that they ought to await the return of the commission
from Spain. This latter view seemed the safest and was adopted, and the
commissioners, P. Valerius Flaccus and Q. Baebius Tamphilus, were despatched
without further delay to Hannibal. If he refused to abandon hostilities
they were to proceed to Carthage to demand the surrender of the general
to answer for his breach of treaty.
21.7
During these proceedings in Rome the siege of Saguntum was being pressed
with the utmost vigour. That city was by far the most wealthy of all beyond
the Ebro; it was situated about a mile from the sea. It is said to have
been founded by settlers from the island of Zacynthus, with an admixture
of Rutulians from Ardea. In a short time, however, it had attained to great
prosperity, partly through its land and sea-borne commerce, partly through
the rapid increase of its population, and also through the maintenance
of a high standard of political integrity which led it to act with a loyalty
towards its allies that brought about its ruin. After carrying his ravages
everywhere throughout the territory, Hannibal attacked the city from three
separate points. There was an angle of the fortifications which looked
down on a more open and level descent than the rest of the ground surrounding
the city, and here he decided to bring up his vineae to allow the battering
rams to be placed against the walls. But although the ground to a considerable
distance from the walls was sufficiently level to admit of the vineae being
brought up, they found when they had succeeded in doing this that they
made no progress. A huge tower overlooked the place, and the wall, being
here more open to attack, had been carried to a greater height than the
rest of the fortifications. As the position was one of especial danger,
so the resistance offered by a picked body of defenders was of the most
resolute character. At first they confined themselves to keeping the enemy
back by the discharge of missiles and making it impossible for them to
continue their operations in safety. As time went on, however, their weapons
no longer flashed on the walls or from the tower, they ventured on a sortie
and attacked the outposts and siege works of the enemy. In these irregular
encounters the Carthaginians lost nearly as many men as the Saguntines.
Hannibal himself, approaching the wall somewhat incautiously, fell with
a severe wound in his thigh from a javelin, and such was the confusion
and dismay that ensued that the vineae and siege works were all but abandoned.
21.8
For a few days, until the general's wound was healed, there was a blockade
rather than an active siege, and during this interval, though there was
a respite from fighting, the construction of siege works and approaches
went on uninterruptedly. When the fighting was resumed it was fiercer than
ever. In spite of the difficulties of the ground the vineae were advanced
and the battering rams placed against the walls. The Carthaginians had
the superiority in numbers-there were said to have been 150,000 fighting
men-whilst the defenders, obliged to keep watch and ward everywhere, were
dissipating their strength and finding their numbers unequal to the task.
The walls were now being pounded by the rams, and in many places had been
shaken down. One part where a continuous fall had taken place laid the
city open; three towers in succession, and the whole of the wall between
them fell with a tremendous crash. The Carthaginians looked upon the town
as already captured after that fall, and both sides rushed through the
breach as though the wall had only served to protect them from each other.
There was nothing of the desultory fighting which goes on when cities are
stormed, as each side gets an opportunity of attacking the other. The two
bodies of combatants confronted one another in the space between the ruined
wall and the houses of the city in as regular formation as though they
had been in an open field. On the one side there was the courage of hope,
on the other the courage of despair. The Carthaginians believed that with
a little effort on their part the city would be theirs; the Saguntines
opposed their bodies as a shield for their fatherland now stripped of its
walls; not a man relaxed his foothold for fear of letting an enemy in through
the spot which he had left open. So the hotter and closer the fighting
became the greater grew the number of wounded, for no missile fell ineffectively
amongst the crowded ranks. The missile used by the Saguntines was the phalarica,
a javelin with a shaft smooth and round up to the head, which, as in the
pilum, was an iron point of square section. The shaft was wrapped in tow
and then smeared with pitch; the iron head was three feet long and capable
of penetrating armour and body alike. Even if it only stuck in the shield
and did not reach the body it was a most formidable weapon, for when it
was discharged with the tow set on fire the flame was fanned to a fiercer
heat by its passage through the air, and it forced the soldier to throw
away his shield and left him defenceless against the sword thrusts which
followed.
21.9
The conflict had now gone on for a considerable time without any advantage
to either side; the courage of the Saguntines was rising as they found
themselves keeping up an unhoped-for resistance, whilst the Carthaginians,
unable to conquer, were beginning to look upon themselves as defeated.
Suddenly the defenders, raising their battle-shout, forced the enemy back
to the debris of the ruined wall; there, stumbling and in disorder, they
were forced still further back and finally driven in rout and flight to
their camp. Meantime it was announced that envoys had arrived from Rome.
Hannibal sent messengers down to the harbour to meet them and inform them
that it would be unsafe for them to advance any further through so many
wild tribes now in arms, and also that Hannibal in the present critical
position of affairs had no time to receive embassies. It was quite certain
that if they were not admitted they would go to Carthage. He therefore
forestalled them by sending messengers with a letter addressed to the heads
of the Barcine party, to warn his supporters and prevent the other side
from making any concessions to Rome.
21.10
The result was that, beyond being received and heard by the Carthaginian
senate, the embassy found its mission a failure. Hanno alone, against the
whole senate, spoke in favour of observing the treaty, and his speech was
listened to in silence out of respect to his personal authority, not because
his hearers approved of his sentiments. He appealed to them in the name
of the gods, who are the witnesses and arbiters of treaties, not to provoke
a war with Rome in addition to the one with Saguntum. "I urged you," he
said, "and warned you not to send Hamilcar's son to the army. That man's
spirit, that man's offspring cannot rest; as long as any single representative
of the blood and name of Barca survives our treaty with Rome will never
remain unimperilled. You have sent to the army, as though supplying fuel
to the fire, a young man who is consumed with a passion for sovereign power,
and who recognises that the only way to it lies in passing his life surrounded
by armed legions and perpetually stirring up fresh wars. It is you, therefore,
who have fed this fire which is now scorching you. Your armies are investing
Saguntum, which by the terms of the treaty they are forbidden to approach;
before long the legions of Rome will invest Carthage, led by the same generals
under the same divine guidance under which they avenged our breach of treaty
obligations in the late war. Are you strangers to the enemy, to yourselves,
to the fortunes of each nation? That worthy commander of yours refused
to allow ambassadors who came from allies, on behalf of allies, to enter
his camp, and set at naught the law of nations. Those men, repulsed from
a place to which even an enemy's envoys are not refused access, have come
to us; they ask for the satisfaction which the treaty prescribes; they
demand the surrender of the guilty party in order that the State may clear
itself from all taint of guilt. The slower they are to take action, the
longer they are in commencing war, so much the more persistence and determination,
I fear, will they show when war has begun. Remember the Aegates and Eryx,
and all you had to go through for four-and-twenty years. This boy was not
commanding then, but his father, Hamilcar-a second Mars as his friends
would have us believe. But we broke the treaty then as we are breaking
it now; we did not keep our hands off Tarentum or, which is the same thing,
off Italy then any more than we are keeping our hands off Saguntum now,
and so gods and men combined to defeat us, and the question in dispute,
namely, which nation had broken the treaty, was settled by the issue of
the war, which, like an impartial judge, left the victory on the side which
was in the right. It is against Carthage that Hannibal is now bringing
up his vineae and towers, it is Carthage whose walls he is shaking with
his battering rams. The ruins of Saguntum-would that I might prove a false
prophet-will fall on our heads, and the war which was begun with Saguntum
will have to be carried on with Rome.
"'Shall we then surrender Hannibal?' some one will say. I am quite aware
that as regards him my advice will have little weight, owing to my differences
with his father, but whilst I was glad to hear of Hamilcar's death, for
if he were alive we should already be involved in war with Rome, I feel
nothing but loathing and detestation for this youth, the mad firebrand
who is kindling this war. Not only do I hold that he ought to be surrendered
as an atonement for the broken treaty, but even if no demand for his surrender
were made I consider that he ought to be deported to the farthest corner
of the earth, exiled to some spot from which no tidings of him, no mention
of his name, could reach us, and where it would be impossible for him to
disturb the welfare and tranquillity of our State. This then is what I
propose: 'That a commission be at once despatched to Rome to inform the
senate of our compliance with their demands, and a second to Hannibal ordering
him to withdraw his army from Saguntum and then surrendering him to the
Romans in accordance with the terms of the treaty, and I also propose that
a third body of commissioners be sent to make reparation to the Saguntines.'"
21.11
When Hanno sat down no one deemed it necessary to make any reply, so completely
was the senate, as a body, on the side of Hannibal. They accused Hanno
of speaking in a tone of more uncompromising hostility than Flaccus Valerius,
the Roman envoy, had assumed. The reply which it was decided to make to
the Roman demands was that the war was started by the Saguntines not by
Hannibal, and that the Roman people would commit an act of injustice if
they took the part of the Saguntines against their ancient allies, the
Carthaginians. Whilst the Romans were wasting time in despatching commissioners,
things were quiet round Saguntum. Hannibal's men were worn out with the
fighting and the labours of the siege, and after placing detachments on
guard over the vineae and other military engines, he gave his army a few
days' rest. He employed this interval in stimulating the courage of his
men by exasperating them against the enemy, and firing them by the prospect
of rewards. After he had given out in the presence of his assembled troops
that the plunder of the city would go to them, they were all in such a
state of excitement that had the signal been given then and there it seemed
impossible for anything to withstand them. As for the Saguntines, though
they had a respite from fighting for some days, neither meeting attacks
nor making any, they worked at their defences so continuously by day and
night that they completed a fresh wall at the place where the fall of the
former wall had laid the town open.
The assault was recommenced with greater vigour than ever. In every
direction confused shouts and clamour resounded, so that it was difficult
to ascertain where to render assistance most promptly or where it was most
needed. Hannibal was present in person to encourage his men, who were bringing
up a tower on rollers which overtopped all the fortifications of the city.
Catapults and ballistae had been put in position on each of the stories,
and after it had been brought up to the walls it swept them clear of the
defenders. Seizing his opportunity, Hannibal told off about 500 African
troops to undermine the wall with pick-axes, an easy task, as the stones
were not fixed with cement but with layers of mud between the courses in
the ancient fashion of construction. More of it consequently fell than
had been dug away, and through the gaping ruin the columns of armed warriors
marched into the city. They seized some high ground, and after massing
their catapults and ballistae there they enclosed it with a wall so as
to have a fortified position actually within the city which could dominate
it like a citadel. The Saguntines on their side carried an inside wall
round the portion of the city not yet captured. Both sides kept up their
fortifying and fighting with the utmost energy, but by having to defend
the interior portion of the city the Saguntines were continually reducing
its dimensions. In addition to this there was a growing scarcity of everything
as the siege was prolonged, and the anticipations of outside help were
becoming fainter; the Romans, their one hope, were so far away, whilst
all immediately round them was in the hands of the enemy. For a few days
their drooping spirits were revived by the sudden departure of Hannibal
on an expedition against the Oretani and the Carpetani. The rigorous way
in which troops were being levied in these two tribes had created great
excitement, and they had kept the officers who were superintending the
levy practically prisoners. A general revolt was feared, but the unexpected
swiftness of Hannibal's movements took them by surprise and they abandoned
their hostile attitude.
21.12
The attack on Saguntum was not slackened; Maharbal, the son of Himilco,
whom Hannibal had left in command, carried on operations with such energy
that the general's absence was not felt by either friends or foes. He fought
several successful actions, and with the aid of three battering rams brought
down a considerable portion of the wall, and on Hannibal's return showed
him the place all strewn with the newly-fallen wall. The army was at once
led to an assault on the citadel; a desperate fight began, with heavy losses
on both sides, and a part of the citadel was captured. Attempts were now
made in the direction of peace, though with but faint hopes of success.
Two men undertook the task, Alco, a Saguntine, and Alorcus, a Spaniard.
Alco, thinking that his prayers might have some effect, crossed over without
the knowledge of the Saguntines to Hannibal at night. When he found that
he gained nothing by his tears, and that the conditions offered were such
as a victor exasperated by resistance would insist upon, harsh and severe,
he laid aside the character of a pleader and remained with the enemy as
a deserter, alleging that any one who advocated peace on such terms would
be put to death. The conditions were that restitution should be made to
the Turdetani, all the gold and silver should be delivered up, and the
inhabitants should depart with one garment each and take up their abode
wherever the Carthaginians should order them. As Alco insisted that the
Saguntines would not accept peace on these terms, Alorcus, convinced, as
he said, that when everything else has gone courage also goes, undertook
to mediate a peace on those conditions. At that time he was one of Hannibal's
soldiers, but he was recognised as a guest friend by the city of Saguntum.
He started on his mission, gave up his weapon openly to the guard, crossed
the lines, and was at his request conducted to the praetor of Saguntum.
A crowd, drawn from all classes of society, soon gathered, and after a
way had been cleared through the press, Alorcus was admitted to an audience
of the senate. He addressed them in the following terms:
21.13
"If your fellow-townsman, Alco, had shown the same courage in bringing
back to you the terms on which Hannibal will grant peace that he showed
in going to Hannibal to beg for peace, this journey of mine would have
been unnecessary. I have not come to you either as an advocate for Hannibal
or as a deserter. But as he has remained with the enemy either through
your fault or his own-his own if his fears were only feigned, yours if
those who report what is true have to answer for their lives-I have come
to you out of regard to the old ties of hospitality which have so long
subsisted between us, that you may not be left in ignorance of the fact
that there do exist terms on which you can secure peace and the safety
of your lives. Now, that it is for your sake alone and not on behalf of
any one else that I say what I am saying before you is proved by the fact
that as long as you had the strength to maintain a successful resistance,
and as long as you had any hopes of help from Rome, I never breathed a
word about making peace. But now that you have no longer anything to hope
for from Rome, now that neither your arms nor your walls suffice to protect
you, I bring you a peace forced upon you by necessity rather than recommended
by the fairness of its conditions. But the hopes, faint as they are, of
peace rest upon your accepting as conquered men the terms which Hannibal
as conqueror imposes and not looking upon what is taken from you as a positive
loss, since everything is at the victor's mercy, but regarding what is
left to you as a free gift from him. The city, most of which he has laid
in ruins, the whole of which he has all but captured, he takes from you;
your fields and lands he leaves you; and he will assign you a site where
you can build a new town. He orders all the gold and silver, both that
belonging to the State and that owned by private individuals, to be brought
to him; your persons and those of your wives and children he preserves
inviolate on condition that you consent to leave Saguntum with only two
garments apiece and without arms. These are the demands of your victorious
enemy, and heavy and bitter as they are, your miserable plight urges you
to accept them. I am not without hope that when everything has passed into
his power he will relax some of these conditions, but I consider that even
as they are you ought to submit to them rather than permit yourselves to
be butchered and your wives and children seized and carried off before
your eyes."
21.14
A large crowd had gradually collected to listen to the speaker, and the
popular Assembly had become mingled with the senate, when without a moment's
warning the leading citizens withdrew before any reply was given. They
collected all the gold and silver from public and private sources and brought
it into the forum, where a fire had already been kindled, and flung it
into the flames, and most of them thereupon leaped into the fire themselves.
The terror and confusion which this occasioned throughout the city was
heightened by the noise of a tumult in the direction of the citadel. A
tower after much battering had fallen, and through the breach created by
its fall a Carthaginian cohort advanced to the attack and signalled to
their commander that the customary outposts and guards had disappeared
and the city was unprotected. Hannibal thought that he ought to seize the
opportunity and act promptly. Attacking it with his full strength, he took
the place in a moment. Orders had been given that all the adult males were
to be put to death; a cruel order, but under the circumstances inevitable,
for whom would it have been possible to spare when they either shut themselves
up with their wives and children and burnt their houses over their heads,
or if they fought, would not cease fighting till they were killed?
21.15
An enormous amount of booty was found in the captured city. Although most
of it had been deliberately destroyed by the owners, and the enraged soldiers
had observed hardly any distinctions of age in the universal slaughter,
whilst all the prisoners that were taken were assigned to them, still,
it is certain that a considerable sum was realised by the sale of the goods
that were seized, and much valuable furniture and apparel was sent to Carthage.
Some writers assert that Saguntum was taken in the eighth month of the
siege, and that Hannibal led his force from there to New Carthage for the
winter, his arrival in Italy occurring five months later. In this case
it is impossible for P. Cornelius and Ti. Sempronius to have been the consuls
to whom the Saguntine envoys were sent at the beginning of the siege and
who afterwards, whilst still in office, fought with Hannibal, one of them
at the Ticinus, both shortly afterwards at the Trebia. Either all the incidents
occurred within a much shorter period or else it was the capture of Saguntum,
not the beginning of the siege, which occurred when those two entered upon
office. For the battle of the Trebia cannot have fallen so late as the
year when Cn. Servilius and C. Flaminius were in office, because C. Flaminius
entered upon his consulship at Ariminum, his election taking place under
the consul Tiberius Sempronius, who came to Rome after the battle of the
Trebia to hold the consular elections, and, after they were over, returned
to his army in winter quarters.
21.16
The commissioners who had been sent to Carthage, on their return to Rome,
reported that everything breathed a hostile spirit. Almost on the very
day they returned the news arrived of the fall of Saguntum, and such was
the distress of the senate at the cruel fate of their allies, such was
their feeling of shame at not having sent help to them, such their exasperation
against the Carthaginians and their alarm for the safety of the State-for
it seemed as though the enemy were already at their gates-that they were
in no mood for deliberating, shaken as they were by so many conflicting
emotions. There were sufficient grounds for alarm. Never had they met a
more active or a more warlike enemy, and never had the Roman republic been
so lacking in energy or so unprepared for war. The operations against the
Sardinians, Corsicans, and Histrians, as well as those against the Illyrians,
had been more of an annoyance than a training for the soldiers of Rome;
whilst with the Gauls there had been desultory fighting rather than regular
warfare. But the Carthaginians, a veteran enemy which for three-and-twenty
years had seen hard and rough service amongst the Spanish tribes, and had
always been victorious, trained under a general of exceptional ability,
were now crossing the Ebro fresh from the sack of a most wealthy city,
and were bringing with them all those Spanish tribes, eager for the fray.
They would rouse the various Gaulish tribes, who were always ready to take
up arms; there would be the whole world to fight against; the battleground
would be Italy; the struggle would take place before the walls of Rome.
21.17
The seat of the campaigns had already been decided; the consuls were now
ordered to draw lots. Spain fell to Cornelius, Africa to Sempronius. It
was resolved that six legions should be raised for that year, the allies
were to furnish such contingents as the consuls should deem necessary,
and as large a fleet as possible was to be fitted out; 24,000 Roman infantry
were called up and 1800 cavalry; the allies contributed 40,000 infantry
and 4400 cavalry, and a fleet of 220 ships of war and 20 light galleys
was launched. The question was then formally submitted to the Assembly,
Was it their will and pleasure that war should be declared against the
people of Carthage? When this was decided, a special service of intercession
was conducted; the procession marched through the streets of the city offering
prayers at the various temples that the gods would grant a happy and prosperous
issue to the war which the people of Rome had now ordered. The forces were
divided between the consuls in the following way: To Sempronius two legions
were assigned, each consisting of 4000 infantry and 300 cavalry, and 16,000
infantry and 1800 cavalry from the allied contingents. He was also provided
with 160 warships and 12 light galleys. With this combined land and sea
force he was sent to Sicily, with instructions to cross over to Africa
if the other consul succeeded in preventing the Carthaginian from invading
Italy. Cornelius, on the other hand, was provided with a smaller force,
as L. Manlius, the praetor, was himself being despatched to Gaul with a
fairly strong detachment. Cornelius was weakest in his ships; he had only
60 warships, for it was never supposed that the enemy would come by sea
or use his navy for offensive purposes. His land force was made up of two
Roman legions, with their complement of cavalry, and 14,000 infantry from
the allies with 1600 cavalry. The province of Gaul1 was held by two Roman
legions and 10,000 allied infantry with 600 Roman and 1000 allied cavalry.
This force was ultimately employed in the Punic War.
21.18
When these preparations were completed, the formalities necessary before
entering upon war required that a commission should be despatched to Carthage.
Those selected were men of age and experience-Q. Fabius, M. Livius, L.
Aemilius, C. Licinius, and Q. Baebius. They were instructed to inquire
whether it was with the sanction of the government that Hannibal had attacked
Saguntum, and if, as seemed most probable, the Carthaginians should admit
that it was so and proceed to defend their action, then the Roman envoys
were to formally declare war upon Carthage. As soon as they had arrived
in Carthage they appeared before the senate. Q. Fabius had, in accordance
with his instructions, simply put the question as to the responsibility
of the government, when one of the members present said: "The language
of your previous deputation was peremptory enough when you demanded the
surrender of Hannibal on the assumption that he was attacking Saguntum
on his own authority, but your language now, so far at least, is less provocative,
though in effect more overbearing. For on that occasion it was Hannibal
whose action you denounced and whose surrender you demanded, now you are
seeking to extort from us a confession of guilt and insist upon obtaining
instant satisfaction, as from men who admit they are in the wrong. I do
not, however, consider that the question is whether the attack on Saguntum
was an act of public policy or only that of a private citizen, but whether
it was justified by circumstances or not. It is for us to inquire and take
proceedings against a citizen when he has done anything on his own authority;
the only point for you to discuss is whether his action was compatible
with the terms of the treaty. Now, as you wish us to draw a distinction
between what our generals do with the sanction of the State and what they
do on their own initiative, you must remember that the treaty with us was
made by your consul, C. Lutatius, and whilst it contained provisions guarding
the interests of the allies of both nations, there was no such provision
for the Saguntines, for they were not your allies at the time. But, you
will say, by the treaty concluded with Hasdrubal, the Saguntines are exempted
from attack. I shall meet that with your own arguments. You told us that
you refused to be bound by the treaty which your consul, C. Lutatius, concluded
with us, because it did not receive the authorisation of either the senate
or the Assembly. A fresh treaty was accordingly made by your government.
Now, if no treaties have any binding force for you unless they have been
made with the authority of your senate or by order of your Assembly, we,
on our side, cannot possibly be bound by Hasdrubal's treaty, which he made
without our knowledge. Drop all allusions to Saguntum and the Ebro, and
speak out plainly what has long been secretly hatching in your minds."
Then the Roman, gathering up his toga, said, "Here we bring you war and
peace, take which you please." He was met by a defiant shout bidding him
give whichever he preferred, and when, letting the folds of his toga fall,
he said that he gave them war, they replied that they accepted war and
would carry it on in the same spirit in which they accepted it.
21.19
This straightforward question and threat of war seemed to be more consonant
with the dignity of Rome than a wordy argument about treaties; it seemed
so previous to the destruction of Saguntum, and still more so afterwards.
For had it been a matter for argument, what ground was there for comparing
Hasdrubal's treaty with the earlier one of Lutatius? In the latter it was
expressly stated that it would only be of force if the people approved
it, whereas in Hasdrubal's treaty there was no such saving clause. Besides,
his treaty had been silently observed for many years during his lifetime,
and was so generally approved that, even after its author's death, none
of its articles were altered. But even if they took their stand upon the
earlier treaty-that of Lutatius-the Saguntines were sufficiently safeguarded
by the allies of both parties being exempted from hostile treatment, for
nothing was said about "the allies for the time being" or anything to exclude
"any who should be hereafter taken into alliance." And since it was open
to both parties to form fresh alliances, who would think it a fair arrangement
that none should be received into alliance whatever their merits, or that
when they had been received they should not be loyally protected, on the
understanding that the allies of the Carthaginians should not be induced
to revolt, or if they deserted their allies on their own accord were not
to be received into alliance by the others?
The Roman envoys in accordance with their instructions went on to Spain
for the purpose of visiting the different tribes and drawing them into
alliance with Rome, or at least detaching them from the Carthaginians.
The first they came to were the Borgusii, who were tired of Punic domination
and gave them a favourable reception, and their success here excited a
desire for change amongst many of the tribes beyond the Ebro. They came
next to the Volciani, and the response they met with became widely known
throughout Spain and determined the rest of the tribes against an alliance
with Rome. This answer was given by the senior member of their national
council in the following terms: "Are you not ashamed, Romans, to ask us
to form friendship with you in preference to the Carthaginians, seeing
how those who have done so have suffered more through you, their allies,
cruelly deserting them than through any injury inflicted on them by the
Carthaginians? I advise you to look for allies where the fall of Saguntum
has never been heard of; the nations of Spain see in the ruins of Saguntum
a sad and emphatic warning against putting any trust in alliances with
Rome." They were then peremptorily ordered to quit the territory of the
Volciani, and from that time none of the councils throughout Spain gave
them a more favourable reply. After this fruitless mission in Spain they
crossed over into Gaul.
21.20
Here a strange and appalling sight met their eyes; the men attended the
council fully armed, such was the custom of the country. When the Romans,
after extolling the renown and courage of the Roman people and the greatness
of their dominion, asked the Gauls not to allow the Carthaginian invaders
a passage through their fields and cities, such interruption and laughter
broke out that the younger men were with difficulty kept quiet by the magistrates
and senior members of the council. They thought it a most stupid and impudent
demand to make, that the Gauls, in order to prevent the war from spreading
into Italy, should turn it against themselves and expose their own lands
to be ravaged instead of other people's. After quiet was restored the envoys
were informed that the Romans had rendered them no service, nor had the
Carthaginians done them any injury to make them take up arms either on
behalf of the Romans or against the Carthaginians. On the other hand, they
heard that men of their race were being expelled from Italy, and made to
pay tribute to Rome, and subjected to every other indignity. Their experience
was the same in all the other councils of Gaul, nowhere did they hear a
kindly or even a tolerably peaceable word till they reached Massilia. There
all the facts which their allies had carefully and honestly collected were
laid before them; they were informed that the interest of the Gauls had
already been secured by Hannibal, but even he would not find them very
tractable, with their wild and untamable nature, unless the chiefs were
also won over with gold, a thing which as a nation they were most eager
to procure. After thus traversing Spain and the tribes of Gaul the envoys
returned to Rome not long after the consuls had left for their respective
commands. They found the whole City in a state of excitement; definite
news had been received that the Carthaginians had crossed the Ebro, and
every one was looking forward to war.
21.21
After the capture of Saguntum, Hannibal withdrew into winter quarters at
New Carthage. Information reached him there of the proceedings at Rome
and Carthage, and he learnt that he was not only the general who was to
conduct the war, but also the sole person who was responsible for its outbreak.
As further delay would be most inexpedient, he sold and distributed the
rest of the plunder, and calling together those of his soldiers who were
of Spanish blood, he addressed them as follows: "I think, soldiers, that
you yourselves recognise that now that we have reduced all the tribes in
Spain we shall either have to bring our campaigns to an end and disband
our armies or else we must transfer our wars to other lands. If we seek
to win plunder and glory from other nations, then these tribes will enjoy
not only the blessings of peace, but also the fruits of victory. Since,
therefore, there await us campaigns far from home, and it is uncertain
when you will again see your homes and all that is dear to you, I grant
a furlough to every one who wishes to visit his friends. You must reassemble
at the commencement of spring, so that we may, with the kindly help of
the gods, enter upon a war which will bring us immense plunder and cover
us with glory." They all welcomed the opportunity, so spontaneously offered,
of visiting their homes after so long an absence, and in view of a still
longer absence in the future. The winter's rest, coming after their past
exertions, and soon to be followed by greater ones, restored their faculties
of mind and body and strengthened them for fresh trials of endurance.
In the early days of spring they reassembled according to orders. After
reviewing the whole of the native contingents, Hannibal left for Gades,
where he discharged his vows to Hercules, and bound himself by fresh obligations
to that deity in case his enterprise should succeed. As Africa would be
open to attack from the side of Sicily during his land march through Spain
and the two Gauls into Italy, he decided to secure that country with a
strong garrison. To supply their place he requisitioned troops from Africa,
a light-armed force consisting mainly of slingers. By thus transferring
Africans to Spain and Spaniards to Africa, the soldiers of each nationality
would be expected to render more efficient service, as being practically
under reciprocal obligations. The force he despatched to Africa consisted
of 13,850 Spanish infantry furnished with ox-hide bucklers, and 870 Balearic
slingers, with a composite body of 1200 cavalry drawn from numerous tribes.
This force was destined partly for the defence of Carthage, partly to hold
the African territory. At the same time recruiting officers were sent to
various communities; some 4000 men of good family were called up who were
under orders to be conveyed to Carthage to strengthen its defence, and
also to serve as hostages for the loyalty of their people.
21.22
Spain also had to be provided for, all the more so as Hannibal was fully
aware that Roman commissioners had been going all about the country to
win over the leading men of the various tribes. He placed it in charge
of his energetic and able brother, Hasdrubal, and assigned him an army
mainly composed of African troops-11,850 native infantry, 300 Ligurians,
and 500 Balearics. In addition to this body of infantry there were 450
Libyphoenician cavalry-these are a mixed race of Punic and aboriginal African
descent-some 1800 Numidians and Moors, dwellers on the shore of the Mediterranean,
and a small mounted contingent of 300 Ilergetes raised in Spain. Finally,
that his land force might be complete in all its parts, there were twenty-one
elephants. The protection of the coast required a fleet, and as it was
natural to suppose that the Romans would again make use of that arm in
which they had been victorious before, Hasdrubal had assigned to him a
fleet of 57 warships, including 50 quinqueremes, 2 quadriremes, and 5 triremes,
but only 32 quinqueremes and the 5 triremes were ready for sea. From Gades
he returned to the winter quarters of his army at New Carthage, and from
New Carthage he commenced his march on Italy. Passing by the city of Onusa,
he marched along the coast to the Ebro. The story runs that whilst halting
there he saw in a dream a youth of god-like appearance who said that he
had been sent by Jupiter to act as guide to Hannibal on his march to Italy.
He was accordingly to follow him and not to lose sight of him or let his
eyes wander. At first, filled with awe, he followed him without glancing
round him or looking back, but as instinctive curiosity impelled him to
wonder what it was that he was forbidden to gaze at behind him, he could
no longer command his eyes. He saw behind him a serpent of vast and marvellous
bulk, and as it moved along trees and bushes crashed down everywhere before
it, whilst in its wake there rolled a thunder-storm. He asked what the
monstrous portent meant, and was told that it was the devastation of Italy;
he was to go forward without further question and allow his destiny to
remain hidden.
21.23
Gladdened by this vision he proceeded to cross the Ebro, with his army
in three divisions, after sending men on in advance to secure by bribes
the good-will of the Gauls dwelling about his crossing-place, and also
to reconnoitre the passes of the Alps. He brought 90,000 infantry and 12,000
cavalry over the Ebro. His next step was to reduce to submission the Ilergetes,
the Bargusii, and the Ausetani, and also the district of Lacetania, which
lies at the foot of the Pyrenees. He placed Hanno in charge of the whole
coast-line to secure the passes which connect Spain with Gaul, and furnished
him with an army of 10,000 infantry to hold the district, and 1000 cavalry.
When his army commenced the passage of the Pyrenees and the barbarians
found that there was truth in the rumour that they were being led against
Rome, 3000 of the Carpetani deserted. It was understood that they were
induced to desert not so much by the prospect of the war as by the length
of the march and the impossibility of crossing the Alps. As it would have
been hazardous to recall them, or to attempt to detain them by force, in
case the quick passions of the rest of the army should be roused, Hannibal
sent back to their homes more than 7000 men who, he had personally discovered,
were getting tired of the campaign, and at the same time he gave out that
the Carpetani had also been sent back by him.
21.24
Then, to prevent his men from being demoralised by further delay and inactivity,
he crossed the Pyrenees with the remainder of his force and fixed his camp
at the town of Iliberri. The Gauls were told that it was against Italy
that war was being made, but as they had heard that the Spaniards beyond
the Pyrenees had been subjugated by force of arms, and strong garrisons
placed in their towns, several tribes, fearing for their liberty, were
roused to arms and mustered at Ruscino. On receiving the announcement of
this movement, Hannibal, fearing delay more than hostilities, sent spokesmen
to their chiefs to say that he was anxious for a conference with them,
and either they might come nearer to Iliberri, or he would approach Ruscino
to facilitate their meeting, for he would gladly receive them in his camp
or would himself go to them without loss of time. He had come into Gaul
as a friend not a foe, and unless the Gauls compelled him he would not
draw his sword till he reached Italy. This was the proposal made through
the envoys, but when the Gauls had, without any hesitation, moved their
camp up to Iliberri, they were effectually secured by bribes and allowed
the army a free and unmolested passage through their territory under the
very walls of Ruscino.
21.25
No intelligence, meanwhile, had reached Rome beyond the fact reported by
the Massilian envoys, namely that Hannibal had crossed the Ebro. No sooner
was this known than the Boii, who had been tampering with the Insubres,
rose in revolt, just as though he had already crossed the Alps, not so
much in consequence of their old standing enmity against Rome as of her
recent aggressions. Bodies of colonists were being settled on Gaulish territory
in the valley of the Po, at Placentia and Cremona, and intense irritation
was produced. Seizing their arms they made an attack on the land, which
was being actually surveyed at the time, and created such terror and confusion
that not only the agricultural population, but even the three Roman commissioners
who were engaged in marking out the holdings, fled to Mutina, not feeling
themselves safe behind the walls of Placentia. The commissioners were C.
Lutatius, C. Servilius, and M. Annius. There is no doubt as to the name
Lutatius, but instead of Annius and Servilius some annalists have Manlius
Acilius and C. Herennius, whilst others give P. Cornelius Asina and C.
Papirius Maso. There is also doubt as to whether it was the envoys who
had been sent to the Boii to remonstrate with them that were maltreated,
or the commissioners upon whom an attack was made whilst surveying the
ground. The Gauls invested Mutina, but as they were strangers to the art
of conducting sieges, and far too indolent to set about the construction
of military works, they contented themselves with blockading the town without
inflicting any injury on the walls. At last they pretended that they were
ready to discuss terms of peace, and the envoys were invited by the Gaulish
chieftains to a conference. Here they were arrested, in direct violation
not only of international law but of the safe-conduct which had been granted
for the occasion. Having made them prisoners the Gauls declared that they
would not release them until their hostages were restored to them.
When news came that the envoys were prisoners and Mutina and its garrison
in jeopardy, L. Manlius, the praetor, burning with anger, led his army
in separate divisions to Mutina. Most of the country was uncultivated at
that time and the road went through a forest. He advanced without throwing
out scouting parties and fell into an ambush, out of which, after sustaining
considerable loss, he made his way with difficulty on to more open ground.
Here he entrenched himself, and as the Gauls felt it would be hopeless
to attack him there, the courage of his men revived, though it was tolerably
certain that as many as 500 had fallen. They recommenced their march, and
as long as they were going through open country there was no enemy in view;
when they re-entered the forest their rear was attacked and great confusion
and panic created. They lost 700 men and six standards. When they at last
got out of the trackless and entangled forest there was an end to the terrifying
tactics of the Gauls and the wild alarm of the Romans. There was no difficulty
in repelling attacks when they reached the open country and made their
way to Tannetum, a place near the Po. Here they hastily entrenched themselves,
and, helped by the windings of the river and assisted by the Brixian Gauls,
they held their ground against an enemy whose numbers were daily increasing.
21.26
When the intelligence of this sudden outbreak reached Rome and the senate
became aware that they had a Gaulish war to face in addition to the war
with Carthage, they ordered C. Atilius, the praetor, to go to the relief
of Manlius with a Roman legion and 5000 men who had been recently enlisted
by the consul from among the allies. As the enemy, afraid to meet these
reinforcements, had retired, Atilius reached Tannetum without any fighting.
After raising a fresh legion in place of the one which had been sent away
with the praetor, P. Cornelius Scipio set sail with sixty warships and
coasted along by the shores of Etruria and Liguria, and from there past
the mountains of the Salyes until he reached Marseilles. Here he disembarked
his troops at the first mouth of the Rhone to which he came-the river flows
into the sea through several mouths-and formed his entrenched camp, hardly
able yet to believe that Hannibal had surmounted the obstacle of the Pyrenees.
When, however, he understood that he was already contemplating crossing
the Rhone, feeling uncertain as to where he would meet him and anxious
to give his men time to recover from the effects of the voyage, he sent
forward a picked force of 300 cavalry accompanied by Massilian guides and
friendly Gauls to explore the country in all directions and if possible
to discover the enemy.
Hannibal had overcome the opposition of the native tribes by either
fear or bribes and had now reached the territory of the Volcae. They were
a powerful tribe, inhabiting the country on both sides of the Rhone, but
distrusting their ability to stop Hannibal on the side of the river nearest
to him, they determined to make the river a barrier and transported nearly
all the population to the other side, on which they prepared to offer armed
resistance. The rest of the river population and those of the Volcae even,
who still remained in their homes, were induced by presents to collect
boats from all sides and to help in constructing others, and their efforts
were stimulated by the desire to get rid as soon as possible of the burdensome
presence of such a vast host of men. So an enormous number of boats and
vessels of every kind, such as they used in their journeys up and down
the river, was got together; new ones were made by the Gauls by hollowing
out the trunks of trees, then the soldiers themselves, seeing the abundance
of timber and how easily they were made, took to fashioning uncouth canoes,
quite content if only they would float and carry burdens and serve to transport
themselves and their belongings.
21.27
Everything was now ready for the crossing, but the whole of the opposite
bank was held by mounted and unmounted men prepared to dispute the passage.
In order to dislodge them Hannibal sent Hanno, the son of Bomilcar, with
a division, consisting mainly of Spaniards, a day's march up the river.
He was to seize the first chance of crossing without being observed, and
then lead his men by a circuitous route behind the enemy and at the right
moment attack them in the rear. The Gauls who were taken as guides informed
Hanno that about 25 miles up-stream a small island divided the river in
two, and the channel was of less depth in consequence. When they reached
the spot they hastily cut down the timber and constructed rafts on which
men and horses and other burdens could be ferried across. The Spaniards
had no trouble; they threw their clothes on to skins and placing their
leather shields on the top they rested on these and so swam across. The
rest of the army was ferried over on rafts, and after making a camp near
the river they took a day's rest after their labours of boat-making and
the nocturnal passage, their general in the meantime waiting anxiously
for an opportunity of putting his plan into execution. The next day they
set out on their march, and lighting a fire on some rising ground they
signalled by the column of smoke that they had crossed the river and were
not very far away. As soon as Hannibal received the signal he seized the
occasion and at once gave the order to cross the river. The infantry had
prepared rafts and boats, the cavalry mostly barges on account of the horses.
A line of large boats was moored across the river a short distance up-stream
to break the force of the current, and consequently the men in the smaller
boats crossed over in smooth water. Most of the horses were towed astern
and swam over, others were carried in barges, ready saddled and bridled
so as to be available for the cavalry the moment they landed.
21.28
The Gauls flocked together on the bank with their customary whoops and
war songs, waving their shields over their heads and brandishing their
javelins. They were somewhat dismayed when they saw what was going on in
front of them; the enormous number of large and small boats, the roar of
the river, the confused shouts of the soldiers and boatmen, some of whom
were trying to force their way against the current, whilst others on the
bank were cheering their comrades who were crossing. Whilst they were watching
all this movement with sinking hearts, still more alarming shouts were
heard behind them; Hanno had captured their camp. Soon he appeared on the
scene, and they were now confronted by danger from opposite quarters-the
host of armed men landing from the boats and the sudden attack which was
being made on their rear. For a time the Gauls endeavoured to maintain
the conflict in both directions, but finding themselves losing ground they
forced their way through where there seemed to be least resistance and
dispersed to their various villages. Hannibal brought over the rest of
his force undisturbed, and, without troubling himself any further about
the Gauls, formed his camp.
In the transport of the elephants I believe different plans were adopted;
at all events, the accounts of what took place vary considerably. Some
say that after they had all been collected on the bank the worst-tempered
beast amongst them was teased by his driver, and when he ran away from
it into the water the elephant followed him and drew the whole herd after
it, and as they got out of their depth they were carried by the current
to the opposite bank. The more general account, however, is that they were
transported on rafts; as this method would have appeared the safest beforehand
so it is most probable that it was the one adopted. They pushed out into
the river a raft 200 feet long and 50 feet broad, and to prevent it from
being carried down-stream, one end was secured by several stout hawsers
to the bank. It was covered with earth like a bridge in order that the
animals, taking it for solid ground, would not be afraid to venture on
it. A second raft, of the same breadth but only 100 feet long and capable
of crossing the river, was made fast to the former. The elephants led by
the females were driven along the fixed raft, as if along a road, until
they came on to the smaller one. As soon as they were safely on this it
was cast off and towed by light boats to the other side of the river. When
the first lot were landed others were brought over in the same way. They
showed no fear whilst they were being driven along the fixed raft; their
fright began when they were being carried into mid-channel on the other
raft which had been cast loose. They crowded together, those on the outside
backing away from the water, and showed considerable alarm until their
very fears at the sight of the water made them quiet. Some in their excitement
fell overboard and threw their drivers, but their mere weight kept them
steady, and as they felt their way into shallow water they succeeded in
getting safely to land.
21.29
While the elephants were being ferried across, Hannibal sent 500 Numidian
horse towards the Romans to ascertain their numbers and their intentions.
This troop of horse encountered the 300 Roman cavalry who, as I have already
stated, had been sent forward from the mouth of the Rhone. It was a much
more severe fight than might have been expected from the number of combatants.
Not only were there many wounded but each side lost about the same number
of killed, and the Romans, who were at last completely exhausted, owed
their victory to a panic among the Numidians and their consequent flight.
Of the victors as many as 160 fell, not all Romans, some were Gauls; whilst
the vanquished lost more than 200. This action with which the war commenced
was an omen of its final result, but though it portended the final victory
of Rome it showed that the victory would not be attained without much bloodshed
and repeated defeats. The forces drew off from the field and returned to
their respective commanders. Scipio found himself unable to form any definite
plans beyond what were suggested to him by the movements of the enemy.
Hannibal was undecided whether to resume his march to Italy or to engage
the Romans, the first army to oppose him. He was dissuaded from the latter
course by the arrival of envoys from the Boii and their chief, Magalus.
They came to assure Hannibal of their readiness to act as guides and take
their share in the dangers of the expedition, and they gave it as their
opinion that he ought to reserve all his strength for the invasion of Italy
and not fritter any of it away beforehand. The bulk of his army had not
forgotten the previous war and looked forward with dismay to meeting their
old enemy, but what appalled them much more was the prospect of an endless
journey over the Alps, which rumour said was, to those at all events who
had never tried it, a thing to be dreaded.
21.30
When Hannibal had made up his mind to go forward and lose no time in reaching
Italy, his goal, he ordered a muster of his troops and addressed them in
tones of mingled rebuke and encouragement. "I am astonished," he said,
"to see how hearts that have been always dauntless have now suddenly become
a prey to fear. Think of the many victorious campaigns you have gone through,
and remember that you did not leave Spain before you had added to the Carthaginian
empire all the tribes in the country washed by two widely remote seas.
The Roman people made a demand for all who had taken part in the siege
of Saguntum to be given up to them, and you, to avenge the insult, have
crossed the Ebro to wipe out the name of Rome and bring freedom to the
world. When you commenced your march, from the setting to the rising sun,
none of you thought it too much for you, but now when you see that by far
the greater part of the way has been accomplished; the passes of the Pyrenees,
which were held by most warlike tribes, surmounted; the Rhone, that mighty
stream, crossed in the face of so many thousand Gauls, and the rush of
its waters checked-now that you are within sight of the Alps, on the other
side of which lies Italy, you have become weary and are arresting your
march in the very gates of the enemy. What do you imagine the Alps to be
other than lofty mountains? Suppose them to be higher than the peaks of
the Pyrenees, surely no region in the world can touch the sky or be impassable
to man. Even the Alps are inhabited and cultivated, animals are bred and
reared there, their gorges and ravines can be traversed by armies. Why,
even the envoys whom you see here did not cross the Alps by flying through
the air, nor were their ancestors native to the soil. They came into Italy
as emigrants looking for a land to settle in, and they crossed the Alps
often in immense bodies with their wives and children and all their belongings.
What can be inaccessible or insuperable to the soldier who carries nothing
with him but his weapons of war? What toils and perils you went through
for eight months to effect the capture of Saguntum! And now that Rome,
the capital of the world, is your goal, can you deem anything so difficult
or so arduous that it should prevent you from reaching it? Many years ago
the Gauls captured the place which Carthaginians despair of approaching;
either you must confess yourselves inferior in courage and enterprise to
a people whom you have conquered again and again, or else you must look
forward to finishing your march on the ground between the Tiber and the
walls of Rome."
21.31
After this rousing appeal he dismissed them with orders to prepare themselves
by food and rest for the march. The next day they advanced up the left
bank of the Rhone towards the central districts of Gaul, not because this
was the most direct route to the Alps, but because he thought that there
would be less likelihood of the Romans meeting him, for he had no desire
to engage them before he arrived in Italy. Four days' marching brought
him to the "Island." Here the Isere and the Rhone, flowing down from different
points in the Alps, enclose a considerable extent of land and then unite
their channels; the district thus enclosed is called the "Island." The
adjacent country was inhabited by the Allobroges, a tribe who even in those
days were second to none in Gaul in power and reputation. At the time of
Hannibal's visit a quarrel had broken out between two brothers who were
each aspiring to the sovereignty. The elder brother, whose name was Brancus,
had hitherto been the chief, but was now expelled by a party of the younger
men, headed by his brother, who found an appeal to violence more successful
than an appeal to right. Hannibal's timely appearance on the scene led
to the question being referred to him; he was to decide who was the legitimate
claimant to the kingship. He pronounced in favour of the elder brother,
who had the support of the senate and the leading men. In return for this
service he received assistance in provisions and supplies of all kinds,
especially of clothing, a pressing necessity in view of the notorious cold
of the Alps. After settling the feud amongst the Allobroges, Hannibal resumed
his march. He did not take the direct course to the Alps, but turned to
the left towards the Tricastini; then, skirting the territory of the Vocontii,
he marched in the direction of the Tricorii. Nowhere did he meet with any
difficulty until he arrived at the Durance. This river, which also takes
its rise in the Alps, is of all the rivers of Gaul the most difficult to
cross. Though carrying down a great volume of water, it does not lend itself
to navigation, for it is not kept in by banks, but flows in many separate
channels. As it is constantly shifting its bottom and the direction of
its currents, the task of fording it is a most hazardous one, whilst the
shingle and boulders carried down make the foothold insecure and treacherous.
It happened to be swollen by rain at the time, and the men were thrown
into much disorder whilst crossing it, whilst their fears and confused
shouting added considerably to their difficulties.
21.32
Three days after Hannibal had left the banks of the Rhone, P. Cornelius
Scipio arrived at the deserted camp with his army in battle order, ready
to engage at once. When, however, he saw the abandoned lines and realised
that it would be no easy matter to overtake his opponent after he had got
such a long start, he returned to his ships. He considered that the easier
and safer course would be to meet Hannibal as he came down from the Alps.
Spain was the province allotted to him, and to prevent its being entirely
denuded of Roman troops he sent his brother Cneius Scipio with the greater
part of his army to act against Hasdrubal, not only to keep the old allies
and win new ones, but to drive Hasdrubal out of Spain. He himself sailed
for Genoa with a very small force, intending to defend Italy with the army
lying in the valley of the Po. From the Durance Hannibal's route lay mostly
through open level country, and he reached the Alps without meeting with
any opposition from the Gauls who inhabited the district. But the sight
of the Alps revived the terrors in the minds of his men. Although rumour,
which generally magnifies untried dangers, had filled them with gloomy
forebodings, the nearer view proved much more fearful. The height of the
mountains now so close, the snow which was almost lost in the sky, the
wretched huts perched on the rocks, the flocks and herds shrivelled and
stunted with the cold, the men wild and unkempt, everything animate and
inanimate stiff with frost, together with other sights dreadful beyond
description-all helped to increase their alarm.
As the head of the column began to climb the nearest slopes, the natives
appeared on the heights above; had they concealed themselves in the ravines
and then rushed down they would have caused frightful panic and bloodshed.
Hannibal called a halt and sent on some Gauls to examine the ground, and
when he learnt that advance was impossible in that direction he formed
his camp in the widest part of the valley that he could find; everywhere
around the ground was broken and precipitous. The Gauls who had been sent
to reconnoitre got into conversation with the natives, as there was little
difference between their speech or their manners, and they brought back
word to Hannibal that the pass was only occupied in the daytime, at nightfall
the natives all dispersed to their homes. Accordingly, at early dawn he
began the ascent as though determined to force the pass in broad daylight,
and spent the day in movements designed to conceal his real intentions
and in fortifying the camp on the spot where they had halted. As soon as
he observed that the natives had left the heights and were no longer watching
his movements, he gave orders, with the view of deceiving the enemy, for
a large number of fires to be lighted, larger in fact than would be required
by those remaining in camp. Then, leaving the baggage with the cavalry
and the greater part of the infantry in camp, he himself with a specially
selected body of troops in light marching order rapidly moved out of the
defile and occupied the heights which the enemy had held.
21.33
The following day the rest of the army broke camp in the grey dawn and
commenced its march. The natives were beginning to assemble at their customary
post of observation when they suddenly became aware that some of the enemy
were in possession of their stronghold right over their heads, whilst others
were advancing on the path beneath. The double impression made on their
eyes and imagination kept them for a few moments motionless, but when they
saw the column falling into disorder mainly through the horses becoming
frightened, they thought that if they increased the confusion and panic
it would be sufficient to destroy it. So they charged down from rock to
rock, careless as to whether there were paths or not, for they were familiar
with the ground. The Carthaginians had to meet this attack at the same
time that they were struggling with the difficulties of the way, and as
each man was doing his best for himself to get out of the reach of danger,
they were fighting more amongst themselves than against the natives. The
horses did the most mischief; they were terrified at the wild shouts, which
the echoing woods and valleys made all the louder, and when they happened
to be struck or wounded they created terrible havoc amongst the men and
the different baggage animals. The road was flanked by sheer precipices
on each side, and in the crowding together many were pushed over the edge
and fell an immense depth. Amongst these were some of the soldiers; the
heavily-laden baggage animals rolled over like falling houses. Horrible
as the sight was, Hannibal remained quiet and kept his men back for some
time, for fear of increasing the alarm and confusion, but when he saw that
the column was broken and that the army was in danger of losing all its
baggage, in which case he would have brought them safely through to no
purpose, he ran down from his higher ground and at once scattered the enemy.
At the same time, however, he threw his own men into still greater disorder
for the moment, but it was very quickly allayed now that the passage was
cleared by the flight of the natives. In a short time the whole army had
traversed the pass, not only without any further disturbance, but almost
in silence. He then seized a fortified village, the head place of the district,
together with some adjacent hamlets, and from the food and cattle thus
secured he provided his army with rations for three days. As the natives,
after their first defeat, no longer impeded their march, whilst the road
presented little difficulty, they made considerable progress during those
three days.
21.34
They now came to another canton which, considering that it was a mountain
district, had a considerable population. Here he narrowly escaped destruction,
not in fair and open fighting, but by the practices which he himself employed-falsehood
and treachery. The head men from the fortified villages, men of advanced
age, came as a deputation to the Carthaginian and told him that they had
been taught by the salutary example of other people's misfortunes to seek
the friendship of the Carthaginians rather than to feel their strength.
They were accordingly prepared to carry out his orders; he would receive
provisions and guides, and hostages as a guarantee of good faith. Hannibal
felt that he ought not to trust them blindly nor to meet their offer with
a flat refusal, in case they should become hostile. So he replied in friendly
terms, accepted the hostages whom they placed in his hands, made use of
the provisions with which they supplied him on the march, but followed
their guides with his army prepared for action, not at all as though he
were going through a peaceable or friendly country. The elephants and cavalry
were in front, he himself followed with the main body of the infantry,
keeping a sharp and anxious look-out in all directions. Just as they reached
a part of the pass where it narrowed and was overhung on one side by a
wall of rock, the barbarians sprang up from ambush on all sides and assailed
the column in front and rear, at close quarters, and at a distance by rolling
huge stones down on it. The heaviest attack was made in the rear, and as
the infantry faced round to meet it, it became quite obvious that if the
rear of the column had not been made exceptionally strong, a terrible disaster
must have occurred in that pass. As it was, they were in the greatest danger,
and within an ace of total destruction. For whilst Hannibal was hesitating
whether to send his infantry on into the narrow part of the pass-for whilst
protecting the rear of the cavalry they had no reserves to protect their
own rear-the mountaineers, making a flank charge, burst through the middle
of the column and held the pass so that Hannibal had to spend that one
night without his cavalry or his baggage.
21.35
The next day, as the savages attacked with less vigour, the column closed
up, and the pass was surmounted, not without loss, more, however, of baggage
animals than of men. From that time the natives made their appearance in
smaller numbers and behaved more like banditti than regular soldiers; they
attacked either front or rear just as the ground gave them opportunity,
or as the advance or halt of the column presented a chance of surprise.
The elephants caused considerable delay, owing to the difficulty of getting
them through narrow or precipitous places; on the other hand, they rendered
that part of the column safe from attack where they were, for the natives
were unaccustomed to the sight of them and had a great dread of going too
near them. Nine days from their commencing the ascent they arrived at the
highest point of the Alps, after traversing a region mostly without roads
and frequently losing their way either through the treachery of their guides
or through their own mistakes in trying to find the way for themselves.
For two days they remained in camp on the summit, whilst the troops enjoyed
a respite from fatigue and fighting. Some of the baggage animals which
had fallen amongst the rocks and had afterwards followed the track of the
column came into camp. To add to the misfortunes of the worn-out troops,
there was a heavy fall of snow-the Pleiads were near their setting-and
this new experience created considerable alarm. In the early morning of
the third day the army recommenced its heavy march over ground everywhere
deep in snow. Hannibal saw in all faces an expression of listlessness and
despondency. He rode on in front to a height from which there was a wide
and extensive view, and halting his men, he pointed out to them the land
of Italy and the rich valley of the Po lying at the foot of the Alps. "You
are now," he said, "crossing the barriers not only of Italy, but of Rome
itself. Henceforth all will be smooth and easy for you; in one or, at the
most, two battles, you will be masters of the capital and stronghold of
Italy." Then the army resumed its advance with no annoyance from the enemy
beyond occasional attempts at plunder. The remainder of the march, however,
was attended with much greater difficulty than they had experienced in
the ascent, for the distance to the plains on the Italian side is shorter,
and therefore the descent is necessarily steeper. Almost the whole of the
way was precipitous, narrow, and slippery, so that they were unable to
keep their footing, and if they slipped they could not recover themselves;
they kept falling over each other, and the baggage animals rolled over
on their drivers.
21.36
At length they came to a much narrower pass which descended over such sheer
cliffs that a light-armed soldier could hardly get down it even by hanging
on to projecting roots and branches. The place had always been precipitous,
and a landslip had recently carried away the road for 1000 feet. The cavalry
came to a halt here as though they had arrived at their journey's end,
and whilst Hannibal was wondering what could be causing the delay he was
informed that there was no passage. Then he went forward to examine the
place and saw that there was nothing for it but to lead the army by a long
circuitous route over pathless and untrodden snow. But this, too, soon
proved to be impracticable. The old snow had been covered to a moderate
depth by a fresh fall, and the first comers planted their feet firmly on
the new snow, but when it had become melted under the tread of so many
men and beasts there was nothing to walk on but ice covered with slush.
Their progress now became one incessant and miserable struggle. The smooth
ice allowed no foothold, and as they were going down a steep incline they
were still less able to keep on their legs, whilst, once down, they tried
in vain to rise, as their hands and knees were continually slipping. There
were no stumps or roots about for them to get hold of and support themselves
by, so they rolled about helplessly on the glassy ice and slushy snow.
The baggage animals as they toiled along cut through occasionally into
the lowest layer of snow, and when they stumbled they struck out their
hoofs in their struggles to recover themselves and broke through into the
hard and congealed ice below, where most of them stuck as though caught
in a gin.
21.37
At last, when men and beasts alike were worn out by their fruitless exertions,
a camp was formed on the summit, after the place had been cleared with
immense difficulty owing to the quantity of snow that had to be removed.
The next thing was to level the rock through which alone a road was practicable.
The soldiers were told off to cut through it. They built up against it
an enormous pile of tall trees which they had felled and lopped, and when
the wind was strong enough to blow up the fire they set light to the pile.
When the rock was red hot they poured vinegar upon it to disintegrate it.
After thus treating it by fire they opened a way through it with their
tools, and eased the steep slope by winding tracks of moderate gradient,
so that not only the baggage animals but even the elephants could be led
down. Four days were spent over the rock, and the animals were almost starved
to death, for the heights are mostly bare of vegetation and what herbage
there is is buried beneath the snow. In the lower levels there were sunny
valleys and streams flowing through woods, and spots more deserving of
human inhabitants. Here the beasts were turned loose to graze, and the
troops, worn out with their engineering, were allowed to rest. In three
days more they reached the open plains and found a pleasanter country and
pleasanter people living in it
21.38
Such, in the main, was the way in which they reached Italy, five months,
according to some authorities, after leaving New Carthage, fifteen days
of which were spent in overcoming the difficulties of the Alps. The authorities
are hopelessly at variance as to the number of the troops with which Hannibal
entered Italy. The highest estimate assigns him 100,000 infantry and 20,000
cavalry; the lowest puts his strength at 20,000 infantry and 6000 cavalry.
L. Cincius Alimentus tells us that he was taken prisoner by Hannibal, and
I should be most inclined to accept his authority if he had not confused
the numbers by adding in the Gauls and Ligurians; if these are included
there were 80,000 infantry and 10,000 cavalry. It is, however, more probable
that these joined Hannibal in Italy, and some authorities actually assert
this. Cincius also states that he had heard Hannibal say that subsequently
to his passage of the Rhone he lost 36,000 men, besides an immense number
of horses and other animals. The first people he came to were the Taurini,
a semi-Garlic tribe. As tradition is unanimous on this point I am the more
surprised that a question should be raised as to what route Hannibal took
over the Alps, and that it should be generally supposed that he crossed
over the Poenine range, which is said to have derived its name from that
circumstance. Coelius asserts that he crossed by the Cremonian range. These
two passes, however, would not have brought him to the Taurini but through
the Salassi, a mountain tribe, to the Libuan Gauls. It is highly improbable
that those routes to Gaul were available at that time, and in any case
the Poenine route would have been closed by the semi-German tribes who
inhabited the district. And it is perfectly certain, if we accept their
authority, that the Seduni and Veragri, who inhabit that range, say that
the name of Poenine was not given to it from any passage of the Carthaginians
over it but from the deity Poeninus, whose shrine stands on the highest
point of the range.
21.39
It was a very fortunate circumstance for Hannibal at the outset of his
campaign that the Taurini, the first people he came to, were at war with
the Insubres. But he was unable to bring his army into the field to assist
either side, for it was whilst they were recovering from the ills and misfortunes
which had gathered upon them that they felt them most. Rest and idleness
instead of toil, plenty following upon starvation, cleanliness and comfort
after squalor and emaciation, affected their filthy and well-nigh bestialised
bodies in various ways. It was this state of things which induced P. Cornelius
Scipio, the consul, after he had arrived with his ships at Pisa and taken
over from Manlius and Atilius an army of raw levies disheartened by their
recent humiliating defeats, to push on with all speed to the Po that he
might engage the enemy before he had recovered his strength. But when he
reached Placentia Hannibal had already left his encampment and taken by
storm one of the cities of the Taurini, their capital, in fact, because
they would not voluntarily maintain friendly relations with him. He would
have secured the adhesion of the Gauls in the valley of the Po, not by
fear but by their own choice, if the sudden arrival of the consul had not
taken them by surprise whilst they were waiting for a favourable moment
to revolt. Just at the time of Scipio's arrival, Hannibal moved out of
the country of the Taurini, for, seeing how undecided the Gauls were as
to whose side they should take, he thought that if he were on the spot
they would follow him. The two armies were now almost within sight of one
another, and the commanders who were confronting each other, though not
sufficiently acquainted with each other's military skill, were even then
imbued with mutual respect and admiration. Even before the fall of Saguntum
the name of Hannibal was on all men's lips in Rome, and in Scipio Hannibal
recognised a great leader, seeing that he had been chosen beyond all others
to oppose him. This mutual esteem was enhanced by their recent achievements;
Scipio, after Hannibal had left him in Gaul, was in time to meet him on
his descent from the Alps; Hannibal had not only dared to attempt but had
actually accomplished the passage of the Alps. Scipio, however, made the
first move by crossing the Po and shifting his camp to the Ticinus. Before
leading his men into battle he addressed them in a speech full of encouragement,
in the following terms:
21.40
"If, soldiers, I were leading into battle the army which I had with me
in Gaul, there would have been no need for me to address you. For what
encouragement would those cavalry need who had won such a brilliant victory
over the enemy's cavalry at the Rhone or those legions of infantry with
whom I pursued this same enemy, who by his running away and shirking an
engagement acknowledged that I was his conqueror? That army, raised for
service in Spain, is campaigning under my brother, Cn. Scipio, who is acting
as my deputy in the country which the senate and people of Rome have assigned
to it. In order, therefore, that you might have a consul to lead you against
Hannibal and the Carthaginians, I have volunteered to command in this battle,
and as I am new to you and you to me I must say a few words to you. "Now
as to the character of the enemy and the kind of warfare which awaits you.
You have to fight, soldiers, with the men whom you defeated in the former
war by land and sea, from whom you have exacted a war indemnity for the
last twenty years, and from whom you wrested Sicily and Sardinia as the
prizes of war. You, therefore, will go into this battle with the exultation
of victors, they with the despondency of the vanquished. They are not going
to fight now because they are impelled by courage but through sheer necessity;
unless indeed you suppose that, after shirking a contest when their army
was at its full strength, they have gained more confidence now that they
have lost two-thirds of their infantry and cavalry in their passage over
the Alps, now that those who survive are fewer than those who have perished.
"'Yes,' it may be said, 'they are few in number, but they are strong in
courage and physique, and possess a power of endurance and vigour in attack
which very few can withstand.' No, they are only semblances or rather ghosts
of men, worn out with starvation, cold, filth, and squalor, bruised and
enfeebled amongst the rocks and precipices, and, what is more, their limbs
are frostbitten, their thews and sinews cramped with cold, their frames
shrunk and shrivelled with frost, their weapons battered and shivered,
their horses lame and out of condition. This is the cavalry, this the infantry
with whom you are going to fight; you will not have an enemy but only the
last vestiges of an enemy to meet. My only fear is that when you have fought
it will appear to be the Alps that have conquered Hannibal. But perhaps
it was right that it should be so, and that the gods, without any human
aid, should begin and all but finish this war with a people and their general
who have broken treaties, and that to us, who next to the gods have been
sinned against, it should be left to complete what they began.
21.41
"I am not afraid of any one thinking that I am saying this in a spirit
of bravado for the sake of putting you in good heart, whilst my real feelings
and convictions are far otherwise. I was at perfect liberty to go with
my army to Spain, for which country I had actually started, and which was
my assigned province. There I should have had my brother to share my plans
and dangers; I should have had Hasdrubal rather than Hannibal as my foe,
and undoubtedly a less serious war on my hands. But as I was sailing along
the coast of Gaul I heard tidings of this enemy, and at once landed, and
after sending on cavalry in advance moved up to the Rhone. A cavalry action
was fought-that was the only arm I had the opportunity of employing-and
I defeated the enemy. His infantry were hurrying away like an army in flight,
and as I could not come up with them overland, I returned to my ships with
all possible speed, and after making a wide circuit by sea and land have
met this dreaded foe almost at the foot of the Alps. Does it seem to you
that I have unexpectedly fallen in with him whilst I was anxious to decline
a contest and not rather that I am meeting him actually on his track and
challenging and dragging him into action? I shall be glad to learn whether
the earth has suddenly within the last twenty years produced a different
breed of Carthaginans, or whether they are the same as those who fought
at the Aegates, and whom you allowed to depart from Eryx on payment of
eighteen denarii a head, and whether this Hannibal is, as he gives out,
the rival of Hercules in his journeys, or whether he has been left by his
father to pay tax and tribute and to be the slave of the Roman people.
If his crime at Saguntum were not driving him on, he would surely have
some regard, if not for his conquered country, at all events for his house
and his father, and the treaties signed by that Hamilcar who at the order
of our consul withdrew his garrison from Eryx, who with sighs and groans
accepted the hard conditions imposed on the conquered Carthaginians, and
who agreed to evacuate Sicily and pay a war indemnity to Rome. And so I
would have you, soldiers, fight not merely in the spirit which you are
wont to show against other foes, but with feelings of indignant anger as
though you saw your own slaves bearing arms against you. When they were
shut up in Eryx we might have inflicted the most terrible of human punishments
and starved them to death; we might have taken our victorious fleet across
to Africa, and in a few days destroyed Carthage without a battle. We granted
pardon to their prayers, we allowed them to escape from the blockade, we
agreed to terms of peace with those whom we had conquered, and afterwards
when they were in dire straits through the African war we took them under
our protection, To requite us for these acts of kindness they are following
the lead of a young madman and coming to attack our fatherland. I only
wish this struggle were for honour alone and not for safety. It is not
about the possession of Sicily and Sardinia, the old subjects of dispute,
but for Italy that you have to fight. There is no second army at our back
to oppose the enemy if we fall to win, there are no more Alps to delay
his advance while a fresh army can be raised for defence. Here it is, soldiers,
that we have to resist, just as though we were fighting before the walls
of Rome. Every one of you must remember that he is using his arms to protect
not himself only but also his wife and little children; nor must his anxiety
be confined to his home, he must realise, too, that the senate and people
of Rome are watching our exploits today. What our strength and courage
are now here, such will be the fortune of our City yonder and of the empire
of Rome."
21.42
Such was the language which the consul used towards the Romans. Hannibal
thought that the courage of his men ought to be roused by deeds first rather
than by words. After forming his army into a circle to view the spectacle,
he placed in the centre some Alpine prisoners in chains, and when some
Gaulish arms had been thrown down at their feet he ordered an interpreter
to ask if any one of them was willing to fight if he were freed from his
chains and received arms and a horse as the reward of victory. All to a
man demanded arms and battle, and when the lot was cast to decide who should
fight, each wished that he might be the one whom Fortune should select
for the combat. As each man's lot fell, he hastily seized his arms full
of eagerness and exultant delight, amidst the congratulations of his comrades
and danced after the custom of his country. But when they began to fight,
such was the state of feeling not only amongst the men who had accepted
this condition, but amongst the spectators generally that the good fortune
of those who died bravely was lauded quite as much as that of those who
were victorious.
21.43
After his men had been impressed by watching several pairs of combatants
Hannibal dismissed them, and afterwards summoned them round him, when he
is reported to have made the following speech: "Soldiers, you have seen
in the fate of others an example how to conquer or to die. If the feelings
with which you watched them lead you to form a similar estimate of your
own fortunes we are victors. That was no idle spectacle but a picture,
as it were, of your own condition. Fortune, I am inclined to think has
bound you in heavier chains and imposed upon you a sterner necessity than
on your captives. You are shut in on the right hand and on the left by
two seas, and you have not a single ship in which to make your escape;
around you flows the Po, a greater river than the Rhone and a more rapid
one; the barrier of the Alps frowns upon you behind, those Alps which you
could hardly cross when your strength and vigour were unimpaired. Here,
soldiers, on this spot where you have for the first time encountered the
enemy you must either conquer or die. The same Fortune which has imposed
upon you the necessity of fighting also holds out rewards of victory, rewards
as great as any which men are wont to solicit from the immortal gods. Even
if we were only going to recover Sicily and Sardinia, possessions which
were wrested from our fathers, they would be prizes ample enough to satisfy
us. Everything that the Romans now possess, which they have won through
so many triumphs, all that they have amassed, will become yours, together
with those who own it. Come then, seize your arms and with the help of
heaven win this splendid reward. You have spent time enough in hunting
cattle on the barren mountains of Lusitania and Celtiberia, and finding
no recompense for all your toils and dangers; now the hour has come for
you to enter upon rich and lucrative campaigns and to earn rewards which
are worth the earning, after your long march over all those mountains and
rivers, and through all those nations in arms. Here Fortune has vouchsafed
an end to your toils, here she will vouchsafe a reward worthy of all your
past services.
"Do not think because the war, being against Rome, bears a great name,
that therefore victory will be correspondingly difficult. Many a despised
enemy has fought a long and costly fight; nations and kings of high renown
have been beaten with a very slight effort. For, setting aside the glory
which surrounds the name of Rome, what point is there in which they can
be compared to you? To say nothing of your twenty years' campaigning earned
on with all your courage, all your good fortune, from the pillars of Hercules,
from the shores of the ocean, from the furthest corners of the earth, through
the midst of all the most warlike peoples of Spain and Gaul, you have arrived
here as victors. The army with which you will fight is made up of raw levies
who were beaten, conquered, and hemmed in by the Gauls this very summer,
who are strangers to their general, and he a stranger to them. I, reared
as I was, almost born, in the headquarters tent of my father, a most distinguished
general, I, who have subjugated Spain and Gaul, who have conquered not
only the Alpine tribes, but, what is a much greater task, the Alps themselves-am
I to compare myself with this six months' general who has deserted his
own army, who, if any one were to point out to him the Romans and the Carthaginians
after their standards were removed, would, I am quite certain, not know
which army he was in command of as consul? I do not count it a small matter,
soldiers, that there is not a man amongst you before whose eyes I have
not done many a soldierly deed, or to whom I, who have witnessed and attested
his courage, could not recount his own gallant exploits and the time and
place where they were performed. I was your pupil before I was your commander,
and I shall go into battle surrounded by men whom I have commended and
rewarded thousands of times against those who know nothing of each other,
who are mutual strangers.
21.44
"Wherever I turn my eyes I see nothing but courage and strength, a veteran
infantry, a cavalry, regular and irregular alike, drawn from the noblest
tribes, you, our most faithful and brave allies, you, Carthaginians, who
are going to fight for your country, inspired by a most righteous indignation.
We are taking the aggressive, we are descending in hostile array into Italy,
prepared to fight more bravely and more fearlessly than our foe because
he who attacks is animated by stronger hopes and greater courage than he
who meets the attack. Besides, we are smarting from a sense of injustice
and humiliation. First they demanded me, your general, as their victim,
then they insisted that all of you who had taken part in the siege of Saguntum
should be surrendered; had you been given up they would have inflicted
upon you the most exquisite tortures. That outrageously cruel and tyrannical
nation claims everything for itself, makes everything dependent on its
will and pleasure; they think it right to dictate with whom we are to make
war or peace. They confine and enclose us within mountains and rivers as
boundaries, but they do not observe the limits which they themselves have
fixed. 'Do not cross the Ebro, see that you have nothing to do with the
Saguntines.' 'But Saguntum is not on the Ebro.' 'You must not move a step
anywhere.' 'Is it a small matter, your taking from me my oldest provinces,
Sicily and Sardinia? Will you cross over into Spain as well, and if I withdraw
from there, will you cross over into Africa? Do I say, will cross over?
You have crossed over.' They have sent the two consuls for this year, one
to Africa, the other to Spain. There is nothing left to us anywhere except
what we claim by force of arms. Those may be allowed to be cowards and
dastards who have something to fall back upon, whom their own land, their
own territory will receive as they flee through its safe and peaceful roads;
you must of necessity be brave men, every alternative between victory and
death has been broken off by the resolve of despair, and you are compelled
either to conquer, or if Fortune wavers, to meet death in battle rather
than in flight. If you have all made up your minds to this, I say again
you are victors, no keener weapon has been put into men's hands by the
immortal gods than a contempt for death."
21.45
After the fighting spirit of both armies had been roused by these harangues,
the Romans threw a bridge over the Ticinus and constructed a blockhouse
for its defence. Whilst they were thus occupied, the Carthaginian sent
Maharbal with a troop of 500 Numidian horse to ravage the lands of the
allies of Rome, but with orders to spare those of the Gauls as far as possible,
and to win over their chiefs to his side. When the bridge was completed
the Roman army crossed over in the territory of the Insubres and took up
a position five miles from Ictumuli, where Hannibal had his camp. As soon
as he saw that a battle was imminent, he hastily recalled Maharbal and
his troopers. Feeling that he could never say enough by way of admonition
and encouragement to his soldiers, he ordered an assembly, and before the
whole army offered definite rewards in the hope of which they were to fight.
He said that he would give them land wherever they wished, in Italy, Africa,
or Spain, which would be free from all taxation for the recipient and for
his children; if any preferred money to land, he would satisfy his desires;
if any of the allies wished to become Carthaginian citizens he would give
them the opportunity; if any preferred to return to their homes he would
take care that their circumstances should be such that they would never
wish to exchange them with any of their countrymen. He even promised freedom
to the slaves who followed their masters, and to the masters, for every
slave freed, two more as compensation. To convince them of his determination
to carry out these promises, he held a lamb with his left hand and a flint
knife in his right and prayed to Jupiter and the other gods, that, if he
broke his word and forswore himself they would slay him as he had slain
the lamb. He then crushed the animal's head with the flint. They all felt
then that the gods themselves would guarantee the fulfilment of their hopes,
and looked upon the delay in bringing on an action as delay in gaining
their desires; with one mind and one voice they clamoured to be led into
battle.
21.46
The Romans were far from showing this alacrity. Amongst other causes of
alarm they had been unnerved by some portents which had happened lately.
A wolf had entered the camp and after worrying all it met had got away
unhurt. A swarm of bees, too, had settled on a tree which overhung the
headquarters tent. After the necessary propitiation had been made Scipio
moved out with a force of cavalry and light-armed javelin men towards the
enemy's camp to get a nearer view and to ascertain the number and nature
of his force. He fell in with Hannibal who was also advancing with his
cavalry to explore the neighbourhood. Neither body at first saw the other;
the first indication of a hostile approach was given by the unusually dense
cloud of dust which was raised by the tramp of so many men and horses.
Each party halted and made ready for battle. Scipio placed the javelin
men and the Gaulish cavalry in the front, the Roman horse and the heavy
cavalry of the allies as reserves. Hannibal formed his centre with his
regular cavalry, and posted the Numidians on the flanks. Scarcely had the
battle shout been raised before the javelin men retired to the second line
amongst the reserves. For some time the cavalry kept up an equal fight,
but as the foot-soldiers became mixed up with the mounted men they made
their horses unmanageable, many were thrown or else dismounted where they
saw their comrades in difficulty, until the battle was mainly fought on
foot. Then the Numidians on the flanks wheeled round and appeared on the
rear of the Romans, creating dismay and panic amongst them. To make matters
worse the consul was wounded and in danger; he was rescued by the intervention
of his son who was just approaching manhood. This was the youth who afterwards
won the glory of bringing this war to a close, and gained the soubriquet
of Africanus for his splendid victory over Hannibal and the Carthaginians.
The javelin men were the first to be attacked by the Numidians and they
fled in disorder, the rest of the force, the cavalry, closed round the
consul, shielding him as much by their persons as by their arms, and returned
to camp in orderly retirement. Caelius assigns the honour of saving the
consul to a Ligurian slave, but I would rather believe that it was his
son; the majority of authors assert this and the tradition is generally
accepted.
21.47
This was the first battle with Hannibal, and the result made it quite clear
that the Carthaginian was superior in his cavalry, and consequently that
the open plains which stretch from the Po to the Alps were not a suitable
battlefield for the Romans. The next night accordingly, the soldiers were
ordered to collect their baggage in silence, the army moved away from the
Ticinus and marched rapidly to the Po, which they crossed by the pontoon
bridge which was still intact, in perfect order and without any molestation
by the enemy. They reached Placentia before Hannibal knew for certain that
they had left the Ticinus; however, he succeeded in capturing some 600,
who were loitering on his side of the Po, and were slowly unfastening the
end of the bridge. He was unable to use the bridge for crossing, as the
ends had been unfastened and the whole was floating down-stream. According
to Caelius, Mago with the cavalry and Spanish infantry at once swam across,
whilst Hannibal himself took his army across higher up the river where
it was fordable, the elephants being stationed in a row from bank to bank
to break the force of the current. Those who know the river will hardly
believe this for it is highly improbable that the cavalry could have stood
against so violent a river without damage to their horses and arms, even
supposing that the Spaniards had been carried across by their inflated
skins, and it would have required a march of many days to find a ford in
the Po where an army loaded with baggage could be taken across. I attach
greater weight to those authorities who state that it took them at least
two days to find a spot where they could throw a bridge over the river,
and that it was there that Mago's cavalry and the Spanish light infantry
crossed. Whilst Hannibal was waiting near the river to give audience to
deputations from the Gauls, he sent his heavy infantry across, and during
this interval Mago and his cavalry advanced a day's march from the river
in the direction of the enemy at Placentia. A few days later Hannibal entrenched
himself in a position six miles from Placentia, and the next day he drew
out his army in battle order in full view of the enemy and gave him the
opportunity of fighting.
21.48
The following night a murderous outbreak took place amongst the Gaulish
auxiliaries in the Roman camp; there was, however, more excitement and
confusion than actual loss of life. About 2000 infantry and 200 horsemen
massacred the sentinels and deserted to Hannibal. The Carthaginian gave
them a kind reception and sent them to their homes with the promise of
great rewards if they would enlist the sympathies of their countrymen on
his behalf. Scipio saw in this outrage a signal of revolt for all the Gauls,
who, infected by the madness of this crime, would at once fly to arms,
and though still suffering severely from his wound, he left his position
in the fourth watch of the following night, his army marching in perfect
silence, and shifted his camp close to the Trebia on to higher ground where
the hills were impracticable for cavalry. He was less successful in escaping
the notice of the enemy than he had been at the Ticinus, Hannibal sent
first the Numidians, then afterwards the whole of his cavalry in pursuit
and would have inflicted disaster upon the rear of the column at all events,
had not the Numidians been tempted by their desire for plunder to turn
aside to the deserted Roman camp. Whilst they were wasting their time in
prying into every corner of the camp, without finding anything worth waiting
for, the enemy slipped out of their hands, and when they caught sight of
the Romans they had already crossed the Trebia and were measuring out the
site for their camp. A few stragglers whom they caught on their side the
river were killed. Unable any longer to endure the irritation of his wound,
which had been aggravated during the march, and also thinking that he ought
to wait for his colleague-he had already heard that he had been recalled
from Sicily-Scipio selected what seemed the safest position near the river,
and formed a standing camp which was strongly entrenched. Hannibal had
encamped not far from there, and in spite of his elation at his successful
cavalry action he felt considerable anxiety at the shortness of supplies
which, owing to his marching through hostile territory where no stores
were provided, became more serious day by day. He sent a detachment to
the town of Clastidium where the Romans had accumulated large quantities
of corn. Whilst they were preparing to attack the place they were led to
hope that it would be betrayed to them. Dasius, a Brundisian, was commandant
of the garrison, and he was induced by a moderate bribe of 400 gold pieces
to betray Clastidium to Hannibal. The place was the granary of the Carthaginians
while they were at the Trebia. No cruelty was practiced on the garrison,
as Hannibal was anxious to win a reputation for clemency at the outset.
21.49
.The war on the Trebia had for the time being come to a standstill, but
military and naval actions were taking place around Sicily and the islands
fringing Italy, both under the conduct of Sempronius and also before his
arrival. Twenty quinqueremes with a thousand soldiers on board had been
despatched by the Carthaginians to Italy, nine of them to Liparae, eight
to the island of Vulcanus, and three had been carried by the currents into
the Straits of Messana. These were sighted from Messana, and Hiero, the
King of Syracuse, who happened to be there at the time waiting for the
consul, despatched twelve ships against them, and they were taken without
any opposition and brought into the harbour of Messana. It was ascertained
from the prisoners, that besides the fleet of twenty ships to which they
belonged which had sailed for Italy thirty-five quinqueremes were also
on the way to Sicily with the object of stirring up the old allies of Carthage.
Their main anxiety was to secure Lilybaeum, and the prisoners were of opinion
that the storm which had separated them from the rest had also driven that
fleet up to the Aegates. The king communicated this information just as
he had received it to M. Aemilius, the praetor, whose province Sicily was,
and advised him to throw a strong garrison into Lilybaeum. The praetor
at once sent envoys and military tribunes to the neighbouring states to
urge them to take measures for self-defence. Lilybaeum especially was engrossed
in preparations for war; orders were issued for the seamen to carry ten
days' rations on board that there might be no delay in setting sail when
the signal was given; and men were despatched along the coast to look out
for the approach of the hostile fleet. So it came to pass that although
the Carthaginians had purposely lessened the speed of their vessels, so
that they might approach Lilybaeum before daylight, they were descried
in the offing owing to there being a moon all night, and also because they
were coming with their sails set. Instantly the signal was given by the
look-out men; in the town there was the cry, "To arms," and the ships were
manned. Some of the soldiers were on the walls and guarding the gates,
others were on board the ships. As the Carthaginians saw that they would
have to deal with people who were anything but unprepared, they stood out
from the harbour till daylight, and spent the time in lowering their masts
and preparing for action. When it grew light they put out to sea that they
might have sufficient room for fighting, and that the enemy's ships might
be free to issue from the harbour. The Romans did not decline battle, encouraged
as they were by the recollection of their former conflicts in this very
place, and full of confidence in the numbers and courage of their men.
21.50
When they had sailed out to sea the Romans were eager to come to close
quarters and make a hand-to-hand fight of it; the Carthaginians, on the
other hand, sought to avoid this and to succeed by maneuvering and not
by direct attack; they preferred to make it a battle of ships rather than
of soldiers. For their fleet was amply provided with seamen, but only scantily
manned by soldiers, and whenever a ship was laid alongside one of the enemy's
they were very unequally matched in fighting men. When this became generally
known, the spirits of the Romans rose as they realised how many of their
military were on board, whilst the Carthaginians lost heart when they remembered
how few they had. Seven of their ships were captured in a very short time,
the rest took to flight. In the seven ships there were 1700 soldiers and
sailors, amongst them three members of the Carthaginian nobility. The Roman
fleet returned undamaged into port, with the exception of one which had
been rammed, but even that was brought in. Immediately after this battle
Tiberius Sempronius, the consul, arrived at Messana before those in the
town had heard of it. King Hiero went to meet him at the entrance of the
Straits with his fleet fully equipped and manned, and went on board the
consul's vessel to congratulate him on having safely arrived with his fleet
and his army, and to wish him a prosperous and successful passage to Sicily.
He then described the condition of the island and the movements of the
Carthaginians, and promised to assist the Romans now in his old age with
the same readiness which he had shown as a young man in the former war;
he should supply the seamen and soldiers with corn and clothing gratis.
He also told the consul that Lilybaeum and the cities on the coast were
in great danger, some were anxious to effect a revolution. The consul saw
that there must be no delay in his sailing for Lilybaeum; he started at
once and the king accompanied him with his fleet.
21.51
At Lilybaeum Hiero and his fleet bade him farewell, and the consul, after
leaving the praetor to see to the defence of the coast of Sicily, crossed
over to Malta which was held by the Carthaginians. Hamilcar, the son of
Gisgo, who was in command of the garrison, surrendered the island and his
men, a little under 2000 in number. A few days later he returned to Lilybaeum,
and the prisoners, with the exception of the three nobles, were sold by
auction. After satisfying himself as to the security of that part of Sicily,
the consul sailed to the Insulae Vulcani, as he heard that the Carthaginian
fleet was anchored there. No enemy, however, was found in the neighbourhood,
for they had left for Italy to ravage the coastal districts, and after
laying waste the territory of Vibo they were threatening the city. Whilst
he was returning to Sicily the news of these depredations reached the consul,
and at the same time a despatch was handed to him from the senate informing
him of Hannibal's presence in Italy and ordering him to come to his colleague's
assistance as soon as possible. With all these causes for anxiety weighing
upon him, the consul at once embarked his army and despatched it up the
Adriatic to Ariminum. He furnished Sex. Pomponius, his legate, with twenty-five
ships of war, and entrusted to him the protection of the Italian coast
and the territory of Vibo, and made up the fleet of M. Aemilius, the praetor,
to fifty vessels. After making these arrangements for Sicily, he started
for Italy with ten ships, and cruising along the coast reached Ariminum.
From there he marched to the Trebia and effected a junction with his colleague.
21.52
The fact that both consuls and all the available strength that Rome possessed
were now brought up to oppose Hannibal, was a pretty clear proof that either
that force was adequate for the defence of Rome or that all hope of its
defence must be abandoned. Nevertheless, one consul, depressed after his
cavalry defeat, and also by his wound, would rather that battle should
be deferred. The other, whose courage had suffered no check and was therefore
all the more eager to fight, was impatient of any delay. The country between
the Trebia and the Po was inhabited by Gauls who in this struggle between
two mighty peoples showed impartial goodwill to either side, with the view,
undoubtedly, of winning the victor's gratitude. The Romans were quite satisfied
with this neutrality if only it was maintained and the Gauls kept quiet,
but Hannibal was extremely indignant, as he was constantly giving out that
he had been invited by the Gauls to win their freedom. Feelings of resentment
and, at the same time, a desire to enrich his soldiers with plunder prompted
him to send 2000 infantry and 1000 cavalry, made up of Gauls and Numidians,
mostly the latter, with orders to ravage the whole country, district after
district, right up to the banks of the Po. Though the Gauls had hitherto
maintained an impartial attitude, they were compelled in their need of
help to turn from those who had inflicted these outrages to those who they
hoped would avenge them. They sent envoys to the consuls to beg the Romans
to come to the rescue of a land which was suffering because its people
had been too loyal to Rome. Cornelius Scipio did not consider that either
the grounds alleged or the circumstances justified his taking action. He
regarded that nation with suspicion on account of their many acts of treachery,
and even if their past faithlessness could have been forgotten through
lapse of time, he could not forget the recent treachery of the Boii. Sempronius,
on the other hand, was of opinion that the most effective means of preserving
the fidelity of their allies was to defend those who first asked for their
help. As his colleague still hesitated, he sent his own cavalry supported
by about a thousand javelin men to protect the territory of the Gauls on
the other side of the Trebia. They attacked the enemy suddenly whilst they
were scattered and in disorder, most of them loaded with plunder, and after
creating a great panic amongst them, and inflicting severe losses upon
them, they drove them in flight to their camp. The fugitives were driven
back by their comrades who poured in great numbers out of the camp, and
thus reinforced they renewed the fighting. The battle wavered as each side
retired or pursued, and up to the last the action was undecided. The enemy
lost more men; the Romans claimed the victory.
21.53
To no one in the whole army did the victory appear more important or more
decisive than to the consul himself. What gave him especial pleasure was
that he had proved superior in that arm in which his colleague had been
worsted. He saw that the spirits of his men were restored, and that there
was no one but his colleague who wished to delay battle; he believed that
Scipio was more sick in mind than in body, and that the thought of his
wound made him shrink from the dangers of the battlefield. "But we must
not be infected by a sick man's lethargy. What will be gained by further
delay, or rather, by wasting time? Whom are we expecting as our third consul;
what fresh army are we looking for? The camp of the Carthaginians is in
Italy, almost in sight of the City. They are not aiming at Sicily and Sardinia,
which they lost after their defeats, nor the Spain which lies on this side
the Ebro; their sole object is to drive the Romans away from their ancestral
soil, from the land on which they were born. What groans our fathers would
utter, accustomed as they were to warring round the walls of Carthage,
if they could see us, their descendants, with two consuls and two consular
armies, cowering in our camp in the very heart of Italy, whilst the Carthaginian
is annexing to his empire all between the Alps and the Apennines." This
was the way he spoke when sitting by his incapacitated colleague, this
the language he used before his soldiers as though he were haranguing the
Assembly. He was urged on, too, by the near approach of the time for the
elections, and the fear that the war, if delayed, might pass into the hands
of the new consuls, as well as by the chance he had of monopolising all
the glory of it while his colleague was on the sick list. In spite, therefore,
of the opposition of Cornelius he ordered the soldiers to get ready for
the coming battle.
Hannibal saw clearly what was the best course for the enemy to adopt,
and had very little hope that the consuls would do anything rash or ill-advised.
When, however, he found that what he had previously learnt by hearsay was
actually the case, namely, that one of the consuls was a man of impetuous
and headstrong character, and that he had become still more so since the
recent cavalry action, he had very little doubt in his own mind that he
would have a favourable opportunity of giving battle. He was anxious not
to lose a moment, in order that he might fight whilst the hostile army
was still raw and the better of the two generals was incapacitated by his
wound, and also whilst the Gauls were still in a warlike mood, for he knew
that most of them would follow him with less alacrity the further they
were dragged from their homes. These and similar considerations led him
to hope that a battle was imminent, and made him desirous of forcing an
engagement if there was any holding back on the other side. He sent out
some Gauls to reconnoitre-as Gauls were serving in both armies they could
be most safely trusted to find out what he wanted-and when they reported
that the Romans had prepared for battle, the Carthaginian began to look
out for ground which would admit of an ambuscade.
21.54
Between the two armies there was a stream with very high banks which were
overgrown with marshy grass and the brambles and brushwood which are generally
found on waste ground. After riding round the place and satisfying himself
from personal observation that it was capable of concealing even cavalry,
Hannibal, turning to his brother Mago, said, "This will be the place for
you to occupy. Pick out of our whole force of cavalry and infantry a hundred
men from each arm, and bring them to me at the first watch, now it is time
for food and rest." He then dismissed his staff. Presently Mago appeared
with his 200 picked men. "I see here," said Hannibal, "the very flower
of my army, but you must be strong in numbers as well as in courage. Each
of you therefore go and choose nine others like himself, from the squadrons
and the maniples. Mago will show you the place where you are to lie in
ambuscade, you have an enemy who are blindly ignorant of these practices
in war." After sending Mago with his 1000 infantry and 1000 cavalry to
take up his position, Hannibal gave orders for the Numidian cavalry to
cross the Trebia in the early dawn and ride up to the gates of the Roman
camp; then they were to discharge their missiles on the outposts and so
goad the enemy on to battle. When the fighting had once started they were
gradually to give ground and draw their pursuers to their own side of the
river. These were the instructions to the Numidians; the other commanders,
both infantry and cavalry, were ordered to see that all their men had breakfast,
after which they were to wait for the signal, the men fully armed, the
horses saddled and ready. Eager for battle, and having already made up
his mind to fight, Sempronius led out the whole of his cavalry to meet
the Numidian attack, for it was in his cavalry that he placed most confidence;
these were followed by 6000 infantry and at last the whole of his force
marched on to the field. It happened to be the season of winter, a snowstorm
was raging, and the district, situated between the Alps and the Apennines,
was rendered especially cold by the vicinity of rivers and marshes. To
make matters worse, men and horses alike had been hurriedly sent forward,
without any food, without any protection against the cold, so they had
no heat in them and the chilling blasts from the river made the cold still
more severe as they approached it in their pursuit of the Numidians. But
when they entered the water which had been swollen by the night's rain
and was then breast high, their limbs became stiff with cold, and when
they emerged on the other side they had hardly strength to hold their weapons;
they began to grow faint from fatigue and as the day wore on, from hunger.
21.55
Hannibal's men, meanwhile, had made fires in front of their tents, oil
had been distributed amongst the maniples for them to make their joints
and limbs supple and they had time for an ample repast. When it was announced
that the enemy had crossed the river they took their arms, feeling alert
and active in mind and body, and marched to battle. The Balearic and light-armed
infantry were posted in front of the standards; they numbered about 8000;
behind them the heavy-armed infantry, the mainstay and backbone of the
army; on the flanks Hannibal distributed the cavalry, and outside them,
again, the elephants. When the consul saw his cavalry, who had lost their
order in the pursuit, suddenly meeting with an unsuspected resistance from
the Numidians, he recalled them by signal and received them within his
infantry. There were 18,000 Romans, 20,000 Latin allies, and an auxiliary
force of Cenomani, the only Gallic tribe which had remained faithful. These
were the forces engaged. The Balearics and light infantry opened the battle,
but on being met by the heavier legions they were rapidly withdrawn to
the wings, an evolution which at once threw the Roman horse into difficulties,
for the 4000 wearied troopers had been unable to offer an effective resistance
to 10,000 who were fresh and vigorous, and now in addition they were overwhelmed
by what seemed a cloud of missiles from the light infantry. Moreover, the
elephants, towering aloft at the ends of the line, terrified the horses
not only by their appearance but by their unaccustomed smell, and created
widespread panic. The infantry battle, as far as the Romans were concerned,
was maintained more by courage than by physical strength, for the Carthaginians,
who had shortly before been getting themselves into trim, brought their
powers fresh and unimpaired into action, whilst the Romans were fatigued
and hungry and stiff with cold. Still, their courage would have kept them
up had it been only infantry that they were fighting against. But the light
infantry, after repulsing the cavalry, were hurling their missiles on the
flanks of the legions; the elephants had now come up against the centre
of the Roman line, and Mago and his Numidians, as soon as it had passed
their ambuscade, rose up in the rear and created a terrible disorder and
panic. Yet in spite of all the dangers which surrounded them, the ranks
stood firm and immovable for some time, even, contrary to all expectation,
against the elephants. Some skirmishers who had been placed where they
could attack these animals flung darts at them and drove them off, and
rushed after them, stabbing them under their tails, where the skin is soft
and easily penetrated.
21.56
Maddened with pain and terror, they were beginning to rush wildly on their
own men, when Hannibal ordered them to be driven away to the left wing
against the auxiliary Gauls on the Roman right. There they instantly produced
unmistakable panic and flight, and the Romans had fresh cause for .alarm
when they saw their auxiliaries routed. They now stood fighting in a square,
and about 10,000 of them, unable to escape in any other direction, forced
their way through the centre of the African troops and the auxiliary Gauls
who supported them and inflicted an immense loss on the enemy. They were
prevented by the river from returning to their camp, and the rain made
it impossible for them to judge where they could best go to the assistance
of their comrades, so they marched away straight to Placentia. Then desperate
attempts to escape were made on all sides; some who made for the river
were swept away by the current or caught by the enemy while hesitating
to cross; others, scattered over the fields in flight, followed the track
of the main retreat and sought Placentia; others, fearing the enemy more
than the river, crossed it and reached their camp. The driving sleet and
the intolerable cold caused the death of many men and baggage animals,
and nearly all the elephants perished. The Carthaginians stopped their
pursuit at the banks of the Trebia and returned to their camp so benumbed
with cold that they hardly felt any joy in their victory. In the night
the men who had guarded the camp, and the rest of the soldiers, mostly
wounded, crossed the Trebia on rafts without any interference from the
Carthaginians, either because the roaring of the storm prevented them from
hearing or because they were unable to move through weariness and wounds
and pretended that they heard nothing. Whilst the Carthaginians were keeping
quiet, Scipio led his army to Placentia and thence across the Po to Cremona,
in order that one colony might not be burdened with providing winter quarters
for the two armies.
21.57
This defeat so unnerved people in Rome that they believed the enemy was
already advancing to attack the City, and that there was no help to be
looked for, no hope of repelling him from their walls and gates. After
one consul had been beaten at the Ticinus the other was recalled from Sicily,
and now both consuls and both consular armies had been worsted. What fresh
generals, men asked, what fresh legions could be brought to the rescue?
Amidst this universal panic Sempronius arrived. He had slipped through
the enemy's cavalry at immense risk while they were dispersed in quest
of plunder, and owed his escape rather to sheer audacity than to cleverness,
for he had little hope of eluding them or of successful resistance if he
failed to do so. After conducting the elections, which was the pressing
need for the moment, he returned to winter quarters. The consuls elected
were Cneius Servilius and C. Flaminius. Even in their winter quarters the
Romans were not allowed much quiet; the Numidian horse were roaming in
all directions, or where the ground was too rough for them, the Celtiberians
and Lusitanians. They were, therefore, cut off from supplies on every side,
except what were brought in ships on the Po. Near Placentia there was a
place called Emporium, which had been carefully fortified and occupied
by a strong garrison. In the hope of capturing the place, Hannibal approached
with cavalry and light-armed troops, and as he trusted mainly to secrecy
for success, he marched thither by night. But he did not escape the observation
of the sentinels, and such a shouting suddenly arose that it was actually
heard at Placentia. By daybreak the consul was on the spot with his cavalry,
having given orders for the legions of infantry to follow in battle formation.
A cavalry action followed in which Hannibal was wounded, and his retirement
from the field discomfited the enemy; the position was admirably defended.
After taking only a few days' rest, before his wound was thoroughly
healed Hannibal proceeded to attack Victumviae. During the Gaulish war
this place had served as an emporium for the Romans; subsequently, as it
was a fortified place, a mixed population from the surrounding country
had settled there in considerable numbers, and now the terror created by
the constant depredations had driven most of the people from the fields
into the town. This motley population, excited by the news of the energetic
defence of Placentia, flew to arms and went out to meet Hannibal. More
like a crowd than an army they met him on his march, and as on the one
side there was nothing but an undisciplined mob, and on the other a general
and soldiers who had perfect confidence in each other, a small body routed
as many as 35,000 men. The next day they surrendered and admitted a Carthaginian
garrison within their walls. They had just completed the surrender of their
arms in obedience to orders, when instructions were suddenly given to the
victors to treat the city as though it had been carried by storm, and no
deed of blood, which on such occasions historians are wont to mention,
was left undone, so awful was the example set of every form of licentiousness
and cruelty and brutal tyranny towards the wretched inhabitants. Such were
the winter operations of Hannibal.
21.58
The soldiers rested whilst the intolerable cold lasted; it did not, however,
last long, and at the first doubtful indications of spring Hannibal left
his winter quarters for Etruria with the intention of inducing that nation
to join forces with him, either voluntarily or under compulsion. During
his passage of the Apennines he was overtaken by a storm of such severity
as almost to surpass the horrors of the Alps. The rain was driven by the
wind straight into the men's faces, and either they had to drop their weapons
or if they tried to struggle against the hurricane it caught them and dashed
them to the ground, so they came to a halt. Then they found that it was
stopping their respiration so that they could not breathe, and they sat
down for a short time with their backs to the wind. The heavens began to
reverberate with terrific roar, and amidst the awful din lightning flashed
and quivered. Sight and sound alike paralysed them with terror. At last,
as the force of the gale increased owing to the rain having ceased, they
saw that there was nothing for it but to pitch their camp on the ground
where they had been caught by the storm. Now all their labour had to begin
over again, for they could neither unroll anything nor fix anything, whatever
was fixed did not stand, the wind tore everything into shreds and carried
it off. Soon the moisture in the upper air above the cold mountain peaks
froze and discharged such a shower of snow and hail that the men, giving
up all further attempts, lay down as best they could, buried beneath their
coverings rather than protected by them. This was followed by such intense
cold that when any one attempted to rise out of that pitiable crowd of
prostrate men and beasts it was a long time before he could get up, for
his muscles being cramped and stiff with cold, he could hardly bend his
limbs. At length, by exercising their arms and legs, they were able to
move about, and began to recover their spirits; here and there fires were
lighted, and those who were most helpless turned to their colleagues for
help. They remained on that spot for two days like a force blockaded; many
men and animals perished; of the elephants which survived the battle of
the Trebia they lost seven.
21.59
After descending from the Apennines Hannibal advanced towards Placentia,
and after a ten miles' march formed camp. The following day he marched
against the enemy with 12,000 infantry and 5000 cavalry. Sempronius had
by this time returned from Rome, and he did not decline battle. That day
the two camps were three miles distant from each other; the following day
they fought, and both sides exhibited the most determined courage, but
the action was indecisive. At the first encounter the Romans were so far
superior that they not only conquered in the field, but followed the routed
enemy to his camp and soon made an attack upon it. Hannibal stationed a
few men to defend the rampart and the gates, the rest he massed in the
middle of the camp, and ordered them to be on the alert and wait for the
signal to make a sortie. It was now about three o'clock; the Romans were
worn out with their fruitless efforts as there was no hope of carrying
the camp, and the consul gave the signal to retire. As soon as Hannibal
heard it and saw that the fighting had slackened and that the enemy were
retiring from the camp, he immediately launched his cavalry against them
right and left, and sallied in person with the main strength of his infantry
from the middle of the camp. Seldom has there been a more equal fight,
and few would have been rendered more memorable by the mutual destruction
of both armies had the daylight allowed it to be sufficiently prolonged;
as it was, night put an end to a conflict which had been maintained with
such determined courage. There was greater fury than bloodshed, and as
the fighting had been almost equal on both sides, they separated with equal
loss. Not more than 600 infantry and half that number of cavalry fell on
either side, but the Roman loss was out of proportion to their numbers;
several members of the equestrian order and five military tribunes as well
as three prefects of the allies were killed. Immediately after the battle
Hannibal withdrew into Liguria, and Sempronius to Luca. Whilst Hannibal
was entering Liguria, two Roman quaestors who had been ambushed and captured,
C. Fulvius and L. Lucretius, together with three military tribunes and
five members of the equestrian order, most of them sons of senators, were
given up to him by the Gauls in order that he might feel more confidence
in their maintenance of peaceful relations, and their determination to
give him active support.
21.60
While these events were in progress in Italy, Cn. Cornelius Scipio, who
had been sent with a fleet and an army to Spain, commenced operations in
that country. Starting from the mouth of the Rhone, he sailed round the
eastward end of the Pyrenees and brought up at Emporiae. Here he disembarked
his army, and beginning with the Laeetani, he brought the whole of the
maritime populations as far as the Ebro within the sphere of Roman influence
by renewing old alliances and forming new ones. He gained in this way a
reputation for clemency which extended not only to the maritime populations
but to the more warlike tribes in the interior and the mountain districts.
He established peaceable relations with these, and more than that, he secured
their support in arms and several strong cohorts were enrolled from amongst
them. The country on this side the Ebro was Hanno's province, Hannibal
had left him to hold it for Carthage. Considering that he ought to oppose
Scipio's further progress before the whole province was under Roman sway,
he fixed his camp in full view of the enemy and offered battle. The Roman
general, too, thought that battle ought not to be delayed; he knew he would
have to fight both Hanno and Hasdrubal, and preferred dealing with each
singly rather than meeting them both at once.. The battle was not a hard-fought
one. The enemy lost 6000; 2000, including those who were guarding the camp,
were made prisoners; the camp itself was carried and the general with some
of his chiefs was taken; Cissis, a town near the camp, was successfully
attacked. The plunder, however, as it was a small place, was of little
value, consisting mainly of the barbarians' household goods and some worthless
slaves. The camp, however, enriched the soldiers with the property belonging
not only to the army they had defeated but also to the one serving with
Hannibal in Italy. They had left almost all their valuable possessions
on the other side of the Pyrenees, that they might not have heavy loads
to carry.
21.61
Before he had received definite tidings of this defeat, Hasdrubal had crossed
the Ebro with 8000 infantry and 1000 cavalry, hoping to encounter the Romans
as soon as they landed, but after hearing of the disaster at Cissis and
the capture of the camp, he turned his route to the sea. Not far from Tarracona
he found our marines and seamen wandering at will through the fields, success
as usual producing carelessness. Sending his cavalry in all directions
amongst them, he made a great slaughter and drove them pell-mell to their
ships. Afraid to remain any longer in the neighbourhood lest he should
be surprised by Scipio, he retreated across the Ebro. On hearing of this
fresh enemy Scipio came down by forced marches, and after dealing summary
punishment to some of the naval captains, returned by sea to Emporiae,
leaving a small garrison in Tarracona. He had scarcely left when Hasdrubal
appeared on the scene, and instigated the Ilergetes, who had given hostages
to Scipio, to revolt, and in conjunction with the warriors of that tribe
ravaged the territories of those tribes who remained loyal to Rome. This
roused Scipio from his winter quarters, on which Hasdrubal again disappeared
beyond the Ebro, and Scipio invaded in force the territory of the Ilergetes,
after the author of the revolt had left them to their fate. He drove them
all into Antanagrum, their capital, which he proceeded to invest, and a
few days later he received them into the protection and jurisdiction of
Rome, after demanding an increase in the number of hostages and inflicting
a heavy fine upon them. From there he advanced against the Ausetani, who
lived near the Ebro and were also in alliance with the Carthaginians, and
invested their city. The Laeetani whilst bringing assistance to their neighbours
by night were ambushed not far from the city which they intended to enter.
As many as 12,000 were killed, almost all the survivors threw away their
arms and fled to their homes in scattered groups all over the country.
The only thing which saved the invested city from assault and storm was
the severity of the weather. For the thirty days during which the siege
lasted the snow was seldom less than four feet deep, and it covered up
the mantlets and vineae so completely that it even served as a sufficient
protection against the firebrands which the enemy discharged from time
to time. At last, after their chief, Amusicus, had escaped to Hasdrubal's
quarters, they surrendered and agreed to pay an indemnity of twenty talents.
The army returned to its winter quarters at Tarracona.
21.62
During this winter many portents occurred in Rome and the neighbourhood,
or at all events, many were reported and easily gained credence, for when
once men's minds have been excited by superstitious fears they easily believe
these things. A six-months-old child, of freeborn parents, is said to have
shouted "Io Triumphe" in the vegetable market, whilst in the Forum Boarium
an ox is reported to have climbed up of its own accord to the third story
of a house, and then, frightened by the noisy crowd which gathered, it
threw itself down. A phantom navy was seen shining in the sky; the temple
of Hope in the vegetable market was struck by lightning; at Lanuvium Juno's
spear had moved of itself, and a crow had flown down to her temple and
settled upon her couch; in the territory of Amiternum beings in human shape
and clothed in white were seen at a distance, but no one came close to
them; in the neighbourhood of Picenum there was a shower of stones; at
Caere the oracular tablets had shrunk in size; in Gaul a wolf had snatched
a sentinel's sword from its scabbard and run off with it. With regard to
the other portents, the decemvirs were ordered to consult the Sacred Books,
but in the case of the shower of stones at Picenum a nine days' sacred
feast was proclaimed, at the close of which almost the whole community
busied itself with the expiation of the others. First of all the City was
purified, and full-grown victims were sacrificed to the deities named in
the Sacred Books; an offering of forty pounds' weight of gold was conveyed
to Juno at Lanuvium, and the matrons dedicated a bronze statue of that
goddess on the Aventine. At Caere, where the tablets had shrunk, a lectisternium
was enjoined, and a service of intercession was to be rendered to Fortuna
on Algidus. In Rome also a lectisternium was ordered for Juventas and a
special service of intercession at the temple of Hercules, and afterwards
one in which the whole population were to take part at all the shrines.
Five full-grown victims were sacrificed to the Genius of Rome, and C. Atilius
Serranus, the praetor, received instructions to undertake certain vows
which were to be discharged should the commonwealth remain in the same
condition for ten years. These ceremonial observances and vows, ordered
in obedience to the Sacred Books, did much to allay the religious fears
of the people.
21.63
One of the consuls elect was C. Flaminius, and to him was assigned by lot
the command of the legions at Placentia. He wrote to the consul giving
orders for the army to be in camp at Ariminum by the 15th of March. The
reason was that he might enter upon his office there, for he had not forgotten
his old quarrels with the senate, first as tribune of the people, then
afterwards about his consulship, the election to which had been declared
illegal, and finally about his triumph. He further embittered the senate
against him by his support of C. Claudius; he alone of all the members
was in favour of the measure which that tribune introduced. Under its provisions
no senator, no one whose father had been a senator, was allowed to possess
a vessel of more than 300 amphorae burden. This was considered quite large
enough for the conveyance of produce from their estates, all profit made
by trading was regarded as dishonourable for the patricians. The question
excited the keenest opposition and brought Flaminius into the worst possible
odium with the nobility through his support of it, but on the other hand
made him a popular favourite and procured for him his second consulship.
Suspecting, therefore, that they would endeavour to detain him in the City
by various devices, such as falsifying the auspices or the delay necessitated
by the Latin Festival, or other hindrances to which as consul he was liable,
he gave out that he had to take a journey, and then left the City secretly
as a private individual and so reached his province. When this got abroad
there was a fresh outburst of indignation on the part of the incensed senate;
they declared that he was carrying on war not only with the senate but
even with the immortal gods. "On the former occasion," they said, "when
he was elected consul against the auspices and we recalled him from the
very field of battle, he was disobedient to gods and men. Now he is conscious
that he has despised them and has fled from the Capitol and the customary
recital of solemn vows. He refuses to approach the temple of Jupiter Optimus
Maximus on the day of his entrance upon office, to see and consult the
senate, to whom he is so odious and whom he alone of all men detests, to
proclaim the Latin Festival and offer sacrifice to Jupiter Latiaris on
the Alban Mount, to proceed to the Capitol and after duly taking the auspices
recite the prescribed vows, and from thence, vested in the paludamentum
and escorted by lictors, go in state to his province. He has stolen away
furtively without his insignia of office, without his lictors, just as
though he were some menial employed in the camp and had quitted his native
soil to go into exile. He thinks it, forsooth, more consonant with the
greatness of his office to enter upon it at Ariminum rather than in Rome,
and to put on his official dress in some wayside inn rather than at his
own hearth and in the presence of his own household gods." It was unanimously
decided that he should be recalled, brought back if need be by force, and
compelled to discharge, on the spot, all the duties he owed to God and
man before he went to the army and to his province. Q. Terentius and M.
Antistius were delegated for this task, but they had no more influence
with him than the despatch of the senate in his former consulship. A few
days afterwards he entered upon office, and whilst offering his sacrifice,
the calf, after it was struck, bounded away out of the hands of the sacrificing
priests and bespattered many of the bystanders with its blood. Amongst
those at a distance from the altar who did not know what the commotion
was about there was great excitement; most people regarded it as a most
alarming omen. Flaminius took over the two legions from Sempronius, the
late consul, and the two from C. Atilius, the praetor, and commenced his
march to Etruria through the passes of the Apennines.
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