26.1
The new consuls, Cn, Fulvius Centimalus and P. Sulpicius Galba, entered
upon office on the 15th of March, and at once convened a meeting of the
senate in the Capitol to discuss questions of State, the conduct of the
war and the distribution of the provinces and the armies. The retiring
consuls-Q. Fulvius and Appius Claudius-retained their commands and were
instructed to prosecute the siege of Capua unremittingly until they had
effected its capture. The recovery of this city was the main concern of
the Romans now. What determined them was not only the bitter resentment
which its defection had evoked, a feeling which was never more justified
in the case of any city, but also the certainty they felt that, as in its
revolt it had drawn many communities with it, owing to its greatness and
strength, so its recapture would create amongst these communities a feeling
of respect for the power whose sovereignty they had formerly acknowledged.
The praetors of the past year, M. Junius in Etruria and P. Sempronius in
Gaul, had their commands extended and were each to retain the two legions
they had. M. Marcellus was to act as proconsul and finish the war in Sicily
with the army which he had. If he needed reinforcements he was to take
them from the troops which P. Cornelius was commanding in Sicily, but none
were to be selected from those who had been forbidden by the senate to
take a furlough or return home before the end of the war. The province
of Sicily was assigned to C. Sulpicius, and he was to take over the two
legions which were with P. Cornelius; any reinforcements he needed were
to be supplied from the army of Cn. Fulvius which had been so disgracefully
routed and cut up the previous year in Apulia. The soldiers who had so
disgraced themselves were placed under the same conditions with regard
to length of service as the survivors of Cannae. As an additional brand
of ignominy the men of both these armies were forbidden to winter in towns
or to construct winter quarters for themselves within ten miles of any
town. The two legions which Q. Mucius had commanded in Sardinia were given
to L. Cornelius, and any additional force he might require was to be raised
by the consuls. T. Otacilius and M. Valerius were ordered to cruise off
the coasts of Sicily and Greece respectively with the fleets and soldiers
they had previously commanded. The former had a hundred ships with two
legions on board; the latter, fifty ships and one legion. The total strength
of the Roman armies engaged on land and sea this year amounted to twenty-five
legions.
26.2
.At the beginning of the year a despatch from L. Marcius was laid before
the senate. The senators fully appreciated the successful way in which
he had conducted his operations, but a good many of them were indignant
at the honorific title he had assumed. The superscription of the letter
was "The propraetor to the senate," though the imperium had not been conferred
upon him by an order of the people nor with the sanction of the senate.
An evil precedent had been set, they said, when a commander was chosen
by his army, and the solemn procedure at elections, after the auspices
were duly taken, was transferred to camps and provinces far away from the
magistrates and the laws, and left to the caprice of the soldiers. Some
thought the senate ought to take the matter up, but it was thought better
to adjourn the consideration of it until the horsemen who had brought the
despatch had left the City. With regard to the food and clothing of the
army, they ordered a reply to be sent to the effect that both these matters
would be attended to by the senate. They refused, however, to allow the
despatch to be addressed "To the propraetor L. Marcius," lest it should
appear that the question which was to be discussed had been prejudged.
After the messengers had been dismissed the consuls gave this question
priority over everything else, and it was unanimously agreed that the tribunes
should consult the plebs as soon as possible as to whom they wished to
have sent to Spain with the imperium as commander-in-chief to take over
the army which Cn. Scipio had commanded. The tribunes undertook to do so,
and due notice of the question was given to the Assembly. But the citizens
were preoccupied with a controversy of a very different nature. C. Sempronius
Blaesus had fixed a day for bringing Cn. Fulvius to trial for losing his
army in Apulia, and made a very bitter attack upon him beforehand in the
Assembly. "Many commanders," he said, "have through rashness and inexperience
led their armies into most dangerous positions, but Cn. Fulvius is the
only one who has demoralised his army by every form of vice before betraying
them. They may with perfect truth be said to have been destroyed before
they saw the enemy; they owed their defeat to their own commander, not
to Hannibal.
"Now no man, when he is going to vote, takes sufficient trouble to find
out what sort of a man it is to whom he is entrusting the supreme command
of the army. Think of the difference between Tiberius Sempronius and Cn.
Fulvius. Tiberius Sempronius had an army of slaves given to him, but in
a short time, thanks to the discipline he maintained and the wise use he
made of his authority, there was not a man amongst them who when he was
in the field of battle gave a thought to his birth or his condition. Those
men were a protection to our allies and a terror to our enemies. They snatched,
as though from the very jaws of Hannibal, cities like Cumae and Beneventum
and restored them to Rome. Cn. Fulvius, on the other hand, had an army
of Roman citizens, born of respectable parents, brought up as free men,
and he infected them with the vices of slaves, and made them such that
they were insolent and riotous amongst our allies, weaklings and cowards
in face of the enemy; they could not stand even the war-cry of the Carthaginians,
let alone their charge. Good heavens! no wonder the soldiers gave ground,
when their commander was the first to run away; the wonder is that any
stood their ground and fell, and that all did not accompany Cn. Fulvius
in his panic and flight. C. Flaminius, L. Paulus, L. Postumius, and the
two Scipios, Cnaeus and Publius, all chose to fall in battle rather than
desert their armies, when they were hemmed in by the foe. Cn. Fulvius came
back to Rome as the all-but solitary herald of the annihilation of his
army. After the army had fled from the field of Cannae it was deported
to Sicily, not to return till the enemy had evacuated Italy, and a similar
decree was recently passed in the case of Fulvius' legions. But, shame
to relate, the commander himself remained unpunished after his flight from
a battle brought on by his own headstrong folly; he is free to pass the
rest of his life where he passed it in youth-in stews and brothels-whilst
his soldiers, whose only fault is that they copied their commander, are
practically sent into exile and have to undergo a service of disgrace.
So unequal are the liberties enjoyed in Rome by the rich and the poor,
the men of rank and the men of the people."
26.3
In his defence Fulvius threw all the blame upon his men. They clamoured,
he said, for battle, and he led them out, not at the moment, for it was
late in the day, but on the following morning. Though they were drawn up
on favourable ground, at an early hour they found either the terror of
the enemy's name or the strength of his attack too much for them. When
they were all flying in disorder he was swept away by the rush as Varro
was at Cannae and as many other commanders have been at different times.
What help would he have given to the republic by staying there alone? unless
indeed his death would have warded off other national disasters. His failure
was not due to lack of supplies, or to incautiously taking up a position
on unfavourable ground; he had not been ambushed through insufficient reconnoitring;
he had been beaten in a fair fight on an open field. Men's tempers, on
whichever side they were, were beyond his control, a man's natural disposition
made him either brave or cowardly. The speeches of the prosecutor and the
defendant occupied two days, on the third day the witnesses were produced.
Besides all the other serious charges brought against him, a great many
men stated on oath that the panic and flight began with the praetor, and
that when the soldiers found that they were left to themselves, and thought
that their commander had good ground for fear, they too turned their backs
and fled. The prosecutor had in the first instance asked for a fine, but
the evidence which had been given roused the anger of the people to such
an extent that they insisted upon a capital charge being laid. This led
to a fresh contest. As the prosecutor during the first two days had limited
the penalty to a fine and only on the third day made the charge a capital
one, the defendant appealed to the other tribunes, but they refused to
interfere with their colleague. It was open to him by ancient custom to
proceed either by statute law or by customary precedent, whichever he preferred,
until he had obtained judgment, whether the penalty were a capital or a
pecuniary one. On this Sempronius announced that he should prosecute C.
Fulvius on the charge of treason and requested the City praetor to convene
the Assembly for the purpose on the appointed day. Then the accused tried
another way of escape. His brother Quintus was in high favour with the
people at the time, owing to his former successes and the general conviction
that he would soon take Capua, and the defendant hoped that he might be
present at his trial. Quintus wrote to the senate for their permission,
appealing to their compassion and begging to be allowed to defend his brother's
life, but they told him in reply that it would militate against the interests
of the State for him to leave Capua. Just before the day of trial Cn. Fulvius
went into exile at Tarquinii. The plebs affirmed by resolution his legal
status as exile and all the consequences it involved.
26.4
Meanwhile the whole stress of the war bore on Capua. The blockade was proving
more effective than direct assault; the common people and the slaves could
not endure the famine, nor could they send messengers to Hannibal owing
to the strict watch which was kept. At last a Numidian was found who promised
to get through with the despatches, and he succeeded. He escaped through
the Roman lines by night, and this encouraged the Capuans to attempt sorties
in all directions while they still had some strength left. Numerous cavalry
encounters took place in which they generally had the advantage, but their
infantry got the worst of it. The gratification which the Romans derived
from their infantry successes was considerably damped by their finding
themselves beaten in any arm by an enemy whom they had invested and almost
conquered. At length they devised a clever plan by which they could make
up for their inferiority in the mounted arm. Young men of exceptional speed
and agility were selected from all the legions and supplied with bucklers
somewhat shorter than those used by the cavalry. Each was furnished with
seven javelins, four feet long and tipped with iron heads similar to those
on the darts of the velites. The troopers each took one of these upon his
horse and trained them to ride behind and leap down briskly at a given
signal. As soon as their daily training had given them sufficient confidence,
the cavalry advanced against the Capuans, who were drawn up on the level
ground between the Roman camp and the city walls. As soon as they came
within range the signal was given and the velites sprang down to the ground.
The line of infantry thus formed made a sudden attack on the Capuan horse;
shower after shower of javelins was flung at the men and horses all along
the line. A great many were wounded, and the novel and unexpected form
of attack created widespread consternation. Seeing the enemy shaken the
Roman cavalry charged home, and in the rout that followed they drove them
with much loss right up to their gates. From that time the Romans had the
superiority in their cavalry also. The velites were subsequently incorporated
in the legions. This plan of combining infantry and cavalry in one force
is said to have originated with one of the centurions-Q. Navius, and he
received special honour from his commander in consequence.
26.5
Such was the position of affairs at Capua. During this time Hannibal was
drawn in two directions; he was anxious to get possession of the citadel
of Tarentum and he was equally anxious to retain his hold on Capua. Regard
for Capua however carried the day, for he saw that it was the spot to which
all eyes were turned, of friends and foes alike, and its fate would show
conclusively, one way or the other, the consequences of defection from
Rome. Leaving therefore his baggage and heavy-armed troops in Bruttium,
he hurried into Campania with a force of horse and foot selected for their
capacity for rapid marching. Swift as his advance was, however, three and
thirty elephants followed him. He took up his position in a secluded valley
at the back of Mount Tifata which overlooked Capua. On his march he captured
the fortified post of Calatia. He then turned his attention to the besiegers
of Capua, and sent a message to the city telling them at what time he intended
to attack the Roman lines, so that they might be ready to make a sortie
and pour in full strength out of all their gates. The investing force was
thrown into a state of great alarm, for while Hannibal was delivering his
assault on one side, the whole of the forces of Capua, mounted and unmounted,
supported by the Punic garrison under Bostar and Hanno were making a vigorous
sortie on the other. Realising their critical position and the danger of
leaving a portion of their lines unprotected by concentrating their defence
in any one direction, the Romans divided their force; Appius Claudius confronted
the Capuans, Fulvius was opposed to Hannibal; the propraetor C. Nero with
the cavalry of the six legions held the road to Suessula, and C. Fulvius
Flaccus with the cavalry of the allies took up a position towards the Volturnus.
There was not only the usual shouting and uproar when the battle commenced;
the din of horses and men and arms was aggravated by the non-combatant
population of Capua. They crowded on to the walls, and by clashing brazen
vessels together, as people do in the dead of the night when there is an
eclipse of the moon, they made such a dreadful noise that it even distracted
the attention of the combatants.
Appius had no difficulty in driving the Capuans from his earthworks,
but Fulvius had to meet a much heavier attack from Hannibal and his Carthaginians
on the other side. Here the sixth legion gave way and a cohort of Spaniards
with three elephants succeeded in getting up to the breastwork. They had
penetrated the Roman line, and whilst they saw their chance of breaking
through into the camp they saw also the danger of being cut off from their
supports. When Fulvius saw the disorder of the legion and the danger which
threatened the camp, he called upon Q. Navius and other centurions of the
first rank to charge the enemy's cohort which was fighting just under the
breastwork. "It is a most critical moment," he told them; "either you must
allow the enemy to go on, in which case they will break into the camp with
less difficulty than they found in breaking through the closed ranks of
the legion, or you must dispose of them whilst they are still below the
breastwork. It will not be a hard fight; they are a small body, cut off
from their support; and the very fact of the Roman line being broken will
be an advantage if both sections close on the enemy's flanks, who would
then be hemmed and exposed to a double attack." On hearing this Navius
took the standard of the second maniple of hastati from the bearer and
advanced with it against the enemy, threatening at the same time to throw
it into their midst if his men did not promptly follow him and take their
share in the fighting. He was a huge man and his armour set him off, and
as he lifted the standard high in the air, he attracted all eyes. But when
he was close to the Spaniards they hurled their javelins at him from all
sides, and almost the whole of their line turned their attention to this
one man. Neither the number of the enemy, however, nor the force of their
missiles were able to check the gallant fellow's onset.
26.6
M. Atilius now brought up the leading maniple of the sixth legion against
the Spanish cohort; L. Porcius Licinius and T. Popilius, who were in command
of the camp, were keeping up a fierce struggle in front of the breastwork,
and killed some of the elephants whilst they were actually clambering over
it. Their bodies rolled down into the fosse and filled it up, making a
bridge for the passage of the enemy, and a terrible carnage began over
the prostrate elephants. On the other side of the camp the Capuans and
their Punic garrison had by this time been repulsed, and the fighting went
on right up to the city gate which leads to the Volturnus. The efforts
of the Romans to break in were frustrated not so much by the arms of the
defenders as by the ballistae and scorpions which were mounted over the
gate and kept the assailants at a distance by the missiles they discharged.
A further check was given them by a wound received by Appius Claudius;
he was struck by a heavy javelin in the upper part of the chest under the
left shoulder, whilst he was riding along the front encouraging his men.
A great many of the enemy were however killed outside the gate; the rest
were driven in hasty flight into the city. When Hannibal saw the destruction
of his Spanish cohort and the energy with which the Romans were defending
their lines, he gave up the attack and recalled the standards. The retiring
column of infantry was followed by the cavalry who were to protect the
rear in case the enemy harassed their retreat. The legions were burning
to pursue them, but Fulvius ordered the "retire" to be sounded, as he considered
that he had gained quite enough in making both the Capuans and Hannibal
himself realise how little he could do in their defence.
Some authors who describe this battle say that 8000 of Hannibal's men
were killed that day and 3000 Capuans, and that 15 standards were taken
from the Carthaginians and 18 from the Capuans. In other accounts I find
that the affair was nothing like so serious, there was more excitement
and confusion than actual fighting. According to these writers the Numidians
and Spaniards broke unexpectedly into the Roman lines with the elephants,
and these animals, trotting all over the camp, upset the tents and created
terrible uproar and panic during which the baggage animals broke their
tethers and bolted. To add to the confusion Hannibal sent some men got
up as Italians, who could speak Latin, to tell the defenders in the name
of the consul that as the camp was lost each man must do his best to escape
to the nearest mountains. The trick was, however, soon detected and frustrated
with heavy loss to the enemy, and the elephants were driven out of the
camp with firebrands. In any case, however it began or ended, this was
the last battle fought before Capua surrendered. The "medix tuticus," the
supreme magistrate of Capua, happened for that year to be Seppius Loesius,
a man of humble birth and slender fortune. The story goes that owing to
a portent which had occurred in his mother's household she consulted a
soothsayer on behalf of her little boy, and he told her that the highest
official position in Capua would come to her son. As she was not aware
of anything which would justify such expectations she replied, "You are
indeed describing a desperate state of things in Capua when you say that
such an honour will come to my son." Her jesting reply to what was a true
prediction turned out itself to be true, for it was only when famine and
sword were pressing them sorely and all hope of further resistance was
disappearing that Loesius accepted the post. He was the last Capuan to
hold it, and he only did so under protest; Capua, he declared, was abandoned
and betrayed by all her foremost citizens.
26.7
Finding that his enemy could not be drawn into an engagement and that it
was impossible to break through their lines and relieve Capua, Hannibal
decided to abandon his attempt and march away from the place, for he was
afraid of being cut off from his supplies by the new consuls. He was anxiously
turning over in his mind the question of his future movements when the
idea occurred to him of marching upon Rome, the head and guiding spirit
of the whole war. He had always set his heart upon this, and men blamed
him for letting the opportunity slip, immediately after the battle of Cannae;
he himself admitted that he had made a mistake in not doing so. He was
not without hope of seizing some part of the City in the confusion caused
by his unexpected appearance, and if Rome were in danger, he expected that
both the consuls-or at all events, one of them-would at once quit their
hold on Capua. Then, as they would be weakened by their forces being divided,
they would give either him or the Capuans the opportunity of fighting a
successful action. One thing made him anxious, the possibility of the Capuans
surrendering as soon as he had withdrawn. Amongst his men there was a Numidian
who was ready for any desperate enterprise, and he induced this man, by
the offer of a reward, to carry a despatch and enter the Roman lines in
the guise of a deserter, then steal away on the opposite side and enter
Capua. He wrote in a very encouraging strain, and pointed out that his
departure would be the means of saving them, as it would draw off the Roman
generals from their attack on Capua to defend Rome. They were not to be
despondent, a few days' patience would completely break up the siege. He
then ordered the boats which were on the Volturnus to be seized and brought
up to a fort which he had previously constructed to secure the passage
of the river. He was informed that there was a sufficient number of them
to admit of his entire army being taken across in one night. Ten days'
rations were supplied to the men; they marched down to the river, and all
his legions were across before day-break.
26.8
Fulvius Flaccus was informed by deserters of this project before it was
put into execution, and at once sent intelligence of it to the senate.
The news was received with varying feelings as men's temperaments differed.
Naturally, at such a crisis, a meeting of the senate was instantly convened.
Publius Cornelius Asina was for recalling all the generals and armies from
every part of Italy for the defence of the City, regardless of Capua or
any other object they had in view. Fabius Maximus considered that it would
be a disgrace for them to quit their hold on Capua and allow themselves
to be scared by Hannibal and marched up and down at his beck and menaces.
"Do you suppose," he asked the senators, "that the man who did not venture
to approach the City after his victory at Cannae, really hopes to capture
it now that he has been driven away from Capua? His object in coming here
is not to attack Rome but to raise the siege of Capua. The army which is
now in the City will be sufficient for our defence, for it will be aided
by Jupiter and the other gods who have witnessed Hannibal's violation of
treaty engagements." P. Valerius Flaccus advocated a middle course, which
was ultimately adopted. He recommended that a despatch should be sent to
the generals commanding at Capua, telling them what defensive force the
City possessed. They themselves would know what troops Hannibal was bringing
and how large an army was required to maintain the siege of Capua. If one
of the generals commanding could be sent with a part of the army to Rome
without interfering with the effective conduct of the siege by the other
general, Claudius and Fulvius might arrange which of them should continue
the investment of Capua and which should go to Rome to prevent their own
city from being invested. When this decision of the senate reached Capua,
the proconsul Q. Fulvius, whose colleague had been obliged to leave for
Rome owing to his wound, selected a force out of the three armies and crossed
the Volturnus with 15,000 infantry and 1000 cavalry. When he had definitely
ascertained that Hannibal was advancing by the Latin Road, he sent men
on in advance through the burghs situated on the Appian Way and also to
some lying near it, to warn the inhabitants to have supplies stored in
readiness in their towns and to bring them in from the outlying fields
to the line of march. They were further to call in their fighting men to
defend their homes, and each municipality was to provide for its own protection.
26.9
After crossing the Volturnus Hannibal fixed his camp a short distance from
the river, and the next day he marched past Cales into the Sidicine territory.
One day was devoted to laying waste the district, and then he proceeded
along the Latin Road through the lands of Suessa, Allifae, and Casinum
up to the walls of the last-mentioned place. Here he remained encamped
for two days and ravaged the whole of the surrounding country. From there
he went on past Interamna and Aquinum into the territory of Fregellae as
far as the Liris. Here he found that the bridge had been destroyed by the
people of Fregellae in order to delay his advance. Fulvius too had been
delayed at the Volturnus, owing to Hannibal having burnt his boats, and
he had considerable difficulty in procuring rafts for the transport of
his troops, owing to the lack of timber. When, however, he had once crossed,
the remainder of his march was uninterrupted, as he found ample supplies
of provisions waiting for him in each city he came to, and also put out
by the side of the road in the country districts. His men, too, in their
eagerness urged one another to march more quickly, for they were going
to defend their homes. A messenger who had travelled from Fregellae for
a day and a night without stopping created great alarm in Rome, and the
excitement was increased by people running about the City with wildly exaggerated
accounts of the news he had brought. The wailing cry of the matrons was
heard everywhere, not only in private houses but even in the temples. Here
they knelt and swept the temple-floors with their dishevelled hair and
lifted up their hands to heaven in piteous entreaty to the gods that they
would deliver the City of Rome out of the hands of the enemy and preserve
its mothers and children from injury and outrage. The senators remained
in session in the Forum so as to be at hand should the magistrates wish
to consult them. Some received orders and went off to execute their commissions,
others offered their services in case they could be of use anywhere. Troops
were posted at the Capitol, on the walls, round about the City and even
as far as the Alban Mount and the fortress of Aesula. In the midst of all
this excitement word was brought that the proconsul Q. Fulvius was on his
way from Capua with an army. As proconsul he could not hold command in
the City, the senate therefore passed a decree conferring upon him consular
powers. After completely destroying the territory of Fregellae in revenge
for the destruction of the bridge over the Liris, Hannibal continued his
march through the districts of Frusinum, Ferentinum and Anagnia into the
neighbourhood of Labicum. He then crossed Algidus and marched on Tusculum,
but he was refused admittance, so he turned to the right below Tusculum
towards Gabii, and still descending, came into the district of Pupinia
where he encamped, eight miles from Rome. The nearer his approach the greater
was the slaughter of those who were fleeing to the City at the hands of
the Numidians who rode in front of the main body. Many, too, of all ages
and conditions were made prisoners.
26.10
In the midst of this turmoil and excitement Fulvius Flaccus entered Rome
with his army. He passed through the Porta Capena and marched right through
the City past the Cavinae and the Esquiliae, and out again through the
Colline Gate, entrenching himself on ground between the Colline and Esquiline
Gates. Here the plebeian aediles furnished him with provisions. The consuls,
attended by the senate, visited him in his camp, and a council was held
to consider what measures the supreme interests of the republic demanded.
It was decided that the consuls should form entrenched camps in the vicinity
of the Colline and Esquiline Gates, the City praetor taking command of
the Citadel and the Capitol, and that the senate should remain in permanent
session in the Forum in case any sudden emergency should need to be provided
against. Hannibal had now moved his camp to the Anio at a distance of three
miles from the City. From this position, he advanced with a body of 2000
cavalry towards the Colline Gate as far as the temple of Hercules, and
from that point he rode up and made as close an inspection as he could
of the walls and the situation of the City. Flaccus was furious with indignation
at this calm and leisurely proceeding and sent some cavalry with orders
to clear the enemy and drive them back to their camp. There were some 1200
Numidian deserters stationed on the Aventine at the time, and the consuls
sent orders to them to ride through the City to the Esquiliae, as they
considered none more fitted to fight amongst the hollows and garden walls
and sepulchres and enclosed paths all around that part of the City. When
those on guard at the Citadel and the Capitol saw them trotting down the
Publician hill they shouted out that the Aventine was taken. This caused
so much confusion and panic that, had not the Carthaginian camp been outside
the City, the terrified population would have poured out of the gates.
As it was, they took refuge in the houses and various buildings, and seeing
some of their own people walking in the streets, they took them for enemies
and attacked them with stones and missiles. It was impossible to calm the
excitement or to rectify the mistake, as the streets were packed with crowds
of country people with their cattle, whom the sudden danger had driven
into the City. The cavalry action was successful and the enemy were driven
off. It became necessary, however, to quell the disturbances which, without
the slightest reason, were breaking out in many quarters, and the senate
decided that all who had been Dictators, consuls or censors should be invested
with the imperium until the enemy had retired from the walls. During the
remainder of the day and throughout the night, many such disturbances arose
and were promptly repressed.
26.11
The following day Hannibal crossed the Anio and led out the whole of his
force to battle; Flaccus and the consuls did not decline the challenge.
When both sides were drawn up to decide an action in which Rome was the
victor's prize, a tremendous hailstorm threw the two armies into such disorder
that they had difficulty in holding their arms. They retired to their respective
camps, fearing everything rather than their enemy. The following day, when
the armies were drawn up in the same position, a similar storm separated
them. On each occasion, after they were once more in camp, the weather
cleared up in an extraordinary way. The Carthaginians looked upon the occasion
as preternatural, and the story runs that Hannibal was heard to say that
at one time he lacked the will, at another the opportunity, of becoming
master of Rome. His hopes were further damped by two incidents, one of
some importance, the other less so. The more important was his receiving
information that while he was actually in arms near the walls of Rome a
force had marched out fully equipped, under their standards, to reinforce
the army in Spain. The other incident, which he learnt from a prisoner,
was the sale by auction of the spot on which he had fixed his camp, and
the fact that, in spite of his occupation of it, there was no abatement
in the price. That any one should have been found in Rome to buy the ground
which he was holding in possession as spoil of war, seemed to Hannibal
such an insulting piece of arrogance that he instantly summoned a crier
and made him give notice of the sale of the silversmiths' shops round the
Forum of Rome.
These incidents led to his withdrawal from Rome, and he retired as far
as the river Tutia, six miles distant from the City. From there he marched
to the grove of Feronia and the temple, which was celebrated in those days
for its wealth. The people of Capena and other cities round used to bring
their first-fruits and other offerings, according to their ability, and
they had also embellished it with a considerable quantity of gold and silver.
Now the temple was despoiled of all its treasures. Great heaps of metal,
where the soldiers, struck by remorse, had thrown pieces of uncoined brass,
were found there after Hannibal's departure. All writers are agreed as
to the plundering of this temple. Coelius tell us that Hannibal diverted
his march to it while he was going from Eretum to Rome, after marching
from Amiternum by Reate and Cutiliae. According to this writer, on leaving
Capua, Hannibal entered Samnium, and from there passed to the Peligni;
then, marching past the town of Sulmo, he crossed the frontiers of the
Marrucini and then advanced through the Alban territory to the country
of the Marsi, and from there to Amiternum and the hamlet of Foruli. There
can be no uncertainty as to the route he took, for the traces of that great
commander and his large army could not have been lost in so short a space
of time; the only point at issue is whether that was the route he took
when he marched to Rome or whether he followed it on his return to Campania.
26.12
The energy with which the Romans pressed the siege of Capua was far greater
than that which Hannibal exhibited in its defence, for he hurried away
through Lucania to Bruttium in the hope of surprising Regium. Though the
siege was in no way relaxed during Fulvius' absence, his return made a
sensible difference in the conduct of operations, and it was a matter of
general surprise that Hannibal had not returned at the same time. The Capuans
gradually learnt through their conversations with the besiegers that they
were abandoned and left to themselves, and that the Carthaginians had given
up all hope of saving Capua. In accordance with a resolution of the senate,
the proconsul issued an edict which was published in the city, that any
Campanian burgher who went over to the Romans before a certain day would
be amnestied. Not a single man went over; their fears prevented them from
trusting the Romans, for they had in their revolt committed crimes too
great for any hope of pardon. But whilst no one would provide for his own
safety by going over to the enemy, there was nothing done for the public
safety in the way of wise or prudent counsel. The nobility had deserted
their public duties; it was impossible to get together a meeting of the
senate. The supreme magistracy was held by a man who conferred no honour
on his office; on the contrary, his unfitness detracted from its authority
and power. None of the nobility were to be seen in the forum, or indeed
anywhere in public; they shut themselves up at home waiting for their country's
downfall and their own destruction. All responsibility was thrown upon
the commandants of the Punic garrison, Bostar and Hanno, and they were
much more concerned for their own safety than for that of their supporters
in the city. A communication was drawn up for the purpose of forwarding
it to Hannibal, in which he was directly charged with surrendering Capua
into the enemy's hands and exposing his garrison to every kind of torture.
He had gone off, so the despatch hinted, to be out of the way, lest Capua
should be taken before his eyes, The Romans could not be drawn off from
besieging Capua even when an attack was threatened on their city; so much
more determination did the Romans show as enemies, than the Carthaginians
as friends. If Hannibal would return to Capua and turn the whole tide of
war in that direction, then the garrison were prepared to make an attack
on the besiegers. He had not crossed the Alps to make war with Regium or
Tarentum; where the legions of Rome were, there ought the armies of Carthage
to be. That was how he had conquered at Cannae, and at Thrasymenus, by
meeting the enemy face to face, army to army, and trying his fortune in
battle.
This was the main drift of the despatch. It was handed to some Numidians
who had undertaken to carry it on promise of a reward. They had come into
Fulvius' camp as deserters, intending to seize a favourable opportunity
of slipping away, and the famine from which Capua had long been suffering
was a very good reason why they should desert. A Campanian woman, however,
the mistress of one of these deserters, suddenly appeared in the camp and
informed the Roman commander that the Numidians had come in as part of
a pre-arranged plot, and were really carrying a despatch to Hannibal, and
that she was prepared to prove it, as one of them had disclosed the affair
to her. When this man was brought forward, he at first stoutly denied all
knowledge of the woman, but gradually he gave way before the truth, especially
when he saw that instruments of torture were being sent for and got ready,
and at last made a complete confession. The despatch was produced, and
further evidence came to light, as it was found that other Numidians were
at large in the Roman camp under the guise of deserters. Above seventy
of them were arrested and together with the recent arrivals were all scourged,
and their hands were cut off, after which they were sent back to Capua.
The sight of this terrible punishment broke the spirit of the Capuans.
26.13
The people went in a body to the senate house and insisted on Loesius summoning
the senate. They openly threatened the nobles who had so long absented
themselves from the senate, that they would go round to their houses and
drag them all by main force into the streets. These threats resulted in
a full meeting of the senate. The general opinion was in favour of sending
a deputation to the Roman commander, but Vibius Virrius, the prime author
of the revolt from Rome, when asked his opinion, told those who were talking
about a deputation and terms of peace and surrender that they were forgetting
what they would have done had they had the Romans in their power, or what,
as circumstances now were, they would have to suffer. "Why! ," he exclaimed,
"do you imagine that our surrender now will be like the one we made in
old days when, in order to get help against the Samnites, we surrendered
ourselves and all that belonged to us to Rome? Have you already forgotten
at what a critical moment for Rome we revolted from her? How we put to
death with every torture and indignity the garrison which we could easily
have sent away? What numerous and desperate sorties we have made against
our besiegers, how we have assaulted their lines and called Hannibal in
to crush them? Have you forgotten this last act of ours when we sent him
to attack Rome ?
"Now look at the other side, consider their determined hostility to
us and see if you have anything to hope for. Though there was a foreign
enemy on Italian soil, and that enemy Hannibal, though the flames of war
were being kindled in every quarter, they neglected everything, even Hannibal
himself, and sent both the consuls, each with an army, to Capua. For two
years now have they hemmed us in with their lines of circumvallation, and
are wearing us down with famine. They have endured as much as we have in
the extremity of peril, the utmost severity of toil; often have they been
slaughtered about their entrenchments, and all but driven out of them.
But I pass over these things; the labours and dangers of a siege are an
old and common experience. But to show their rage and implacable hatred
against us I will remind you of these incidents: Hannibal assaulted their
lines with an enormous force of infantry and cavalry, and partly captured
them, but they did not raise the siege; he crossed the Volturnus and desolated
the district of Calenum with fire; the sufferings of their allies failed
to call off the Romans; he ordered a general advance on Rome itself, they
disregarded the threatening storm; he crossed the Anio and encamped within
three miles of the City, and at last rode up to its walls and gates and
made as though he would take their city from them if they did not loose
their hold on Capua; they did not loose their hold. When wild beasts are
mad with rage you can still divert their blind fury by approaching their
lairs and young ones which they will hasten to defend. The Romans were
not diverted from Capua by the prospect of their city being besieged, or
by the terrified cries of their wives and children which could almost be
heard here, or by the threatened desecration of their hearths and altars,
of the shrines of their gods and the tombs of their ancestors. So eager
are they to visit us with punishment, so greedily do they thirst for our
blood. And, perhaps, rightly; we should have done the same had fortune
favoured us.
"Heaven, however, has ordered otherwise, and so, though I am bound to
meet my death in any case, I can, whilst I am still free, escape the insults
and the tortures which the enemy is preparing for me, I can dispose of
myself by a death as peaceful as it is honourable. I refuse to look upon
Appius Claudius and Q. Fulvius exulting in all the insolence of victory;
I refuse to be dragged in chains through the streets of Rome to grace their
triumph, and then in the dungeon or bound to the stake, with my back torn
with the scourge, pass under the headsman's axe. I will not see my city
plundered and burnt, and the matrons and maidens and noble boys of Capua
ravished and outraged. Alba, the mother city of Rome, was rased by the
Romans to its foundations in order that no memorial of their origin and
of the stock whence they sprung might survive; much less can I believe
that they will spare Capua which they hate more bitterly than they hate
Carthage. So, for those of you who intend to meet your fate before you
witness all these horrors I have prepared a banquet today at my house.
When you have taken your fill of food and wine, the same goblet that is
handed to me will be passed round to you. That draught will free our bodies
from torture, our spirits from insult, our eyes and ears from seeing and
hearing all the suffering and outrage which await the vanquished. Men will
be in readiness to place our lifeless bodies on a vast pile which will
be kindled in the court-yard of the house. This is the only path to death
which is honourable and worthy of free men. Even the enemy will admire
our courage, and Hannibal will know that the allies whom he has abandoned
and betrayed were, after all, brave men."
26.14
This speech of Virrius was received with approbation by many who had not
the courage to carry out what they approved of. The majority of the senators
were not without hope that the clemency of the Roman people so often experienced
in former wars would be once more extended to them, and they determined
to send envoys to make a formal surrender of Capua. About seven-and-twenty
accompanied Virrius home and banqueted with him. When they had as far as
possible deadened their feelings with wine against the sense of impending
evil, they all partook of the poisoned cup. Then they rose from table and
grasped each other's hands and took a last embrace of one another, weeping
for their own and their country's doom. Some remained that they might be
cremated together on the same funeral pyre, others departed for their homes.
The congestion of the veins caused by the food and wine they had taken
made the action of the poison somewhat slow, and most of them lingered
through the whole night and part of the following day. All however, expired
before the gates were opened to the enemy. The following day, the gate
called "the Gate of Jupiter," opposite the Roman camp, was opened by the
proconsul's order. One legion was admitted through it and two squadrons
of allied cavalry, with C. Fulvius in command. First he took care that
all the weapons of war in Capua were brought to him; then, after stationing
guards at all the gates to prevent any exit or escape, he arrested the
Punic garrison and ordered the senate to go to the Roman commanders. On
their arrival in the camp they were manacled, and ordered to send word
for all the gold and silver they possessed to be brought to the quaestors.
This amounted to 2072 pounds of gold and 31,200 pounds of silver. Twenty-five
senators were sent to be kept in custody at Cales, and twenty-eight who
were proved to have been mainly instrumental in bringing about the revolt
were sent to Teanum
26.15
As to the punishment to be meted out to the senators of Capua, Claudius
and Fulvius were anything but unanimous. Claudius was prepared to grant
them pardon, but Fulvius took a much sterner line. Appius Claudius wished
to refer the whole question to the senate at Rome. He maintained that it
was but right that the senators should have an opportunity of investigating
all the circumstances and finding out whether the Capuans had made any
of the allies or the Latins or the municipal burghs privy to their designs,
and if so, whether any of these had given them assistance in the war. Fulvius,
on the other hand, declared that the very last thing they ought to do was
to harass their faithful allies by vague charges and put them at the mercy
of informers who were perfectly indifferent as to what they said or what
they did. Any such investigation therefore he should stifle. After this
interchange of views they parted, Appius feeling no doubt that in spite
of his violent language his comrade would, in such an important matter,
await instructions from Rome. Fulvius, determined to forestall any such
obstacle to his designs, dismissed the council and ordered the military
tribunes and the officers of the allies to select 2000 horsemen and warn
them to be in readiness by the time the third watch was sounded. Starting
with this force in the night, he reached Teanum at day-break and rode straight
into the forum. A crowd had collected at the first entry of the cavalry,
and Fulvius ordered the chief magistrate of the district to be summoned,
and on his appearance commanded him to produce the Capuans who were in
his custody. They were all brought forward and then scourged and beheaded.
Then putting spurs to his horse he rode to Cales. When he had taken his
seat on the tribunal and the Capuans who had been brought out were being
bound to the stake, a mounted messenger arrived post-haste from Rome and
handed Fulvius a despatch from the praetor C. Calpurnius containing the
decree of the senate. The spectators guessed the nature of the contents,
and those standing round the tribunal expressed their belief-a belief which
soon found expression throughout the Assembly-that the whole question of
the treatment of the Capuan prisoners was to be left to the senate. Fulvius
thought so too; he took the letter and without opening it placed it in
his breast and then ordered his marshal to tell the lictor to carry out
the law. Thus, those who were at Cales were also executed. Now he read
the despatch and the decree of the senate. But it was too late to prevent
a deed accomplished, which had been hurried on as quickly as possible in
order that it might not be prevented. Just as Fulvius was leaving the tribunal
a Capuan named Taurea Vibellius strode through the middle of the crowd
and addressed him by name. Fulvius resumed his seat, wondering what the
man wanted. "Order me too," he cried, to be put to death so that you may
boast of having caused the death of a braver man than yourself." Fulvius
declared that the man was certainly out of his mind, and added that even
if he wished to kill him he was prevented from doing so by the decree of
the senate. Then Vibellius exclaimed, "Now that my native city has been
taken, my friends and relations lost to me, my wife and children slain
by my own hand to save them from insult and outrage, and since even the
opportunity of dying as my fellow-countrymen here have died is refused
me, let me seek in courage a release from the life which has become so
hateful to me." With these words he drew out a sword which he had concealed
in his garment, and plunging it into his heart fell dying at the general's
feet.
26.16
As the execution of the Capuans and most of the other steps taken were
carried out by the instructions of Fulvius alone, some authors assert that
Appius Claudius died immediately after the surrender of Capua. According
to this account, Taurea did not come voluntarily to Cales, nor did he perish
by his own hand; when he had been tied to the stake along with the others
he shouted repeatedly, and as owing to the noise they could not hear what
he was saying, Fulvius ordered silence. Then Taurea said, as I have already
related, that he was being done to death by a man who was far from being
his equal in courage. At these words, the marshal, on the proconsul's order
gave this direction to the lictor: "Lictor, let this brave man have more
of the rod, and execute the law upon him first of all." Some authors assert
that the decree of the senate was read before the men were beheaded, but
there was a proviso in it to the effect that if he thought fit, he might
refer the question to the senate, and Fulvius took this to mean that he
was at liberty to decide as to what would be the best course in the interests
of the republic. After Fulvius returned to Capua, he received the submission
of Atella and Calatia. Here too the ringleaders in the revolt were punished;
seventy of the leading senators were put to death, and three hundred Campanian
nobles thrown into prison. Others who were distributed amongst the various
Latin cities to be kept in custody perished from various causes; the rest
of the population of Capua were sold as slaves. The question now was what
was to be done with the city and its territory. Some were of opinion that
a city so strong, so near to Rome and so hostile to it, ought to be utterly
destroyed. Utilitarian considerations however prevailed. The territory
was generally allowed to be the first in Italy in point of productiveness,
and the only reason why the city was spared was that there might be a place
for the tillers of the soil to live in. A motley throng of peasants, freedmen,
small tradesmen and artisans were told off to occupy the place; the whole
of the territory with the buildings on it became the property of the Roman
State. It was settled that Capua itself should be simply a lodgment and
a shelter, a city merely in name; there was to be no corporate life, no
senate, no council of the plebs, no magistrates; the population were without
any right of public assembly or self-government; they had no common interest
and were incapable of taking any common action. The administration of justice
was in the hands of a praetor who was to be sent annually from Rome. In
this way matters were arranged at Capua in pursuance of a policy which
commends itself from every point of view. Sternly and swiftly was punishment
meted out to those who had been most guilty, the civic population was scattered
far and wide with no hope of return, the unoffending walls and houses were
spared from the ravages of fire and demolition. The preservation of the
city, whilst it was a material advantage to Rome, afforded to the friendly
communities a striking proof of her lenity; the whole of Campania and all
the surrounding nationalities would have been horror-struck at the destruction
of such a famous and wealthy city. The enemy, on the other hand, was made
to realise the power of Rome to punish those who were faithless to her,
and the powerlessness of Hannibal to protect those who had gone over to
him.
26.17
Now that the senate was relieved from its anxiety about Capua, it was able
to turn its attention to Spain. A force of 6000 infantry and 300 cavalry
was placed at Nero's disposal, and he selected it from the two legions
he had had with him at Capua; an equal number of infantry and 600 cavalry
were to be furnished by the allies. He embarked his army at Puteoli and
landed at Tarraco. Here he hauled his ships ashore and furnished the crews
with arms, thus augmenting his strength. With this composite force he marched
to the Ebro and took over the army there from Ti. Fonteius and L. Marcius.
He then advanced against the enemy. Hasdrubal-Hamilcar's son-was encamped
at the Lapides Atri (the "Black Boulders"). This is a place in the Auretanian
country between the towns of Iliturgis and Mentissa. Nero occupied the
two exits of the pass. Hasdrubal, finding himself shut in, sent a herald
to promise in his name that he would deport the whole of his army from
Spain if he were allowed to leave his position. The Roman general was glad
to accept the offer, and Hasdrubal asked for an interview the following
day. At this conference they were to draw up in writing the terms upon
which the various citadels were to be handed over, and the date at which
the garrisons were to be withdrawn, on the understanding that they should
take with them all their goods and chattels.
His request was granted, and Hasdrubal ordered the most heavily armed
portion of his army to get out of the pass as best they could as soon as
darkness set in. He was careful to see that not very many went out that
night, as a small body would make but little noise and be more likely to
escape observation. They would also find their way more easily through
the narrow and difficult foot-paths. The next day he kept the appointment,
but so much time was taken up in discussing and writing down a number of
things which had nothing to do with the matters they had agreed to discuss,
that the whole day was lost and the business adjourned till the morrow.
So another opportunity was afforded him of sending off a fresh body of
troops by night. The discussion was not brought to a close the next day,
and so it went on; several days were occupied in discussing terms, and
the nights in despatching the Carthaginians secretly from their camp. When
the greater part of the army had escaped, Hasdrubal no longer kept to the
conditions which he had himself proposed, and there was less and less desire
to come to terms as his sincerity diminished with his fears. Almost the
entire force of infantry had now got out of the defile when, at daybreak,
a dense fog covered the valley and the whole of the surrounding country.
No sooner did Hasdrubal become aware of this than he sent a message to
Nero begging that the interview might be put off for that day as it was
a day on which the Carthaginians were forbidden by their religion to transact
any important business. Even this did not arouse any suspicion of trickery.
On learning that he would be excused for that day, Hasdrubal promptly left
his camp with the cavalry and elephants, and by keeping his movements secret,
emerged into safety. About ten o'clock the sun dispersed the mist, and
the Romans saw that the hostile camp was deserted. Then, recognising at
last the trick which the Carthaginian had played upon him and how he had
been befooled, Nero hurriedly prepared to follow him and force him to an
engagement. The enemy, however, declined battle; only a few skirmishes
took place between the Carthaginian rear and the Roman advanced guard.
26.18
The Spanish tribes who had revolted after the defeat of the two Scipios
showed no signs of returning to their allegiance; there were not, however,
any fresh instances. After the recovery of Capua the public interest both
in senate and people centered in Spain quite as much as in Italy; and it
was decided that the army serving there should be increased and a commander-in-chief
appointed. There was, however, much uncertainty felt as to whom they ought
to appoint. Two consummate generals had fallen within thirty days of each
other, and the selection of a man to take their place demanded exceptional
care. Various names were proposed, and at last it was arranged that the
matter should be left to the people, and a proconsul for Spain formally
elected. The consuls fixed a day for the election. They were in hopes that
those who felt themselves qualified for such an important command would
become candidates. They were, however, disappointed, and the disappointment
renewed the grief of the people, as they thought of the defeats they had
sustained and the generals they had lost. The citizens were depressed,
almost in despair, nevertheless they went out to the Campus Martius on
the day fixed for the election. All turned their eyes to the magistrates
and watched the expression of the leaders of the republic as they looked
enquiringly at one another. Everywhere men were saying that the State was
in such a hopeless condition that no one dared to accept the command in
Spain. Suddenly, Publius Cornelius Scipio, the son of the Scipio who had
fallen in Spain, a young man barely twenty-four years old, took his stand
upon a slight eminence where he could be seen and heard, and announced
himself as a candidate. All eyes were turned towards him, and the delighted
cheers with which his announcement was received were at once interpreted
as an omen of his future good fortune and success. On proceeding to vote,
not only the centuries but even the individual voters were unanimous to
a man in favour of entrusting P. Scipio with the supreme command in Spain.
When, however, the election was decided and their enthusiasm had had time
to cool down, there was a sudden silence as the people began to reflect
on what they had done, and ask themselves whether their personal affection
for him might not have got the better of their judgment. What gave them
the greatest concern was his youth. Some, too, recalled with dread the
fortune that had attended his house, and regarded as ominous of evil even
the name of the man who was quitting two bereaved families in order to
carry on a campaign round the tombs of his uncle and his father.
26.19
Seeing how the step which they had taken so impetuously now filled them
with anxiety, Scipio called the voters together and spoke to them about
his age and the command which they had entrusted to him, and the war which
he had to conduct. He spoke in such lofty and glowing words that he evoked
their enthusiasm once more, and inspired them with more hopeful confidence
than is usually called out by faith in men's promises or by reasonable
anticipations of success. Scipio won people's admiration not only by the
sterling qualities which he possessed, but also by his cleverness in displaying
them, a cleverness which he had developed from early youth. In his public
life he generally spoke and acted as though he were guided either by visions
of the night or by some divine inspiration, whether it was that he was
really open to superstitious influences or that he claimed oracular sanction
for his commands and counsels in order to secure prompt adoption. He sought
to create this impression on men's minds from the beginning, from the day
when he assumed the toga virilis, for he never undertook any important
business, either public or private, without first going to the Capitol,
where he sat for some time in the temple in privacy and alone. This custom,
which he kept up all through his life, gave rise to a widespread belief,
whether designedly upon his part or not, that he was of divine origin,
and the story was told of him which was commonly related of Alexander-a
story as silly as it was fabulous-that he was begotten by an enormous serpent
which had been often seen in his mother's bedroom, but on any one's approach,
suddenly uncoiled itself and disappeared. The belief in these marvels was
never scoffed at by him; on the contrary, it was strengthened by deliberate
policy on his part in refusing to deny or to admit that anything of the
kind ever occurred. There were many other traits in this young man's character,
some of which were genuine, others the result of studied acting, which
created a greater admiration for him than usually falls to the lot of man.
It was the confidence with which he had in this way inspired his fellow-citizens
that led them to entrust to him, young as he was, a task of enormous difficulty,
and a command which involved the gravest responsibilities. The force which
he had formed out of the old army in Spain, and that which sailed from
Puteoli with C. Nero, were further reinforced by 10,000 infantry and 1000
cavalry. M. Junius Silanus was appointed as his second in command. Setting
sail from the mouth of the Tiber with a fleet of thirty vessels, all quinqueremes,
he coasted along the Etruscan shore, crossed the Gulf of Gaul, and after
rounding the Pyrenaean Promontory brought up at Emporiae, a Greek city,
founded by settlers from Phocaea. Here he disembarked his troops and proceeded
overland to Tarraco, leaving orders for his fleet to follow his movements.
At Tarraco he was met by deputations which had been sent from all the friendly
tribes as soon as they knew of his coming. The vessels were hauled ashore,
and the four Massilian triremes which had acted as convoy were sent home.
The deputations informed Scipio of the unsettlement amongst their tribes
due to the varying fortunes of the war. He replied in a bold and assured
tone, full of self-confidence, but no expression savouring of presumption
or arrogance escaped him, everything he said was marked by perfect dignity
and sincerity.
26.20
Tarraco was now his headquarters. From there he paid visits to the friendly
tribes, and also inspected the winter quarters of the army. He praised
them warmly for having maintained their hold on the province after sustaining
two such terrible blows, and also for keeping the enemy to the south of
the Ebro, thereby depriving them of any advantages from their victories,
and also affording protection to their own friends. Marcius, whom he kept
with him, he treated with so much honour that it was perfectly obvious
that Scipio had not the slightest fear of his reputation being dimmed by
anybody. Soon afterwards Silanus succeeded Nero and the new troops were
sent into winter quarters. After making all the necessary visits and inspections
and completing the preparations for the next campaign Scipio returned to
Tarraco. His reputation was quite as great among the enemy as among his
own countrymen; there was amongst the former a foreboding, a vague sense
of fear which was all the stronger because no reason for it could be given.
The Carthaginian armies withdrew into their respective winter-quarters:
Hasdrubal, the son of Gisgo, to Gades on the coast, Mago into the interior
above the forest of Castulo, Hasdrubal, the son of Hamilcar, near the Ebro
in the neighbourhood of Saguntum. This summer, marked by two important
events, the recovery of Capua and the despatch of Scipio to Spain, was
drawing to a close when a Carthaginian fleet was sent from Sicily to Tarentum
to intercept supplies from the Roman garrison in the citadel. It certainly
succeeded in blocking all access to the citadel from the sea, but the longer
it remained the greater was the scarcity amongst the townspeople as compared
with that amongst the Romans in the citadel. For though the coast was clear
and open access was secured to the harbour by the Carthaginian fleet, it
was impossible to convey to the population of the city as much corn as
was consumed by the crowd of sailors, drawn from every class, on board
the fleet. The garrison in the citadel, on the other hand, being only a
small body, were able to exist on what they had previously laid in, without
any external supply. At length the ships were sent away, and their departure
was hailed with more delight than their arrival had been. But the scarcity
was not in the slightest degree lessened, for when their protection was
withdrawn, corn could not be brought in at all.
26.21
Towards the end of this summer M. Marcellus left Sicily for Rome. On his
arrival in the City he was granted an audience of the senate in the Temple
of Bellona. After giving a report of his campaign and gently protesting
on his own behalf and on that of his soldiers against not being allowed
to bring them home, though he had completely pacified the province, he
requested to be allowed to enter the City in triumph. After a lengthy debate
his request was refused. On the one hand, it was argued, it was most inconsistent
to refuse him a triumph now that he was on the spot after the way in which
the news of his successes in Sicily had been received, and public thanksgivings
and special rites ordered while he was still in his province. Against this
it was alleged that as the senate had ordered him to hand over his army
to his successor, it was a proof that a state of war still existed in the
province, and he could not enjoy a triumph since he had not brought the
war to a close, nor was his army present to testify as to whether he deserved
a triumph or not. They decided upon a middle course, he was to be allowed
an ovation. The tribunes of the plebs were authorised by the senate to
propose as an ordinance to the people "that for the day on which he entered
the City in ovation M. Marcellus should retain his command."
The day previous to this he celebrated his triumph on the Alban Mount.
From there he marched into the City in ovation. An enormous quantity of
spoil was carried before him together with a model of Syracuse at the time
of its capture. Catapults and ballistae and all the engines of war taken
from the city were exhibited in the procession, as were also the works
of art which had been accumulated in royal profusion during the long years
of peace. These included a number of articles in silver and bronze, pieces
of furniture, costly garments and many famous statues with which Syracuse,
like all the principal cities of Greece, had been adorned. To signalise
his victories over the Carthaginians eight elephants were led in the procession.
Not the least conspicuous feature of the spectacle was the sight of Sosis
the Syracusan and Moericus the Spaniard who marched in front wearing golden
crowns. The former had guided the nocturnal entry into Syracuse, the latter
had been the agent in the surrender of Nasos and its garrison. Each of
these men received the full Roman citizenship and 500 jugera of land. Sosis
was to take his allotment in that part of the Syracusan territory which
had belonged to the king or to those who had taken up arms against Rome,
and he was allowed to choose any house in Syracuse which had been the property
of those who had been put to death under the laws of war. A further order
was made that Moericus and the Spaniards should have assigned to them a
city and lands in Sicily out of the possessions of those who had revolted
from Rome. M. Cornelius was commissioned to select the city and territory
for them, where he thought best, and 400 jugera in the same district were
also decreed as a gift to Belligenes through whose instrumentality Moericus
had been induced to change sides. After Marcellus' departure from Sicily
a Carthaginian fleet landed a force of 8000 infantry and 3000 Numidian
horse. The cities of Murgentia and Ergetium revolted to them, and their
example was followed by Hybla and Macella and some other less important
places. Muttines and his Numidians were also roaming all through the island
and laying waste the fields of Rome's allies with fire. To add to these
troubles the Roman army bitterly resented not being withdrawn from the
province with their commander and also not being allowed to winter in the
towns. Consequently they were very remiss in their military duties; in
fact it was only the absence of a leader that prevented them from breaking
out into open mutiny. In spite of these difficulties the praetor M. Cornelius
succeeded by remonstrances and reassurances in calming the temper of his
men, and then reduced all the revolted cities to submission. In pursuance
of the senate's orders he selected Murgentia, one of those cities, for
the settlement of Moericus and his Spaniards.
26.22
As both the consuls had Apulia for their province, and as there was less
danger from Hannibal and his Carthaginians, they received instructions
to ballot for Apulia and Macedonia. Macedonia fell to Sulpicius, and he
superseded Laevinus. Fulvius was recalled to conduct the consular elections
in Rome. The Veturian century of juniors was the first to vote, and they
declared for T. Manlius Torquatus and T. Otacilius, the latter being at
the time absent from Rome. The voters began to press round Manlius to congratulate
him, regarding his election as a certainty, but he at once proceeded, surrounded
by a large crowd, to the consul's tribunal and begged to be allowed to
make a brief speech and also asked that the century which had voted might
be recalled. When all were on the tiptoe of expectation to learn what he
wanted, he began by excusing himself on the score of his eyesight. "A man
must have little sense of shame," he continued "whether he be pilot of
a ship or commander of an army, who asks that the lives and fortunes of
others should be committed to him when, in all he does, he has to depend
upon other people's eyes. If, therefore, you approve, order the Veturian
century of juniors to cast their vote again, and to remember, whilst they
are choosing their consuls, the war in Italy and the critical position
of the republic. Your ears can hardly yet have recovered from the uproar
and confusion caused by the enemy a few months ago, when he brought the
flames of war almost up to the very walls of Rome." The century replied
with a general shout that they had not changed their minds, they should
vote as before. Then Torquatus said, "I shall not be able to tolerate your
manners and conduct, nor will you submit to my authority. Go back and vote
again, and bear in mind that the Carthaginians are carrying war in Italy,
and that their leader is Hannibal." Then the century, swayed by the speaker's
personal authority and by the murmurs of admiration which they heard all
around them, begged the consul to call up the Veturian century of seniors,
as they wished to consult their elders and be guided by their advice in
the choice of consuls. They were accordingly called up and an interval
was allowed for the two bodies to consult privately in the ovile. The seniors
maintained that the choice really lay between three men, two of them already
full of honours-Q. Fabius and M. Marcellus-and, if they particularly wished
a new man to be appointed consul to act against the Carthaginians, M. Valerius
Laevinus, who had conducted operations against Philip both by sea and land
with conspicuous success. So they discussed the claims of these three,
and after the seniors had withdrawn the juniors proceeded to vote. They
gave their vote in favour of M. Marcellus Claudius, resplendent with the
glory of his conquest of Sicily, and, as the second consul, M. Valerius.
Neither of them had put in a personal appearance. The other centuries all
followed the leading century. People nowadays may laugh at the admirers
of antiquity. I for my part do not believe it possible, even if there ever
existed a commonwealth of wise men such as philosophers dream of but have
never really known, that there could be an aristocracy more grave or more
temperate in their desire for power or a people with purer manners and
a higher moral tone. That a century of juniors should have been anxious
to consult their seniors as to whom they were to place in supreme authority
is a thing hardly credible in these days, when we see in what contempt
children hold the authority of their parents.
26.23
Then followed the election of praetors. The successful candidates were
P. Manlius Vulso, L. Manlius Acidinus, C. Laetorius and L. Cincius Alimentus.
When the elections were over news came of the death of T. Otacilius in
Sicily. He was the man whom the people would have given to T. Manlius as
his colleague in the consulship, if the order of the proceedings had not
been interrupted. The Games of Apollo had been exhibited the previous year,
and when the question of their repetition the next year was moved by the
praetor Calpurnius, the senate passed a decree that they should be observed
for all time. Some portents were observed this year and duly reported.
The statue of victory which stood on the roof of the temple of Concord
was struck by lightning and thrown down on to the statues of Victory which
stood above the facade in front of the pediment, and here it was caught
and prevented from falling lower. At Anagnia and Fregellae the walls and
gates were reported to have been struck. In the forum of Subertum streams
of blood had flowed for a whole day. At Eretium there was a shower of stones
and at Reate a mule had produced offspring. These portents were expiated
by sacrifices of full-grown victims; a day was appointed for special intercessions
and the people were ordered to join in solemn rites for nine days. Some
members of the national priesthood died this year, and others were appointed
in their stead. Manlius Aemilius Numida, one of the Keepers of the Sacred
Books, was succeeded by M. Aemilius Lepidus. C. Livius was appointed pontiff
in the room of M. Pomponius Matho, and M. Servilius, augur, in the place
of Spurius Carvilius Maximus. The death of the pontiff T. Otacilius Crassus
did not occur before the close of the year, so no one was appointed in
his place. C. Claudius, one of the Flamens of Jupiter, was guilty of irregularity
in laying the selected parts of the victim on the altar and consequently
resigned his office.
26.24
M. Valerius Laevinus had been holding private interviews with some of the
leading Aetolians with the view of ascertaining their political leanings.
It was arranged that a meeting of their national council should be convened
to meet him, and thither he proceeded with some fast-sailing vessels. He
commenced his address to the assembly by alluding to the captures of Syracuse
and Capua as instances of the success which had attended the arms of Rome
in Sicily and Italy, and then proceeded: "It is the practice of the Romans,
a practice handed down from their ancestors, to cultivate the friendship
of other nations; some of them they have received into citizenship on the
same footing as themselves; others they have allowed to remain under such
favourable conditions that they preferred alliance to full citizenship.
You, Aetolians, will be held in all the greater honour because you will
have been the first of all the oversea nations to establish friendly relations
with us. Philip and the Macedonians you find to be troublesome neighbours;
I have already dealt a fatal blow to their ambitions and aggressiveness,
and I shall reduce them to such a pass that they will not only evacuate
those cities which they have wrested from you, but will have enough to
do to defend Macedonia itself. The Acarnanians, too, whose secession from
your league you feel so keenly, I shall bring back to the old terms by
which your rights and suzerainty over them were guaranteed." These assertions
and promises of the Roman commander were supported by Scopas, the chief
magistrate of Aetolia at the time, and by Dorimachus, a leading man amongst
them, both of whom from their official position spoke with authority. They
were less reserved, and adopted a more confident tone as they extolled
the power and greatness of Rome. What weighed most, however, with the Assembly
was the hope of becoming masters of Acarnania.
The terms on which they were to become the friends and allies of Rome
were reduced to writing and an additional clause was inserted that if it
was their will and pleasure the Eleans and Lacedaemonians as well as Attalus,
Pleuratus and Scerdilaedus might be included in the treaty. Attalus was
king of Pergamum in Asia Minor; Pleuratus, king of the Thracians; Scerdilaedus,
king of the Illyrians. The Aetolians were at once to commence war with
Philip on land, and the Roman general would assist them with not less than
twenty-five quinqueremes. The territories, buildings and walls of all the
cities as far as Corcyra were to become the property of the Aetolians,
all the other booty was to go to the Romans, who were also to be responsible
for Acarnania passing under the dominion of the Aetolians. Should the Aetolians
make peace with Philip, one of the conditions was to be that he would abstain
from hostilities against Rome and her allies and dependencies. Similarly,
if the Romans made a treaty with him it was to be a provision that he should
not be allowed to make war upon the Aetolians and their allies. These were
the agreed conditions, and after a lapse of two years, copies of the treaty
were deposited by the Aetolians at Olympia, and by the Romans in the Capitol,
in order that the sacred memorials round them might be a perpetual witness
to their obligation. The reason for this delay was that the Aetolian envoys
had been detained for a considerable time in Rome. No time, however, was
lost in commencing hostilities, and Laevinus attacked Zacynthus. This is
a small island adjacent to Aetolia, and it contains one city of the same
name as the island; this city, with the exception of its citadel, Laevinus
captured. He also took two cities belonging to the Acarnanians-Oeniadae
and Nasos-and handed them over to the Aetolians. After this he withdrew
to Corcyra, feeling satisfied that Philip had enough on his hands with
the war on his frontiers to prevent him from thinking about Italy and the
Carthaginians and his compact with Hannibal.
26.25
Philip was wintering in Pella when the news of the defection of the Aetolians
reached him. He had intended to march into Greece at the beginning of the
spring, and with the view of keeping the Illyrians and the cities adjacent
to his western frontier quiet he made a sudden invasion into the territories
of Oricum and Apollonia. The men of Apollonia came out to give battle,
but he drove them back in great panic to their walls. After devastating
the neighbouring district of Illyria, he turned swiftly into Pelagonia
and captured Sintia, a city of the Dardani, which gave them easy access
into Macedonia. After these rapid incursions he turned his attention to
the war which the Aetolians, in conjunction with the Romans, were commencing
against him. Marching through Pelagonia, Lyncus and Bottiaea he descended
into Thessaly, whose population he hoped to rouse to joint action with
him against the Aetolians. Leaving Perseus with a force of 4000 men to
hold the pass into Thessaly against them he returned to Macedonia, before
engaging in the more serious contest, and from there marched into Thrace
to attack the Maedi. This tribe were in the habit of making incursions
into Macedonia whenever they found the king occupied with some distant
war and his kingdom unprotected. To break their aggressiveness he devastated
their country, and attacked Iamphoryna, their chief city and stronghold.
When Scopas heard that the king had gone into Thessaly, and was engaged
in hostilities there, he called up all the fighting men of Aetolia and
prepared to invade Acarnania. The Acarnanians were inferior to their enemy
in strength; they were also aware that Oeniadae and Nasos were lost, and
above all, that the arms of Rome were turned against them. Under these
circumstances they entered upon the struggle more in a spirit of rage and
despair than with prudence and method. Their wives and children and all
men over sixty years of age were sent into the adjoining country of Epirus.
All who were between fifteen and sixty bound themselves by oath not to
return home unless they were victorious, and if any one left the field,
defeated, no man should receive him into any city or house or admit him
to his table or his hearth. They drew up a form of words, invoking a terrible
curse upon any of their countrymen who should prove recreants, and a most
solemn appeal to their hosts, the Epirotes, to respect their oath. They
also begged them to bury those of their countrymen who fell in battle in
one common grave and place over it this inscription: "Here lie the Acarnanians
who met their death whilst fighting for their country against the violence
and injustice of the Aetolians." In this determined and desperate mood,
they fixed their camp on the extreme limit of their borders and awaited
the enemy. Messengers were despatched to Philip to announce their critical
situation, and in spite of his recapture of Iamphoryna and other successes
in Thrace he was compelled to abandon his northern campaign and go to their
assistance. Rumours of the oath which the Acarnanians had taken arrested
the advance of the Aetolians; the news of Philip's approach compelled them
to withdraw into the interior of their country. Philip had made a forced
march to prevent the Acarnanians from being crushed, but he did not advance
beyond Dium, and on learning that the Aetolians had retired he returned
to Pella.
26.26
At the beginning of spring Laevinus set sail from Corcyra and after rounding
the promontory of Leucata reached Naupactus. He announced that he was going
on to attack Anticyra, so that Scopas and the Aetolians might be ready
for him there. Anticyra is situated in Locris, on the left hand as you
enter the Corinthian Gulf, and is only a short distance either by sea or
land from Naupactus. In three days the attack began in both directions;
the naval attack was the heavier one because the ships were furnished with
artillery and engines of every kind, and it was the Romans who were delivering
the attack on this side. In a few days the place surrendered and was made
over to the Aetolians; the booty in accordance with the treaty became the
property of the Romans. During the siege a despatch was handed to Laevinus
informing him that he had been made consul, and that P. Sulpicius was coming
to succeed him. Whilst he was there he was overtaken by a tedious illness,
and consequently arrived in Rome much later than was expected. M. Marcellus
entered upon his consulship on March 15, and in order to comply with traditional
usage summoned a meeting of the senate on the same day. The meeting was
a purely formal one; he announced that in his colleague's absence he should
not submit any proposals either in respect of the policy of the State or
the assignment of provinces. "I am quite aware," he told the senators,
"that there are a large body of Sicilians quartered in the country houses
of my detractors round the City. I have no intention of preventing them
from publishing here in Rome the charges which have been got up by my enemies;
on the contrary, I was prepared to give them an immediate opportunity of
appearing before the senate had they not pretended to be afraid of speaking
about a consul in his colleague's absence. When, however, my colleague
has come I shall not allow any business to be discussed before the Sicilians
have been brought into the senate house. M. Cornelius has issued what is
practically a formal summons throughout the island in order that as many
as possible might come to Rome to lay their complaints against me. He has
filled the City with letters containing false information about a state
of war existing in Sicily, solely that he may tarnish my reputation." The
consul's speech won for him the reputation of being a man of moderation
and self-control. The senate adjourned, and it seemed as though there would
be a total suspension of business pending the other consul's arrival. As
usual, idleness led to discontent and grumbling. The plebs were loud in
their complaints about the way the war dragged on, the devastation of the
land round the City wherever Hannibal and his army moved, the exhaustion
of Italy by the constant levies, the almost annual destruction of their
armies. And now the new consuls were both of them fond of war, far too
enterprising and ambitious, quite capable, even in a time of peace and
quiet, of getting up a war, and now that war was actually going on all
the less likely to allow the citizens any respite or breathing space.
26.27
All this talk was suddenly interrupted by a fire which broke out in the
night in several places round the Forum on the eve of the Quinquatrus.
Seven shops which were afterwards replaced by five were burning at the
same time, as well as the offices where the New Banks now stand. Soon after,
private buildings-the Basilicae did not yet exist-the Lautumiae, the Fish
Market and the Hall of Vesta were alight. It was with the utmost difficulty
that the Temple of Vesta was saved, mainly through the exertions of thirteen
slaves, who were afterwards manumitted at the public cost. The fire raged
all through the next day and there was not the smallest doubt that it was
the work of incendiaries, for fires started simultaneously in several different
places. The senate accordingly authorised the consul to give public notice
that whoever disclosed the names of those through whose agency the conflagration
had been started should, if he were a freeman, receive a reward, if a slave,
his liberty. Tempted by the offer of a reward, a slave belonging to the
Capuan family of the Calavii, called Manus, gave information to the effect
that his masters, together with five young Capuan nobles, whose fathers
had been beheaded by Q. Fulvius, had caused the fire and were prepared
to commit every description of crime if they were not arrested. They and
their slaves were at once apprehended. At first they endeavoured to throw
suspicion upon the informer and his statement. It was asserted that after
being beaten by his master, the day before he gave information, he had
run away and had made out of an occurrence which was really accidental
the foundation of a false charge. When, however, the accused and accuser
were brought face to face and the slaves were examined under torture, they
all confessed. The masters as well as the slaves who had been their accessories
were all executed. The informer was rewarded with his liberty and 20,000
ases.
When Laevinus was passing Capua on his way to Rome he was surrounded
by a crowd of the inhabitants who implored him with tears to allow them
to go to Rome and try if they could not awaken the compassion of the senate
and persuade them not to allow Q. Flaccus to ruin them utterly and efface
their name. Flaccus declared that he had no personal feeling against the
Capuans, it was as public enemies that he regarded them, and should continue
to do so as long as he knew that they maintained their present attitude
towards Rome. He had shut them up, he said, within their walls, because
if they got out anywhere they would prowl about the country like wild beasts,
and mangle and murder whatever came in their way. Some had deserted to
Hannibal, others had gone off to burn down Rome. The consul would see in
the half-burnt Forum the result of their crime. They had tried to destroy
the temple of Vesta, with its perpetual fire, and the image which was concealed
in the sacred shrine-that image which Fate had decreed to be the pledge
and guarantee of Roman dominion. He considered that it would be anything
but safe to give the Capuans a chance of entering the City. After hearing
this Laevinus made the Capuans take an oath to Flaccus that they would
return within five days after receiving the reply of the senate. Then he
ordered them to follow him to Rome. Surrounded by this crowd and by a number
of Sicilians who had also met him, he entered the City. It seemed just
as though he were bringing in a body of accusers against the two commanders
who had distinguished themselves by the destruction of two famous cities
and who would now have to defend themselves against those they had vanquished.
26.28
The first questions, however, which the two consuls brought before the
senate were those relating to foreign policy and the allocation of the
various commands. Laevinus made his report on the situation in Macedonia
and Greece, and the unrest amongst the Aetolians, the Acarnanians and the
Locrians. He also gave details as to his own military and naval movements,
and stated that he had driven Philip, who was meditating an attack on the
Aetolians, back into the interior of his kingdom. The legion could now
be safely withdrawn, as the fleet was sufficient to protect Italy from
any attempt on the part of the king. After this statement about himself
and the province of which he had had charge, he and his colleague raised
the question of the various commands. The senate made the following dispositions.
One consul was to operate in Italy against Hannibal; the other was to succeed
T. Otacilius in command of the fleet and also to administer Sicily with
L. Cincius as praetor. They were to take over the armies in Etruria and
Gaul, each of which comprised two legions. The two City legions which the
consul Sulpicius had commanded the previous year were sent to Gaul, and
the consul who was to act in Italy was to appoint to the command in Gaul.
C. Calpurnius had his office of propraetor extended for a year, and was
sent into Etruria, Q. Fulvius also received a year's extension of his command
at Capua. The composite force of citizens and allies was reduced, one strong
legion being formed out of the two; this consisted of 5000 infantry and
300 cavalry, those who had served longest being sent home. The army of
the allies was reduced to 7000 infantry and 300 cavalry, the same rule
being observed as to the release of the veterans who had seen the longest
service. In the case of the retiring consul, Cn. Fulvius, no change was
made; he retained his army and his province, Apulia, for another year.
His late colleague, P. Sulpicius, received orders to disband his entire
army with the exception of the naval force. Similarly the army which M.
Cornelius had commanded was to be sent home from Sicily. The men of Cannae,
who practically represented two legions, were still to remain in the island,
under the command of the praetor L. Cincius. L. Cornelius had commanded
the same number of legions the previous year in Sardinia, and these were
now transferred to the praetor P. Manlius Vulso. The consuls received instructions
to see that in raising the City legions, none were enrolled who had been
in the army of M. Valerius, or in that of Q. Fulvius. So the total number
of Roman legions in active service that year was not to exceed one-and-twenty.
26.29
When the senate had finished making the appointments, the consuls were
ordered to ballot for their commands. Sicily and the fleet fell to Marcellus,
Italy and the campaign against Hannibal to Laevinus. This result utterly
appalled the Sicilians, to whom it seemed as though all the horrors of
the capture of Syracuse were to be repeated. They were standing in full
view of the consuls, waiting anxiously for the result of the balloting,
and when they saw how it was decided, they broke out into loud laments
and cries of distress, which drew the eyes of all upon them for the moment,
and became the subject of much comment afterwards. Clothing themselves
in mourning garb they visited the houses of the senators and assured each
of them in turn that if Marcellus went back to Sicily with the power and
authority of a consul they would every one of them abandon his city and
quit the island for ever. He had, they said, before shown himself vindictive
and implacable towards them; what would he do now, furious as he was at
the Sicilians who had come to Rome to complain of him? It would be better
for the island to be buried beneath the fires of Aetna or plunged in the
depths of the sea than to be given up to such an enemy to wreak his rage
and vengeance on it. These remonstrances of the Sicilians were made to
individual nobles in their own homes, and gave rise to lively discussions,
in which sympathy with the sufferers and hostile sentiments towards Marcellus
were freely expressed. At last they reached the senate. The consuls were
requested to consult that body as to the advisability of a rearrangement
of the provinces. In addressing the House Marcellus said that had the Sicilians
been already admitted to an audience he would have taken a different line,
but as matters stood, he did not wish it to be open to any one to say that
they were afraid to lay their complaints against the man in whose power
they would shortly be placed. If, therefore, it made no difference to his
colleague he was prepared to exchange provinces with him. He begged the
senate not to make any order, for since it would have been unfair to him
for his colleague to have chosen his province without recourse to the ballot,
how much more unfair and even humiliating to him would it be now to have
the province which had fallen to him formally transferred to his colleague!
After indicating their wish, without embodying it in a decree, the senate
adjourned, and the consuls themselves arranged to exchange provinces. Marcellus
was being hurried on by his destiny to meet Hannibal, in order that, as
he was the first Roman general to win the distinction of a successful action
with him after so many disastrous ones, so he would be the last to contribute
to the Carthaginian's reputation by his own fall, and that just at the
time when the war was going most favourably for the Romans.
26.30
When the exchange of provinces had been decided, the Sicilians were introduced
into the senate. After expatiating at some length upon the unbroken loyalty
of Hiero to Rome, and claiming the credit of it for the people rather than
for the king, they proceeded: "There were many reasons for the hatred we
felt towards Hieronymus and afterwards towards Hippocrates and Epicydes,
but the principal one was their abandoning Rome for Hannibal. It was this
that led some of the foremost of our younger men to assassinate Hieronymus
close to the senate-house, and also induced some seventy who belonged to
our noblest houses to form a plot for the destruction of Epicydes and Hippocrates.
As Marcellus failed to support them by bringing up his army to Syracuse
at the time he promised, the plot was disclosed by an informer, and they
were all put to death by the tyrants. Marcellus was really responsible
for the tyranny, owing to his ruthless sacking of Leontium. From that time
the Syracusan leaders never ceased to go over to Marcellus and undertake
to deliver up the city to him whenever he wished. He would rather have
taken it by storm, but when all his attempts by sea and land failed, and
he saw that the thing was impossible, he chose as agents of the surrender
an artisan called Sosis and the Spaniard Moericus, rather than let the
leaders of the city, who had so often offered in vain to do so, undertake
the task. No doubt he considered that he would thus have more justification
for plundering and massacring the friends of Rome. Even if the revolt to
Hannibal had been the act of senate and people and not simply of Hieronymus;
if it had been the government of Syracuse who closed the gates against
Marcellus, and not the tyrants Hippocrates and Epicydes who had ousted
the government; if we had warred against Rome in the spirit and temper
of the Carthaginians, what greater severity could Marcellus have shown
towards us than that which he actually practiced, unless he had blotted
Syracuse out from the face of the earth? At all events, nothing has been
left to us beyond our walls and our houses stripped of everything, and
the defaced and despoiled temples of our gods, from which even the gods
themselves and their votive offerings have been carried off. Many have
been deprived of their land, so that they have not even the bare soil on
which to support themselves, and all who belong to them, with the remains
of their wrecked fortunes. We beg and entreat you, senators, if you cannot
order all that we have lost to be restored to us, at least to insist upon
the restitution of what can be found and identified." After they had stated
their grievances, Laevinus ordered them to withdraw, that their position
might be discussed. "Let them stop," exclaimed Marcellus, "that I may make
my reply in their presence, since we who conduct war on your behalf, senators,
must do so on condition of those whom we have vanquished coming forward
as our accusers. Two cities have been taken this year: let Capua call Fabius
to account, and Syracuse, Marcellus."
26.31
When they had been brought back into the senate-house, Marcellus made the
following speech: "I have not so far forgotten, senators, the majesty of
Rome or the dignity of my office as to stoop to defend myself, as consul,
against the charges of these Greeks, if they concerned me alone. The question
is not so much what I have done as what they ought to have suffered. Had
they not been enemies it is a matter of indifference whether I maltreated
Syracuse now or in Hiero's lifetime. But if they have proved false to us,
opened their gates to the enemy, threatened our envoys with drawn swords,
shut their city and walls against us and called in a Carthaginian army
to protect them against us, who is there who can feel any indignation at
their having suffered hostile violence after having practiced it? I declined
the offers of their leaders to deliver up the city, and looked upon Sosis
and the Spaniard Moericus as much more suitable persons to be trusted in
a matter of such importance. As you make their humble station in life a
reproach to others, you do not yourselves belong to the lowest class in
Syracuse, and yet who amongst you promised to open your gates and admit
my armed force into your city? Those who did this are the objects of your
hatred and execration; not even in this place do you shrink from insulting
them, showing thereby how far you yourselves were from contemplating anything
of the kind. That low social position, senators, which these men make a
ground of reproach, proves most clearly that I discouraged no man who was
willing to render effectual help to the commonwealth. Before commencing
the siege of Syracuse, I made various attempts at a peaceful settlement,
first by sending envoys and then by personal interviews with the leaders.
It was only when I found that no reverence for the persons of my envoys
protected them from violence and that I was unable to get any reply from
the leaders with whom I conferred at their gates, that I took action and
finally took the city by storm, after a vast expenditure of toil and exertion
by sea and land. As to the incidents attending its capture, these men would
be more justified in laying their complaints before Hannibal and his vanquished
Carthaginians than before the senate of the people who vanquished them.
If, senators, I had intended to conceal my spoliation of Syracuse I should
never have adorned the City of Rome with its spoils. With regard to what
I, as conqueror, took away or bestowed in individual cases, I am quite
satisfied that I acted in accordance with the laws of war, according to
the deserts of each individual. Whether you approve of my action or not
is a question that concerns the State more than it concerns me. I only
did my duty, but it will be a serious matter for the republic, if by rescinding
my acts you make other generals in the future more remiss in doing their
duty. And since you have heard what both the Sicilians and I have had to
say in each other's presence, we will leave the House together in order
that the senate may be able to discuss the matter more freely in my absence."
The Sicilians were accordingly dismissed; Marcellus proceeded to the Capitol
to enrol troops.
26.32
The other consul, Laevinus, then consulted the senate as to what reply
was to be given to the petition of the Sicilians. There was a long debate
and great divergence of opinion. Many of those present supported the view
expressed by T. Manlius Torquatus. They were of opinion that hostilities
ought to have been directed against the tyrants, who were the common enemies
of Syracuse and of Rome. The city ought to have been allowed to surrender,
not taken by storm, and when surrendered it ought to have had its own laws
and liberties guaranteed to it, instead of being ruined by war after it
had been worn out by a deplorable servitude under its tyrants. The struggle
between the tyrants and the Roman general in which Syracuse was the prize
of victory had resulted in the utter destruction of a most famous and beautiful
city, the granary and treasury of the Roman people. The commonwealth had
frequently experienced its generosity, especially in the present Punic
war, and the City had been embellished by its munificent gifts. If Hiero,
that loyal supporter of the power of Rome, could rise from the dead, with
what face would any one dare to show him either Rome or Syracuse? In the
one-his own city-he would see universal spoliation and a large part of
it burnt, and as he approached the other he would see just outside its
walls, almost within its gates, the spoils of his country. This was the
line of argument urged by those who sought to create a feeling against
the consul and evoke sympathy for the Sicilians. The majority, however,
did not take such an unfavourable view of his conduct, and a decree was
passed confirming the acts of Marcellus both during the war and after his
victory, and declaring that the senate would for the future make the interests
of the Syracusans their charge and would instruct Laevinus to safeguard
the property of the citizens so far as he could without inflicting any
loss on the State. Two senators were sent to the Capitol to request the
consul to come back, and after the Sicilians had again been brought in,
the decree was read to them. Some kind words were addressed to the envoys
and they were dismissed. Before they left the House they flung themselves
on their knees before Marcellus and implored him to forgive them for what
they had said in their anxiety to gain sympathy and relief in their distress.
They also begged him to take them and their city under his protection,
and look upon them as his clients. The consul promised that he would do
so, and after a few gracious words dismissed them.
26.33
The Capuans were then admitted to an audience. Their case was a harder
one, and their appeal for mercy was all the stronger. They could not deny
that they deserved punishment, and there were no tyrants on whom they could
throw the blame, but they considered that they had paid an adequate penalty
after so many of their senators had been carried off by poison, and so
many had died under the axe. Some of their nobles, they said, were still
living, who had not been driven by the consciousness of guilt into doing
away with themselves, nor had the victor in his wrath condemned them to
death. These men begged that they and their families might be set at liberty,
and some portion of their goods restored to them. They were for the most
part Roman citizens, connected with Roman families by intermarriage. After
the envoys had withdrawn, there was some doubt as to whether they ought
to summon Q. Fulvius from Capua-the consul Claudius had died soon after
its capture-in order that the matter might be debated in the presence of
the general whose proceedings were being called in question. This had just
been done in the case of Marcellus and the Sicilians. When, however, some
senators were seen sitting in the House who had been through the whole
of the siege-M. Atilius Regulus and Caius the brother of Flaccus, both
on his staff, and Q. Minucius and L. Veturius Philo, who had been members
of Claudius' staff-they would not have Q. Fulvius recalled, nor the hearing
of the Capuans adjourned. Amongst those who had been at Capua, the man
whose opinion carried most weight was M. Atilius, and he was asked what
course he would advise. He replied: "I believe I was present at the military
council which met after the fall of Capua, when the consuls made enquiry
as to which of the Capuans had assisted our republic. They discovered only
two, and those were women. One was Vestia Oppia of Atella, who was living
in Capua and who offered sacrifices daily for the welfare and triumph of
Rome; the other was Cluvia Pacula, at one time a woman of loose character,
who secretly supplied the starving prisoners with food. The rest of the
Capuans were just as hostile to us as the Carthaginians themselves, and
those whom Q. Fulvius executed were selected rather on account of their
higher rank than of their greater guilt. I do not quite see how the senate
is competent to deal with the Capuans, who are Roman citizens, without
an order of the people. After the revolt of the Satricans, the course adopted
by our ancestors was for a tribune of the plebs, M. Antistius, to bring
the matter first before the Assembly, and a resolution was passed empowering
the senate to decide what should be done to them. I therefore advise that
we arrange with the tribunes of the plebs for one or more of them to propose
a resolution to that body empowering us to settle the fate o f the Capuans."
L. Atilius, tribune of the plebs, was authorised by the senate to put the
question in the following terms: "Whereas the inhabitants of Capua, Atella
and Calatia, and also the dwellers in the valley of the Sabatus have yielded
themselves to the proconsul Fulvius to be at the arbitrament and disposal
of the people of Rome, and whereas they have surrendered divers persons
together with themselves, as also their land and city with all things therein,
sacred and profane, together with their goods and chattels and whatsoever
else they had in possession, I demand of you Quirites to know what it is
your will and pleasure shall be done in regard of all these persons and
things?" The resolution of the Assembly ran thus: "What the senate, or
the greater part of those who are present, shall, on oath, decree and determine,
that we will and order shall be done."
26.34
The plebs having thus resolved, the senate made the following orders: First
they restored their liberty and property to Oppia and Cluvia; if they wished
to ask the senate for a further reward, they were to come to Rome. Separate
decrees were made in the case of each of the Capuan families; it is not
worth while giving a complete enumeration. Some were to have their property
confiscated, they themselves with their wives and children were to be sold,
with the exception of those of their daughters who had married outside
the territory before they passed under the power of Rome. Others were to
be thrown into chains, and their fate settled afterwards. In the case of
the rest, the question whether their property should be confiscated or
not depended upon the amount at which they were assessed. Where property
was restored it was to include all the captured live stock except the horses,
all the slaves except the adult males, and everything which was not attached
to the soil. It was further decreed that the populations of Capua, Atella,
Calatia and the valley of the Sabatus should all retain their liberty,
except those who themselves, or whose parents had been with the enemy,
but none of them could become a Roman citizen or a member of the Latin
League. None of those who had been in Capua during the siege could remain
in the city or its neighbourhood beyond a certain date; a place of residence
was assigned to them beyond the Tiber at some distance from it. Those who
had not been in Capua during the war, nor in any revolted Campanian city,
were to be settled to the north of the Liris in the direction of Rome;
those who had gone over to the side of Rome before Hannibal came to Capua
were to be removed to this side of the Volturnus, and no one was to possess
any land or building within fifteen miles of the sea. Those who had been
deported beyond the Tiber were forbidden to acquire or to hold either for
themselves or their posterity landed property anywhere except in the territories
of Veii, Sutrium and Nepete, and in no case was such holding to exceed
fifty jugera. The property of all the senators and of all who had held
any magistracy in Capua, Atella and Calatia was ordered to be sold in Capua,
and those persons whom it had been decided to sell into slavery were sent
to Rome and sold there. The disposal of the images and bronze statues which
were alleged to have been taken from the enemy, and the question which
of them were sacred and which profane, were referred to the Pontifical
College. After hearing these decrees. the Capuans were dismissed in a much
more sorrowful state of mind than that in which they had come. It was no
longer Q. Fulvius' cruelty to them, but the injustice of the gods and their
accursed fate that they denounced.
26.35
After the departure of the Sicilian and Capuan envoys, the enrolment of
the new legions was completed. Then came the question of providing the
fleet with its proper complement of rowers. There was not a sufficient
number of men available, nor was there any money at the time in the treasury
with which to procure them or to pay them. In view of this state of things
the consuls issued an order requiring private individuals to furnish seamen
in proportion to their income and their rank, as they had done on a previous
occasion, and also to supply them with thirty days' provision and pay.
This order excited such a widespread feeling of indignation and resentment
that if the people had had a leader they would have risen in insurrection.
The consuls, they said, after ruining the Sicilians and Capuans, had seized
upon the Roman plebs as their next victim to mangle and destroy. "After
being drained by the war-tax," they complained, "for so many years, we
have nothing left but the bare and wasted soil. Our houses have been burnt
by the enemy, our slaves who tilled our fields have been appropriated by
the State, first buying them for a few coppers to make soldiers of them,
and now requisitioning them for seamen. Whatever silver or gold we had
has been taken to pay the rowers and furnish the annual war-tax. No resort
to force, no exercise of authority can compel us to give what we do not
possess. Let the consuls sell our goods, then let them glut their rage
on our bodies which are all we have left; nothing remains with which we
can even ransom ourselves." Language of this kind was used not only in
private conversation, but openly in the Forum, before the very eyes of
the consuls. A vast crowd had gathered round the tribunal, uttering angry
cries, and the consuls were powerless to allay the agitation either by
fair speeches or by threats. Ultimately they announced that they would
give them three days to think the matter over, and they themselves devoted
that time to seeing whether they could not find some way out of the difficulty.
The next day they called the senate together to consider the matter, and
many arguments were advanced to prove that the plebs were acting fairly
and reasonably in their protest. At last the discussion came round to this
point, that whether fair or unfair the burden must fall on the individual
citizens. From what source, it was asked, could they procure seamen and
sailors, when there was no money in the treasury, and how could they keep
their hold on Sicily, or render the shores of Italy safe against any attempt
by Philip, if they had no fleet?
26.36
As there seemed to be no solution of the difficulty and a kind of mental
torpor appeared to beset the senate, the consul Laevinus came to the rescue.
"As the magistrates," he said, "take precedence of the senate and the senate
of the people in honour and dignity; so they ought to lead the way in discharging
unpleasant and difficult tasks. If, in laying any obligation on an inferior,
you have first decided that it is binding on you and those connected with
you, you will find that all are more ready to obey you. They do not feel
an expense to be burdensome when they see each of their leaders bearing
more than his due share of it. We want the Roman people to have fleets
and to equip them, we want each citizen to furnish rowers and not to shirk
his duty; then let us impose the burden on ourselves first of all. Let
us, every one of us, bring our gold and silver and bronze money, tomorrow,
to the treasury, only reserving the rings for ourselves, our wives and
our children, and the bullae for our boys. Those who have wives and daughters
may keep an ounce of gold for each of them. With regard to silver, those
who have occupied curule chairs should keep the plating on their horse-trappings
and two pounds of silver that they may have a dish and saltcellar for the
gods. All the other senators should keep only one pound of silver. In the
case of bronze coin let us retain 5000 ases for each household. All the
rest of our gold and silver and money let us place in the hands of the
commissioners of the treasury. No formal resolution should be passed; our
contributions must be strictly voluntary; and our mutual rivalry to assist
the commonwealth may stir up the equestrian order to emulate us, and after
them, the plebs. This is the only course which we consuls have been able
to devise after our lengthy discussion, and we beg you to adopt it with
the help of the gods. As long as the commonwealth is safe, each man's property
is safe under its protection, but if you desert it, it will be in vain
that you try to keep what you have." These suggestions were so favourably
received that the consuls were even thanked for them. No sooner did the
senate adjourn, than they each brought their gold and silver and bronze
to the treasury, and they were so eager to be among the first to have their
names inscribed in the public register that the commissioners were not
able to take over the amounts or the clerks to enter them fast enough.
The equestrian order showed quite as much zeal as the senate, and the plebs
were not behind the equestrian order. In this way, without any formal order
or compulsion by the magistrates, the full complement of rowers was made
up, and the State put in a position to pay them. As the preparations for
war were now complete the consuls started for their respective provinces.
26.37
At no period of the war were the Carthaginians and the Romans alike subjected
to greater vicissitudes of fortune, or to more rapid alternations of hope
and fear. In the provinces, the disasters in Spain on the one hand and
the successes in Sicily on the other filled the Romans with mingled feelings
of sorrow and joy. In Italy the loss of Tarentum was felt to be a grievous
blow, but the unexpected stand by the garrison in the citadel made all
hearts glad, and the sudden panic at the prospect of Rome being besieged
and stormed gave way to universal rejoicings when Capua was taken a few
days later. In the campaign overseas a kind of balance was struck. Philip
began hostilities at an inopportune moment for Rome, but in the new alliance
with the Aetolians and Attalus, king of Pergamum, it seemed as though Fortune
were giving a pledge of Rome's dominion in the East. The Carthaginians,
again, felt that the capture of Tarentum was a set-off against the loss
of Capua, and though they prided themselves on having marched unopposed
up to the walls of Rome they were mortified at the futility of their enterprise,
and humiliated by the contempt shown for them when a Roman army marched
out on its way to Spain whilst they were actually lying under the very
walls. Even in Spain itself, where the destruction of two great generals
with their armies had raised their hopes of finally expelling the Romans
and finishing the war, the higher their hopes had been, the greater the
disgust they felt at their victory being robbed of all its importance by
L. Marcius, who was not even a regular general. So whilst Fortune was holding
the scales evenly and everything was in suspense, both sides felt the same
hopes and fears as though the war were only just beginning.
26.38
Hannibal's principal cause of anxiety was the effect produced by the fall
of Capua. It was generally felt that the Romans had shown greater determination
in attacking than he had in defending the place, and this alienated many
of the Italian communities from him. He could not occupy them all with
garrisons unless he was prepared to weaken his army by detaching numerous
small units from it; a course at that time highly inexpedient. On the other
hand he did not dare to withdraw any of his garrisons and so leave the
loyalty of his allies to depend upon their hopes and fears. His temperament,
prone as it was to rapacity and cruelty, led him to plunder the places
which he was unable to defend, in order that they might be left to the
enemy waste and barren. This evil policy had evil results for him, for
it aroused horror and loathing not only amongst the actual sufferers but
amongst all who heard of them. The Roman consul was not slow in sounding
the feelings of those cities where any hope of recovering them had shown
itself. Amongst these was the city of Salapia. Two of its most prominent
citizens were Dasius and Blattius. Dasius was friendly to Hannibal; Blattius
favoured the interests of Rome as far as he safely could, and had sent
secret messages to Marcellus holding out hopes that the city might be surrendered.
But the thing could not be carried through without the help of Dasius.
For a long time he hesitated, but at last he addressed himself to Dasius,
not so much in the hope of success as because no better plan presented
itself. Dasius was opposed to the project, and by way of injuring his political
rival disclosed the affair to Hannibal. Hannibal summoned them both before
his tribunal. When they appeared, he was occupied with business, intending
to go into their case as soon as he was at liberty, and the two men, accuser
and accused, stood waiting, apart from the crowd. Whilst thus waiting Blattius
approached Dasius on the subject of the surrender. At this open and barefaced
conduct, Dasius called out that the surrender of the city was being mooted
under the very eyes of Hannibal. Hannibal and those round him felt that
the very audacity of the thing made the charge improbable, and regarded
it as due to spite and jealousy, since it was easy to invent such an accusation
in the absence of witnesses. They were accordingly dismissed. Blattius,
however, did not desist from his venturesome project. He was perpetually
urging the matter and showing what a beneficial thing it would be for them
both and for their city. At last he succeeded in effecting the surrender
of the city with its garrison of 5000 Numidians. But the surrender could
only be effected with a heavy loss of life. The garrison were by far the
finest cavalry in the Carthaginian army, and although they were taken by
surprise and could make no use of their horses in the city, they seized
their arms in the confusion and attempted to cut their way out. When they
found escape impossible they fought to the last man. Not more than fifty
fell into the hands of the enemy alive. The loss of this troop of horse
was a heavier blow to Hannibal than the loss of Salapia; never from that
time was the Carthaginian superior in cavalry, hitherto by far his most
efficient arm.
26.39
During this period the privations of the Roman garrison in the citadel
of Tarentum had become almost insupportable; the men and their commandant
M. Livius placed all their hopes in the arrival of supplies sent from Sicily.
To secure a safe passage for these along the coast of Italy, a squadron
of about twenty vessels was stationed at Regium. The fleet and the transports
were under the command of D. Quinctius. He was a man of humble birth, but
his many deeds of gallantry had gained him a high military reputation.
He had only five ships to begin with, the largest of these-two triremes-had
been assigned to him by Marcellus; subsequently, owing to the effective
use he made of these, three quinqueremes were added to his command, and
at last, by compelling the allied cities, Regium, Velliea and Paestum to
furnish the ships which they were bound by treaty to supply, he made up
the above-mentioned squadron of twenty vessels. As this fleet was setting
out from Regium, and was opposite Sapriportis, a place about fifteen miles
from Tarentum, it fell in with a Tarentine fleet, also of twenty ships,
under the command of Democrates. The Roman commander, not anticipating
a fight, had all sail set; he had, however, got together his full complement
of rowers while he was in the neighbourhood of Croton and Sybaris, and
his fleet was excellently equipped and manned, considering the size of
the vessels. It so happened that the wind completely died down just as
the enemy came into sight, and there was ample time to lower the sails
and get the rowers and soldiers into readiness for the approaching conflict.
Seldom have two regular fleets gone into action with such determination
as these small flotillas, for they were fighting for larger issues than
their own success. The Tarentines hoped that as they had already recovered
their city from the Romans after the lapse of nearly a century, so they
might now rescue their citadel, by cutting off the enemy's supplies after
they had deprived them of the mastery of the sea. The Romans were eager
to show, by retaining their hold on the citadel, that Tarentum had not
been lost in fair fight. but by a foul and treacherous stroke. So, when
the signal was given on each side, they rowed with their prows straight
at each other; there was no backing or maneuvering, nor did they let go
of any ship when once they had grappled and boarded. They fought at such
close quarters that they not only discharged missiles, but even used their
swords in hand-to-hand fighting. The prows were locked together and remained
so while the hinder part of the vessel was pushed about by the oars of
hostile ships. The vessels were so crowded together that hardly any missile
failed to reach its aim or fell into the water. They pressed forward front
to front like a line of infantry, and the combatants made their way from
ship to ship. Conspicuous amongst all was the fight between the two ships
which had led their respective lines and were the first to engage.
Quinctius himself was in the Roman ship, and in the Tarentine vessel
was a man named Nico Perco, who hated the Romans for private as well as
public grounds, and who was equally hated by them, for he was one of the
party who betrayed Tarentum to Hannibal. Whilst Quinctius was fighting
and encouraging his men, Nico took him unawares and ran him through with
his spear. He fell headlong over the prow, and the victorious Tarentine
springing on to the ship dislodged the enemy, who were thrown into confusion
by the loss of their leader. The foreship was now in the hands of the Tarentines,
and the Romans in a compact body were with difficulty defending the hinder
part of the vessel, when another of the hostile triremes suddenly appeared
astern. Between the two the Roman ship was captured. The sight of the admiral's
ship in the enemy's hands created a panic, and the remainder of the fleet
fled in all directions; some were sunk, others were hurriedly rowed to
land and were seized by the people of Thurium and Metapontum. Very few
of the transports which were following with supplies fell into the enemy's
hands; the rest, shifting their sails to meet the changing winds, were
carried out to sea. An affair took place at Tarentum during this time which
led to a very different result. A foraging force of 4000 Tarentines were
dispersed through the fields, and Livius, the Roman commandant, who was
always looking out for a chance of striking a blow, sent C. Persius, an
able and energetic officer, with 2500 men from the citadel to attack them.
He fell upon them while they were dispersed in scattered groups all through
the fields, and after inflicting great and widespread slaughter, drove
the few who escaped in headlong flight through their half-opened gates
into the town. So matters were equalised as far as Tarentum was concerned;
the Romans were victorious by land, and the Tarentines by sea. Both were
alike disappointed in their hopes of obtaining the corn which had been
within their view.
26.40
Laevinus' arrival in Sicily had been looked forward to by all the friendly
cities, both those who had been old allies of Rome, and those who had recently
joined her. His first and most important task was the settlement of the
affairs of Syracuse, which, as peace had only quite recently been established,
were still in confusion. When he had accomplished this task he marched
to Agrigentum, where the embers of war were still smouldering, and a Carthaginian
garrison still in occupation. Fortune favoured his enterprise. Hanno was
in command, but the Carthaginians placed their chief reliance on Muttines
and his Numidians. He was scouring the island from end to end and carrying
off plunder from the friends of Rome; neither force nor stratagem could
keep him from entering Agrigentum and leaving it on his raids whenever
he chose. His reputation as a dashing officer was beginning to eclipse
that of the commandant himself, and at last created so much jealousy that
even the successes he gained were unwelcome to Hanno, because of the man
who gained them. It ended in his giving the command of the cavalry to his
own son in the hope that by depriving Muttines of his post he would also
destroy his influence with the Numidians. It had just the opposite effect,
for the ill-feeling created only made Muttines more popular, and he showed
his resentment at the injustice done to him by at once entering into secret
negotiations with Laevinus for the surrender of the city. When his emissaries
had come to an understanding with the consul and arranged the plan of operations,
the Numidians seized the gate leading to the sea after driving off or massacring
the men on guard, and admitted a Roman force which was in readiness into
the city. As they were marching in serried ranks into the forum and the
heart of the city, amidst great confusion, Hanno, thinking it was only
a riotous disturbance caused by the Numidians, such as had often happened
before, went to allay the tumult. When, however, he saw in the distance
a larger body of troops than the Numidians amounted to, and when the well-known
battle shout of the Romans reached his ears, he at once took to flight
before a missile could reach him. Escaping with Epicydes through a gate
on the other side of the city, and attended by a small escort, he reached
the shore. Here they were fortunate enough to find a small ship, in which
they sailed across to Africa, abandoning Sicily, for which they had fought
through so many years, to their victorious enemy. The mixed population
of Sicilians and Carthaginians whom they had left behind, made no attempt
at resistance, but rushed away in wild flight, and, as the exits were all
closed, they were slaughtered round the gates. When he had gained possession
of the place, Laevinus ordered the men who had been at the head of affairs
in Agrigentum to be scourged and beheaded; the rest of the population he
sold with the plunder, and sent all the money to Rome.
When the fate of the Agrigentines became generally known throughout
Sicily, all the cities at once declared for Rome. In a short time twenty
towns were clandestinely surrendered and six taken by storm, and as many
as forty voluntarily surrendered on terms. The consul meted out rewards
and punishments to the chief men in these cities, according to each man's
deserts, and now that the Sicilians had at last laid arms aside he obliged
them to turn their attention to agriculture. That fertile island was not
only capable of supporting its own population, but had on many occasions
relieved the scarcity in Rome, and the consul intended that it should do
so again if necessary. Agathyrna had become the seat of a motley population,
numbering some 4000 men, made up of all sorts of characters-refugees, insolvent
debtors-most of them had committed capital offences at the time when they
were living in their own cities and under their own laws and afterwards
when similarity of fortunes arising from various causes had drawn them
together at Agathyrna. Laevinus did not think it safe to leave these men
behind in the island, as a material for fresh disturbances, whilst things
were settling down under the newly established peace. The Regians too would
find a body so experienced in brigandage as they were, very useful; accordingly
Laevinus transported them all to Italy. As far as Sicily was concerned,
the state of war was put an end to this year.
26.41
At the commencement of spring P. Scipio issued orders for the allied contingents
to muster at Tarraco. He then launched his ships and led the fleet and
transports to the mouth of the Ebro, where he had also ordered the legions
to concentrate from their winter quarters. He then left Tarraco, with an
allied contingent of 5000 men for the army. On his arrival he felt that
he ought to address some words of encouragement to his men, especially
to the veterans who had gone through such terrible disasters. He accordingly
ordered a parade and addressed the troops in the following words: "No commander
before my time, who was new to his troops, has been in a position to express
well-deserved thanks to his men before he made use of their services. Fortune
laid me under obligations to you before I saw my province or my camp, first
because of the devoted affection you showed towards my father and my uncle
during their lifetime and after their death, and then again, because of
the courage with which you kept your hold on the province when it was apparently
lost after their terrible defeat, and so retained it unimpaired for Rome
and for me their successor. It must be our aim and object now with the
help of heaven not so much to maintain our own footing in Spain as to prevent
the Carthaginians from maintaining theirs. We must not remain stationary
here, defending the bank of the Ebro against the enemy's passage of the
river; we must cross over ourselves and shift the seat of war. To some
of you at least, I fear that this plan may seem too large and bold when
you remember the defeats we have lately sustained, and when you think of
my youth. No man is less likely to forget those fatal battles in Spain
than I am, for my father and my uncle were killed within thirty days of
each other, so that my family was visited by one death upon another.
"But though I am almost heart-broken at the orphanhood and desolation
of our house, the good fortune and courage of our race forbid me to despair
of the State. It has been our lot and destiny to conquer in all great wars
only after we have been defeated. Not to mention the earlier wars-Porsena
and the Gauls and the Samnites-I will take these two Punic wars. How many
fleets and generals and armies were lost in the first war! And what about
this war? In all our defeats I was either present in person, or where I
was not, I felt them more keenly than any one. The Trebia, Lake Thrasymenus,
Cannae-what are they but records of Roman consuls and their armies cut
to pieces? Add to these the defection of Italy, of the greatest part of
Sicily, of Sardinia, and then the crowning terror and panic-the Carthaginian
camp pitched between the Anio and the walls of Rome, and the sight of the
victorious Hannibal almost within our gates. In the midst of this utter
collapse one thing stood unshaken and unimpaired, the courage of the Roman
people; it and it alone raised up and sustained all that lay prostrate
in the dust. You, my soldiers, under the conduct and auspices of my father
were the first to retrieve the defeat of Cannae by barring the way to Hasdrubal
when he was marching to the Alps and Italy. Had he joined forces with his
brother the name of Rome would have perished; this success of yours held
us up under those defeats. Now, by the goodness of heaven, everything is
going in our favour; the situation in Italy and Sicily is becoming better
and more hopeful day by day. In Sicily, Syracuse and Agrigentum have been
captured, the enemy has been everywhere expelled and the whole of the island
acknowledges the sovereignty of Rome. In Italy, Arpi has been recovered
and Capua taken, Hannibal in his hurried flight has traversed the whole
breadth of Italy from Rome to the furthest corners of Bruttium, and his
one prayer is that he may be allowed to make a safe retreat and get away
from the land of his enemies. At a time when one defeat followed close
on the heels of another, and heaven itself seemed to be fighting on Hannibal's
side, you, my soldiers, together with my two parents-let me honour them
both with the same appellation-upheld in this country the tottering fortunes
of Rome. What then can be more foolish than for you to fail in courage
now when all is going on prosperously and happily there? As to recent events,
I could wish that they had caused as little pain to me as to you.
"The immortal gods who watch over the fortunes of the dominions of Rome,
and who moved the electors in their centuries to insist with one voice
upon the supreme command being given to me-the gods, I say, are assuring
us through auguries and auspices and even through visions of the night
that all will go successfully and happily with us. My own heart too, hitherto
my truest prophet, presages that Spain will be ours and that ere long all
who bear the name of Carthage will be driven away from this soil and will
cover sea and land in their shameful flight. What my breast thus divines
is confirmed by solid reasoning from facts. Owing to the maltreatment they
have received their allies are sending envoys to us to appeal for protection.
Their three generals are at variance, almost in active opposition to each
other, and after breaking up their army into three separate divisions have
marched away into different parts of the country. The same misfortune has
overtaken them which was so disastrous to us, they are being deserted by
their allies as we were by the Celtiberians, and the army which proved
so fatal to my father and my uncle they have split up into separate bodies.
Their domestic quarrel will not let them act in unison, and now that they
are divided they will not be able to withstand us. Welcome, soldiers, the
omen of the name I bear, be loyal to a Scipio who is the offspring of your
late commander, the scion of a stock which has been cut down. Come on then,
my veterans, and lead a new army and a new commander across the Ebro into
the lands which you have so often traversed and where you have given so
many proofs of your prowess and your courage. You recognise a likeness
to my father and my uncle in figure, face, and expression, I will soon
show you that I am like them also in character and fidelity and courage,
so that each of you may say that the Scipio who was his old commander has
either come to life again or reappeared in his son."
26.42
After kindling the spirits of his men by this speech, he crossed the Ebro
with 25,000 infantry and 2500 cavalry, leaving M. Silanus in charge of
the country north of the Ebro with 3000 infantry and 300 cavalry. As the
Carthaginian armies had all taken different routes, some of his staff urged
him to attack the one which was nearest, but he thought that if he did
that there would be a danger of their all concentrating against him, and
he would be no match for the three together. He decided to begin with an
attack on New Carthage, a city not only rich in its own resources, but
also with the enemy's war-stores, their arms, their war-chest and hostages
drawn from every part of Spain. It possessed an additional advantage in
its situation, as it afforded a convenient base for the invasion of Africa,
and commanded a harbour capable of holding any fleet however large, and,
as far as I know, the only one of the kind on that part of the coast which
abuts on our sea. No one knew of his intended march except C. Laelius,
who was sent round with his fleet and instructed to regulate the pace of
his vessels so that he might enter the harbour at the same time that the
army showed itself. Seven days after leaving the Ebro, the land and sea
forces reached New Carthage simultaneously. The Roman camp was fixed opposite
the north side of the city, and to guard against attacks from the rear
was strengthened by a double rampart; the front was protected by the nature
of the ground. The following is the situation of New Carthage. There is
a bay about half-way down the coast of Spain, opening to the south-west
and stretching inland about two-and-a-half miles. A small island at the
mouth of the harbour forms a breakwater and shelters it from all winds,
except those from the south-west. From the innermost part of the bay stretches
a promontory on the slopes of which the city stands, surrounded on the
east; and south by the sea. On the west it is enclosed by a shallow sheet
of water which extends northward and varies in depth with the rise and
fall of the tide. A neck of land about a quarter of a mile in length connects
the city with the mainland. The Roman commander did not throw an earthwork
across this isthmus, though it would have cost him very little trouble
to do so; whether it was that he wished to impress the enemy with his confidence
in his strength, or because he wished to have an unimpeded retirement in
his frequent advances against the city.
26.43
When the necessary intrenchments were completed he drew up the vessels
in the harbour as though he were going to blockade the place by sea. Then
he was rowed round the fleet and warned the captains to be careful in keeping
a look-out by night, as an enemy when first besieged makes counter-attacks
in all directions. On his return to camp he explained to his soldiers his
plan of operations and his reasons for beginning the campaign with an attack
upon a solitary city in preference to anything else. After they were mustered
on parade he made the following speech to them: "Soldiers, if any one supposes
that you have been brought here for the sole purpose of attacking this
city, he is making more account of the work before you than of the advantage
you will reap from it. You are going, it is true, to attack the walls of
a single city, but in the capture of this one city you will have secured
the whole of Spain. Here are the hostages taken from all the nobles and
kings and tribes, and when once these are in your power, everything which
the Carthaginians now hold will be given up to you. Here is the enemy's
war-chest, without which they cannot keep up the war, seeing that they
have to pay their mercenaries, and the money will be of the utmost service
to us in gaining over the barbarians. Here are their artillery, their armoury,
the whole of their engines of war, which will at once provide you with
all you want, and leave the enemy destitute of all he needs. And what is
more, we shall become masters, not only of a most wealthy and beautiful
city, but also of a most commodious harbour, from which all that is requisite
for the purposes of war, both by sea and land, will be supplied. Great
as our gains will be, the deprivations which the enemy suffers will be
still greater. Here is their stronghold, their granary, their treasure,
their arsenal-everything is stored here. Here is their direct route from
Africa. This is their only naval base between the Pyrenees and Gades; from
this Africa threatens the whole of Spain. But I see that you are all perfectly
ready; let us pass over to the assault on New Carthage, with our full strength
and a courage that knows no fear." The men all shouted with one voice,
that they would carry out his orders, and he marched them up to the city.
Then he ordered a general attack to be made by the army and the fleet.
26.44
When Mago, the Carthaginian commander, saw that an attack was being prepared
both by land and sea, he made the following disposition of his forces.
Two thousand townsmen were posted in the direction of the Roman camp; the
citadel was occupied by 500 soldiers; 500 more were stationed in the higher
part of the city, towards the east. The rest of the townsmen were ordered
to be in readiness to meet any sudden emergency and to hasten in whatever
direction the shouting of the enemy might summon them. Then the gate was
thrown open and those who had been drawn up in the street leading to their
enemy's camp were sent forward. The Romans, at the direction of their general,
retired a short distance in order to be nearer to the supports which were
to be sent up. At first the lines stood confronting each other in equal
strength; but as the successive reinforcements came up they not only turned
the enemy to flight, but pressed upon them so closely as they fled in disorder
that if the "retire" had not sounded they would in all probability have
burst into the city pell-mell with the fugitives. The confusion and terror
of the battlefield spread right through the city; many of the pickets fled
from their stations panic-struck; the defenders of the walls leaped down
the shortest way they could and deserted the fortifications. Scipio had
taken his stand on an eminence which they called Mercury's Hill, and from
here he became aware that the walls were in many places without defenders.
He at once called out the whole force in the camp to the attack, and ordered
the scaling ladders to be brought up. Covered by the shields of three powerful
young men-for missiles of every description were flying from the battlements-he
went up close to the walls, encouraging his men, giving the necessary orders,
and, what did most to stimulate their efforts, observing with his own eyes
each man's courage or cowardice. So they rushed on, regardless of missiles
and wounds, and neither the walls nor the men upon them could prevent them
from striving who should be the first to mount. At the same time the ships
commenced an attack upon that part of the city which faced the sea. Here,
however, there was too much noise and confusion to admit of a regular assault,
for what with bringing up the vessels and hauling out the scaling ladders,
and clambering ashore as quickly as they could, the men only got in one
another's way through their hurry and eagerness.
26.45
Whilst this was going on the Carthaginian general had manned the walls
with his regular soldiers, and they were amply supplied with missiles,
great heaps of which had been stored in readiness. But neither the men,
nor their missiles, nor anything else proved such a sure defence as the
walls themselves. Very few of the ladders were long enough to reach to
the top of the wall, and the longer the ladders the weaker they were. The
consequence was that whilst each man who reached the top was unable to
get on to the wall, the others who came up behind him were unable to advance
and the ladder was broken by the mere weight of men. Some who were on ladders
which stood the strain grew dizzy from the height and fell to the ground.
As men and ladders were crashing down in all directions and the spirits
and courage of the enemy were rising with their success, the signal was
sounded for retiring. This led the besieged to hope that they would not
only gain a respite from their hard and wearisome struggle for the time
being, but would also be safe for the future, as they believed that the
city could not be taken by escalade and storm, whilst the construction
of siege works would be a difficult matter and would allow time for succours
to be sent. The noise and tumult of this first attempt had hardly subsided
when Scipio ordered fresh troops to take the ladders from those who were
exhausted and wounded and make a more determined attack upon the city.
He had ascertained from the fishermen of Tarraco, who were in the habit
of crossing these waters in light skiffs and when these ran aground of
wading ashore through the shallows, that it was easy at low water to approach
the walls on foot. It was now reported to him that the tide was on the
ebb; and he at once took about 500 men with him and marched down to the
water. It was about midday, and not only was the falling tide drawing the
water seaward, but a strong northerly wind which had sprung up was driving
it in the same direction, and the lagoon had become so shallow that in
some places it was waist-deep and in others only reached to the knee. This
state of things, which Scipio had ascertained by careful investigation
and reasoning, he ascribed to the direct intervention of the gods, who
he said were turning the sea into a highway for the Romans, and by withdrawing
its waters were opening up a path which had never before been trodden by
mortal feet. He bade his men follow the guidance of Neptune and make their
way through the middle of the lagoon up to the walls.
26.46
Those who were making the attack on the land side were in very great difficulties.
Not only were they baffled by the height of the walls, but as they approached
them they were open to showers of missiles on both hands, so that their
sides were more exposed than their front. In the other direction, however,
the 500 found their passage through the lake and their ascent from there
to the foot of the walls an easy matter. No fortifications had been constructed
on this side, as it was considered to be sufficiently protected by the
lake and by the nature of the ground, nor were there any outposts or pickets
on guard against any attack, as all were intent on rendering assistance
where danger was actually visible. They entered the city without meeting
any opposition, and at once marched full speed to the gate round which
all the fighting had gathered. All had their attention absorbed in the
struggle; even the eyes and ears of the combatants, as of those who were
watching and cheering them on, were so riveted on the fighting that not
a single man was aware that the city behind him was captured until the
missiles began to fall upon them from the rear. Now that they had the enemy
in front and rear they gave up the defence, the walls were seized, the
gate was battered from both sides, smashed to pieces, and carried out of
the way to allow a free passage to the troops. A large number surmounted
the walls and inflicted heavy slaughter on the townsmen, but those who
entered through the gate marched in unbroken ranks through the heart of
the city into the forum. From this point Scipio saw the enemy retreating
in two directions; one body was making for a hill to the east of the city,
which was being held by a detachment of 500 men; the others were going
to the citadel where Mago, together with the men who had been driven from
the walls, had taken refuge. Sending a force to storm the hill, he led
the rest of his troops against the citadel. The hill was taken at the first
charge, and Mago, seeing that the whole of the city was in occupation of
the enemy, and that his own position was hopeless, surrendered the citadel
and its defenders. Until the citadel was surrendered the carnage went on
everywhere throughout the city, no adult male who was met with was spared,
but on its surrender the signal was given and an end put to the slaughter.
The victors then turned their attention to the plunder, of which there
was a vast amount of every kind.
26.47
As many as 10,000 freemen were made prisoners. Those who were citizens
were set free and Scipio gave them back their city and all the property
which the war had left them. There were some 2000 artisans; these Scipio
allotted to the public service, and held out to them hopes of recovering
their liberty if they did their best in the tasks which the war demanded.
The rest of the able-bodied population and the sturdiest of the slaves
he assigned to the fleet to make up the complement of rowers. He also augmented
his fleet by five vessels which he had seized. Besides all this population
there were the Spanish hostages; these he treated with as much consideration
as though they had been children of the allies of Rome. An enormous amount
of munitions of war was also secured; 120 catapults of the largest size
and 281 smaller ones, 23 of the heavier ballistae and 52 lighter ones,
together with an immense number of scorpions of various calibre, as well
as missiles and other arms. 73 military standards were also captured. A
vast quantity of gold and silver was brought to the general, including
287 golden bowls, almost all of which were at least a pound in weight,
18,300 pounds of silver plate and coinage, the former comprising a large
number of vessels. This was all weighed and counted and then made over
to the quaestor C. Flaminius, as were also 10,000 bushels of wheat and
270 pecks of barley. In the harbour 63 transports were captured, some of
them with their cargoes of corn and arms, as well as bronze, iron, sails,
esparto grass, and other articles required for the fleet. Amidst such an
enormous supply of military and naval stores, the actual city itself was
regarded as the least important capture of all.
26.48
Leaving C. Laelius with the marines in charge of the city, Scipio led his
legions the same day back into camp. They were well-nigh worn out; they
had fought in the open field, had undergone much toil and danger in the
capture of the city, and after capturing it had sustained a conflict on
unfavourable ground with those who had taken refuge in the citadel. So
he gave them one day's respite from all military duties and ordered them
to seek refreshment and rest. The next day he issued orders for all the
soldiers and marines to appear on parade that he might address them. First
he offered up a thanksgiving to the immortal gods because they had not
only made him master in a single day of the wealthiest city in all Spain,
but had also brought together beforehand into the place all the resources
of Africa and Spain, so that whilst nothing was left to the enemy he and
his men had a superabundance of everything. Then he praised the courage
of his troops, whom, he said, nothing had daunted, neither the sortie of
the enemy, nor the height of the walls, nor the untried depth of the lagoon,
nor the fort on the hill, nor the unusual strength of the citadel. Nothing
had prevented them from surmounting every obstacle and forcing their way
everywhere. Though every man amongst them deserved all the rewards he could
give, the glory of the mural crown belonged especially to him who was the
first to scale the wall, and the man who considered that he deserved it
should claim it.
Two men came forward, Q. Tiberilius, a centurion of the fourth legion,
and Sextus Digitius, one of the marines. The contention between them was
not so heated as the excitement with which each body advocated the claim
of its own representative. C. Laelius, the commander of the fleet, supported
the marine, M. Sempronius Tuditanus took the part of his legionaries. As
the dispute was almost becoming a mutiny, Scipio announced that he would
allow three arbitrators to be named who should investigate the case and
take evidence and give their decision as to which had been the first to
scale the wall and enter the town. C. Laelius and M. Sempronius were named
by their respective parties, and Scipio added the name of P. Cornelius
Caudinus, who belonged to neither party, and bade the three sit at once
and try the case judicially. As they proceeded, the dispute became hotter
than ever, for the two men whose dignity and authority had helped to restrain
the excitement were now withdrawn to the tribunal. At last Laelius left
his colleagues and stepped down in front of the tribunal to Scipio and
pointed out to him that the proceedings were being carried on in defiance
of all order and self-restraint, and the men were almost coming to blows.
And even if there were no resort to violence the precedent that was being
set was none the less detestable, since men were trying to win the reward
of valour by falsehood and perjury. On the one side were the soldiers of
the legion, on the other those of the fleet, all alike ready to swear by
all the gods to what they wanted rather than to what they knew to be true,
and prepared to involve in the guilt of perjury not themselves only, but
the military standards, the eagles and their solemn oath of allegiance.
Laelius added that he was making these representations to him at the wish
of P. Cornelius and M. Sempronius. Scipio approved of the step Laelius
had taken and summoned the troops to assembly. He then announced that he
had definitely ascertained that Q. Tiberilius and Sextius Digitius had
both surmounted the wall at the same moment, and he should honour their
bravery by presenting them each with a mural crown. Then he bestowed rewards
upon the rest according to each man's merit. C. Laelius, the commander
of the fleet, was singled out for special distinction, and in the praises
which he lavished upon him he placed him on an equality with himself, finally
presenting him with a golden crown and thirty oxen.
26.49
After this he ordered the hostages from the various Spanish states to be
summoned into his presence. It is difficult to give their number, for I
find in one place 300 mentioned and in another 3724. There is a similar
discrepancy amongst the authorities on other points. One author asserts
that the Carthaginian garrison amounted to 10,000 men, another puts it
at 7000, whilst a third estimates it as not more than 2000. In one place
you will find that there were 10,000 prisoners, in another the number is
said to have exceeded 25,000. If I followed the Greek author Silenus I
should give the number of scorpions large and small as 60; according to
Valerius Antias there were 6000 large ones and 13,000 small ones; so wildly
do men invent. It is even a matter of dispute who were in command. Most
authorities agree that Laelius was in command of the fleet, but there are
some who say that it was M. Junius Silanus. Antias tells us that Arines
was the Carthaginian commandant when the garrison surrendered, other writers
say it was Mago. Nor are authors agreed as to the number of ships that
were captured, or the weight of gold and silver, or the amount of money
that was brought into the treasury. If we are to make a choice, the numbers
midway between these extremes are probably nearest the truth. When the
hostages appeared Scipio began by reassuring them and dispelling their
fears. They had, he told them, passed under the power of Rome, and the
Romans preferred to hold men by the bonds of kindness rather than by those
of fear. They would rather have foreign nations united to them on terms
of alliance and mutual good faith than kept down in hard and hopeless servitude.
He then ascertained the names of the States from which they came and made
an inventory of the number belonging to each State. Messengers were then
despatched to their homes, bidding their friends to come and take charge
of those who belonged to them-where envoys from any of these States happened
to be present he restored their own relations to them on the spot; the
care of the rest he entrusted to C. Flaminius the quaestor, with injunctions
to show them all kindness and protection. Whilst he was thus engaged a
high-born lady, wife of Mandonius the brother of Indibilis, chief of the
Ilergetes, came forward from the crowd of hostages and flinging herself
in tears at the general's feet implored him to impress more strongly on
their guards the duty of treating the women with tenderness and consideration.
Scipio assured her that nothing would be wanting in this respect. Then
she continued: "We do not set great store on those things, for what is
there that is not good enough for the condition that we are in? I am too
old to fear the injury to which our sex is exposed, but it is for others
that I am anxious as I look at these young girls." Round her stood the
daughters of Indibilis and other maidens of equal rank in the flower of
their youthful beauty, and they all looked up to her as a mother. Scipio
replied: "For the sake of the discipline which I in common with all Romans
uphold, I should take care that nothing which is anywhere held sacred be
violated amongst us; your virtue and nobility of soul, which even in misfortune
is not forgetful of matronly decorum, make me now still more careful in
this matter." He then delivered them into the charge of a man of tried
integrity, with strict injunctions to protect their innocence and modesty
as carefully as though they were the wives and mothers of his own guests.
26.50
Soon afterwards an adult maiden who had been captured was brought to him
by the soldiers, a girl of such exceptional beauty that she attracted the
eyes of all wherever she moved. On enquiring as to her country and parentage,
Scipio learnt, amongst other things, that she had been betrothed to a young
Celtiberian noble named Aluccius. He at once sent for her parents and also
for her betrothed, who, he learnt, was pining to death through love of
her. On the arrival of the latter Scipio addressed him in more studied
terms than a father would use. "A young man myself," he said, "I am addressing
myself to a young man, so we may lay aside all reserve. When your betrothed
had been taken by my soldiers and brought to me, I was informed that she
was very dear to you, and her beauty made me believe it. Were I allowed
the pleasures suitable to my age, especially those of chaste and lawful
love, instead of being preoccupied with affairs of state, I should wish
that I might be forgiven for loving too ardently. Now I have the power
to indulge another's love, namely yours. Your betrothed has received the
same respectful treatment since she has been in my power that she would
have met with from her own parents. She has been reserved for you, in order
that she might be given to you as a gift inviolate and worthy of us both.
In return for that boon I stipulate for this one reward-that you will be
a friend to Rome. If you believe me to be an upright and honourable man
such as the nations here found my father and uncle to be, you may rest
assured that there are many in Rome like us, and you may be perfectly certain
that nowhere in the world can any people be named whom you would less wish
to have as a foe to you and yours, or whom you would more desire as a friend."
The young man was overcome with bashfulness and joy. He grasped Scipio's
hand, and besought all the gods to recompense him, for it was quite impossible
for him to make any return adequate to his own feelings, or the kindness
Scipio had shown him. Then the girl's parents and relatives were called.
They had brought a large amount of gold for her ransom, and when she was
freely given back to them, they begged Scipio to accept it as a gift from
them; his doing so, they declared, would evoke as much gratitude as the
restoration of the maiden unhurt. As they urged their request with great
importunity, Scipio said that he would accept it, and ordered it to be
laid at his feet. Calling Aluccius, he said to him: "In addition to the
dowry which you are to receive from your future father-in-law you will
now receive this from me as a wedding present." He then told him to take
up the gold and keep it. Delighted with the present and the honourable
treatment he had received, the young man resumed home, and filled the ears
of his countrymen with justly-earned praises of Scipio. A young man had
come among them, he declared, in all ways like the gods, winning his way
everywhere by his generosity and goodness of heart as much as by the might
of his arms. He began to enlist a body of his retainers, and in a few days
returned to Scipio with a picked force of 1400 mounted men.
26.51
Scipio kept Laelius with him to advise as to the disposal of the prisoners,
the hostages and the booty, and when all had been arranged, he assigned
him one of the captured quinqueremes, and placing on board Mago and some
fifteen senators who had been made prisoners with him, he sent Laelius
to Rome to report his victory. He had himself decided to spend a few days
in New Carthage, and he employed this time in exercising his military and
naval forces. On the first day the legions, fully equipped, went through
various evolutions over a space of four miles; the second day was employed
in rubbing up and sharpening their weapons in front of their tents; the
third day they engaged in regular battle. practice with single-sticks and
darts, the points of which were muffled with balls of cork or lead; the
fourth day they rested, and on the fifth they were again exercised under
arms. This alternation of exercise and rest was kept up as long as they
remained in Carthage. The rowers and marines put out to sea when the weather
was calm and tested the speed and handiness of their ships in a sham fight.
These maneuvers going on outside the city on land and sea sharpened the
men both physically and mentally for war; the city itself resounded with
the din of warlike constructions carried on by the artisans of every kind
who were kept together in the Government workshops. The general devoted
his attention equally to everything. At one time he was present with the
fleet watching a naval encounter; at another he was exercising his legions;
then he would be giving some hours to an inspection of the work which was
going on in the shops and in the arsenal and dockyards, where the vast
number of artisans were vying with each other as to who could work the
hardest. After starting these various undertakings and seeing that the
damaged portions of the walls were repaired, he started for Tarraco, leaving
a detachment in the city for its protection. On his way he was met by numerous
delegations; some of them he dismissed, after giving his reply while still
on the march; others he put off till he reached Tarraco, where he had given
notice to all the allies, old and new, to meet him. Almost all the tribes
south of the Ebro obeyed the summons, as did many also from the northern
province. The Carthaginian generals did their best to suppress any rumours
of the fall of New Carthage, then when the facts came out too clearly to
be either suppressed or perverted, they tried to minimise its importance.
It was by a sudden ruse, almost by stealth, they said, that one city out
of the whole of Spain had been filched from them in a single day; a young
swaggerer elated with this trifling success had in the intoxication of
his delight made believe that it was a great victory. But when he learnt
that three generals and three victorious armies were bearing down upon
him he would be painfully reminded of the deaths which had already visited
his family. This was what they told people generally, but they themselves
were perfectly aware how much their strength was in every way weakened
by the loss of New Carthage.
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