28.1
Though Hasdrubal's invasion had shifted the burden of war to Italy and
brought corresponding relief to Spain, war was suddenly renewed in that
country which was quite as formidable as the previous one. At the time
of Hasdrubal's departure Spain was divided between Rome and Carthage as
follows: Hasdrubal Gisgo had retreated to the ocean littoral near Gades,
the Mediterranean coast-line and almost the whole of Eastern Spain was
held by Scipio on behalf of Rome. A new general took Hasdrubal's place,
named Hanno, who brought over a fresh army, and marched into Celtiberia,
which lies between the Mediterranean and the ocean, and here he soon raised
a very considerable army. Scipio sent M. Silanus against him with a force
of not more than 10,000 infantry and 500 cavalry. Silanus marched with
all the speed he could, but his progress was impeded by the bad state of
the roads and by the narrow mountain passes, obstacles which are met with
in most parts of Spain. In spite of these difficulties he outstripped not
only any natives who might have carried tidings, but even any floating
rumours of his advance, and with the assistance of some Celtiberian deserters
who acted as guides he succeeded in finding the enemy. When he was about
ten miles distant, he was informed by his guides that there were two camps
near the road on which he was marching; the one on the left was occupied
by the Celtiberians, a newly raised army about 9000 strong, the one on
the right by the Carthaginians. The latter was carefully guarded by outposts,
pickets and all the usual precautions against surprise; the Celtiberian
camp was without any discipline, and all precautions were neglected as
might be expected of barbarians and raw levies who felt all the less fear
because they were in their own country. Silanus decided to attack that
one first, and kept his men as much to the left as possible, so as not
to be seen by the Carthaginian outposts. After sending on his scouts he
advanced rapidly against the enemy.
28.2
He was now about three miles away and none of the enemy had yet noticed
his advance, the rocks and thickets which covered the whole of this hilly
district concealed his movements. Before making his final advance, he ordered
his men to halt in a valley where they were effectually hidden and take
food. The scouting parties resumed and confirmed the statements of the
deserters, on which the Romans, after placing the baggage in the centre
and arming themselves for the combat, advanced in order of battle. The
enemy caught sight of these when they were a mile distant and hurriedly
prepared to meet them. As soon as Mago heard the shouting and confusion
he galloped across from his camp to take command. There were in the Celtiberian
army 4000 men with shields and 200 cavalry, making up a regular legion.
These were his main strength and he stationed them in the front; the rest
who were lightly armed he posted in reserve. In this formation he led them
out of the camp, but they had hardly crossed the rampart when the Romans
hurled their javelins at them. The Spaniards stooped to avoid them, and
then sprang up to discharge their own, which the Romans who were in their
usual close order received on their overlapping shields; then they closed
up foot to foot and fought with their swords. The Celtiberians, accustomed
to rapid evolutions, found their agility useless on the broken ground,
but the Romans, who were used to stationary fighting, found no inconvenience
from it beyond the fact that their ranks were sometimes broken when moving
through narrow places or patches of brushwood. Then they had to fight singly
or in pairs, as if they were fighting duels.
These very obstacles, however, by impeding the enemy's flight, gave
them up, as though bound hand and foot, to the sword. Almost all the heavy
infantry of the Celtiberians had fallen when the Carthaginian light infantry,
who had now come from the other camp, shared their fate. Not more than
2000 infantry escaped; the cavalry, which had hardly taken any part in
the battle, together with Mago also got away. The other general, Hanno,
was taken prisoner, together with those who were the last to appear in
the field when the battle was already lost. Mago, with almost the whole
of his cavalry and his veteran infantry, joined Hasdrubal at Gades ten
days after the battle. The Celtiberian levies dispersed amongst the neighbouring
forests and so reached their homes. So far the war had not been a serious
one, but there was all the material for a much greater conflagration had
it been possible to induce the other tribes to join the Celtiberians in
arms; that possibility was by this most timely victory destroyed. Scipio
therefore eulogised Silanus in generous terms, and felt hopeful of bringing
the war to a termination if he on his part acted with sufficient promptitude.
He advanced, accordingly, into the remote corner of Spain where all the
remaining strength of Carthage was concentrated under Hasdrubal. He happened
at the time to be encamped in the district of Baetica for the purpose of
securing the fidelity of his allies, but on Scipio's advance he suddenly
moved away and in a march which closely resembled a flight retreated to
Gades on the coast. Feeling, however, quite certain that as long as he
kept his army together he would be the object of attack, he arranged, before
he crossed over to Gades, for the whole of his force to be distributed
amongst the various cities, so that they could defend the walls whilst
the walls protected them.
28.3
When Scipio became aware of this breaking up of the hostile forces, he
saw that to carry his arms from city to city would involve a loss of time
far greater than the results gained, and consequently marched back again.
Not wishing, however, to leave that district in the enemy's hands, he sent
his brother Lucius with 10,000 infantry and 1000 cavalry to attack the
richest city in that part of the country; the natives call it Orongi. It
is situated in the country of the Maessesses, one of the tribes of Southern
Spain; the soil is fertile, and there are also silver mines. Hasdrubal
had used it as his base from which to make his incursions on the inland
tribes. Lucius Scipio encamped in the neighbourhood of the city, but before
investing it, he sent men up to the gates to hold a parley with the townsmen
and endeavour to persuade them to put the friendship rather than the strength
of the Romans to the proof. As nothing in the shape of a peaceable answer
was resumed, he surrounded the place with a double line of circumvallation
and formed his army into three divisions, so that one division at a time
could be in action while the other two were resting, and thus a continuous
attack might be kept up. When the first division advanced to the storm
there was a desperate fight; they had the utmost difficulty in approaching
the walls and bringing up the scaling-ladders owing to the rain of missiles
showered down upon them. Even when they had planted the ladders against
the walls and began to mount them, they were thrust down by forks made
for the purpose, iron hooks were let down upon others so that they were
in danger of being dragged off the ladders and suspended in mid-air. Scipio
saw that what made the struggle indecisive was simply the insufficient
number of his men and that the defenders had the advantage because they
were fighting from their walls. He withdrew the division which was engaged,
and brought up the two others. In face of this fresh attack the defenders,
worn out with meeting the former assault, retreated hastily from the walls,
and the Carthaginian garrison, fearing that the city had been betrayed,
left their various posts and formed into one body. This alarmed the townsmen,
who dreaded lest the enemy when once inside the city should massacre every
one, whether Carthaginian or Spaniard. They flung open one of the gates
and burst out of the town, holding their shields in front of them in case
missiles should be hurled on them from a distance, and showing their empty
right hands to make it plain that they had thrown away their swords. Their
action was misinterpreted either owing to the distance at which they were
seen, or because treachery was suspected, and a fierce attack was made
upon the flying crowd, who were cut down as though they were a hostile
army. The Romans marched in through the open gate whilst other gates were
demolished with axes and mallets, and as each cavalry man entered he galloped
in accordance with instructions to the forum. The cavalry were supported
by a detachment of triarii; the legionaries occupied the rest of the city.
There was no plundering and, except in the case of armed resistance, no
bloodshed. All the Carthaginians and about a thousand of the townsmen who
had closed the gates were placed under guard, the town was handed over
to the rest of the population and their property restored to them. About
2000 of the enemy fell in the assault upon the city; not more than 90 of
the Romans.
28.4
The capture of this city was a source of great gratification to those who
had effected it, as it was also to the commander-in-chief and the rest
of the army. The entry of the troops was a noteworthy sight owing to the
immense number of prisoners who preceded them. Scipio bestowed the highest
commendation on his brother, and declared that the capture of Orongis was
as great an achievement as his own capture of New Carthage. The winter
was now coming on, and as the season would not admit of his making an attempt
on Gades or pursuing Hasdrubal's army, dispersed as it was throughout the
province, Scipio brought his entire force back into Hither Spain. After
dismissing the legions to their winter quarters, he sent his brother to
Rome with Hanno and the other prisoners of high rank, and then retired
to Tarraco. The Roman fleet under the command of the proconsul M. Valerius
Laevinus sailed during the year to Africa, and committed widespread devastation
round Utica and Carthage; plunder was carried off under the very walls
of Utica and on the frontiers of Carthage. On their return to Sicily they
fell in with a Carthaginian fleet of seventy vessels. Out of these seventeen
were captured, four were sunk, the rest scattered in flight. The Roman
army, victorious alike on land and sea, returned to Lilybaeum with an enormous
amount of plunder of every kind. Now that the enemy's ships had been driven
off and the sea rendered safe, large supplies of corn were conveyed to
Rome.
28.5
It was in the beginning of this summer that the proconsul P. Sulpicius
and King Attalus who, as already stated, had wintered at Aegina, sailed
for Lemnos with their combined fleets, the Roman vessels numbering twenty-five
and the king's ships, thirty-five. In order to be in readiness to meet
his enemies by land or sea, Philip went down to Demetrias on the coast
and issued orders for his army to assemble at Larissa by a given day. When
they heard of the king's arrival at Demetrias, deputations from all his
allies visited him there. The Aetolians, emboldened by their alliance with
Rome and the arrival of Attalus, were ravaging their neighbours' lands.
Great alarm was created amongst the Acarnanians, the Boeotians and the
inhabitants of Euboea, and the Achaeans had further cause for apprehension,
for, in addition to their war with the Aetolians, they were threatened
by Machanidas the tyrant of Lacedaemon, who had encamped not far from the
Argive frontiers. The deputations informed the king of the state of things,
and one and all begged him to render them assistance against the dangers
which were threatening by land and sea. The condition of his own kingdom
was far from tranquil; reports were brought to him announcing that Scerdilaedus
and Pleuratus were again active and that Thracian tribes, especially the
Maedi, were prepared to invade Macedonia as soon as the king was involved
in a distant war. The Boeotians and the States in the interior of Greece
reported that the Aetolians had closed the pass of Thermopylae at its narrowest
part with a fosse and rampart to prevent him from carrying succour to the
cities of his allies. Even a lethargic leader would have been roused to
activity by all these disturbances round him. He dismissed the deputations
with a definite promise that he would furnish assistance to them all as
time and circumstances allowed. For the moment the most pressing care was
the city of Peparethos, as King Attalus, who had sailed thither from Lemnos,
was reported to be plundering and destroying all the country round. Philip
sent a detachment to protect the place. He also sent Polyphantas with a
small force into Boeotia, and Menippus, one of his generals, with 1000
peltasts to Chalcis. This force was supplemented by 500 Agrianians, in
order that the whole of the island might be protected. Philip himself proceeded
to Scotusa and ordered the Macedonian troops at Larissa to march there.
Information was brought to him here that the national council of the Aetolians
had been summoned to meet at Heraclea and that Attalus would be present
to consult with them as to the conduct of the war. Philip accordingly proceeded
thither by forced marches, but did not reach the place till the council
was broken up. He destroyed the crops, however, which were almost ripe,
especially round the gulf of the Aenianes, and then led his army back to
Scotusa. Leaving the bulk of his forces there he returned to Demetrias
with his household troops. With the view of meeting any movement on the
part of the enemy, he sent men into Phocis, Euboea and Peparethos to select
elevated positions on which beacon fires might be lighted, and himself
fixed an observation post on Tisaeos, a peak of immense height. In this
way he hoped to receive instant notice from the distant fires of any movement
on the part of the enemy. The Roman general and Attalus sailed from Peparethos
to Nicaea, and from there to the city of Oreus in Euboea. This is the first
city in Euboea which you pass on your left hand as you leave the Gulf of
Demetrias for Chalcis and the Euripus. It was arranged between Attalus
and Sulpicius that the Romans should attack by sea and the king's troops
by land.
28.6
It was not till the fourth day after their arrival that they commenced
the attack, the interval having been spent in secret conferences with Plator,
whom Philip had made commandant of the garrison. The city has two citadels,
one overlooking the sea, the other in the heart of the city. From the latter
a subterranean passage leads down to the sea, and at one time terminated
in a tower five stories high, which formed an imposing defence. Here a
violent contest took place, for the tower was plentifully stored with missiles
of every kind, and the engines and artillery had been brought up from the
ships for use against the walls. Whilst every one's attention was engrossed
by the struggle going on here, Plator admitted the Romans through the gate
of the seaward citadel, and this was captured at once. Then the defenders,
finding themselves forced back into the city, tried to gain the other citadel.
Men who were posted here for the purpose closed the gates against them,
and thus shut out from both citadels they were killed or made prisoners.
The Macedonian garrison stood in a close phalanx under the wall of the
citadel, neither attempting to flee nor taking an active part in the fighting.
Plator persuaded Sulpicius to let them go and they were placed on board
and landed at Demetrium in Phthiotis. Plator himself joined Attalus. Encouraged
by his easy success at Oreus, Sulpicius sailed at once with his victorious
fleet to Chalcis, but here the result by no means answered his expectations.
The sea which is wide and open at each end of the Euripus contracts here
into a narrow channel, which at first sight presents the appearance of
a double harbour with two mouths opposite each other. But it would be difficult
to find a more dangerous roadstead for a fleet. Sudden tempestuous winds
sweep down from the lofty mountains on both sides, and the Euripus does
not, as is commonly asserted, ebb and flow seven times a day at regular
intervals, but its waters, driven haphazard like the wind first in one
direction and then in another, rush along like a torrent down the side
of a precipitous mountain, so that ships are never in quiet waters day
or night. After Sulpicius had anchored his fleet in these treacherous waters,
he found that the town was protected on the one side by the sea, and on
the other, the land side, by very strong fortifications, whilst the strength
of its garrison and the loyalty of the officers, so different from the
duplicity and treason at Oreus, made it impregnable. After surveying the
difficulties of his position, the Roman commander acted wisely in desisting
from his rash enterprise, and without any further loss of time sailed away
to Cynos in Locris, a place situated about a mile from the sea, which served
as the emporium of the Opuntians.
28.7
The beacon fires at Oreus had given Philip warning, but through the treachery
of Plator they were lighted too late, and in any case Philip's inferiority
in naval strength would have made it extremely difficult for him to reach
the island. In consequence of this delay he made no effort for its relief,
but he hastened to the relief of Chalcis as soon as he got the signal.
Although this city is also situated on the island, it is separated from
the mainland by such a narrow strait as to allow of its being connected
by a bridge, and it is therefore more easy to approach it by land than
by sea. Philip marched from Demetrias to Scotusa; he left that place at
midnight, and after routing the Aetolians who were holding the pass of
Thermopylae drove them in confusion to Heraclea. He finally reached Elatia
in Phocis, having covered more than sixty miles in one day. Almost on the
very same day the city of the Opuntians was taken and sacked by Attalus.
Sulpicius had left the spoils to him, because Oreus had been sacked by
the Romans a few days previously, when the king's troops were elsewhere.
Whilst the Roman fleet was lying off Oreus, Attalus was busily occupied
in extorting contributions from the principal citizens of Opus, utterly
unaware of Philip's approach. So rapid was the Macedonian advance that
had not some Cretans who had gone foraging further than usual caught sight
of the hostile column in the distance, Attalus would have been completely
surprised. As it was he fled, without stopping to arm, in wild disorder
to his ships, and the men were actually pushing their vessels off when
Philip appeared, and even from the water's edge created great alarm amongst
the crews. Then he returned to Opus, storming at gods and men because the
chance of a great success had been almost snatched out of his hands. He
was just as furious with the Opuntians, for, though they might have held
out till his arrival, no sooner did they see the enemy than they voluntarily
surrendered.
After settling matters at Opus, he went on to Thronium. Attalus had
sailed to Oreus, but on learning that Prusias, the king of Bithynia, had
violated the frontiers of his dominions he dropped all his projects in
Greece, including the Aetolian war, and sailed to Asia. Sulpicius took
his fleet back to Aegina, whence he had started in the beginning of spring.
Philip captured Thronium with no more difficulty than Attalus had experienced
at Opus. The population of this city consisted of refugees from Thebes
in Phthiotis. When the place was captured by Philip, they escaped and put
themselves under the protection of the Aetolians, who assigned for their
abode a city which had been ruined and abandoned in the previous war with
Philip. After his capture of Thronium he advanced to the capture of Tithronon
and Drymiae, small unimportant towns in Doris. Ultimately he reached Elatia,
where it was arranged that the embassies from Ptolemy and the Rhodians
should meet him. Here they were discussing the question of bringing the
Aetolian war to a close-the ambassadors had been present at the recent
council of the Romans and Aetolians at Heraclea-when news was brought that
Machanidas had decided to attack the Eleans in the midst of their preparations
for the Olympic Games. Philip thought it his duty to prevent this, and
accordingly dismissed the ambassadors after assuring them that he was responsible
for the war and would place no obstacles in the way of peace, provided
its terms were fair and honourable. He then set off with his army in light
marching order, and passed through Boeotia to Megara, and from there he
descended to Corinth. Here he collected supplies, and then advanced towards
Phlius and Pheneos. When he had reached Heraea he heard that Machanidas,
alarmed at his rapid approach, had made a hurried return to Lacedaemon.
On receiving this intelligence he repaired to Aegium, in order to be present
at the meeting of the Achaean League; he also expected to find there the
Carthaginian fleet, which he had sent for in the hope of doing something
by sea. The Carthaginians had left that place a few days previously for
Oxeae and then, when they heard that Attalus and the Romans had left Oreus,
they sought shelter in the harbours of Acarnania, fearing lest if they
were attacked within the strait of Rhium, the neck of the Gulf of Corinth,
they should be overpowered.
28.8
Philip was extremely disappointed and vexed at finding that in spite of
his rapid movements he was always too late to do anything, and that Fortune
mocked his energy and activity by snatching away every opportunity from
before his eyes. However, he concealed his disappointment in the presence
of the council, and spoke in a very confident tone. Appealing to gods and
men he declared that at no time or place had he ever failed to go with
all possible speed wherever the clash of hostile arms was heard. It would
be difficult, he continued, to estimate whether the enemy's anxiety to
flee or his own eagerness to fight played the greater part in the war.
In this way Attalus got away from Opus, and Sulpicius from Chalcis, and
now Machanidas had slipped out of his hands. But flight did not always
mean victory, and it was impossible to regard as serious a war in which
when once you have come into touch with the enemy, you have conquered.
The most important thing was the enemy's own admission that they were no
match for him, and in a short time he would win a decisive victory, the
enemy would find the result of the battle no better than they had anticipated.
His allies were delighted with his speech. He then made over Heraea and
Triphylia to the Achaeans, and on their bringing forward satisfactory evidence
that Aliphera in Megalopolis had formed part of their territory, he restored
that place also to them. Subsequently with some vessels furnished by the
Achaeans-three quadriremes and as many biremes-he sailed to Anticyra. He
had previously sent into the Gulf of Corinth seven quinqueremes and more
than twenty light vessels, intending to strengthen the Carthaginian fleet,
and with these he proceeded to Eruthrae in Aetolia near Eupalium, where
he disembarked. The Aetolians were aware of his landing, for all the men
who were in the fields or in the neighbouring forts of Potidania or Apollonia
fled to the woods and the mountains; their flocks and herds which they
were unable in their haste to drive away Philip secured and placed on board.
The whole of the plunder was despatched in charge of Nicias the praetor
of the Achaeans to Aegium; Philip, sending his army overland through Boeotia,
went himself to Corinth, and from there to Cenchreae. Here he re-embarked,
and sailing past the coast of Attica, round the headland of Sunium and
almost through the hostile fleets, arrived at Chalcis. In his address to
the citizens he spoke in the highest terms of their loyalty and courage
in refusing to be moved by either threats or promises, and he urged them,
in case they were attacked, to show the same determination to be true to
their ally if they thought their own position preferable to that of Opus
or Oreus. From Chalcis he sailed to Oreus, where he entrusted the administration
and defence of the city to those magnates who had fled on the capture of
the place rather than betray it to the Romans. Then he returned to Demetrias,
the place from which he had started to render assistance to his allies.
He now proceeded to lay down the keels of 100 war-ships at Cassandrea,
and a large number of shipwrights were assembled for their construction.
As matters were now quiet in Greece, owing to the departure of Attalus
and the effective assistance which Philip had given to his allies in their
difficulties, he returned to Macedonia to commence operations against the
Maedi.
28.9
Just at the close of this summer Quintus Fabius, the son of Maximus, who
was on the staff of the consul M. Livius, came to Rome to inform the senate
that the consul considered L. Porcius and his legions sufficient for the
defence of Gaul, in which case he, Livius, and his consular army might
be safely withdrawn. The senate recalled not only Livius, but his colleague
as well, but the instructions given to each differed. M. Livius was ordered
to bring his troops back, but Nero's legions were to remain in their province,
confronting Hannibal. The consuls had been in correspondence with each
other and had agreed that as they had been of the same mind in their conduct
of public affairs, so, though coming from opposite directions, they should
approach the City at the same time. Whichever should be the first to reach
Praeneste was to wait there for his colleague, and, as it happened, they
both arrived there on the same day. After despatching a summons for the
senate to meet at the temple of Bellona in three days' time they went on
together towards the City. The whole population turned out to meet them
with shouts of welcome, and each tried to grasp the consuls' hands; congratulations
and thanks were showered upon them for having, by their efforts, rendered
the commonwealth safe. When the senate was assembled they followed the
precedent set by all victorious generals and laid before the House a report
of their military operations. Then they made request that in recognition
of their energetic and successful conduct of public affairs special honours
should be rendered to the gods and they, the consuls, should be allowed
to enter the City in triumph The senators passed a decree that their request
should be granted out of gratitude to the gods in the first place, and
then, next to the gods, out of gratitude to the consuls. A solemn thanksgiving
was decreed on their behalf, and each of them was allowed to enjoy a triumph.
As they had been in perfect agreement as to the management of their
campaign, they decided that they would not have separate triumphs, and
the following arrangement was made: As the victory had been won in the
province assigned to Livius, and as it had fallen to him to take the auspices
on the day of battle, and further, as his army had been brought back to
Rome, whilst Nero's army was unable to leave its province, it was decided
that Livius should ride in the chariot at the head of his soldiers, and
C. Claudius Nero alone on horseback. The triumph thus shared between them
enhanced the glory of both, but especially of the one who allowed his comrade
to surpass him in honour as much as he himself surpassed him in merit.
"That horseman," men said to one another, "traversed Italy from end to
end in six days, and at the very time when Hannibal believed him to be
confronting him in Apulia he was fighting a pitched battle with Hasdrubal
in Gaul. So one consul had checked the advance of two generals, two great
captains from the opposite corners of Italy, by opposing his strategy to
the one and meeting the other in person. The mere name of Nero had sufficed
to keep Hannibal quiet in his camp, and as to Hasdrubal, what brought about
his defeat and destruction but Nero's arrival in the field? The one consul
may ride in a chariot with as many horses as he pleases, the real triumph
belongs to the other who is borne on horseback through the City; even if
he went on foot Nero's renown would never die, whether through the glory
he acquired in war, or the contempt he showed for it in his triumph." These
and similar remarks from the spectators followed Nero till he reached the
Capitol. The money they brought into the treasury amounted to 300,000 sesterces
and 80,000 of bronze coinage. M. Livius' largesse to his soldiers amounted
to fifty-six ases per man, and C. Nero promised to give the same amount
to his men as soon as he rejoined his army. It is remarked that in their
jests and songs the soldiers on that day celebrated the name of C. Claudius
Nero more frequently than that of their own consul; and that the members
of the equestrian order were full of praises for L. Veturius and Q. Caecilius,
and urged the plebs to make them consuls for the coming year. The consuls
added considerably to the weight of this recommendation when on the morrow
they informed the Assembly with what courage and fidelity the two officers
had served them.
28.10
The time was approaching for the elections and it was decided that they
should be conducted by a Dictator. C. Claudius Nero named his colleague
M. Livius as Dictator, and he nominated Q. Caecilius as his Master of the
Horse. L. Veturius and Q. Caecilius were both elected consuls. Then came
the election of praetors; those appointed were C. Servilius, M. Caecilius
Metellus, Tiberius Claudius Asellus and Q. Mamilius Turrinus, who was a
plebeian aedile at the time. When the elections were over, the Dictator
laid down his office and after disbanding his army went on a mission to
Etruria. He had been commissioned by the senate to hold an enquiry as to
which cantons in Etruria had entertained the design of deserting to Hasdrubal
as soon as he appeared, and also which of them had assisted him with supplies,
or men, or in any other way. Such were the events of the year at home and
abroad. The Roman Games were celebrated in full on three successive days
by the curule aediles, Cnaeus Servilius Caepio and Servilius Cornelius
Lentulus; similarly the Plebeian Games were celebrated by the plebeian
aediles, M. Pomponius Matho and Q. Mamilius Turrinus. It was now the thirteenth
year of the Punic War. Both the consuls, L. Veturius Philo and Q. Caecilius
Metellus, had the same province-Bruttium-assigned to them, that they might
jointly carry on operations against Hannibal. The praetors balloted for
their provinces. M. Caecilius Metellus obtained the City jurisdiction;
Q. Mamilius, that over aliens. Sicily fell to C. Servilius, and Sardinia
to Ti. Claudius.
The armies were distributed as follows: One of the consuls took over
Nero's army; the other, that which Q. Claudius had commanded; each consisted
of two legions. M. Livius, who was acting as proconsul for the year, took
over from C. Terentius the two legions of volunteer slaves in Etruria.
It was also decreed that Q. Mamilius, to whom the jurisdiction over aliens
had been allotted, should transfer his judicial business to his colleague,
and hold Gaul with the army which L. Porcius had commanded as propraetor;
he was also instructed to ravage the fields of those Gauls who had gone
over to the Carthaginians on the arrival of Hasdrubal. C. Servilius was
to protect Sicily, as C. Mamilius had done, with the two legions of the
survivors of Cannae. The old army in Sardinia, under A. Hostilius, was
recalled, and the consuls enrolled a new legion which Tiberius Claudius
was to take with him to the island. A year's extension of command was granted
to Q. Claudius, that he might remain in charge at Tarentum, and to C. Hostilius
Tubero, that he might continue to act at Capua. M. Valerius, who had been
charged with the defence of the Sicilian seaboard, was ordered to hand
over thirty ships to the praetor' C. Servilius, and return to Rome with
the rest of his fleet.
28.11
In the anxiety caused by the strain of such a serious war when men referred
every occurrence, fortunate or the reverse, to the direct action of the
gods, numerous portents were announced. At Tarracina the temple of Jupiter,
at Satricum that of Mater Matuta were struck by lightning. At the latter
place quite as much alarm was created by the appearance of two snakes which
glided straight through the doors into the temple of Jupiter. From Antium
it was reported that the ears of corn seemed to those who were reaping
them to be covered with blood. At Caere a pig had been farrowed with two
heads, and a lamb yeaned which was both male and female. Two suns were
said to have been seen at Alba, and at Fregellae it had become light during
the night. In the precinct of Rome an ox was said to have spoken; the altar
of Neptune in the Circus Flaminius was asserted to have been bathed in
perspiration, and the temples of Ceres, Salus and Quirinus were all struck
by lightning. The consuls received orders to expiate the portents by sacrificing
full-grown victims and to appoint a day of solemn intercession. These measures
were carried out in accordance with the senatorial resolution. What was
a much more terrifying experience than all the portents reported from the
country or seen in the City, was the extinction of the fire in the temple
of Vesta. The vestal who was in charge of the fire that night was severely
flogged by order of P. Licinius, the Pontifex Maximus. Though this was
no portent sent by the gods, but merely the result of human carelessness,
it was decided to sacrifice full-grown victims and hold a service of solemn
supplication in the temple of Vestal.
Before the consuls left for the seat of war, they were advised by the
senate "to see to it that the plebeians were reinstated on their holdings.
Through the goodness of the gods the burden of war had now been shifted
from the City of Rome and from Latium, and men could dwell in the country
parts without fear, it was by no means fitting that they should be more
concerned for the cultivation of Sicily than for that of Italy." The people
found it, however, anything but an easy matter. The small holders had been
carried off by the war, there was hardly any servile labour available,
the cattle had been driven off as plunder, and the homesteads had been
either stripped or burnt. Still, at the authoritative behest of the consuls
a considerable number did return to their farms. What led to the senate
taking up this question was the presence of deputations from Placentia
and Cremona, who came to complain of the invasion and wasting of their
country by their neighbours, the Gauls. A large proportion of their settlers,
they said, had disappeared, their cities were almost without inhabitants,
and the countryside was a deserted wilderness. The praetor Mamilius was
charged with the defence of these colonies; the consuls, acting on a resolution
of the senate, published an edict requiring all those who were citizens
of Cremona and Placentia to return to their homes before a certain day.
At last, towards the beginning of spring, they left for the seat of war.
The consul Q. Caecilius took over the army from C. Nero, and L. Veturius,
the one which Q. Claudius had commanded, and this he brought up to its
full strength with the fresh levies which he had raised. They led their
armies into the district of Consentia, and ravaged it in all directions.
As they were returning laden with plunder they were attacked in a narrow
pass by a force of Bruttians and Numidian javelin-men, and not only the
plunder but the troops themselves were in danger. There was, however, more
alarm and confusion than real fighting. The plunder was sent forward and
the legions succeeded in getting into a position free from danger. They
advanced into Lucania, and the whole of the district returned to its allegiance
to Rome without offering any resistance.
28.12
No action was fought with Hannibal this year, for after the blow which
had fallen upon him and upon his country, he made no forward movement,
nor did the Romans care to disturb him, such was their impression of the
powers which that single general possessed, even while his cause was everywhere
round him crumbling into ruin. I am inclined to think that he deserves
our admiration more in adversity than in the time of his greatest successes.
For thirteen years he had been carrying on war with varying fortune in
an enemy's country far from home. His army was not made up of his own fellow-countrymen,
it was a mixed assemblage of various nationalities who had nothing in common,
neither laws nor customs, nor language, who differed in appearance, dress
and arms, who were strangers to one another in their religious observances,
who hardly recognised the same gods. And yet he had united them so closely
together that no disturbance ever broke out, either amongst the soldiers
themselves or against their commander, though very often money and supplies
were lacking and it was through want of these that numerous incidents of
a disgraceful character had occurred between the generals and their soldiers
in the First Punic War. He had rested all his hopes of victory on Hasdrubal
and his army, and after that army had been wiped out he withdrew into Bruttium
and abandoned the rest of Italy to the Romans. Is it not a matter of surprise
that no mutiny broke out in his camp? For in addition to all his other
difficulties, there was no prospect of feeding his army except from the
resources of Bruttium, and even if the whole of that country had been in
cultivation it would have afforded but meager support for so large an army.
But as it was, a large part of the population had been diverted from the
tillage of the soil by the war and by their traditional and innate love
of brigandage. He received no assistance from home, for the government
was mainly concerned about keeping their hold on Spain, just as though
everything in Italy was going on successfully.
The situation in Spain was in some respects similar, in others completely
dissimilar to the state of affairs in Italy. It was similar in so far as
the Carthaginians after their defeat and the loss of their general had
been driven into the most distant parts of Spain to the shores of the ocean.
It was dissimilar because the natural features of the country and the character
of the inhabitants made Spain more fitted than Italy, more fitted, in fact,
than any country in the world for the constant renewal of hostilities.
Though it was the first province, at all events on the continent, into
which the Romans made their way, it was, owing to this cause, the very
last to be completely subjugated, and this only in our own days under the
conduct and auspices of Augustus Caesar. Hasdrubal Gisgo, who, next to
the Barcine family, was the greatest and most brilliant general that held
command in this war, was encouraged by Mago to renew hostilities. He left
Gades, and traversing Further Spain, raised a force of 50,000 infantry
and 4500 cavalry. As to the strength of his cavalry the authorities are
generally agreed, but some writers assert that the infantry force which
he led to Silpia amounted to 70,000 men. Near this city the two Carthaginian
commanders encamped on a wide and open plain, determined to accept battle
if offered.
28.13
When intelligence was brought to Scipio of the muster of this large army,
he did not consider that he could meet it with his Roman legions unless
he employed his native auxiliaries to give at all events the appearance
of greater strength. At the same time he felt that he ought not to depend
too much upon them, for if they changed sides it might lead to the same
disaster as that which had overtaken his father and his uncle. Culchas,
whose authority extended over twenty-eight towns, had promised to raise
a force of infantry and cavalry during the winter, and Silanus was sent
to bring them up. Then breaking up his quarters at Tarraco, Scipio marched
down to Castulo, picking up small contingents furnished by the friendly
tribes which lay on his line of march. There Silanus joined him with 3000
infantry and 500 cavalry. His entire army, Romans and allied contingents,
infantry and cavalry, amounted now to 55,000 men. With this force he advanced
to meet the enemy and took up his position near Baecula. Whilst his men
were entrenching their camp they were attacked by Mago and Masinissa with
the whole of their cavalry and would have been thrown into great disorder
had not Scipio made a charge with a body of horse which he had placed in
concealment behind a hill. These speedily routed those of the assailants
who had ridden close up to the lines and were actually attacking the entrenching
parties; with the others, however, who kept their ranks and were advancing
in steady order the conflict was more sustained, and for a considerable
time remained undecided. But when the cohorts of light infantry came in
from the outposts, and the men at work on the intrenchments had seized
their arms and, fresh for action, were in ever increasing numbers relieving
their wearied comrades until a considerable body of armed men were hastening
from the camp to do battle, the Carthaginians and Numidians retreated.
At first they retired in order though hurriedly and kept their ranks, but
when the Romans pressed their attacks home and resistance was no longer
possible, they broke and fled as best they could. Though this action did
much to raise the spirits of the Romans and depress those of the enemy,
there were for several days incessant skirmishes between the cavalry and
light infantry on both sides.
28.14
After the strength of each side had been sufficiently tested in these encounters
Hasdrubal led out his army to battle, on which the Romans did the same.
Each army remained standing in front of its camp, neither caring to begin
the fight. Towards sunset the two armies, first the Carthaginian and then
the Roman, marched back to camp. This went on for some days; the Carthaginians
were always the first to get into line and the first to receive the order
to retire when they were tired out with standing. No forward movement took
place on either side, no missile was discharged, no battle-shout raised.
The Romans were posted in the centre on the one side, the Carthaginians
in the centre of the other; the flanks on both armies were composed of
Spanish troops. In front of the Carthaginian line were the elephants which
looked in the distance like towers. It was generally supposed in both camps
that they would fight in the order in which they had been standing, and
that the main battle would be between the Romans and Carthaginians in the
centre, the principals in the war and fairly matched in courage and in
arms. When Scipio found that this was assumed as a matter of course, he
carefully altered his dispositions for the day on which he intended to
fight. The previous evening he sent a tessera through the camp ordering
the men to take their breakfast and see that their horses were fed before
daybreak, the cavalry were at the same time to be fully armed with their
horses ready, bitted and saddled. Day had scarcely broken when he sent
the whole of his cavalry with the light infantry against the Carthaginian
outposts, and at once followed them up with the heavy infantry of the legions
under his personal command. Contrary to universal expectation he had made
his wings the strongest part of his army by posting the Roman troops there,
the auxiliaries occupied the centre.
The shouts of the cavalry roused Hasdrubal and he rushed out of his
tent. When he saw the melee in front of the rampart and the disordered
state of his men, and in the distance the glittering standards of the legions
and the whole plain covered with the enemy, he at once sent the whole of
his mounted force against the hostile cavalry. He then led his infantry
out of the camp, and formed his battle line without any change in the existing
order. The cavalry fight had now been going on for some time without either
side gaining the advantage. Nor could any decision be arrived at, for as
each side was in turn driven back they retreated into safety amongst their
infantry. But when the main bodies were within half a mile of each other,
Scipio recalled his cavalry and ordered them to pass to the rear of the
infantry, whose ranks opened out to give them passage, he then formed them
into two divisions, and posted one as a support behind each of the wings.
Then when the moment for executing his maneuver arrived he ordered the
Spaniards in the centre to make a slow advance, and sent word to Silanus
and Marcius that they were to extend to the left as they had seen him extend
to the right, and engage the enemy with their light cavalry and infantry
before the centers had time to close. Each wing was thus lengthened by
three infantry cohorts and three troops of horse, besides velites, and
in this formation they advanced against the enemy at a run, the others
following en echelon. The line curved inwards towards the centre because
of the slower advance of the Spaniards. The wings were already engaged
whilst the Carthaginians and African veterans, the main strength of their
army, had not yet had the chance of discharging a single missile. They
did not dare to leave their place in the line and help their comrades for
fear of leaving the centre open to the advance of the enemy. The wings
were being pressed by a double attack, the cavalry and light infantry had
wheeled round and were making a flank charge, whilst the cohorts were pressing
their front in order to sever them from their centre.
28.15
The struggle had now become a very one-sided one in all parts of the field.
Not only were untrained Balearics and raw Spanish levies face to face with
the Roman and Latin legionaries but as the day went on, the physical strength
of Hasdrubal's army began to give way. Surprised by the sudden attack in
the early morning they had been compelled to go into battle before they
could strengthen themselves with food. It was with this view that Scipio
had deliberately delayed the fight till late in the day, for it was not
until the seventh hour that the attack began on the wings, and it was some
time after that before the battle reached the centre, so that, what with
the heat of the day, the fatigue of standing under arms, and the hunger
and thirst from which they were suffering, they were worn out before they
closed with the enemy. Thus exhausted they leaned on their shields as they
stood. To complete their discomfiture the elephants, scared by the sudden
onsets of the cavalry and the rapid movements of the light infantry, rushed
from the wings into the centre of the line. Wearied and depressed, the
enemy began to retreat, keeping their ranks however, just as if they had
been ordered to retire. But when the victors saw that matters were going
in their favour they made still more furious attacks in all parts of the
field, which the enemy were almost powerless to withstand, though Hasdrubal
tried to rally them and keep them from giving way by calling out that the
hill in their rear would afford them a safe retreat if they would retire
in good order. Their fears, however, got the better of their sense of shame,
and when those nearest to the enemy gave way, their example was suddenly
followed by all and there was a universal flight. Their first halt was
on the lower slope of the hill, and as the Romans hesitated about mounting
the hill, they began to re-form their ranks, but when they saw them steadily
advancing they again fled and were driven back in disorder to their camp.
The Romans were not far from the rampart and would have carried the camp
in their onset had not the brilliant sunshine which often glows between
heavy showers been succeeded by such a storm that the victors could hardly
get back to their camp, and some were even deterred by superstitious fears
from attempting anything further for the day. Although the night and the
storm invited the Carthaginians, exhausted as they were by their toil and
many of them by their wounds, to take the rest they so sorely needed, yet
their fears and the danger they were in allowed them no respite. Fully
expecting an attack on their camp as soon as it was light they strengthened
their rampart with large stones collected from all the valleys round, hoping
to find in their intrenchments the defence which their arms had failed
to afford them. The desertion of their allies, however, decided them to
seek safety in flight rather than risk another battle. The first to abandon
them was Attenes, chief of the Turdetani; he went over with a considerable
body of his countrymen, and this was followed by the surrender of two fortified
towns with their garrisons to the Romans. For fear of the evil spreading
and the spirit of disaffection becoming general, Hasdrubal shifted his
camp the following night.
28.16
When the outposts brought intelligence of the enemy's departure Scipio
sent on his cavalry and followed with his entire army. Such was the rapidity
of the pursuit that had they followed in Hasdrubal's direct track they
must have caught him up. But, acting on the advice of their guides, they
took a shorter route to the river Baetis, so that they might be able to
attack him if he attempted its passage. Finding the river closed to him,
Hasdrubal turned his course towards the ocean, and his hurried march, which
in its haste and confusion looked like a flight gave him a considerable
start on the Roman legions. Their cavalry and light infantry harassed and
retarded him by attacking him in flank and rear, and whilst he was continually
forced to halt to repel first the cavalry and then infantry skirmishers,
the legions came up. Now it was no longer a battle but sheer butchery,
until the general himself set the example of flight and escaped to the
nearest hills with some 6000 men, many of them without arms. The rest were
killed or made prisoners. The Carthaginians hastily improvised an intrenched
camp on the highest point of the hills, and as the Romans found it useless
to attempt the precipitous ascent, they had no difficulty in making themselves
safe. But a bare and sterile height was hardly a place in which to stand
even a few days' siege, and there were numerous desertions. At last Hasdrubal
sent for ships-he was not far from the sea-and fled in the night, leaving
his army to its fate. As soon as Scipio heard of his flight he left Silanus
to keep up the investment of the Carthaginian camp with 10,000 infantry
and 1000 cavalry, whilst he himself with the rest of his force returned
to Tarraco. During his seventy days' march to this place, he took steps
to ascertain the attitude of the various chiefs and tribes towards Rome,
so that they might be recompensed as they deserved. After his departure
Masinissa came to a secret understanding with Silanus, and crossed over
with a small following to Africa, to induce his people to support him in
his new policy. The reasons which determined him on this sudden change
were not evident at the time, but the loyalty which he subsequently displayed
throughout his long life to its close proved beyond question that his motives
at the beginning were carefully weighed. After Mago had sailed to Gades
in the ships which Hasdrubal had sent back for him, the rest of the army
abandoned by their generals broke up, some deserting to the Romans, others
dispersing amongst the neighbouring tribes. No body of troops remained
worth consideration either for numbers or fighting strength. Such, in the
main, was the way in which under the conduct and auspices of Publius Scipio
the Carthaginians were expelled from Spain, fourteen years from the commencement
of the war, and five years after Scipio assumed supreme command. Not long
after Mago's departure Silanus joined Scipio at Tarraco, and reported that
the war was at an end.
28.17
Lucius Scipio was sent to Rome in charge of numerous prisoners of high
rank to announce the subjugation of Spain. Everybody else welcomed this
brilliant success with feelings of delight and exultation, but the one
man who had achieved it and whose thirst for solid and lasting renown was
insatiable looked upon his conquest of Spain as only a small instalment
of what his lofty ambition led him to hope for. Already he was looking
to Africa and the great city of Carthage as destined to crown his glory
and immortalise his name. This was the goal before him and he thought it
best to prepare the way to it by gaining over the kings and tribes in Africa.
He began by approaching Syphax, king of the Masaesulians, a tribe of Moorish
nationality. They lived opposite that part of the Spanish coast where New
Carthage lies. At that time there existed a treaty of alliance between
their king and Carthage, but Scipio did not imagine that Syphax would regard
the sanctity of treaties more scrupulously than they are generally regarded
by barbarians whose fidelity depends upon the caprices of fortune. Accordingly
he sent C. Laelius to him with presents to win him over. The barbarian
was delighted with the presents, and, as he saw that the cause of Rome
was everywhere successful, whilst the Carthaginians had failed in Italy
and entirely disappeared from Spain, he consented to become friendly to
Rome, but insisted that the mutual ratification of the treaty should take
place in the presence of the Roman general. All that Laelius could obtain
from the king was a safe-conduct, and with that he returned to Scipio.
In furtherance of his designs on Africa it was of supreme importance for
him to secure Syphax; he was the most powerful of the native princes, and
had even attempted hostilities against Carthage; moreover, his frontiers
were only separated from Spain by a narrow strait.
Scipio thought it worth while running considerable risk in order to
accomplish his end, and as it could not be effected in any other way, he
made arrangements for visiting Syphax. Leaving the defence of Spain in
the hands of L. Marcius at Tarraco and M. Silanus at New Carthage, to which
latter place he had proceeded by forced marches from Tarraco, he sailed
across to Africa accompanied by C. Laelius. He only took two quinqueremes,
and as the sea was calm most of the passage was made by rowing, though
a light breeze occasionally assisted them. It so happened that Hasdrubal
after his expulsion from Spain entered the harbour at the same time. He
had brought his seven triremes to anchor and was preparing to land when
the two quinqueremes were sighted. No one entertained the smallest doubt
that they belonged to the enemy and could easily be overpowered by superior
numbers before they gained the harbour. The efforts of the soldiers and
sailors, however, to get their arms ready and the ships into trim amidst
much noise and confusion were rendered futile by a freshening breeze from
the sea, which filled the sails of the quinqueremes and carried them into
port before the Carthaginians could get up their anchors. As they were
now in the king's harbour, no one ventured to make any further attempt
to molest them. So Hasdrubal, who was the first to land. and Scipio and
Laelius, who disembarked soon afterwards, all made their way to the king.
28.18
Syphax regarded it as an exceptional honour-as indeed it was-for the captains
of the two most powerful nations of their time to come to him seeking his
friendship and alliance. He invited them both to be his guests, and as
Fortune had willed that they should be under the same roof and at the same
hearth he tried to induce them to confer together with the view of removing
all causes of quarrel. Scipio declined on the ground that he had no personal
quarrel with the Carthaginian and he was powerless to discuss affairs of
State without the orders of the senate. The king was anxious that it should
not seem as if one of his guests was excluded from his table, and he did
his utmost to persuade Scipio to be present. He raised no objection, and
they both dined with the king, and at his particular request occupied the
same couch. Such was Scipio's charm of manner and innate tact in dealing
with everybody that he completely won over not only Syphax, who as a barbarian
was unaccustomed to Roman manners, but even his deadly enemy. Hasdrubal
openly avowed that "he admired Scipio more now that he had made his personal
acquaintance than after his military successes, and he had no doubt that
Syphax and his kingdom were already at the disposal of Rome, such skill
did the Roman possess in winning men. The question for the Carthaginians
was not how Spain had been lost, but how Africa was to be retained. It
was not from a love of travel or a passion for sailing along pleasant shores
that a great Roman commander had quitted his newly subjugated province
and his armies and crossed over with two vessels to Africa, the land of
his enemies, and trusted himself to the untried honour of a king. His real
motive was the hope of becoming master of Africa; this project he had long
been pondering over; he openly complained that 'Scipio was not conducting
war in Africa as Hannibal was in Italy."' After the treaty with Syphax
was concluded Scipio set sail from Africa and, after a four days' passage
in which he was buffeted by changeable and mostly stormy winds, reached
the harbour of New Carthage.
28.19
Spain was now quiet as far as war with Carthage was concerned, but it was
quite evident that some communities conscious of wrong-doing were kept
quiet more by their fears than by any feeling of loyalty to Rome. Amongst
these Iliturgi and Castulo were foremost in importance and foremost in
guilt. As long as Roman arms were successful Castulo remained true to her
alliance; after the Scipios and their armies were destroyed they revolted
to Carthage. Iliturgi had gone further, for the inhabitants had betrayed
and put to death those who had sought refuge with them after those disasters,
thus aggravating their treason by crime. To take action against these cities
immediately on his arrival in Spain, whilst the issue was still undecided,
might have been justifiable but hardly wise. Now, however, that matters
were settled, it was felt that the hour of punishment had arrived. Scipio
sent orders to L. Marcius to take a third part of his force to Castulo
and at once invest the place, and with the remainder he himself marched
to Iliturgi where he arrived after a five days' march. The gates were closed
and every preparation had been made to repel an assault; the townsmen were
quite conscious of the punishment they deserved, and any formal declaration
of war was, therefore, unnecessary. Scipio made this the subject of his
address to his soldiers. "The Spaniards," he said, "by closing their gates
have shown how well they deserve the punishment which they fear. We must
treat them with much greater severity than we treated the Carthaginians;
with the latter we contend for glory and dominion, with hardly any feeling
of anger, but from the former we have to exact the penalty for cruelty,
treachery and murder. The time has come for you to avenge the atrocious
massacre of your fellow-soldiers and the treachery meditated against yourselves
had you been carried there in your flight. You will make it clear for all
time by this awful example that no one must ever consider a Roman citizen
or a Roman soldier a fit subject for ill-treatment, whatever his condition
may be."
Roused by their general's words the men began to prepare for the assault,
storming parties were picked out of all the maniples and supplied with
ladders, and the army was formed into two divisions, one being placed under
the command of Laelius, so that the town might be attacked from opposite
sides and a twofold terror created. The defenders were stimulated to a
determined and prolonged resistance not by their general or their chiefs
but by the fear which came from a consciousness of guilt. With their past
crime in mind they warned each other that the enemy was seeking not victory
so much as vengeance. The question was not how to escape from death but
where to meet it, whether, sword in hand, on the battlefield where the
fortune of war often raises up the vanquished and flings the victor to
the ground, or amidst the ashes of their city before the eyes of their
captive wives and children after being torn with the lash and subjected
to shameful and horrible tortures. With this prospect before them every
man who could carry arms took his part in the fighting, and even the women
and children working beyond their strength supplied missiles to the combatants,
and carried stones up to the walls for those who were strengthening the
defences. Not only was their liberty at stake-that motive only inspires
the brave-but they had before their eyes the very extremity of torture
and a shameful death. As they looked at each other and saw that each was
trying to outdo all the rest in toil and danger, their courage was fired,
and they offered such a furious resistance that the army which had conquered
Spain was again and again repulsed from the walls of one solitary city,
and fell back in confusion after a contest which brought it no honour.
Scipio was afraid that the futile efforts of his troops might raise the
enemies' courage and depress his own men, and he decided to take his part
in the fighting and his share of the danger. Reproaching his soldiers for
their cowardice he ordered the ladders to be brought up and threatened
to mount himself if the rest hung back. He had already reached the foot
of the wall and was in imminent danger when shouts arose on all sides from
the soldiers who were anxious for their commander's safety, and the ladders
were at once planted against the wall. Laelius now delivered his attack
from the other side of the town. This broke the back of the resistance;
the walls were cleared of their defenders and seized by the Romans, and
in the tumult the citadel also was captured on that side where it was considered
impregnable.
28.20
Its capture was effected by some African deserters who were serving with
the Romans. Whilst the attention of the townsmen was directed to defending
the positions which appeared to be in danger and the assailants were mounting
their ladders wherever they could approach the walls, these men noticed
that the highest part of the city, which was protected by precipitous cliffs,
was left unfortified and undefended. These Africans, men of light make
and through constant training extremely agile, were furnished with iron
hooks, and where the projections of the cliff gave them a footing they
climbed it, when they came to a place where it was too steep or too smooth
they fixed the hooks in at moderate intervals and used them as steps, those
in front pulling up those behind, and those below pushing up those above
them. In this way, they managed to reach the top, and no sooner had they
done so than they ran down with loud shouts into the city which the Romans
had already captured. And now the hatred and resentment which had prompted
the attack on the city showed itself. No one thought of making prisoners
or securing plunder though everything was at the mercy of the spoilers;
the scene was one of indiscriminate butchery, non-combatants together with
those in arms, women equally with men were all alike massacred; the ruthless
savagery extended even to the slaughter of infants. Then they flung lighted
brands on the houses and what the fire could not consume was completely
demolished. So bent were they upon obliterating every vestige of the city,
and blotting out all record of their foes. From there Scipio marched to
Castulo. This place was being defended by natives from the surrounding
towns and also by the remains of the Carthaginian army who had gathered
there after their flight. But Scipio's approach had been preceded by the
news of the fall of Iliturgi, and this spread dismay and despair everywhere.
The interests of the Carthaginians and of the Spaniards were quite distinct,
each party consulted for its own safety without regard to the other, and
what was at first mutual suspicion soon led to an open rupture between
them. Cerdubelus openly advised the Spaniards to surrender, Himilco, the
Carthaginian commander, counselled resistance. Cerdubelus came to a secret
understanding with the Roman general, and betrayed the city and the Carthaginians
into his hands. More clemency was shown in this victory; the town was not
so deeply involved in guilt and the voluntary surrender went far to soften
any feelings of resentment.
28.21
After this Marcius was sent to reduce to submission any tribes that had
not yet been subjugated. Scipio returned to New Carthage to discharge his
vows and to exhibit the gladiatorial spectacle which he had prepared in
honour of the memory of his father and his uncle. The gladiators on this
occasion were not drawn from the class from which the trainers usually
take them-slaves and men who sell their blood-but were all volunteers and
gave their services gratuitously. Some had been sent by their chiefs to
give an exhibition of the instinctive courage of their race, others professed
their willingness to fight out of compliment to their general, others again
were drawn by a spirit of rivalry to challenge one another to single combat.
There were several who had outstanding quarrels with one another and who
agreed to seize this opportunity of deciding them by the sword on the agreed
condition that the vanquished was to be at the disposal of the victor.
It was not only obscure individuals who were doing this. Two distinguished
members of the native nobility, Corbis and Orsua, first cousins to each
other, who were disputing the primacy of a city called Ibes gave out that
they intended to settle their dispute with the sword. Corbis was the elder
of the two, but Orsua's father had been the last to hold that dignity,
having succeeded his brother. Scipio wanted them to discuss the question
calmly and peaceably, but as they had refused to do so at the request of
their own relations, they told him that they would not accept the arbitrament
of any one, whether god or man except Mars, and to him alone would they
appeal. The elder relied upon his strength, the younger on his youth; they
both preferred to fight to the death rather than that one should be subject
to the commands of the other. They presented a striking spectacle to the
army and an equally striking proof of the mischief which the passion for
power works amongst men. The elder cousin by his familiarity with arms
and his dexterity easily prevailed over the rough untrained strength of
the younger. The gladiatorial contests were followed by funeral games with
all the pomp which the resources of the province and the camp could furnish.
28.22
Meantime Scipio's lieutenants were by no means inactive. Marcius crossed
the Baetis, called by the natives the Certis, and received the surrender
of two cities without striking a blow. Astapa was a city which had always
been on the side of Carthage. But it was not this that created a strong
feeling of resentment so much as its extraordinary hatred against the Romans,
far more than was justified by the necessities of war. Neither the situation
nor the fortifications of the city were such as to inspire its inhabitants
with confidence, but their love of brigandage induced them to make raids
on the territories of their neighbours who were allies of Rome. In these
excursions they made a practice of capturing any Roman soldiers or camp
sutlers or traders whom they came across. As it was dangerous to travel
in small parties, large companies used to travel together and one of these
whilst crossing the frontier was surprised by the brigands who were lying
in ambush, and all were killed. When the Roman army advanced to attack
the place, the inhabitants, fully aware of the chastisement which their
crime merited, felt quite certain that the enemy were too much incensed
to allow of any hope of safety in surrender. Despairing of protection either
in their walls or their arms, they resolved upon a deed equally cruel and
horrible to themselves and to those who belonged to them. Collecting the
more valuable of their possessions they piled them up into a heap in a
selected place in their forum. On this pile they ordered their wives and
children to take their seats and then heaped round them a quantity of wood,
on the top of which they threw dead brushwood. Fifty armed men were told
off to guard their possessions and the persons of those who were dearer
than their possessions, and the following instructions were given them:
"Remain on guard as long as the battle is doubtful, but if you see that
is going against us, and the city is on the point of being captured, you
know that those whom you see going into action will never return alive,
and we implore you by all the gods celestial and infernal in the name of
liberty, liberty which will end in either an honourable death or a dishonourable
servitude, that you leave nothing on which a savage enemy can vent his
rage. Fire and sword are in your hands. Better that faithful and loving
hands should make away with what is doomed to die than that the enemy should
add mockery and scorn to murder. "These admonitions were followed by a
dire curse on any one who was turned from his purpose by hope of life or
by softheartedness.
Then they flung open the gates and burst out in a tumultuous charge.
There was no advanced post strong enough to check them, for the last thing
to be feared was that the besieged would venture outside their walls. One
or two troops of horse and some light infantry were sent against them from
the camp, and a fierce irregular fight ensued in which the troopers who
had been first to come into collision with the enemy were routed, and this
created a panic amongst the light infantry. The attack would have been
pushed even to the foot of the rampart if the pick of the legions had not
made the most of the few minutes allowed them for getting into line. As
it was, there was at first some wavering amongst the front ranks, for the
enemy, blinded by rage, rushed with mad recklessness upon wounds and death.
Then the veterans who came up in support, unshaken by the frantic onset,
cut down the front ranks and stayed the advance of those behind. When in
their turn they tried to force the enemy back they found that not a man
would give ground, they were all resolved to die where they stood. On this
the Romans extended their lines, which their superiority in numbers enabled
them to do easily, until they outflanked the enemy, who fighting in a compact
body were killed to a man.
28.23
The wholesale slaughter was at any rate the work of an exasperated soldiery
who met their armed foes in the shock of open battle. But a much more horrible
butchery took place in the city, where a weak and defenceless crowd of
women and children were massacred by their own people, and their still
writhing bodies flung on to the lighted pile which was again almost extinguished
by the streams of blood. And last of all the men themselves, exhausted
by the pitiful slaughter of those dear to them, flung themselves arms and
all into the midst of the flames. All had perished by the time the Romans
came on the scene. At first they stood horror-struck at such a fearful
sight, then, seeing the melted gold and silver flowing amongst the other
articles which made up the heap, the greediness common to human nature
impelled them to try and snatch what they could out of the fire. Some were
caught by the flames, others were scorched by the heated air, for those
in front could not retreat owing to the crowd pressing on behind. Thus
Astapa was destroyed without yielding any plunder to the soldiers. After
accepting the surrender of the remaining cities in that district Marcius
led his victorious army back to Scipio at New Carthage. Just at this time
some deserters came from Gades and promised to deliver up the city with
its Carthaginian garrison and the commandant and also the ships in the
harbour. After his flight Mago had taken up his quarters in that city,
and with the help of the ships which he had assembled he had got together
a considerable force, partly from the opposite coast of Africa and partly
through the agency of Hanno from the Spanish tribes round. After guarantees
of good faith had been given on both sides, Scipio sent Marcius with the
cohorts of light infantry and Laelius with seven triremes and one quinquereme
to conduct joint operations against the place by sea and land.
28.24
Scipio was overtaken by a serious illness, which rumour, however, made
still more serious, as each man from the innate love of exaggeration added
some fresh detail to what he had already heard. The whole of Spain, especially
the remoter parts, was much agitated at the news, and it was easy to judge
what an amount of trouble would have been caused by his actual death from
seeing what storms arose from the groundless rumour of it. Friendly states
did not preserve their fidelity, the army did not remain loyal. Mandonius
and Indibilis had made up their minds, that after the expulsion of the
Carthaginians the sovereignty of Spain would pass to them. When they found
that their hopes were frustrated they called out their countrymen, the
Lacetani, and raised a force amongst the Celtiberians with which they ravaged
the country of the Suessitanians and the Sedetanians, who were allies of
Rome. A disturbance of a different kind, an act of madness on the part
of the Romans themselves, occurred in the camp at Sucro. It was held by
a force of 8000 men who were stationed there to protect the tribes on this
side the Ebro. The vague rumours about their commander's life were not
however the primary cause of their movement. A long period of inactivity
had, as usual, demoralised them, and they chafed against the restraints
of peace after being accustomed to live on the plunder captured from the
enemy. At first their discontent was confined to murmurs amongst themselves.
"If there is war going on in the province," they said, "what are we doing
here amongst a peaceable population? If the war is at an end why are we
not taken back to Rome? "Then they demanded their arrears of pay with an
insolence quite inconsistent with military discipline or the respect which
soldiers should show towards their officers. The men at the outposts insulted
the tribunes as they went their rounds of inspection, and some went off
during the night to plunder the peaceable inhabitants in the neighbourhood,
till at last they used to quit their standards in broad daylight without
leave. They did everything just as their caprice and fancy dictated, no
attention was paid to rules or discipline or to the orders of their officers.
One thing alone helped to keep up the outward aspect of a Roman camp and
that was the hope which the men entertained that the tribunes would become
infected with their madness and take part in their mutiny. In this hope
they allowed them to administer justice from their tribunals, they went
to them for the watchword and the orders of the day, and relieved guard
at the proper intervals. Thus after depriving them of any real authority
they kept up the appearance of obedience, whilst they were actually their
own commanders. When they found that the tribunes censured and reprobated
their proceedings and endeavoured to repress them, and openly declared
that they would have nothing to do with their insensate folly, they broke
out into open mutiny. They drove the tribunes from their official seats,
and then out of the camp, and amidst universal acclamation placed the supreme
command in the hands of the chief ringleaders of the mutiny, two common
soldiers whose names were C. Albius of Cales and C. Atrius, an Umbrian.
These men were by no means content to wear the insignia of the military
tribunes, they had the audacity to affect those of the chief magistrates,
the fasces and the axes. It never occurred to them that those symbols which
they had carried before them to strike fear into others were impending
over their own backs and necks. The false belief that Scipio was dead blinded
them; they felt certain that the spread of this report would kindle the
flames of war throughout the whole of Spain. In the general turmoil they
imagined that they would be able to levy contributions on the allies of
Rome and plunder the cities round them, and when crime and outrage were
being committed everywhere, what they had done would not be noticed in
the universal confusion.
28.25
They were every hour expecting fresh details of Scipio's death, and even
news of his funeral. None came however and the idle rumours by degrees
died away. Then they began to look for those who started the report, but
each in turn kept out of the way, preferring to be thought credulous rather
than suspected of inventing such a story. Abandoned by their followers,
the ringleaders looked with dread upon the insignia they had assumed, and
fully expected that in return for this idle show of power they would draw
down upon themselves the weight of the true and legitimate authority. While
the mutiny was thus at a standstill, definite information was brought that
Scipio was alive and this was soon followed by the further intelligence
that his health was restored. This intelligence was brought by a party
of seven military tribunes, whom Scipio had sent to Sucro. At first their
presence was strongly resented, but the quiet talks they had with those
they happened to know had a calming effect; they visited the soldiers in
their tents, and chatted with the groups which gathered round the tribunals
or in front of the headquarters tent. They made no reference to the treason
the soldiers had been guilty of, but only questioned them as to the causes
of the sudden outbreak. They were told in reply that the men did not get
their pay punctually, nor their due share of credit for the part they had
played in the campaign. It was by their courage, they asserted, that the
Roman name was preserved and the province saved for the republic after
the destruction of the two armies and their commanders, at the time when
the Iliturgans committed their foul crime. And though they had received
the just recompense for their treason, no one had been found to reward
the Roman soldiers for their meritorious services.
In reply to these and similar complaints the tribunes told the men that
their requests were reasonable and they would lay them before the general.
They were glad that these were nothing worse or harder to set right, and
the men might rest assured that P. Scipio, after the favour the gods had
shown him, and, indeed, the whole State, would show their gratitude. Scipio
was experienced in war, but unfamiliar with the storms of internal disturbances.
Two things made him anxious, the possibility of the army exceeding all
measure in its insubordination, or of his inflicting punishments which
would be excessive. For the present he decided to go on as he had begun,
and handle the matter gently. Collectors were sent among the tributary
states so that the soldiers might hope to receive their pay soon. An order
was shortly after issued for them to assemble at New Carthage for that
purpose; they might go in a body or successively in single detachments
as they preferred. The unrest was already dying down when the sudden cessation
of hostilities on the part of the revolted Spaniards completely stopped
it. When Mandonius and Indibilis heard that Scipio was still alive, they
gave up their enterprise and retired within their frontiers, and the mutineers
could no longer find any one either amongst their own countrymen or amongst
the natives who would associate himself with their mad scheme. After carefully
considering every possible plan they saw that the only way of escaping
the consequences of their evil counsels, and that not a very hopeful way,
was to submit themselves either to the just displeasure of their general
or to his clemency, which they were not without hopes of experiencing.
They argued that he had ever pardoned the enemies of his country after
armed conflict, whereas during their mutiny not a wound had been received
or a drop of blood shed, it had been free from all cruelty and did not
deserve a cruel punishment. So ready are men with reasons when they wish
to palliate their own misconduct. There was considerable hesitation as
to whether they should go to receive their pay separately cohort by cohort.
or all together. The latter course seemed the safer and they decided upon
it.
28.26
Whilst they were discussing these points a council of war was being held
over them in New Carthage. The members were divided; some thought it sufficient
to proceed only against the ringleaders, who did not number more than five-and-thirty;
others regarded it as an act of high treason rather than a mutiny and held
that such a bad example could only be dealt with by the punishment of the
many who were implicated. The more merciful view, that punishment should
only fall on those with whom the mischief originated, finally prevailed;
for the troops generally a severe reprimand was considered sufficient.
On the breaking up of the council the army stationed in Carthage was informed
that an expedition was to be made against Mandonius and Indibilis, and
that rations were to be prepared for several days in advance. The object
was to make it appear that this was the business for which the council
had been held. The seven tribunes who had been sent to Sucro to quell the
mutiny now returned in advance of the troops, and each handed in the names
of five ringleaders. Suitable men had been told off to meet the culprits
with smiles and pleasant words, and invite them to their houses, and when
they had drunk themselves into a state of stupor place them in fetters.
When the men were now not far from New Carthage they were informed by people
who met them that the whole of the army at Carthage were starting on the
morrow with M. Silanus against the Lacetanians. This news did not completely
dispel the secret fears which haunted their minds, still they were greatly
rejoiced to hear it, as they imagined that now that their commander would
be alone, they would have him in their power, instead of their being in
his.
The sun was setting when they entered the city, and they found the other
army making all preparations for their march. It had been arranged beforehand
how they were to be received, they were told that their commander was glad
that they had arrived when they did, just before the other army left. They
then dispersed for food and rest, and the ringleaders were conducted by
the men selected for the purpose to their houses, where they were entertained,
and where the tribunes arrested and manacled them without any disturbance.
At the fourth watch the baggage train of the army began to move for its
pretended march; at daybreak the standards went forward, but the whole
army was halted as soon as it reached the gate, and guards were posted
round all the gates to prevent any one from leaving the city. The newly
arrived troops were then summoned to an assembly, and they ran into the
forum and crowded threateningly round their general's tribunal, expecting
to intimidate him by their shouts. At the moment when he ascended his tribunal
the troops who had marched back from the gate and were fully armed surrounded
the unarmed crowd. Now their rebellious spirit was completely cowed, and,
as they afterwards admitted, the thing that they were most afraid of was
the colour and vigour of their chief whom they expected to see looking
weak and ill, and the expression in his face such as they had never witnessed
before, not even in the heat of battle. For some time he sat in silence,
until he received information that the ringleaders had been brought down
to the forum and everything was in readiness.
28.27
After the usher had obtained silence he made the following speech: "I never
supposed that I should want words in which to address my army, not that
I ever trained myself to speak rather than to act, but that having lived
a camp life from boyhood I have learnt to understand the soldier's character.
As to what I am to say to you now, words and ideas alike fail me; I do
not even know by what title I am to address you. Am I to call you Roman
citizens-you who have revolted against your country? Can I call you soldiers
when you have renounced the authority and auspices of your general, and
broken the solemn obligations of your military oath? Your appearance, your
features, your dress, your demeanour I recognise as those of my fellow-countrymen,
but I see that your actions, your language, your designs, your spirit and
temper are those of your country's foes. What difference is there between
your hopes and aims and those of the Ilergetes and the Lacetanians? And
yet they chose men of kingly rank, Mandonius and Indibilis, to lead them
in their madness, whilst you delegated the auspices and the supreme command
to Atrius, an Umbrian, and Albius, a man from Cales. Do tell me, soldiers,
that you did not all join in that or approve of its being done. I will
gladly believe that only a few were guilty of such insensate folly, if
you assure me that this is so. For the crime is of such a nature that had
it involved the whole army it could only have been expiated by a frightful
sacrifice.
"It is painful for me to speak thus, opening up, as it were, wounds,
but unless they are handled and probed they cannot be healed. After the
expulsion of the Carthaginians from Spain I did not believe that there
were anywhere people who wished me dead, such had been my conduct towards
friends and enemies alike. And yet, alas so greatly was I mistaken that
even in my own army the report of my death was not only credited but eagerly
looked for. I would not for a moment wish to lay this to the charge of
you all, for if I thought that the whole of my army wished for my death,
I would die here before your eyes. My life would have no attraction for
me if it were hateful to my fellow-countrymen and my soldiers. But every
multitude is like the sea which left to itself is naturally motionless,
till winds and gales excite it. So it is with calm and storms amongst you,
the cause and origin of your madness is to be found in your ringleaders,
who infected you with their frenzy. For you do not seem even now to be
aware to what lengths of folly you have gone or what criminal recklessness
you have been guilty of towards me, towards your country, your parents
and your children, towards the gods who were witnesses of your military
oath, towards the auspices under which your served, towards the traditions
of the army and the discipline of our ancestors, towards the majesty inherent
in supreme authority. About myself I prefer to be silent; you may have
lent a thoughtless rather than a willing ear to the report of my death;
I may be a man whose rule might be naturally expected to prove irksome
to his army. But your country-what has it deserved of you that you should
make common cause with Mandonius and Indibilis for its betrayal? What have
the Roman people done that you should deprive the tribunes whom they elected
of their authority, and bestow it on private individuals? And not content
with having such men for tribunes you, a Roman army, have transferred the
fasces of your commander to men who never possessed a single slave to be
at their command! The headquarters tent was occupied by an Albius and an
Atrius; at their doors the trumpet sounded; to them you went for orders;
they were seated on P. Scipio's tribunal; the lictor was in attendance
and cleared the way before them; in front of them the axes and fasces were
borne! When there is a shower of stones, or buildings are struck by lightning,
or animals produce monstrous offspring, you consider these things as portents.
We have here a portent which no victims, no intercessions can expiate but
the blood of those who have dared such an awful crime.
28.28
"Though no crime is dictated by rational motives, I should still like to
know what was in your mind, what was your intention, so far as such wickedness
admitted of any. Years ago a legion which was sent to garrison Regium murdered
the principal men of the place and kept possession of that wealthy city
for ten years. For this crime the entire legion of 4000 men were beheaded
at Rome in the Forum. But they did not choose for their leader an Umbrian
who was little more than a camp-follower, an Atrius whose very name is
an evil omen. They followed D. Vibellius, a military tribune. Nor did they
join hands with Pyrrhus, or with the Samnites and Lucanians, the enemies
of Rome, but you communicated your plans to Mandonius and Indibilis and
prepared to join them in arms. They were content to do as the Campanians
did when they wrested Capua from the Tuscans, its old inhabitants, or as
the Mamertines did when they seized Messana in Sicily; they intended to
make Regium their future home without any idea of attacking Rome or the
allies of Rome. Did you intend to make Sucro your permanent abode? If,
after subjugating Spain, I had gone away and left you here you would have
rightly complained to gods and men that you had not returned to your wives
and children. But you may have banished from your minds all thought of
them, as you have in the case of your country and in my own case. I want
to trace the course which your criminal project would have taken, though
stopping short of the extreme of madness. As long as I was alive and retained
intact the army with which in one day I captured New Carthage and defeated
and routed four Carthaginian armies, would you really have wrested the
province of Spain from the hands of Rome, you, a force of some 8000 men,
every one of you of less account at all events than the Albius and Atrius
whom you made your masters?
"I put aside and ignore my own honour and reputation, and assume that
I was in no way injured by your too easily crediting the story of my death.
But what then? Supposing I had died, would the commonwealth have died with
me, would the sovereignty of Rome have shared my fate? No, Jupiter Optimus
Maximus would never have allowed a City built for eternity, built under
the auspices and sanction of the gods, to be as short-lived as this fragile
mortal body of mine. C. Flaminius, Aemilius Paulus, Sempronius Gracchus,
Postumius Albinus, M. Marcellus, T. Quinctius Crispinus, Cnaeus Fulvius,
and my own relations, the two Scipios, all of them distinguished generals,
have been carried off in this single war, and yet Rome lives on and will
live on though a thousand more should perish through sickness or the sword.
Would then the republic have been interred in my solitary grave? Why even
you yourselves, after the defeat and death of my father and my uncle, chose
Septimus Marcius to lead you against the Carthaginians, flushed as they
were with their recent victory. I am speaking as though Spain would have
been left without a general; but would not the sovereignty of the empire
have been amply vindicated by M. Silanus, who came into the province invested
with the same power and authority as I myself with my brother Lucius and
C. Laelius as his lieutenants? Can any comparison be made between their
army and you, between their rank and experience and those of the men you
have chosen, between the cause for which they are fighting and the one
which you have taken up? And if you were superior to them all would you
bear arms in company with the Carthaginians against your country, against
your fellow-citizens? What injury have they done to you?"
28.29
"Coriolanus was once driven to make war on his country by an iniquitous
sentence which condemned him to dishonoured and forlorn exile, but his
affection as a son recalled him from the crime which he was meditating
as a citizen. What have you suffered to call out this bitter hostility?
Did you proclaim war against your country, did you desert the people of
Rome in favour of the Ilergetes, did you trample underfoot all law, human
and divine, simply because your pay was a few days in arrear owing to your
general's illness? There is no doubt about it, soldiers, you were seized
with madness; the bodily illness from which I suffered was not one whit
more severe than the mental malady which overtook you. I shrink with horror
from dwelling upon the credit men gave to rumours, the hopes they entertained,
the ambitious schemes they formed. Let all be forgotten, if possible, or
if not that, let silence at least draw a veil over all. I admit that my
words have appeared stern and unfeeling to you, but how much more unfeeling,
think you, has your conduct been than anything I have said? You imagine
that it is right and proper for me to tolerate your actions, and yet you
have not patience to hear them mentioned. Bad as they are however, I will
not reproach you with them any longer; I only wish you may forget them
as easily as I shall. As for the army as a body, if you sincerely repent
of your wrongdoing you give me satisfaction enough and more than enough.
Albius of Cales and Atrius of Umbria with the other ringleaders in this
detestable mutiny will expiate their crime with their blood. The sight
of their punishment ought to give you satisfaction rather than pain, if
indeed you have recovered your sanity, for their designs would have proved
more mischievous and destructive to you than to any one else." He had hardly
finished speaking when, at a preconcerted signal, the eyes and ears of
his audience were assailed by everything which could terrify and appal.
The army which was on guard all round the assembly clashed their swords
against their shields, and the voice of the usher was heard calling over
the names of those who had been sentenced in the council or war. These
were stripped to the waist and conducted into the middle of the assembly;
all the apparatus of punishment was at once brought out; they were tied
to the stake, scourged and finally beheaded. The spectators were so benumbed
by terror that no voice was raised against the severity of the punishment,
not even a groan was heard. Then the bodies were all dragged away, and
after the place was cleansed, the soldiers were summoned each by name to
take the oath of obedience to P. Scipio before the military tribunes. Then
they each received the pay due to them. Such was the end and issue of the
mutiny which started amongst the soldiers at Sucro.
28.30
Hanno, Mago's lieutenant, had been despatched during this time, with a
small body of Africans to hire troops among the Spanish tribes, and succeeded
in raising 4000 men. Soon afterwards, his camp was captured by L. Marcius,
most of his men were killed in the assault, some during their flight by
the pursuing cavalry; Hanno himself escaped with a handful of his men.
Whilst this was going on at the Baetis Laelius sailed westward and brought
up at Carteia, a city situated on that part of the coast where the Straits
begin to widen into the ocean. Some men had come into the Roman camp with
a voluntary offer to surrender the city of Gades, but the plot was discovered
before it was ripe. All the conspirators were arrested and Mago handed
them over to the custody of Adherbal for conveyance to Carthage. Adherbal
placed them on board a quinquereme which was sent on in advance as it was
a slower vessel than the eight triremes with which he followed shortly
after The quinquereme was just entering the Straits when Laelius sailed
out of the harbour of Carteia in another quinquereme followed by seven
triremes. He bore straight down upon Adherbal, feeling quite sure that
the quinquereme could not be brought round, as it was caught by the current
sweeping through the channel.
Surprised by this unsuspected attack, the Carthaginian general hesitated
for a few moments whether to follow his quinquereme or turn his prows against
the enemy. This hesitation put it out of his power to decline the contest,
for they were now within range of one another's missiles, and the enemy
were pressing on him on all sides. The strength of the tide prevented them
from steering their ships as they wished. There was no semblance of a naval
battle, no freedom of action, no room for tactics or maneuvers. The tidal
currents completely dominated the action and carried the ships against
their own side and against the enemy indiscriminately, in spite of all
the efforts of the rowers. You might see a ship which was endeavouring
to escape carried stem foremost against the victors, whilst the one pursuing
it, if it got into an opposing current, was swept back as though it were
the one in flight. And when they were actually engaged and one ship was
making for another in order to ram it, it would swerve from its course
and receive a side-blow from the other's beak, whilst the one which was
coming broadside on would suddenly be swung round and present its prow.
So the varying struggle of the triremes went on, directed and controlled
by Chance. The Roman quinquereme answered the helm better, either because
its weight made it steadier, or because it had more banks of oars to cut
through the waves. It sank two triremes, and sweeping rapidly past a third
sheared off all the oars on one side, and it would have disabled the rest
if Adherbal had not got clear away with the remaining five, and crowding
all sail reached Africa.
28.31
After his victory Laelius returned to Carteia where he learnt what had
been going on at Gades, how the plot had been discovered and the conspirators
sent to Carthage. As the purpose for which he had come was thus frustrated
he sent word to L. Marcius, saying that if they did not wish to waste their
time by sitting before Gades, they ought both to rejoin their commander-in-chief.
Marcius quite agreed, and they both returned in a few days to New Carthage.
On their departure Mago breathed more freely after having been threatened
by the double danger from land and sea, and on receiving intelligence of
the renewal of hostilities by the Ilergetes, he once more entertained hopes
of reconquering Spain. Messengers were despatched to Carthage, to lay before
the senate a highly coloured account of the mutiny in the Roman camp and
the defection of the allies of Rome, and at the same time strongly urge
that assistance should be sent to him in order that he might win back the
heritage left him by his ancestors, the sovereignty of Spain. Mandonius
and Indibilis had retired for some time within their borders and were quietly
waiting till they knew what was decided with regard to the mutiny. They
felt no doubt that if Scipio pardoned the offence of his own fellow-countrymen,
he would exercise clemency towards them also. But when the severity of
the punishment became generally known they were convinced that equal measure
would be meted out to them, and so they decided to resume hostilities.
They summoned their tribesmen once more to arms, and called out the auxiliaries
who had joined them before, and with a force of 20,000 infantry and 2500
cavalry they crossed their frontiers and marched to their old camping ground
in Sedetania.
28.32
By his punctual payment of arrears to all alike, the guilty as well as
the innocent, and by his affable tone and bearing towards every one, Scipio
soon regained the affection of his soldiers. Before he broke up his quarters
at New Carthage, he called his troops together and after denouncing at
some length the treachery of the two chiefs in recommencing war went on
to say that the temper in which he was going to avenge that crime was very
different from the spirit in which he had recently healed the fault of
his misled fellow-citizens. Then he felt as if he were tearing his own
vitals, when with groans and tears he expiated either the thoughtlessness
or the guilt of 8000 men at the cost of thirty lives. Now it was in a cheerful
and confident spirit that he was marching to the destruction of the Ilergetes.
They were not natives of the same soil with him, nor was there any treaty
bond between them; the only bond was that of honour and friendship, and
that they had themselves broken by their crime. When he looked at his own
army he saw that they were all either Roman citizens or Latin allies, but
what affected him most was the fact that there was hardly a single soldier
amongst them who had not been brought from Italy, either by his uncle Cnaeus
Scipio, who was the first Roman general to come into that province, or
by his father or else by himself. They were all of them accustomed to the
name and auspices of the Scipios, and he wanted to take them back with
him to their country to enjoy a well-earned triumph. Should he become a
candidate for the consulship he hoped that they would support him, as the
honour conferred on him would belong to them all. As to the expedition
in front of them the man who regarded it as a war must have forgotten all
that he had hitherto done. Mago, who had fled with a few ships to an island
surrounded by an ocean; beyond the limits of the world of men, was, he
assured them, more of a concern to him than the Ilergetes were, for a Carthaginian
general and a Carthaginian garrison, however small, were still there, but
here there were only brigands and brigand chiefs. They may be strong enough
to plunder their neighbours' fields and burn their houses and carry off
their flocks and herds but they have no courage for a pitched battle and
an open field; when they have to fight they will trust more to their swiftness
for flight than to their weapons. It was not, therefore, because he saw
that there was any danger from them, or any prospect of serious war that
he was marching to crush the Ilergetes before his departure from the province,
but because such a criminal revolt must not go unpunished, and also because
it must not be said that a single enemy has been left behind in a province
which by such courage and good fortune has been reduced to submission.
"Follow me then," he said, in conclusion, "with the kind help of heaven,
not to make war-for you have to do with an enemy who is no match for you-but
to inflict punishment upon men steeped in crime."
28.33
The men were then dismissed with orders to make their preparations for
the next day's departure. Ten days after leaving New Carthage he reached
the Ebro, and within four days of his passage of the river he came within
view of the enemy. In front of his camp there was a level stretch of ground
shut in on either side by mountains. Scipio ordered some cattle taken mostly
from the enemy's fields to be driven towards the hostile camp in order
to rouse the savagery of the barbarians. Laelius was instructed to remain
with his cavalry in concealment behind a projecting mountain spur, and
when the light infantry who went to guard the cattle had drawn the enemy
into a skirmish he was to charge from his hiding-place. The battle soon
began, the Spaniards on catching sight of the cattle rushed out to secure
them, and the skirmishers attacked them while occupied with their plunder.
At first the two sides harassed one another with missiles, then they discharged
light darts, which are more likely to provoke than to decide a battle,
and at last they drew their swords. It would have been a steady hand-to-hand
fight if the cavalry had not come up. They not only made a frontal attack,
riding down all in their way, but some galloped round the foot of the mountain
so as to cut off the retreat of the enemy. There was more slaughter than
usually occurs in skirmishes of this kind, and the barbarians were infuriated
rather than disheartened at their want of success.
In order, therefore, to show that they were not defeated, they marched
out to battle the next morning at daybreak. There was not room for them
all in the narrow valley, described above; two divisions of their infantry
and the whole of their cavalry occupied the plain and the rest of their
infantry were posted on the slope of a hill. Scipio saw that the confined
space would give him an advantage. Fighting on a narrow front was more
adapted to Roman than to Spanish tactics, and as the enemy had brought
his line into a position where he could not employ all his strength, Scipio
adopted a novel stratagem. As there was no room for him to outflank the
enemy with his own cavalry, and as the enemy's cavalry which was massed
with the infantry would be useless where it was, he gave Laelius orders
to make a detour along the hills, escaping observation as far as possible,
and keep the cavalry action distinct from the infantry battle. Scipio led
the whole of his infantry against the enemy with a front of four cohorts,
as it was impossible to extend further. He did not lose a moment in beginning
the fight, for he hoped that in the heat of battle his cavalry might execute
their maneuver unnoticed. Nor were the enemy aware of their movements till
they heard the sounds of battle in their rear. So two separate contests
were going on through the whole length of the valley, one between the infantry
and the other between the cavalry, and the narrow width of the valley prevented
the two armies from assisting each other or acting in concert. The Spanish
infantry, who had gone into action trusting to the support of their cavalry,
were cut to pieces and the cavalry, unable to stand the attack of the Roman
infantry after their own had all fallen, and taken in rear by Laelius and
his cavalry, closed up and for a time stood their ground and kept up their
resistance, but at last all were killed to a man. Not a single combatant
out of the cavalry and infantry which fought in the valley remained alive.
The third division which had been standing on the mountain side, looking
on in safety instead of participating in the fight, had room and time enough
to make good their retreat. Amongst them were the two chieftains, who escaped
in the confusion before the entire army was surrounded.
28.34
The Spanish camp was captured the same day and in addition to the rest
of the booty 3000 prisoners were secured. As many as 2000 Romans and allies
fell in the battle; the wounded amounted to more than 3000. The victory
would not have been so costly had the battle been fought in a wider plain
where flight would have been easier. Indibilis laid aside all idea of continuing
the war, and thought that the safest course, considering his hopeless position,
would be to throw himself on Scipio's well-known clemency and honour. He
sent his brother Mandonius to him. Throwing himself on his knees before
the victor he put everything down to the fatal frenzy of the time, which
like some pestilential contagion had infected not only the Ilergetes and
Lacetanians but even a Roman army with madness. He declared that he and
his brother and the rest of their countrymen were in such a condition that
they would, if he thought it right, give back their lives to the same P.
Scipio from whom they had received them, or, if they were spared a second
time, they would devote the whole of their lives to the one man to whom
they owed them. Previously they had trusted to the strength of their cause
and had not made trial of his clemency, now that their cause was hopeless
they put all their trust in their conqueror's mercy. It was the traditional
practice of the Romans, in the case of a conquered nation with whom no
friendly relations had previously existed either through treaty or community
of rights and laws, not to accept their submission or allow any terms of
peace until all their possessions sacred and profane had been surrendered,
hostages given, their arms taken away and garrisons placed in their cities.
In the present instance however, Scipio, after sternly reprimanding Mandonius
and the absent Indibilis at considerable length, said that their lives
were justly forfeited by their crime, but that through his own kindness
and that of the Roman people, they would be spared. He would not, however,
demand hostages, since these were only a security for those who feared
a fresh outbreak of hostilities, nor would he take away their arms, he
would leave their minds at rest. But if they revolted it was not unoffending
hostages but they themselves who would feel the weight of his arm; he would
inflict punishment not upon a defenceless but upon an armed foe. He would
leave it to them whether they preferred the favour or the wrath of Rome;
they had experience of both. So Mandonius was dismissed, the only condition
imposed upon him being a pecuniary indemnity sufficient to furnish the
pay which was owing to the troops. After sending Marcius on in advance
into Southern Spain, Scipio stayed where he was for a few days until the
Ilergetes paid over the indemnity and then, setting out with a light-armed
force, overtook Marcius who was already nearing the ocean.
28.35
The negotiations which had been begun with Masinissa were delayed for various
reasons. He wanted in any case to meet Scipio personally and to grasp his
hand in confirmation of the league between them, and this was the reason
why Scipio undertook at that time such a long and out-of-the-way journey.
Masinissa was at Gades, and on being informed by Marcius that Scipio was
coming, he represented to Mago that his horses were getting out of condition
through being confined in so small an island, and were causing a general
scarcity from which all alike suffered, whilst his cavalry were becoming
enervated through inaction. He persuaded the Carthaginian commander to
allow him to cross to the mainland for the purpose of plundering the adjacent
country. When he had landed he sent three Numidian chieftains to Scipio
to fix the time and place of the interview. Two were to be detained by
Scipio as hostages, the third was to be sent back to conduct Masinissa
to the place that had been decided upon. They came to the conference, each
with a small escort. From what he had heard of his achievements the Numidian
had already conceived a great admiration for the Roman commander and had
pictured him in imagination as a man of grand and imposing presence. But
when he saw him he felt a deeper veneration for him. The majesty, natural
to Scipio, was heightened by his flowing hair and the simplicity of his
general appearance, which was devoid of all adornment and decoration, and
in the highest degree manly and soldierly. He was at the most vigorous
time of life, and his recovery from his recent illness had given him a
freshness and clearness of complexion which renewed the bloom of youth.
Almost speechless with astonishment at this his first meeting with him,
the Numidian began by thanking him for having sent his nephew home. From
that moment, he declared, he had looked for such an opportunity as this
of expressing his gratitude, and now that one was offered him by the kindness
of heaven he would not let it slip. He was desirous of rendering such service
to Scipio and to Rome that no one of foreign birth might ever be found
to have afforded more zealous assistance. This had long been his wish,
but Spain was a strange and unknown land to him, and he had been unable
to carry out his purpose there; it would, however, be easy to do it in
the land of his birth, where he had been brought up in the expectation
of succeeding to his father's throne. If the Romans sent Scipio as their
general into Africa, he felt pretty certain that the time of Carthage would
be very short. Scipio watched him and listened to him with great pleasure.
He knew that Masinissa was the master-spirit in all the enemy's cavalry,
and the youth's whole bearing showed high courage. After they had pledged
their faith to each other, Scipio returned to Tarraco. Masinissa was allowed
by the Romans to carry off plunder from the adjacent fields, in order that
he might not be thought to have sailed across to the mainland without sufficient
cause. After this he returned to Gades.
28.36
Mago's hopes had been raised by the mutiny in the Roman camp and the revolt
of Indibilis. Now he despaired of effecting anything in Spain and made
preparations for his departure. Whilst he was so employed a despatch came
from the Carthaginian senate ordering him to take the fleet which he had
at Gades over to Italy, and after raising as large a force as possible
of Gauls and Ligurians in that country to form a junction with Hannibal
and not allow the war which had been begun with so much energy and even
more success to drag on lifelessly. Money was brought to him from Carthage
for the purpose, and he also requisitioned as much as he could from the
people in Gades. Not only their public treasury but even their temples
were plundered, and they were all compelled to contribute their private
stores of gold and silver. Sailing along the Spanish coast, he landed a
force not far from New Carthage, and plundered the nearest fields, after
which he brought up his fleet at the city. During the day he kept his men
on board, and did not disembark them till night. He then took them to that
part of the city wall where the Romans had effected the capture of the
place; thinking that the city was held by a weak garrison and that there
would be a movement amongst some of the townsmen who hoped for a change
of masters. The country people, however, who were fleeing from their fields
had brought news of the depredations and approach of the enemy. His fleet
had also been seen during the day, and it was obvious that they would not
have taken their station before the city without some special reason. An
armed force was accordingly drawn up outside the gate which faced the sea.
The enemy approached the walls in disorder, soldiers and seamen were mixed
together, and there was much more noise and tumult than fighting strength.
Suddenly the gate was thrown open and the Romans burst out with a cheer;
the enemy were thrown into confusion, turned their backs at the very first
discharge of missiles and were pursued with heavy loss down to the shore.
If the ships had not been brought up close to the beach and so afforded
a means of escape, not a single fugitive would have survived. On the ships,
too, there was hurry and confusion; the crews drew up the ladders, lest
the enemy should clamber on board with their comrades, and cut the cables
and hawsers so as not to lose time in weighing anchor. Many who tried to
swim to the ships could not see in the darkness what direction to take
or what dangers to avoid, and perished miserably. The next day, after the
fleet had regained the ocean, it was discovered that 800 men had been killed
between the wall and the shore and as many as 2000 arms of different kinds
picked up.
28.37
On his return to Gades, Mago found the gates closed against him, so he
anchored off Cimbii, a place not far from Gades, and sent envoys to lodge
a complaint against the gates being closed to him, an ally and a friend.
They excused themselves by saying that it was done by a gathering of the
townsmen who were incensed at some acts of pillage committed by the soldiers
during the embarkation. He invited their sufetes-the title of their supreme
magistrate-together with the city treasurer to a conference, and when they
were come he ordered them to be scourged and crucified. From there he sailed
to Pityusa, an island about a hundred miles distant from the mainland,
which had at the time a Phoenician population. Here the fleet naturally
met with a friendly reception, and not only were supplies furnished on
a generous scale but he received reinforcements for his fleet in the shape
of arms and men. Thus encouraged, the Carthaginian sailed on to the Balearic
Isles, a voyage of about fifty miles. There are two islands so called;
the larger one was better supplied with arms and contained a more numerous
population; it also possessed a harbour where Mago thought he could conveniently
shelter his fleet for the winter, as the autumn was now closing. But his
fleet met with quite as hostile a reception as if the island had been inhabited
by Romans. The sling which the Balearics make most use of today was at
that time their sole weapon, and no nation comes near them in the skill
with which they handle it. When the Carthaginians tried to approach the
land such a shower of stones fell upon them like a violent hailstorm that
they did not venture inside the harbour. Putting out once more to sea they
approached the smaller island, which possessed a fertile soil, but fewer
resources in men and arms. Here they landed and encamped in a strong position
commanding the harbour, from which they became masters of the island without
meeting any resistance. They raised a force of 2000 auxiliaries which they
sent to Carthage and then beached their ships for the winter. After Mago's
departure Gades surrendered to the Romans.
28.38
Such is the record of Scipio's command in Spain. After handing over the
charge of the province to the proconsuls L. Lentulus and L. Manlius Acidinus,
he set sail with ten ships for Rome. On his arrival a meeting of the senate
was held at the temple of Bellona, at which he gave a report of all he
had done in Spain, how many pitched battles he had fought, how many towns
he had captured, and what tribes he had brought under the dominion of Rome.
He asserted that when he arrived in Spain he found four Carthaginian armies
opposed to him; when he. left, there was not a single Carthaginian in the
country. He was not without hope that a triumph might be accorded to him
for his services; he did not, however, press his demand for one, as it
was quite understood that no one had up to that time enjoyed a triumph
who was not invested with a magistracy. After the senate had been dismissed,
he made his entry into the City and had borne before him 14,342 pounds
of silver and a great quantity of silver coins, all of which he, deposited
in the treasury. L. Veturius Philo now proceeded to hold the consular elections,
and all the centuries voted amidst much enthusiasm for Scipio. Publius
Licinius Crassus, the Pontifex Maximus, was elected as his colleague. It
is recorded that a larger number of voters took part in that election than
at any other time during the war. They had come from all parts, not only
to give their votes, but also to get sight of Scipio; they flocked in crowds
round his house, and at the Capitol when he sacrificed the hecatomb which
he had vowed to Jupiter in Spain. They assured themselves that as C. Lutatius
had brought the First Punic War to a close, so Scipio would terminate this
one, and as he had driven the Carthaginians out of Spain, so he would drive
them out of Italy. They were marking out Africa as his province just as
though the war in Italy was at an end. Then followed the election of praetors.
Two of those elected-Spurius Lucretius and Cnaeus Octavius-were plebeian
aediles at the time; the others-Cnaeus Servilius Caepio and L. Aemilius
Papus-were not holding any office. It was in the fourteenth year of the
Second Punic War (B.C. 205) that P. Cornelius Scipio and P. Licinius Crassus
entered on their consulship. In the assignment of the consular provinces
Scipio with his colleague's consent took Sicily without recourse to the
ballot, because Crassus, as Pontifex Maximus, was prevented by his sacred
duties from leaving Italy; he therefore took Bruttium. The praetors then
balloted for their provinces. The City jurisdiction fell to Cnaeus Servilius;
Spurius Lucretius received Ariminum, as the province of Gaul was then called;
Sicily fell to L. Aemilius and Sardinia to Cnaeus Octavius.
28.39
The senate held a session in the Capitol. A resolution was passed on the
motion of P. Scipio that he should celebrate the Games which he had vowed
during the mutiny and defray the cost out of the money which he had brought
into the treasury. Then he introduced a deputation from Saguntum, the senior
member of which addressed the House in the following terms: "Although there
is no form of suffering, senators, which we have not endured in order to
keep our faith with you to the last, still the kindness which you and your
generals have shown to us has made us forget our misery. For us you have
undertaken war and for fourteen years have carried it on with such determination
that often you have brought yourselves and often reduced the Carthaginians
to the last extremities. Though you had in the heart of Italy such a terrible
war and such an enemy as Hannibal, you nevertheless sent a consul with
his army to Spain to collect, as it were, the remains of our wreckage.
From the day that the two Scipios, Publius and C. Cornelius, came into
the province they never at any moment failed to do good to us and injury
to our enemies. First of all, they restored our city to us, and sent men
all over Spain to find out those of us who had been sold into slavery and
set them free. When our fortunes, from being utterly miserable, had become
almost enviable, your two generals Publius and C. Cornelius met with their
deaths, a loss which we felt even more bitterly than you. It seemed at
the time as though we had been brought back from distant exile to our old
home only to see for the second time our own ruin and our country's destruction.
It did not require a Carthaginian general or army to effect our annihilation,
the Turduli, our inveterate enemies who had been the cause of our former
collapse, would have been quite able to extinguish us. And just when we
had lost all hope, you suddenly sent P. Scipio, whom we are more fortunate
than all our fellow-citizens in seeing here today. We shall carry back
to our people the news that we have seen, as your consul-elect, the one
man in whom we placed all our hopes of safety. City after city has been
taken by him from your enemies throughout Spain, and in every instance
he picked out the Saguntines from the mass of prisoners and sent them home.
And lastly the Turdetani, such deadly enemies to us that had their strength
remained unimpaired Saguntum must have fallen, even they have been brought
so low by his arms that they are no longer to be feared by us, nor, if
I may dare to say so, by our posterity. The tribe in whose favour Hannibal
destroyed Saguntum have had their own city destroyed before our eyes. We
take tribute from their land, but it is not the profit, but the revenge
that we enjoy most.
"For these blessings, the greatest that we could hope for or ask heaven
to grant, the senate and people of Saguntum have sent this deputation to
convey their grateful thanks. We are at the same time to convey their congratulations
to you on having been so successful these last years in Spain and Italy
that you have subjugated the one country by the might of your arms, not
only as far as the Ebro, but even to its most distant shores which the
ocean bounds, whilst in the other you have left the Carthaginian nothing
outside the rampart of his camp. To the great Guardian of your stronghold
in the Capitol, Jupiter Optimus Maximus, we are bidden not only to render
thanks for these boons, but also, if you allow us, to offer and carry to
him in the Capitol this gift of a golden crown, as a memorial of your victories.
We pray that you will sanction this and further, if it seem good to you,
that you will ratify and confirm for all time the advantages which your
generals have conferred upon us." The senate replied to the effect that
the destruction and restoration of Saguntum would both alike be a proof
to all the world of the faith which each side had kept to the other. Their
generals had acted wisely and properly and in accordance with the wishes
of the senate in restoring Saguntum and rescuing its citizens from slavery,
and all other acts of kindness which they had performed were such as the
senate wished to have done. They accorded permission to the envoys to place
their gift in the Capitol. Free quarters and hospitality were provided
for them at the cost of the State, and orders were given for each to be
presented with a sum of not less than 10,000 ases. The other deputations
were then admitted to an audience of the senate. The Saguntines also asked
to be allowed to make a tour through Italy as far as they could with safety,
and guides were furnished them and letters sent to the different towns
requesting them to give the Spaniards a hospitable reception
28.40
The next question before the senate concerned the raising of troops and
the distribution of the various commands. There was a rumour that Africa
was to form a new province and be allotted to Scipio without having recourse
to the ballot. Scipio himself, no longer contented with a moderate share
of glory, was telling people that he had been returned as consul not simply
to carry on the war but to bring it to an end, and the only way of doing
that was for him to take an army over to Africa. In the event of the senate's
opposition he asserted openly that he would carry his proposal by the authority
of the people. The project was most distasteful to the leaders of the senate,
and as the rest of the senators, afraid of becoming unpopular, refused
to speak out, Q. Fabius Maximus was asked for his opinion. This he gave
in the following speech: "I am quite aware, senators, that many of you
regard the question before us today as already decided, and consider that
any one who discusses the destination of Africa as though it were still
an open question is wasting words. I do not quite understand, however,
how Africa can have been definitely assigned as the province of our gallant
and energetic consul, when neither the senate nor the people have decided
that it shall be included amongst the provinces for the year. If it has
been so assigned then I think the consul is quite wrong in inviting a sham
discussion upon a measure that has been decided upon; he is not only stultifying
the senate as a body, but each individual senator who is called upon in
turn for his opinion.
"In expressing my dissent from those who think that we ought at once
to invade Africa, I am quite conscious that I expose myself to two imputations.
For one thing my action will be set down to my cautious nature. Young men
may call it timidity and indolence if they please, as long as we have no
cause to regret that though the counsels of others have seemed at first
sight more attractive, experience shows that mine are better. The other
charge against me will be that I am actuated by motives of malevolence
and envy against the ever-growing glory of our most gallant consul. If
my past life, my character, my dictatorship and five consulships, the glory
I have acquired as a citizen and as a soldier, a glory so great as to produce
surfeit rather than a desire for more-if these do not shield me from this
imputation at least let my age free me from it. What rivalry can exist
between myself and a man who is not even as old as my son? When I was Dictator,
in the full maturity of my powers and engaged in most important operations
my authority was by an unheard-of innovation divided with the Master of
the Horse. Yet no one ever heard a word of protest from me either in the
senate or in the Assembly, even when he was pursuing me with abuse. It
was through my actions rather than my words that I wished the man whom
others considered my equal to be compelled to admit his inferiority to
me. And am I, who have received all the honours that the State can confer,
to enter into competition with one who is in the full flower of his youth?
And simply that if Africa is refused to him, it may be granted to me, tired
as I am not only of public business but of life itself? No, I must live
and die with the glory that I have won. I have prevented Hannibal from
conquering in order that he might be conquered by those of you who are
in the full vigour of your powers."
28.41
"It is but fair, Publius Cornelius, that whilst in my own case I have never
preferred my own reputation to the interests of the State, you should pardon
me for not regarding even your glory as more important than the welfare
of the commonwealth. I admit that if there were no war in Italy or only
an enemy from whose defeat no glory was to be gained, then the man who
would keep you in Italy though acting in the public interest might appear
to be depriving you of the chance of winning glory in a foreign war. But
as our enemy Hannibal has been holding Italy for fourteen years with an
undefeated army, you will surely not despise the glory of expelling from
Italy during your consulship the enemy who has been the cause of so many
defeats, so many deaths, and of leaving it on record that it is you who
have terminated this war, as C. Lutatius has the lasting glory of bringing
the First Punic War to a close? Unless, indeed, Hasdrubal was a finer general
than Hannibal, or the last war a more serious one than this one, or the
victory which closed it a greater and more brilliant one than this will
be, should it fall to our lot to conquer whilst you are consul. Would you
rather have drawn Hamilcar away from Drepana and Eryx, than expel Hannibal
and his Carthaginians from Italy? Even though you should cling to the glory
you have acquired more than to what you hope for, you will not pride yourself
upon having delivered Spain from war rather than Italy. Hannibal is not
yet such an enemy that the man who prefers to fight against another foe
would not be thought to fear rather than to despise him. Why do you not
gird yourself to this task? Why do you not march straight from here to
where Hannibal is and carry the war thither instead of taking a roundabout
course in the hope that when you have crossed over into Africa he will
follow you? You are anxious to win the crowning glory of bringing the Punic
War to an end; your natural course will be to defend your own country before
you go to attack the enemy's. Let there be peace in Italy before there
is war in Africa; let our own fears be banished before we make others tremble.
If both objects can be achieved under your generalship and auspices, then
when you have conquered Hannibal here, go on and capture Carthage. If one
of the two victories must be left for your successors, the former is the
greater and more glorious one and will necessarily lead to the latter.
As matters now are, the public exchequer is unable to support two armies
in Italy and also in Africa, we have nothing left from which to equip a
fleet and furnish it with supplies, and over and above all this who can
fail to see what great dangers would be incurred? P. Licinius, let us suppose,
is conducting the campaign in Italy and P. Scipio one in Africa. Well,
supposing-may all the gods avert the omen which I shudder at the mention
of! but what has happened may happen again-supposing, I say, that Hannibal
wins a victory and marches on Rome, are we to wait till then before recalling
you from Africa, as we recalled Q. Fulvius from Capua? What, if even in
Africa the fortunes of war prove equally favourable for both sides? Take
warning from the fate of your own house, your father and uncle destroyed
with their armies within a month of each other in the country where they
had raised the name of Rome and the glory of your family high among the
nations through their successful operations by land and sea. The daylight
would fail me if I attempted to enumerate the kings and captains who by
their rash invasion of their enemy's territory have brought the most crushing
defeat on themselves and their armies. Athens, a city most sensible and
wise, listened to the advice of a young man of high birth and equally high
ability, and sent a great fleet to Sicily before it had disposed of the
war at home, and in one naval battle the flourishing republic was, for
ever ruined."
28.42
"I will not take instances from distant lands and remote times. This very
Africa we are speaking about and the fate of Atilius Regulus form a conspicuous
example of the fickleness of fortune. "When you, Scipio, have a view of
Africa from the sea will not your conquest of Spain seem mere child's play?
What resemblance is there between them? You began by coasting along the
shores of Italy and Gaul over a sea free from any hostile fleet, and you
brought up at Emporiae, a friendly city. After disembarking your troops
you led them through a perfectly safe country to Tarraco, to the friends
and allies of Rome, and from Tarraco your route led through the midst of
Roman garrisons. Round the Ebro lay the armies of your father and your
uncle, whose courage had been raised by defeat and who were burning to
avenge the loss of their commanders. Their leader was, it is true, irregularly
chosen by the vote of the soldiery to meet the emergency, but had he belonged
to an ennobled family and been duly appointed he would have rivalled distinguished
generals in his mastery of the art of war. Then you were able to attack
New Carthage without the slightest interruption; not one out of the three
Carthaginian armies attempted to defend their allies. The rest of your
operations, though I am far from depreciating them, are not to be compared
with a war in Africa. There no harbour is open to our fleet, no district
which will receive us peaceably, no city in alliance with us, no king friendly
to us, no spot which we can use as a base of operations. Wherever you turn
your eyes, you see hostility and menace.
"Do you put your trust in Syphax and his Numidians? Be satisfied with
having trusted them once. Rashness does not always succeed and duplicity
prepares the way for confidence through trifles, so that when the occasion
calls for it, it may succeed in securing some great advantage. Your father
and your uncle were not defeated until the treachery of their Celtiberian
auxiliaries left them victims to the enemy. You yourself were not exposed
to anything like the danger from the Carthaginian commanders, Mago and
Hasdrubal, that you were from Indibilis and Mandonius after you had accepted
their alliance. Can you trust the Numidians after the experience you have
had of the disloyalty of your own troops? Syphax and Masinissa would both
prefer that they rather than the Carthaginians should be the leading powers
in Africa, but failing that, they would rather have the Carthaginians than
any one else. At this moment mutual rivalry and numberless grounds of complaint
are embittering them against one another, because external dangers are
far distant; but once let them see the arms of Rome and a foreign army,
and they will hasten side by side to extinguish, as it were, a conflagration
which threatens them both. Those Carthaginians defended Spain in a very
different way from that in which they would defend their country's walls,
the temples of their gods, their hearths and homes, when their trembling
wives will follow them and their little children cling to them as they
march out to battle. What, moreover, if, feeling quite assured of the united
support of Africa, the fidelity of their royal allies and the strength
of their walls, and seeing that you and your army are no longer here to
protect Italy, the Carthaginians should send over a fresh army from Africa,
or order Mago, who, we understand, has left the Balearic Isles and is sailing
along the Ligurian coast, to form a junction with Hannibal? Surely we should
be in the same state of alarm as we were at the appearance in Italy of
Hasdrubal, after you had allowed him to slip through your hands-you, who
are going to blockade not Carthage only but the whole of Africa with your
army! You will say that you defeated him. Then I regret all the more, both
on your account and on behalf of the republic, that you allowed him after
his defeat to invade Italy.
"Allow us to ascribe all that has gone happily for you and for the dominion
of Rome to your wise counsels, and all misfortunes to the uncertain chances
of war-the more talent and courage you claim for yourself the more will
your native country and all Italy desire to keep such a doughty defender
at home. Even you cannot disguise the fact that where Hannibal is, there
is the centre and mainstay of the war, for you are giving out that the
one reason for your going to Africa is to draw Hannibal there. Whether
there then or here, you still have Hannibal to deal with. And will you,
I should like to know, be in a stronger position in Africa, single-handed,
than here with your own army and your colleague's acting together? What
a difference that makes is shown by the recent instance of the consuls
Claudius and Livius. Where, pray, is Hannibal more likely to be supplied
with men and arms? In the most remote corner of Bruttium where he has so
long been vainly asking for reinforcements from home, or in the country
round Carthage and on the soil of Africa which is entirely occupied by
his allies? What an extraordinary idea that is of yours to fight where
your forces are reduced by one-half and those of the enemy largely augmented,
rather than in a country where with two armies you would engage only one,
and that, too, exhausted by so many battles, and such long and burdensome
service. Just think how different your plan is from your father's. On his
election as consul he proceeded to Spain, then left his province and returned
to Italy in order to meet Hannibal on his descent from the Alps; you are
preparing to leave Italy while Hannibal is actually here, not in the interest
of the republic but because you think it a grand and glorious thing to
do. Just in the same way you, a general of the Roman people, left your
province and your army without any legal authority, without any instructions
from the senate, and entrusted to a couple of ships the fortunes of the
State and the majesty of the empire which were for the time bound up with
your own safety. I hold the view that P. Cornelius Scipio was elected consul
not for his own private ends, but for us and the commonwealth, and that
armies are raised to guard this city and the soil of Italy, and not for
consuls to transport to any part of the world they please in the arrogant
style of kings and despots."
28.43
This speech of Fabius, so appropriate to the circumstances under which
it was delivered, and backed up by the weight of his character and his
long-established reputation for prudence, produced a great effect upon
most of those present, especially upon the seniors. Seeing that the majority
approved of the sage counsels of age in preference to the impetuous temper
of youth, Scipio is reported to have made the following reply: "Senators,
at the beginning of his speech, Q. Fabius admitted that what he had to
say might lay him under a suspicion of jealousy. Personally, I should not
dare to accuse so great a man of that weakness, but either through the
inadequacy of his defence or the impossibility of making a successful one,
he has utterly failed to clear himself of the charge. For in his anxiety
to dispel the suspicion, he spoke about his distinctions and his reputation
in such exaggerated terms as to give the impression that I was in danger
of finding a rival in the lowest of the Romans, not in him who, because
he stands above all others-a position which I frankly confess I am striving
to attain, denies the possibility of any rivalry between us. He has represented
himself as an old man full of honours, and me as a youth not even as old
as his son, as if the passion for glory did not extend beyond the span
of human life and find its chief satisfaction in the memory of future generations.
I am quite certain that it is the lot of all great men to compare themselves
not with their contemporaries alone, but also with the illustrious of all
ages. I admit, Quintus Fabius, that I am desirous not only of equalling
your renown but-forgive my saying so-of surpassing it, if I can. Let not
your feeling towards me, or mine towards my juniors, be such that we would
prevent any of our fellow-citizens from reaching our level. That would
not only injure the victims of our envy, it would be a loss to the State,
and almost to the human race.
"The speaker dwelt upon the danger to which I should be exposed if I
landed in Africa, showing apparently solicitude not only for the commonwealth
and its army but even for me. What has led to this sudden anxiety on my
account? When my father and my uncle were killed and their armies all but
annihilated; when Spain was lost; when four Carthaginian armies and their
generals were holding the whole country down by the terror of their arms;
when you were looking for a man to take the supreme command in that war
and no one appeared, no one came forward to offer himself but me; when
the Roman people conferred the supreme command on me before I had reached
my twenty-fifth year-why did no one then say anything about my age, the
strength of the enemy, the difficulties of the campaign or the recent disaster
which had overtaken my father and my uncle? Has some calamity occurred
recently in Africa greater than the one which happened then in Spain? Are
there larger armies and better and more numerous commanders in Africa now
than there were then in Spain? Was I then at a riper age for undertaking
a great war than I am today? Is Spain a more convenient field for operations
against the Carthaginians than Africa? Now that I have scattered four Carthaginian
armies in flight, reduced so many cities by force or fear, and subjugated
every part down to the shores of the ocean, petty kings and savage tribes
alike; now that I have reconquered the whole of Spain so completely that
no vestige of war anywhere remains, it is an easy task to make light of
my services, as easy, in fact, as it will be, when I have returned victorious
from Africa, to make light of those very difficulties which are now painted
in such dark colours in order to keep me here.
"Fabius says that no part of Africa is accessible, that there are no
harbours open to us. He tells us that M. Atilius Regulus was made prisoner
in Africa, as though he had met with misfortune as soon as he landed. He
forgets that that very commander, unfortunate as he was afterwards, did
find some harbours in Africa open to him, and for the first twelve months
won some brilliant victories, and as far as the Carthaginian generals were
concerned, remained undefeated to the last. You will not, therefore, deter
me by quoting that instance. Even if that disaster had occurred in this
war instead of in the last one, quite recently and not forty years ago-even
then why should I be prevented from invading Africa because Regulus was
made prisoner any more than I was prevented from going to Spain after the
two Scipios were killed? I should be sorry to believe that Xanthippus,
the Lacedaemonian, was born to be a greater blessing to Carthage than I
am to be to my country, and my confidence is strengthened by seeing what
tremendous issues depend upon one man's courage. We have had to listen
even to stories about the Athenians, how they neglected the war at their
doors in order to go to Sicily. Well, since you are at leisure to tell
us tales about Greece why do you not mention Agathocles, king of Syracuse,
who after Sicily had long been wasted by the flames of the Punic War sailed
across to this same Africa and turned the tide of war back to the country
from which it had started?"
28.44
"Put what need is there of instances drawn from other lands and other times
to remind us how much depends upon taking the aggressive and removing danger
from ourselves by making it recoil upon others? It makes all the difference
in the world whether you are devastating the territory of another nation
or seeing your own destroyed by fire and sword. It shows more courage to
attack than to repel attacks. Then again, the unknown always inspires terror,
but when you have entered your enemy's country you have a nearer view of
his strength and weakness. Hannibal never hoped that so many communities
would go over to him after Cannae; how much less could the Carthaginians,
faithless allies, harsh and tyrannical masters as they are, count upon
the firmness and stability of their African empire! So far, even when deserted
by our allies, we stood in our own strength, the soldiery of Rome. The
Carthaginians have no citizen army, their soldiers are all mercenaries,
ready to change sides on the smallest provocation. If only nothing stops
me, you will hear that I have landed, that Africa is wrapped in the flames
of war, that Hannibal is tearing himself away from Italy, that Carthage
is besieged-all at one stroke. You may look for more cheerful and more
frequent news from Africa than you received from Spain. Everything inspires
me with hope-the Fortune which waits on Rome, the gods who witnessed the
treaty which the enemy has broken, the two princes Syphax and Masinissa,
whose fidelity I shall so far trust as to protect myself from any perfidy
they may attempt. Many advantages which at this distance are not apparent
will be disclosed as the war goes on. A man proves his capacity for leadership
by seizing every opportunity that presents itself, and making every contingency
subserve his plans. I shall have the adversary whom you, Q. Fabius assign
to me-Hannibal-but I would rather draw him away than that he should keep
me here; I would compel him to fight in his own country, and Carthage shall
be the prize of victory rather than the half-ruined strongholds of Bruttium.
"And now as to any injury that may befall the republic during my voyage
or whilst I am disembarking my men on the shores of Africa or during my
advance on Carthage. As the consul, P. Licinius, is also Pontifex Maximus,
and cannot be absent from his sacred duties, it is impossible for him to
ballot for so distant a province. Would it not be almost an insult to say
that he cannot accomplish the task, after Hannibal's power has been shaken
and almost shattered, which you, Q. Fabius, were able to accomplish when
Hannibal in the hour of victory was flying about in every part of Italy?
And even if the war should not be brought to a more speedy termination
by the plan which I suggest, the dignity of Rome and her prestige amongst
foreign kings and nations would surely require us to show that we possess
sufficient courage not only to defend Italy but to carry our arms even
as far as Africa. We must not let the idea get abroad that no Roman general
durst do what Hannibal has done, or that whilst in the First Punic War,
when the struggle was for Sicily, Africa was frequently attacked by our
fleets and armies, in this war, when the struggle is for Italy, Africa
is left in peace. Let Italy, which has been so long harassed, have some
rest at last; let Africa take its turn of fire and ruin; let a Roman camp
threaten the gates of Carthage rather than that we should see the enemy's
lines from our walls. Let Africa be the seat of war henceforth; let us
roll back there all the terror and the flight, all the wasting of our lands
and the defection of our allies, all the other miseries of war which have
been assailing us for the last fourteen years. Enough has been said as
to the republic and the present war and the allocation of provinces. It
would be a long and uninteresting discussion if I were to follow the example
of Q. Fabius, and as he has depreciated my services in Spain, so I were
to pour ridicule on his glory and extol my own. I will do neither the one
nor the other, senators, and if, young as I am, I cannot have the advantage
over an old man in anything else, I will at least prove his superior in
moderation and restraint of language. My life and my conduct of affairs
have been such that I am quite content to accept in silence the judgment
which you have spontaneously formed."
28.45
Scipio was listened to with impatience, for it was generally believed that
if he did not succeed in inducing the senate to decree that Africa should
be his province, he would at once bring the question before the Assembly.
So Q. Fabius, who had held four consulships, challenged Scipio to say openly
before the senate whether he left the decision as to the provinces in their
hands, and was prepared to abide by it, or whether he was going to refer
it to the people. Scipio replied that he should act as he thought best
in the interests of the State. On this Fabius observed: "It was not because
I did not know what you would say or how you would act that I made my request,
for you openly avow that you are sounding the House rather than consulting
it, and that if we do not at once assign you the province which you want,
you have a resolution ready to put to the Assembly." (Then, turning to
the tribunes) "I demand of you, tribunes of the plebs, that you support
me in my refusal to vote, for even if the decision is in my favour the
consul is not going to recognise it." Then a discussion arose between the
consul and the tribunes, he asserting that there was no just ground for
their intervening and supporting a senator in his refusal to vote, when
called upon to do so. The tribunes gave their decision in the following
terms: "If the consul submits to the senate the allocation of the provinces
their decision shall be binding and final, and we will not allow any reference
to the people. If he does not so submit it, we shall support any senator
in his refusal to vote when called upon to do so." The consul asked for
a day's grace in order to consult his colleague. The following day he submitted
the matter to the decision of the senate. The decree made respecting the
provinces was that one consul should take Sicily and the thirty warships
which C. Servilius had had the previous year, permission being granted
him to sail to Africa, if he thought such a course would be in the interests
of the State; the other consul was to take Bruttium and the operations
against Hannibal, with either the army which had served under L. Veturius,
or the one which Q. Caecilius had commanded. These two were to ballot and
arrange which of them was to act in Bruttium with the two legions which
the consul would not require, and the one to whom that field should fall
was to have his command extended for a year. With the exception of the
consuls and praetors, all who were to take charge of armies and provinces
had their commands extended for a year. It fell to Q. Caecilius to act
with the consul against Hannibal in Bruttium.
Scipio exhibited the Games amidst the applause of a large and enthusiastic
crowd of spectators. M. Pomponius Matho and Q. Catius were sent on a mission
to Delphi to carry thither the offering made from the plunder of Hasdrubal's
camp. It was a golden crown of 200 pounds' weight, and there were facsimiles
of the pieces of spoil made in silver weighing in the aggregate 1000 pounds.
Scipio did not succeed in obtaining permission to levy troops and indeed
he did not press the point, but he was allowed to enlist volunteers. As
he had stated that his fleet would not be a charge on the State he was
given liberty to accept any materials contributed by the allies for the
construction of his ships. The cantons of Etruria were the first to promise
assistance, each according to its means. Caere contributed corn and provisions
of all kinds for the crews; Populonia, iron; Tarquinii, cloth for the sails;
Volaterrae, timber for the hulls and corn; Arretium, 3000 shields and as
many helmets, whilst they were ready to supply as many as 50,000 darts,
javelins and long spears. They also offered to furnish all the axes, spades,
sickles, gabions and hand-mills required for forty warships as well as
120,000 pecks of wheat and provision for the sailing-masters and the rowers
on the voyage. Perusia, Clusium and Russellae sent pine-wood for the timbers
of the ships and a large quantity of corn. The Umbrian communities as well
as the inhabitants of Nursia, Reate and Amiternum and the whole of the
Sabine country promised to furnish men. Numerous contingents from the Marsi,
the Paeligni and the Marrucini volunteered to serve on board the fleet.
Camerinum, a city leagued on a basis of equal rights with Rome, sent a
cohort of six hundred men-at-arms. The keels of thirty ships-twenty quinqueremes
and ten quadriremes-were laid down, and Scipio pressed on the work so rapidly
that forty-five days after the timber had been brought from the forests,
the ships were launched with their tackle and armament complete.
28.46
Scipio sailed to Sicily with 7000 volunteers on board his thirty warships,
and P. Licinius proceeded to Bruttium. Of the two consular armies stationed
there he selected the one which the former consul L. Veturius had commanded.
He allowed Metellus to keep the legions he was in command of, as he thought
he would do better with men accustomed to his leadership. The praetors
also departed for their several provinces. As money was needed for the
war the quaestors received instructions to sell that part of the Capuan
territory which extends from the Fossa Graeca to the coast, and evidence
was asked for of any cases where land had been appropriated by a citizen
of Capua, that it might be included in the Roman stateland. The informer
was to receive a gratuity of ten per cent. of the value of the land. The
City praetor, Cnaeus Servilius, was also to see that the citizens of Capua
were residing where the senate had given them permission to reside, and
any who were living elsewhere were to be punished. During the summer Mago
who had been wintering in Minorca embarked with a force of 12,000 infantry
and 2000 cavalry, and set sail for Italy with about thirty warships and
a large number of transports. The coast was quite unguarded and he surprised
and captured Genua. From there he went on to the Ligurian coast on the
chance of rousing the Gauls. One of their tribes-the Ingauni-were at the
time engaged in a war with the Epanterii, an Alpine tribe. After storing
his plunder in Savo and leaving ten vessels as guardships, Mago sent the
remainder of his ships to Carthage to protect the coast, as it was rumoured
that Scipio intended to invade Africa, and then he formed an alliance with
the Ingauni, from whom he expected more support than from the mountaineers,
and commenced to attack the latter. His army grew in numbers every day;
the Gauls, drawn by the spell of his name, flocked to him from all parts.
The movement became known in Rome through a despatch from Spurius Lucretius,
and the senate were filled with the gravest apprehensions. It seemed as
though the joy with which they heard of the destruction of Hasdrubal and
his army two years before would be completely stultified by the outbreak
of a fresh war in the same quarter, quite as serious as the former one,
the only difference being in the commander. They sent orders to the proconsul
M. Livius to move the army of Etruria up to Ariminum, and the City praetor,
Cnaeus Servilius, was empowered, in case he thought it advisable, to order
the City legions to be employed elsewhere and give the command to the man
whom he thought most capable. M. Valerius Laevinus led these legions to
Arretium. About this time Cnaeus Octavius who was commanding in Sardinia
captured as many as eighty Carthaginian transports in the neighbourhood.
According to Coelius' account they were loaded with corn and supplies for
Hannibal; Valerius, however, says that they were carrying the plunder from
Etruria and the Ligurian and Epanterian prisoners to Carthage. Hardly anything
worth recording took place in Bruttium this year. A pestilence attacked
the Romans and the Carthaginians and was equally fatal to both, but in
addition to the epidemic, the Carthaginians were suffering from scarcity
of food. Hannibal spent the summer near the temple of Juno Lacinia, where
he built and dedicated an altar with a long inscription recording his exploits
in Phoenician and also in Greek.
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