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+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Great Events by Famous Historians, Vol. 2</title>
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 10114 ***</div>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h1>THE GREAT EVENTS BY FAMOUS HISTORIANS</h1>
+
+<p class="center">VOLUME II</p>
+
+<p class="center">A COMPREHENSIVE AND READABLE ACCOUNT OF THE WORLD'S
+HISTORY. EMPHASIZING THE MORE IMPORTANT EVENTS, AND PRESENTING
+THESE AS COMPLETE NARRATIVES IN THE MASTER-WORDS OF THE MOST
+EMINENT HISTORIANS</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+NON-SECTARIAN&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;NON-PARTISAN&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;NON-SECTIONAL</p>
+
+<p class="center">ON THE PLAN EVOLVED FROM A CONSENSUS OF OPINIONS GATHERED
+FROM THE MOST DISTINGUISHED SCHOLARS OF AMERICA AND EUROPE,
+INCLUDING BRIEF INTRODUCTIONS BY SPECIALISTS TO CONNECT AND EXPLAIN
+THE CELEBRATED NARRATIVES, ARRANGED CHRONOLOGICALLY, WITH THOROUGH
+INDICES, BIBLIOGRAPHIES, CHRONOLOGIES, AND COURSES OF
+READING</p>
+
+<p class="center">EDITOR-IN-CHIEF</p>
+<p class="center">ROSSITER JOHNSON, LL.D.</p>
+
+<p class="center">ASSOCIATE EDITORS</p>
+<p class="center">CHARLES F. HORNE, Ph.D.</p>
+<p class="center">JOHN RUDD, LL.D.</p>
+
+<p class="center">COPYRIGHT, 1905</p>
+<p>The binding of this volume is a facsimile of the original on
+exhibition in the Bibliothèque Nationale.</p>
+<p>It was executed by the Royal Binder, Clovis Eve, for Marie de'
+Médicis, Queen Consort of Henry IV of France. She was a
+great lover of fine arts, and especially of rich bindings. The one
+here shown was her special pride. It shows her arms—the arms
+of France and Tuscany—surrounded with the cordelière,
+the sign of her widowhood, accompanied by the monogram M.M. (Marie
+Médicis). She was exiled by Cardinal Richelieu in 1631.</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+<p><i><a href="#RULE4_1">An Outline Narrative of the Great
+Events</a></i>, CHARLES F. HORNE</p>
+<p><i><a href="#RULE4_2">Institution and Fall of the Decemvirate in
+Rome (B.C. 450)</a></i>, HENRY G. LIDDELL</p>
+<p><i><a href="#RULE4_3">Pericles Rules in Athens (B.C.
+444)</a></i>, PLUTARCH</p>
+<p><i><a href="#RULE4_4">Great Plague at Athens (B.C. 430)</a></i>,
+GEORGE GROTE</p>
+<p><i><a href="#RULE4_5">Defeat of the Athenians at Syracuse (B.C.
+413)</a></i>, SIR EDWARD S. CREASY</p>
+<p><i><a href="#RULE4_6">Retreat of the Ten Thousand Greeks (B.C.
+401-399)</a></i>, XENOPHON</p>
+<p><i><a href="#RULE4_7">Condemnation and Death of Socrates (B.C.
+399)</a></i>, PLATO</p>
+<p><i><a href="#RULE4_8">Brennus Burns Rome (B.C. 388)</a></i>,
+BARTHOLD GEORG NIEBUHR</p>
+<p><i><a href="#RULE4_9">Tartar Invasion of China by Meha (B.C.
+341)</a></i>, DEMETRIUS CHARLES BOULGER</p>
+<p><i><a href="#RULE4_10">Alexander Reduces Tyre, Later Founds
+Alexandria (B.C. 332)</a></i>, OLIVER GOLDSMITH</p>
+<p><i><a href="#RULE4_11">The Battle of Arbela (B.C. 331)</a></i>,
+SIR EDWARD S. CREASY</p>
+<p><i><a href="#RULE4_12">First Battle Between Greeks and Romans
+(B.C. 280-279)</a></i>, PLUTARCH</p>
+<p><i><a href="#RULE4_13">The Punic Wars (B.C.
+264-219-149)</a></i>, FLORUS</p>
+<p><i><a href="#RULE4_14">Battle of the Metaurus (B.C.
+2O7)</a></i>, SIR EDWARD S. CREASY</p>
+<p><i><a href="#RULE4_15">Scipio Africanus Crushes Hannibal at Zama
+and Subjugates Carthage (B.C. 202)</a></i>, LIVY</p>
+<p><i><a href="#RULE4_16">Judas Maccabaeus Liberates Judea (B.C.
+165-141)</a></i>, JOSEPHUS</p>
+<p><i><a href="#RULE4_17">The Gracchi and Their Reforms (B.C.
+133)</a></i>, THEODOR MOMMSEN</p>
+<p><i><a href="#GAUL">Caesar Conquers Gaul (B.C. 58-50)</a></i>,
+NAPOLEON III</p>
+<p><i><a href="#RULE4_18">Roman Invasion and Conquest of Britain
+(B.C. 55-A.D. 79)</a></i>, OLIVER GOLDSMITH</p>
+<p><i><a href="#RULE4_19">Cleopatra's Conquest of Caesar and Antony
+(B.C. 51-30)</a></i>, JOHN P. MAHAFFY</p>
+<p><i><a href="#RULE4_20">Assassination of Caesar (B.C.
+44)</a></i>, NIEBUHR PLUTARCH</p>
+<p><i><a href="#RULE4_21">Rome Becomes a Monarchy, Death of Antony
+and Cleopatra (B.C. 44-30)</a></i>, HENRY GEORGE LIDDELL</p>
+<p><i><a href="#RULE4_22">Germans under Arminius Revolt Against
+Rome (A.D. 9)</a></i>, SIR EDWARD S. CREASY</p>
+<p><i><a href="#RULE4_23">Universal Chronology (B.C. 450-A.D.
+12)</a></i>, JOHN RUDD</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2>ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+
+<p>
+VOLUME II
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Blind Appius Claudius led into the Roman Senate Chamber to vote on the
+proposition of peace or war with Pyrrhus (page 174</i>),
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Painting by Prof, A. Maccari.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Oracle of Delphi</i>,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Painting by Claudius Harper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Death of Alexander the Great after a prolonged debauch</i>,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Painting by Carl von Piloty.
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="RULE4_1"></a>AN OUTLINE NARRATIVE</h2>
+<p class="center">TRACING BRIEFLY THE CAUSES, CONNECTIONS, AND CONSEQUENCES
+OF</p>
+<p class="center">THE GREAT EVENTS</p>
+<p class="center">(FROM THE RISE OF GREECE TO THE CHRISTIAN ERA)</p>
+<p class="center">CHARLES F. HORNE, Ph.D.</p>
+<p>Earth's upward struggle has been baffled by so many stumbles
+that critics have not been lacking to suggest that we do not
+advance at all, but only swing in circles, like a squirrel in its
+cage. Certain it is that each ancient civilization seemed to bear
+in itself the seeds of its own destruction. Yet it may be held with
+equal truth that each new power, rising above the ruins of the
+last, held something nobler, was borne upward by some truth its
+rival could not reach.</p>
+<p>At no period is this more evident than in the five centuries
+immediately preceding the Christian era. Persia, Greece, Carthage,
+Rome, each in turn was with some justice proclaimed lord of the
+world; each in turn felt the impulse of her glory and advanced
+rapidly in culture and knowledge of the arts; and each in turn
+succumbed to the temptations that beset unlimited success. They
+degenerated not only in physical strength, but in moral
+honesty.</p>
+<p>Let us recognize, however, that the term "world-ruler" as
+applied to even the greatest of these nations has but a restricted
+sense. When the Persian monarch called himself lord of the sun and
+moon, he only meant in a figurative way that he was acquainted with
+no other king so powerful as himself; that beyond his own dominions
+he heard only of feeble colonies, and beyond those the wilderness.
+Alexander, when he sighed for more worlds to conquer, had in
+reality made himself lord of less than a quarter of Asia and of
+about one-sixtieth part of Europe.</p>
+<p>No man and no nation has ever yet been intrusted with the
+government of the entire globe. None has proved sufficiently fitted
+for the giant task. Each empire has been, as it were, but an
+experiment; and beyond the border line of seas and deserts which
+ringed each boastful conqueror, there were always other races
+developing along slower, and it may be surer, lines.</p>
+<p>In those old days our world was in truth too big for conquest.
+Armies marched on foot. Provisions could not be carried in any
+quantity, unless a general clung to the sea-shore and depended on
+his ships. What Alexander might with more truth have sighed for,
+was some modern means of swift transportation, possessed of which
+he might still have enjoyed many interesting, bloody battles in
+more distant lands.</p>
+<p class="center">THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE GREEKS</p>
+<p>Taking the idea "world power" in the restricted sense suggested,
+Persia lost it to Greece at Salamis. As the Asiatic hordes fled
+behind their panic-stricken king, the Greeks, looking round their
+limited horizon, could see no power that might vie with them. The
+idea of pressing home their success and overthrowing the entire
+unwieldy Persian empire was at once conceived.</p>
+<p>But the Greeks were of all races least like to weld earth into
+one dominion. They could not even unite among themselves. In short
+it cannot be too emphatically pointed out that the work of Greece
+was not to consolidate, but to separate, to teach the value of each
+individual man. Asia had made monarchies in plenty. King after king
+had passed in splendid, glittering pomp across her plains, circled
+by a crowd of obsequious courtiers, trampling on a nameless
+multitude of slaves. Europe was to make democracies, or at least to
+try her hand at them.</p>
+<p>It has been well said that a democracy is the strongest
+government for defence, the weakest for attack. Every little Greek
+city clung jealously to its own freedom, and to its equally obvious
+right to dominate its neighbors. The supreme danger of the Persian
+invasion united them for a moment; but as soon as safety was
+assured, they recommenced their bickering. Sparta with her record
+of ancient leadership, Athens with her new-won glory against the
+common foe, each tried to draw the other cities in her train. There
+was no one man who could dominate them all and concentrate their
+strength against the enemy. So for a time Persia continued to
+exist; she even by degrees regained something of her former
+influence over the divided cities.</p>
+<p>Among these Athens held the foremost rank. She was, as we have
+previously seen, far more truly representative of the Greek spirit
+than her rival. Sparta was aristocratic and conservative; Athens
+democratic and progressive. The genius of her leaders gathered the
+lesser towns into a great naval league, in which she grew ever more
+powerful. Her allies sank to be dependent and unwilling vassals,
+forced to contribute large sums to the treasury of their
+overlord.</p>
+<p>This was the age of Pericles.[<a href="#note-1">1</a>] As Athens
+became wealthy, her citizens became cultured. Statues, temples,
+theatres made the city beautiful. Dramatists, orators, and poets
+made her intellectually renowned. A marvellous outburst, this of
+Athens! Displaying for the first time in history the full capacity
+of the human mind! Had there been similar flowerings of genius amid
+forgotten Asiatic times? One doubts it; doubts if such brilliancy
+could ever anywhere have passed, and left no clearer record of its
+triumphs.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1"><!-- Note Anchor 1 --></a>[Footnote 1: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_3">Pericles Rules in Athens</a></i>, page
+12.]</p>
+<p>Amid such splendor it seems captious to point out the flaw. Yet
+Athenian and all Greek civilization did ultimately decline. It
+represented intellectual, but not moral culture. The Greeks
+delighted intensely in the purely physical life about them; they
+had small conception of anything beyond. To enjoy, to be
+successful, that was all their goal; the means scarce counted. The
+Athenians called Aristides the Just; but so little did they honor
+his high rectitude that they banished him for a decade. His title,
+or it may have been his insistence on the subject, bored them.</p>
+<p>His rival, Themistocles, was more suited to their taste, a
+clever scamp, who must always be dealing with both sides in every
+quarrel, and outwitting both. Athens was driven to banish him also
+at last, at his too flagrant treachery. But he was not dismissed
+with the scathing scorn our modern age would heap upon a traitor.
+He was sent regretfully, as one turns from a charming but too
+persistently lawless friend. The banishment was only for ten years,
+and he had his nest already prepared with the Persian King. If you
+would understand the Greek spirit in its fullest perfection, study
+Themistocles. Rampant individualism, seeking personal pleasure,
+clamorous for the admiration of its fellows, but not restrained
+from secret falsity by any strong moral sense—that was what
+the Greeks developed in the end.</p>
+<p>Neither must Athens be regarded as a democracy in the modern
+sense. She was only so by contrast with Persia or with Sparta. Not
+every man in the beautiful city voted, or enjoyed the riches that
+flowed into her coffers, and could thus afford, free from pecuniary
+care, to devote himself to art. Athens probably had never more than
+thirty thousand "citizens." The rest of the adult male population,
+vastly outnumbering these, were slaves, or foreigners attracted by
+the city's splendor.</p>
+<p>But those thirty thousand were certainly men. "There were giants
+in those days." One sometimes stands in wonder at their boldness.
+What all Greece could not do, what Persia had completely failed in,
+they undertook. Athens alone should conquer the world. By force of
+arms they would found an empire of intellect. They fought Persia
+and Sparta, both at once. Plague swept their city, yet they would
+not yield.[<a href="#note-2">2</a>] Their own subject allies turned
+against them; and they fought those too. They sent fleets and
+armies against Syracuse, the mightiest power of the West. It was
+Athens against all mankind!</p>
+<p><a name="note-2"><!-- Note Anchor 2 --></a>[Footnote 2: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_4">Great Plague at Athens</a></i>, page 34.]</p>
+<p>She was unequal to the task, superbly unequal to it. The
+destruction of her army at Syracuse[<a href="#note-3">3</a>] was
+only the foremost of a series of inevitable disasters, which left
+her helpless. After that, Sparta, and then Thebes, became the
+leading city of Greece. Athens slowly regained her fighting
+strength; her intellectual supremacy she had not lost.
+Socrates,[<a href="#note-4">4</a>] greatest of her sons, endeavored
+to teach a morality higher than earth had yet received, higher than
+his contemporaries could grasp. Plato gave to thought a scientific
+basis.</p>
+<p><a name="note-3"><!-- Note Anchor 3 --></a>[Footnote 3: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_5">Defeat of the Athenians at Syracuse</a></i>,
+page 48.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-4"><!-- Note Anchor 4 --></a>[Footnote 4: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_7">Condemnation and Death of Socrates</a></i>,
+page 87.]</p>
+<p>Then Macedonia, a border kingdom of ancient kinship to the
+Greeks, but not recognized as belonging among them, began to
+obtrude herself in their affairs, and at length won that leadership
+for which they had all contended. A hundred and fifty years had
+elapsed since the Greeks had stood united against Persia. During
+all that time their strength had been turned against themselves.
+Now at last the internecine wars were checked, and all the power of
+the sturdy race was directed by one man, Alexander, King of
+Macedon. Democracy had made the Greeks intellectually glorious, but
+politically weak. Monarchy rose from the ruin they had wrought.</p>
+<p>As though that ancient invasion of Xerxes had been a crime of
+yesterday, Alexander proclaimed his intention of avenging it; and
+the Greeks applauded. They understood Persia now far better than in
+the elder days; they saw what a feeble mass the huge heterogeneous
+empire had become. Its people were slaves, its soldiers
+mercenaries. The Greeks themselves had been hired to suppress more
+than one Persian rebellion,[<a href="#note-5">5</a>] and to foment
+these also. They had learned the enormous advantage their stronger
+personality gave them against the masses of sheeplike Asiatics.</p>
+<p><a name="note-5"><!-- Note Anchor 5 --></a>[Footnote 5: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_6">Retreat of the Ten Thousand Greeks</a></i>,
+page 68.]</p>
+<p>So it was in holiday mood that they followed Alexander, and in
+schoolboy roughness that they trampled on the civilization of the
+East. In fact, it is worth noting that the most vigorous resistance
+they encountered was not from the Persians, but from a remnant of
+the Semites, the merchants of the Phoenician city of Tyre.[<a href="#note-6">6</a>] In less than eight years, B.C. 331-323, Alexander
+overran the whole known world of the East,[<a href="#note-7">7</a>]
+only stopping when, on the border of India, his soldiers broke into
+open revolt, not against fighting, but against further
+wandering.</p>
+<p><a name="note-6"><!-- Note Anchor 6 --></a>[Footnote 6: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_10">Alexander Reduces Tyre</a></i>, page
+133.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-7"><!-- Note Anchor 7 --></a>[Footnote 7: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_11">The Battle of Arbela</a></i>, page 141.]</p>
+<p>If this invasion had been the mere outcome of one man's
+ambition, it might scarce be worth recording. But Alexander was
+only the topmost wave in the surging of a long imminent, inevitable
+racial movement. Its effect upon civilization, upon the world, was
+incalculably vast. Alexander and his successors were city-builders,
+administrators. As such they spread Greek culture, the Greek idea
+of individualism, over all their world.</p>
+<p>How deep was the change, made upon the imbruted Asiatics, we may
+perhaps question. Our own age has seen how much of education may be
+lavished on an inferior race without materially altering the brute
+instincts within. The building-up of the soul in man is not a
+matter of individuals, but of centuries. Yet in at least a
+superficial way Greek thought became the thought of all mankind. We
+may dismiss Alexander's savage conquests with a sigh of pity; but
+we cannot deny him recognition as a most potent teacher of the
+world.</p>
+<p>His empire did not last. It was in too obvious opposition to all
+that we have recognized as the Grecian spirit. At his death the
+same impulse seems to have stirred each one of his subordinates, to
+snatch for himself a kingdom from the confusion. Instead of one
+there were soon three, four, and then a dozen semi-Grecian states
+in Asia. The Greek element in each grew very faint.</p>
+<p>From this time onward Asia takes a less prominent place in world
+affairs. Her ancient leadership in the march of civilization had
+long been yielded to the Greeks. Now her semblance of military
+power disappeared as well. Only two further happenings in all Asia
+seem worth noting, down to the birth of Christ. One of these was
+the Tartar conquest of China, an event which coalesced the Tartars,
+helped make them a nation.[<a href="#note-8">8</a>] It was thus
+fraught with most disastrous consequences for the Europe of the
+future. The other was the revolt of the Hebrews under Judas
+Maccabaeus, against their Grecian rulers. This was a religious
+revolt, a religious war. Here for the first time we find a people
+who will believe, who can believe, in no god but their own, who
+will die sooner than give worship to another. We approach the
+borders of an age where the spirit is more valued than the body,
+where the mental is stronger than the physical, where facts are
+dominated by ideas.[<a href="#note-9">9</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-8"><!-- Note Anchor 8 --></a>[Footnote 8: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_9">Tartar Invasion of China</a></i>, page
+126.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-9"><!-- Note Anchor 9 --></a>[Footnote 9: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_16">Judas Maccabaeus Liberates Judea</a></i>,
+page 245.]</p>
+<p>Had Alexander even at the moment of his greatest strength
+directed his forces westward instead of east, he would have found a
+different world and encountered a sturdier resistance. He himself
+recognized this, and during his last years was gathering all the
+resources of his unwieldy empire, to hurl them against Carthage and
+against Italy. What the issue might have been no man can say.
+Alexander's death ended forever the impossible attempt to unite his
+race. Once more and until the end, Grecian strength was wasted
+against itself.</p>
+<p>This gave opportunity to the growing powers of the West.
+Alexander is scarce gone ere we hear Carthage boasting that the
+Mediterranean is but a private lake in her possession. She rules
+all Western Africa and Spain, Sardinia and Corsica. She masters the
+Greeks of Sicily, against whom Athens failed. Rome is compelled to
+sign treaties with her as an inferior.</p>
+<p class="center">THE GROWTH OF ROME</p>
+<p>Rome was only husbanding her strength; the little republic of
+B.C. 510 had grown much during the two centuries of Grecian
+splendor. Her people had become far better fitted for conquest than
+their eastern kinsmen. It is presumable that here too it was the
+difference of surroundings which had differentiated the race. The
+ancient Etrurian (non-Aryan) civilization on which the Latins
+intruded, was apparently more advanced than their own. For
+centuries their utmost prowess scarce sufficed to maintain their
+independence. Thus it was not possible for them to become too
+self-satisfied, to stand afar off and look down on their neighbors
+with Grecian scorn. The <i>ego</i> was less prominently developed;
+the necessity of mutual dependence and united action was more
+deeply taught. Their records display less of brilliancy, but more
+of patient persistency, than those of Greece, less of spectacular
+individualism, more of truly patriotic self-suppression. In Rome,
+even more than in Sparta, the "State" was everything. During the
+early days men found their highest glory in making their city
+glorious; their proudest boast was to be "citizens of Rome."</p>
+<p>To trace the slow steps by which the tiny republic grew to be
+mistress of all Italy would take too long. She settled her internal
+difficulties as all such difficulties must be settled, if the race
+is to progress; that is, she became more democratic.[<a href="#note-10">10</a>] As the lower classes advanced in knowledge and
+intelligence they insisted on a share of the government. They
+fought their way to it. They united Rome, mastered the other Latin
+cities, and admitted them to partnership in her power. She
+conquered the Etruscans and the Samnites. For a moment we find her
+almost overwhelmed by an inroad of the wild Celtic tribes from the
+forests of Central Europe;[<a href="#note-11">11</a>] but,
+fortunately for her, the other Italian states were equally crushed.
+It was weakness against weakness, and the Romans retained their
+foremost place.</p>
+<p><a name="note-10"><!-- Note Anchor 10 --></a>[Footnote 10: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_2">Institution and Fall of the Decemvirate in
+Rome</a></i>, page 1.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-11"><!-- Note Anchor 11 --></a>[Footnote 11: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_8">Brennus Burns Rome</a></i>, page 110.]</p>
+<p>Not till more than a century later were they brought into
+serious conflict with the Greeks. In the year B.C. 280, Pyrrhus,
+King of Epirus, who had won a temporary leadership over a portion
+of the Grecian land, undertook the conquest of the West.[<a href="#note-12">12</a>] Fifty years before, Alexander with far greater
+power might have been victorious over a feebler Rome. Pyrrhus
+failed completely. If the Romans had less dash and a less wide
+experience of varied warfare than his followers, they had far more
+of true, heroic endurance. The Greeks had reached that stage of
+individual culture where they were much too selfishly intelligent
+to be willing to die in battle. Pyrrhus withdrew from Italy.
+Grecian brilliancy was helpless against Roman strength of
+union.</p>
+<p><a name="note-12"><!-- Note Anchor 12 --></a>[Footnote 12: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_12">First Battle between Greeks and
+Romans</a></i>, page 166.]</p>
+<p>Then came the far more serious contest between Rome and
+Carthage.[<a href="#note-13">13</a>] Carthage was a Phoenician, a
+Semite state; and hers was the last, the most gigantic struggle
+made by Semitism to recover its waning superiority, to dominate the
+ancient world. Three times in three tremendous wars did she and
+Rome put forth their utmost strength against each other. Hannibal,
+perhaps the greatest military genius who ever lived, fought upon
+the side of Carthage. At one time Rome seemed crushed, helpless
+before him.[<a href="#note-14">14</a>] Yet in the end Rome
+won.[<a href="#note-15">15</a>] It was not by the brilliancy of her
+commanders, not by the superiority of her resources. It was the
+grim, cool courage of the Aryan mind, showing strongest and calmest
+when face to face with ruin.</p>
+<p><a name="note-13"><!-- Note Anchor 13 --></a>[Footnote 13: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_13">The Punic Wars</a></i>, page 179.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-14"><!-- Note Anchor 14 --></a>[Footnote 14: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_14">Battle of the Metaurus</a></i>, page
+195.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-15"><!-- Note Anchor 15 --></a>[Footnote 15: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_15">Scipio Africanus Crushes Hannibal at Zama
+and Subjugates Carthage</a></i>, page 224.]</p>
+<p>Our modern philosophers, being Aryan, assure us that the victory
+of Carthage would have been an irretrievable disaster to mankind;
+that her falsity, her narrow selfishness, her bloody inhumanity,
+would have stifled all progress; that her dominion would have been
+the tyranny of a few heartless masters over a world of tortured
+slaves. On the other hand, Rome up to this point had certainly been
+a generous mistress to her subjects. She had left them peace and
+prosperity among themselves; she had given them as much political
+freedom as was consistent with her sovereignty; she had wellnigh
+succeeded in welding all Italy into a Roman nation. It is
+noteworthy that the large majority of the Italian cities clung to
+her, even in the darkest straits to which she was reduced by
+Hannibal.</p>
+<p>Yet when the fall of her last great rival left Rome irresistible
+abroad, her methods changed. It is hard to see how even
+Carthaginians could have been more cruel, more grasping, more
+corrupt than the Roman rulers of the provinces. Having conquered
+the governments of the world, Rome had to face outbreak after
+outbreak from the unarmed, unsheltered masses of the people. Her
+barbarity drove them to mad despair. "Servile" wars, slave
+outbreaks are dotted over all the last century of the Roman
+Republic.</p>
+<p>The good, if there was any good, that Roman dominion brought the
+world at that period was the spreading of Greek culture across the
+western half of the world. As Rome mastered the Greek states one by
+one, their genius won a subtler triumph over the conqueror. Her
+generals recognized and admired a culture superior to their own.
+They carried off the statues of Greece for the adornment of their
+villas, and with equal eagerness they appropriated her manners and
+her thought, her literature and her gods.</p>
+<p>But this superficial culture could not save the Roman Republic
+from the dry-rot that sapped her vitals from within. As a mere
+matter of numbers, the actual citizens of Rome or even of the
+semi-Roman districts close around her were too few to continue
+fighting over all the vast empire they controlled. The sturdy
+peasant population of Italy slowly disappeared. The actual
+inhabitants of the capital came to consist of a few thousand vastly
+wealthy families, who held all the power, a few thousand more of
+poorer citizens dependent on the rich, and then a vast swarm of
+slaves and foreigners, feeders on the crumbs of the Roman
+table.</p>
+<p>In the battles against Carthage, the mass of Rome's armies had
+consisted of her own citizens or of allies closely united to them
+in blood and fortune. Her later victories were won by hired troops,
+men gathered from every clime and every race. Roman generals still
+might lead them, Roman laws environ them, Roman gold employ them.
+Yet the fact remained, that in these armies lay the strength of the
+Republic, no longer within her own walls, no longer in the stout
+hearts of her citizens.</p>
+<p>Perhaps the world itself was slow in seeing this degeneration.
+The Gracchi brothers tried to stem the tide, and they were slain,
+sacrificed by the nation they sought to save.[<a href="#note-16">16</a>] Cornelius Sulla was the man who completed, and
+at the same time made plain to all, the change that had been
+growing up. Having bitter grievances against his enemies in the
+capital, he appealed for redress, not to the Roman senate, not to
+the votes of the populace, but to the swords of the legions he
+commanded. Twice he marched his soldiers against Rome. He brushed
+aside the feeble resistance that was offered, and entered the city
+like a conqueror. The blood of those who had opposed his wishes
+flowed in streams. Three thousand senators and knights, the flower
+of the Roman aristocracy, were slain at his nod. Of the common folk
+and of the Italians throughout the peninsula, the slaughter was
+immeasurable. And when his bloody vengeance was at last glutted,
+Sulla ruled as an extravagant, conscienceless, licentious dictator.
+Rome had found a fitting master.</p>
+<p><a name="note-16"><!-- Note Anchor 16 --></a>[Footnote 16: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_17">The Gracchi and Their Reforms</a></i>, page
+259.]</p>
+<p class="center">THE STRUGGLE OF INDIVIDUALS FOR SUPREMACY</p>
+<p>The Roman people, the mighty race who had defied a Hannibal at
+their gates, were clearly come to an end. Sulla had proved the
+power of the Republic to be an empty shell. After his death, men
+used the empty forms awhile; but the surviving aristocrats had
+learned their awful lesson. They put no further faith in the
+strength of the city; they watched the armies and the generals;
+they intrigued for the various commands. It was an exciting game.
+Life and fortune were the stakes they risked; the prize—the
+mastery of a helpless world, waiting to be plundered.</p>
+<p>Pompey and Caesar proved the ablest players. Pompey overthrew
+what was left of the Greek Asiatic kingdoms and returned to Rome
+the idol of his troops, wellnigh as powerful as had been Sulla.
+Caesar, looking in his turn for a place to build up an army devoted
+to himself, selected Gaul and spent eight years in subduing and
+civilizing what was in a way the most important of all Rome's
+conquests. In Gaul he came in contact with another, fresher Aryan
+race.[<a href="#note-17">17</a>] Rome received new soldiers for her
+legions, new brains fitted to understand and carry on the work of
+civilizing the world.</p>
+<p><a name="note-17"><!-- Note Anchor 17 --></a>[Footnote 17: See
+<i><a href="#GAUL">Caesar Conquers Gaul</a></i>, page 267.]</p>
+<p>When Caesar, turning away from Britain,[<a href="#note-18">18</a>] marched these new-formed legions back against
+Rome, even as Sulla had done, it was almost like another Gallic
+invasion of the South. Pompey fled. He gathered his legions from
+Asia; and the world resounded once more to the clash of arms.</p>
+<p><a name="note-18"><!-- Note Anchor 18 --></a>[Footnote 18: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_18">Roman Invasion and Conquest of
+Britain</a></i>, page 285.]</p>
+<p>This, then, was the third and final stage of the huge struggle
+for empire. War was still the business of the world. Rome had first
+defeated foreign nations; then she had to defeat the uprisings of
+the subject peoples; now her chiefs, finding her exhausted, fought
+among themselves for the supreme power. Armies of Asiatics, armies
+of Gauls, each claiming to represent Rome, battled over her
+helpless body.</p>
+<p>Caesar was victorious. But when the conquering power which had
+once belonged to the united nation became embodied in a single man,
+there was a new way by which it might be checked. The government of
+Rome, like that of the Greek and Asiatic tyrannies, became a
+"despotism tempered by assassination"; and Caesar was its foremost
+victim.[<a href="#note-19">19</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-19"><!-- Note Anchor 19 --></a>[Footnote 19: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_20">Assassination of Caesar</a></i>, page
+313.]</p>
+<p>His death did not stop the fascinating gamble for empire. It
+only added one more move to the possible complexities of the game.
+The lesser players had their chance. They intrigued and they
+fought. Egypt, the last remaining civilized state outside of Rome,
+was drawn into the whirlpool also.[<a href="#note-20">20</a>]
+Cleopatra and Antony acted their reckless parts, and at length out
+of the world-wide tumult emerged "young Octavius," to assume his
+<i>r&ocirc;le</i> as "Augustus Caesar," acknowledged emperor of the
+world.[<a href="#note-21">21</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-20"><!-- Note Anchor 20 --></a>[Footnote 20: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_19">Cleopatra's Conquest of Caesar and
+Antony</a></i>, page 295.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-21"><!-- Note Anchor 21 --></a>[Footnote 21: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_21">Rome Becomes a Monarchy</a></i>, page
+333.]</p>
+<p>Note, however, that the term "world" is still one of boast, not
+truth. Emperor over many men, Augustus was; but the powers of
+nature still shut many races safe beyond his mastery. The ocean
+bounded his dominion on the west; the deserts to the south and
+east; the German forests to the north. These last he did essay to
+conquer, but they proved beyond him. The wild German tribes having
+no cities, which they must defend at any cost, could afford to flee
+or hide. Choosing their own time and place they rose suddenly,
+smote the legions of Augustus, and melted into the wilderness
+again.[<a href="#note-22">22</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-22"><!-- Note Anchor 22 --></a>[Footnote 22: See
+<i><a href="#RULE4_22">Germans Under Arminius Revolt against
+Rome</a></i>, page 362.]</p>
+<p>Rome was checked at last. No civilized nation had been able to
+stand against her; but the wild tribes of the Germans and the
+Parthians did. Barbarism had still by far the larger portion of the
+world wherein to live and develop, and gather brain and brawn. Rome
+could not conquer the wilderness.</p>
+<p>(For the next section of this general survey see Volume
+III.)</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="RULE4_2"></a>INSTITUTION AND FALL OF THE DECEMVIRATE IN ROME</h2>
+<p class="center">B.C. 450</p>
+<p class="center">HENRY G. LIDDELL</p>
+<p class="intros">When wars and pestilence had laid a heavy burden
+upon the Roman people, there appears to have been a period in which
+internal commotions and civil strife were stilled, and the quarrels
+of patricians and plebeians gave way to temporary truce. On the
+inevitable renewal of the old struggle the college of tribunes
+adopted a measure favorable to the plebeians in so far as it
+provided means for checking the abuse of power on the part of
+consuls in punishing members of that class in connection with the
+prosecution of suits against them.</p>
+<p class="intros">The passage of this measure had the effect of
+reopening former conflicts, the patrician elements becoming greatly
+alarmed at what they regarded as a fresh encroachment upon their
+hereditary rights. The contest was long and bitter, each side
+either bringing forward or rejecting again and again the same
+measures or the same representatives.</p>
+<p class="intros">Finally, compromises were made, and in the year
+B.C. 452 a commission of ten men, called <i>decemvirs</i>,
+constituting the <i>Decemvirate</i>, was chosen, consisting wholly
+of patricians, who entered with great efficiency upon the discharge
+of legislative duties which resulted in the production of a new
+code. This was approved by the senate and by the popular
+representatives, and was published in the form of ten copper plates
+or tables, which were affixed to the speaker's pulpit in the Forum.
+Among the new decemvirs appointed in the year B.C. 450 were several
+plebeians, the first official representatives of the entire people
+who were chosen from that class.</p>
+<p>The patrician burgesses endeavored to wrest independence from
+the "plebs" after the battle of Lake Regillus; and the latter,
+ruined by constant wars with the neighboring nations, being
+compelled to make good their losses by borrowing money from
+patrician creditors, and liable to become bondsmen in default of
+payment, at length deserted the city, and only returned on
+condition of being protected by tribunes of their own; they then,
+by the firmness of Publilius Volero and Lætorius, obtained
+the right of electing these tribunes at their own assembly, the
+"Comitia of the Tribes." Finally the great consul Spurius Cassius
+endeavored to relieve the commonalty by an agrarian law, so as to
+better their condition permanently.</p>
+<p>The execution of the Agrarian law was constantly evaded. But on
+the conquest of Antium from the Volscians, in the year B.C. 468, a
+colony was sent thither, and this was one of the first examples of
+a distribution of public land to poorer citizens; which answered
+two purposes—the improvement of their condition, and the
+defence of the place against the enemy.</p>
+<p>Nor did the tribunes, now made altogether independent of the
+patricians, fail to assert their power. One of the first persons
+who felt the force of their arm was the second Appius Claudius.
+This Sabine noble, following his father's example, had, after the
+departure of the Fabii, led the opposition to the Publilian law.
+When he took the field against the Volscians, his soldiers would
+not fight, and the stern commander put to death every tenth man in
+his legions. For the acts of his consulship he was brought to trial
+by the tribunes M. Duillius and C. Sicinius. Seeing that conviction
+was certain, the proud patrician avoided humiliation by
+suicide.</p>
+<p>Nevertheless the border wars still continued, and the plebeians
+suffered much. To the evils of debt and want were added about this
+time the horrors of pestilential disease, which visited the Roman
+territory several times at that period. In one year (B.C. 464) the
+two consuls, two of the four augurs, and the curio Maximus, who was
+the head of all the patricians, were swept off—a fact which
+implies the death of a vast number of less distinguished persons.
+The government was administered by the plebeian aediles, under the
+control of senatorial interreges. The Volscians and Aequians
+ravaged the country up to the walls of Rome; and the safety of the
+city must be attributed to the Latins and Hernici, not to the men
+of Rome.</p>
+<p>Meantime the tribunes had in vain demanded a full execution of
+the Agrarian law. But in the year B.C. 462, one of the Sacred
+College, by name C. Terentilius Harsa, came forward with a bill,
+the object of which was to give the plebeians a surer footing in
+the state. This man perceived that as long as the consuls retained
+their almost despotic power, and were elected by the influence of
+the patricians, this order had it in its power to thwart all
+measures, even after they were passed, which tended to advance the
+interests of the plebeians. He therefore no longer demanded the
+execution of the Agrarian law, but proposed that a commission of
+ten men (<i>decemviri</i>) should be appointed to draw up
+constitutional laws for regulating the future relations of the
+patricians and plebeians.</p>
+<p>The Reform Bill of Terentilius was, as might be supposed,
+vehemently resisted by the patrician burgesses. But the plebeians
+supported their champion no less warmly. For five consecutive years
+the same tribunes were reelected and in vain endeavored to carry
+the bill. This was the time which least fulfils the character which
+we have claimed for the Roman people—patience and temperance,
+combined with firmness in their demands. To prevent the tribunes
+from carrying their law, the younger patricians thronged to the
+assemblies and interfered with all proceedings; Terentilius, they
+said, was endeavoring to confound all distinction between the
+orders. Some scenes occurred which seem to show that both sides
+were prepared for civil war.</p>
+<p>In the year B.C. 460 the city was alarmed by hearing that the
+Capitol had been seized by a band of Sabines and exiled Romans,
+under the command of one Herdonius. Who these exiles were is
+uncertain. But we know, by the legend of Cincinnatus, that
+Cæso Quinctius, the son of that old hero, was an exile. It
+has been inferred, therefore, that he was among them, that the
+tribunes had succeeded in banishing from the city the most violent
+of their opponents, and that these persons had not scrupled to
+associate themselves with Sabines to recover their homes. The
+consul Valerius, aided by the Latins of Tusculum, levied an army to
+attack the insurgents, on condition that after success the law
+should be fully considered. The exiles were driven out and
+Herdonius was killed. But the consul fell in the assault, and the
+patricians, led by old Cincinnatus, refused to fulfil his
+promises.</p>
+<p>Then followed the danger of the Æquian invasion, to which
+the legend of Cincinnatus, as given above, refers. The stern old
+man used his dictatorial power quite as much to crush the tribunes
+at home as to conquer the enemies abroad.</p>
+<p>One of the historians tells us that in this period of seditious
+violence many of the leading plebeians were assassinated (as the
+tribune Genucius had been), and to this time only can be attributed
+the horrible story, mentioned by more than one writer, that nine
+tribunes were burned alive at the instance of their colleague
+Mucius. Society was utterly disorganized. The two orders were on
+the brink of civil war. It seemed as if Rome was to become the city
+of discord, not of law. Happily, there were moderate men in both
+orders. Now, as at the time of the secession, their voices
+prevailed, and a compromise was arranged.</p>
+<p>In the eighth year after the first promulgation of the
+Terentilian law, this compromise was made (B.C. 454). The law
+itself was no longer pressed by the tribunes. The patricians, on
+the other hand, so far gave way as to allow three men
+(<i>triumviri</i>) to be appointed, who were to travel into Greece,
+and bring back a copy of the laws of Solon, as well as the laws and
+institutes of any other Greek states which they might deem good and
+useful. These were to be the groundwork of a new code of laws, such
+as should give fair and equal rights to both orders and restrain
+the arbitrary power of the patrician magistrates.</p>
+<p>Another concession made by the patrician lords was a small
+installment of the Agrarian law. L. Icilius, tribune of the plebs,
+proposed that all the Aventine hill, being public land, should be
+made over to the plebs, to be their quarter forever, as the other
+hills were occupied by the patricians and their clients. This hill,
+it will be remembered, was consecrated to the goddess Diana (Jana),
+and though included in the walls of Servius, was yet not within the
+sacred limits (<i>pomoerium</i>) of the patrician city. After some
+opposition the patricians suffered this Icilian law to pass, in
+hopes of soothing the anger of the plebeians. The land was
+parcelled out into building-sites. But as there was not enough to
+give a separate plot to every plebeian householder that wished to
+live in the city, one allotment was assigned to several persons,
+who built a joint house <i>flats</i> or stories, each of which was
+inhabited—as in Edinburgh and in most foreign towns—by
+a separate family.</p>
+<p>The three men who had been sent into Greece returned in the
+third year (B.C. 452). They found the city free from domestic
+strife, partly from the concessions already made, partly from
+expectation of what was now to follow, and partly from the effect
+of a pestilence which had broken out anew.</p>
+<p>So far did moderate counsels now prevail among the patricians,
+that after some little delay they agreed to suspend the ordinary
+government by the consuls and other officers, and in their stead to
+appoint a council of ten, who were, during their existence, to be
+intrusted with all the functions of government. But they were to
+have a double duty: they were not only an administrative, but also
+a legislative council. On the one hand, they were to conduct the
+government, administer justice, and command the armies. On the
+other, they were to draw up a code of laws by which equal justice
+was to be dealt out to the whole Roman people, to patricians and
+plebeians alike, and by which especially the authority to be
+exercised by the consuls, or chief magistrates, was to be clearly
+determined and settled.</p>
+<p>This supreme council of ten, or decemvirs, was first appointed
+in the year B.C. 450. They were all patricians. At their head stood
+Appius Claudius and T. Genucius, who had already been chosen
+consuls for this memorable year. This Appius Claudius (the third of
+his name) was son and grandson of those two patrician chiefs who
+had opposed the leaders of the plebeians so vehemently in the
+matter of the tribunate. But he affected a different conduct from
+his sires. He was the most popular man of the whole council, and
+became in fact the sovereign of Rome. At first he used his great
+power well, and the first year's government of the decemvirs was
+famed for justice and moderation.</p>
+<p>They also applied themselves diligently to their great work of
+law-making, and before the end of the year had drawn up a code of
+ten tables, which were posted in the Forum, that all citizens might
+examine them and suggest amendments to the decemvirs. After due
+time thus spent, the ten tables were confirmed and made law at the
+Comitia of the Centuries. By this code equal justice was to be
+administered to both orders without distinction of persons.</p>
+<p>At the close of the year the first decemvirs laid down their
+office, just as the consuls and other officers of state had been
+accustomed to do before. They were succeeded by a second set of
+ten, who, for the next year at least, were to conduct the
+government like their predecessors. The only one of the old
+decemvirs reelected was Appius Claudius. The patricians, indeed,
+endeavored to prevent even this, and to this end he was himself
+appointed to preside at the new elections; for it was held
+impossible for a chief magistrate to return his own name, when he
+was himself presiding. But Appius scorned precedents. He returned
+himself as elected, together with nine others, men of no name,
+while two of the great Quinctian gens, who offered themselves, were
+rejected.</p>
+<p>Of the new decemvirs, it is certain that three—and it is
+probable that five—were plebeians. Appius, with the plebeian
+Oppius, held the judicial office, and remained in the city; and
+these two seem to have been regarded as the chiefs. The other six
+commanded the armies and discharged the duties previously assigned
+to the quæstors and ædiles.</p>
+<p>The first decemvirs had earned the respect and esteem of their
+fellow-citizens. The new Council of Ten deserved the hatred which
+has ever since cloven to their name. Appius now threw off the mask
+which he had so long worn, and assumed his natural
+character—the same as had distinguished his sire and
+grandsire, of unhappy memory. He became an absolute despot. His
+brethren in the council offered no hinderance to his will; even the
+plebeian decemvirs, bribed by power, fell into his way of action
+and supported his tyranny. They each had twelve lictors, who
+carried fasces with the axes in them the symbol of absolute power,
+as in the times of the kings; so that it was said, "Rome had now
+twelve Tarquins instead of one, and one hundred and twenty armed
+lictors instead of twelve!" All freedom of speech ceased. The
+senate was seldom called together. The leading men, patricians and
+plebeians, left the city. The outward aspect of things was that of
+perfect calm and peace, but an opportunity only was wanting for the
+discontent which was smouldering in all men's hearts to break out
+and show itself.</p>
+<p>By the end of the year the decemvirs had added two more tables
+to the code, so that there were now twelve tables. But these two
+last were of a most oppressive and arbitrary kind, devoted chiefly
+to restore the ancient privileges of the patrician caste. Of these
+tables, it should be observed that they were made laws not by the
+vote of the people, but by the simple edict of the decemvirs.</p>
+<p>It was, no doubt, expected that the second decemvirs also would
+have held <i>comitia</i> for the election of successors. But Appius
+and his colleagues showed no such intention, and when the year came
+to a close they continued to hold office as if they had been
+reelected. So firmly did their power seem to be established that we
+hear of no endeavor being made to induce them to resign.</p>
+<p>In the course of this next year (B.C. 449), the border wars were
+renewed. On the north the Sabines, and the Æquians on the
+northeast, invaded the Roman country at the same time. The latter
+penetrated as far as Mount Algidus, as in B.C. 458, when they were
+routed by old Cincinnatus. The decemvirs probably, like the
+patrician burgesses in former times, regarded these inroads not
+without satisfaction; for they turned away the mind of the people
+from their sufferings at home. Yet from these very wars sprung the
+events which overturned their power and destroyed themselves.</p>
+<p>Two armies were levied, one to check the Sabines, the other to
+oppose the Æquians, and these were commanded by the six
+military decemvirs. Appius and Oppius remained to administer
+affairs at home. But there was no spirit in the armies. Both were
+defeated; and that which was opposed to the Æquians was
+compelled to take refuge within the walls of Tusculum.</p>
+<p>Then followed two events which were preserved in well-known
+legends, and which give the popular narrative of the manner in
+which the power of the decemvirs was at last overthrown.</p>
+<p>LEGEND OF SICCIUS DENTATUS</p>
+<p>In the army sent against the Sabines, Siccius Dentatus was known
+as the bravest man. He was then serving as a centurion; he had
+fought in one hundred and twenty battles; he had slain eight
+champions in single combat; had saved the lives of fourteen
+citizens; had received forty wounds, all in front; had followed in
+nine triumphal processions, and had won crowns and decorations
+without number. This gallant veteran had taken an active part in
+the civil contests between the two orders, and was now suspected,
+by the decemvirs commanding the Sabine army, of plotting against
+them. Accordingly they determined to get rid of him; and for this
+end they sent him out as if to reconnoitre, with a party of
+soldiers, who were secretly instructed to murder him. Having
+discovered their design, he set his back against a rock and
+resolved to sell his life dearly. More than one of his assailants
+fell and the rest stood at bay around him, not venturing to come
+within sword's length, when one wretch climbed up the rock behind
+and crushed the brave old man with a massive stone. But the manner
+of his death could not be hidden from the army, and the generals
+only prevented an outbreak by honoring him with a magnificent
+funeral.</p>
+<p>Such was the state of things in the Sabine army.</p>
+<p>LEGEND OF VIRGINIA[<a href="#note-23">23</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-23"><!-- Note Anchor 23 --></a>[Footnote 23:
+Dionysius is the authority for this legend.]</p>
+<p>The other army had a still grosser outrage to complain of. In
+this there was a notable centurion, Virginius by name. His daughter
+Virginia, just ripening into womanhood, beautiful as the day, was
+betrothed to L. Icilius, the tribune who had carried the law for
+allotting the Aventine hill to the plebeians. Appius Claudius, the
+decemvir, saw her and lusted to make her his own. And with this
+intent he ordered one of his clients, M. Claudius by name, to lay
+hands upon her as she was going to her school in the Forum, and to
+claim her as his slave. The man did so; and when the cries of her
+nurse brought a crowd round them, M. Claudius insisted on taking
+her before the decemvir, in order, as he said, to have the case
+fairly tried. Her friends consented; and no sooner had Appius heard
+the matter than he gave judgment that the maiden should be
+delivered up to the claimant, who should be bound to produce her in
+case her alleged father appeared to gainsay the claim. Now this
+judgment was directly against one of the laws of the twelve tables,
+which Appius himself had framed; for therein it was provided that
+any person being at freedom should continue free till it was proved
+that such person was a slave. Icilius, therefore, with Numitorius,
+the uncle of the maiden, boldly argued against the legality of the
+judgment, and at length Appius, fearing a tumult, agreed to leave
+the girl in their hands on condition of their giving bail to bring
+her before him next morning; and then, if Virginius did not appear,
+he would at once, he said, give her up to her pretended master. To
+this Icilius consented, but he delayed giving bail, pretending that
+he could not procure it readily; and in the mean time he sent off a
+secret message to the camp on Algidus, to inform Virginius of what
+had happened. As soon as the bail was given, Appius also sent a
+message to the decemvirs in command of that army, ordering them to
+refuse leave of absence to Virginius. But when this last message
+arrived, Virginius was already halfway on his road to Rome; for the
+distance was not more than twenty miles, and he had started at
+nightfall.</p>
+<p>Next morning, early, Virginius entered the Forum, leading his
+daughter by the hand, both clad in mean attire. A great number of
+friends and matrons attended him, and he went about among the
+people entreating them to support him against the tyranny of
+Appius. So when Appius came to take his place on the judgment seat
+he found the Forum full of people, all friendly to Virginius and
+his cause. But he inherited the boldness as well as the vices of
+his sires, and though he saw Virginius standing there ready to
+prove that he was the maiden's father, he at once gave judgment,
+against his own law, that Virginia should be given up to M.
+Claudius till it should be proved that she was free. The wretch
+came up to seize her, and the lictors kept the people from him.
+Virginius, now despairing of deliverance, begged Appius to allow
+him to ask the maiden whether she were indeed his daughter or not.
+"If," said he, "I find I am not her father, I shall bear her loss
+the lighter." Under this pretence he drew her aside to a spot upon
+the northern side of the Forum, afterward called the "<i>Nova
+Tabernce</i>" and here, snatching up a knife from a butcher's
+stall, he cried: "In this way only can I keep thee free!"—and
+so saying, stabbed her to the heart. Then he turned to the tribunal
+and said, "On thee, Appius, and on thy head be this blood!" Appius
+cried out to seize "the murderer," but the crowd made way for
+Virginius, and he passed through them holding up the bloody knife,
+and went out at the gate and made straight for the army. There,
+when the soldiers had heard his tale, they at once abandoned their
+decemviral generals and marched to Rome. They were soon followed by
+the other army from the Sabine frontier; for to them Icilius had
+gone, and Numitorius; and they found willing ears among men who
+were already enraged by the murder of old Siccius Dentatus. So the
+two armies joined their banners, elected new generals, and encamped
+upon the Aventine hill, the quarter of the plebeians.</p>
+<p>Meantime the people at home had risen against Appius, and after
+driving him from the Forum they joined their armed fellow-citizens
+upon the Aventine. There the whole body of the commons, armed and
+unarmed, hung like a dark cloud ready to burst upon the city.</p>
+<p>Whatever may be the truth of the legends of Siccius and
+Virginia, there can be no doubt that the conduct of the decemvirs
+had brought matters to the verge of civil war. At this juncture the
+senate met, and the moderate party so far prevailed as to send
+their own leaders, M. Horatius Barbatus and L. Valerius Potitus, to
+negotiate with the insurgents. The plebeians were ready to listen
+to the voices of these men; for they remembered that the consuls of
+the first year of the Republic, when the patrician burgesses were
+friends to the plebeians, were named Valerius and Horatius; and so
+they appointed M. Duillius, a former tribune, to be their
+spokesman. But no good came of it; and Duillius persuaded the
+plebeians to leave the city, and once more to occupy the Sacred
+Mount.</p>
+<p>Then remembrances of the great secession came back upon the
+minds of the patricians, and the senate, observing the calm and
+resolute bearing of the plebeian leaders, compelled the decemvirs
+to resign, and sent back Valerius and Horatius to negotiate
+anew.</p>
+<p>The leaders of the plebeians demanded: First, that the
+tribuneship should be restored, and the <i>Comitia Tributa</i>
+recognized; secondly, that a right of appeal to the people against
+the power of the supreme magistrate should be secured; thirdly,
+that full indemnity should be granted to the movers and promoters
+of the late secession; fourthly, that the decemvirs should be burnt
+alive.</p>
+<p>Of these demands the deputies of the senate agreed to the three
+first; but the fourth, they said, was unworthy of a free people; it
+was a piece of tyranny, as bad as any of the worst acts of the late
+government; and it was needless, because anyone who had reason of
+complaint against the late decemvirs might proceed against them
+according to law. The plebeians listened to these words of wisdom,
+and withdrew their savage demand. The other three were confirmed by
+the fathers, and the plebeians returned to their quarters on the
+Aventine. Here they held an assembly according to their tribes, in
+which the pontifex Maximus presided; and they now, for the first
+time, elected ten tribunes—first Virginius, Numitorius, and
+Icilius, then Duillius and six others: so full were their minds of
+the wrong done to the daughter of Virginius; so entirely was it the
+blood of young Virginia that overthrew the decemvirs, even as that
+of Lucretia had driven out the Tarquins.</p>
+<p>The plebeians had now returned to the city, headed by their ten
+tribunes, a number which was never again altered so long as the
+tribunate continued in existence. It remained for the patricians to
+redeem the pledges given by their agents Valerius and Horatius on
+the other demands of the plebeian leaders.</p>
+<p>The first thing to settle was the election of the supreme
+magistrates. The decemvirs had fallen, and the state was without
+any executive government.</p>
+<p>It has been supposed, as we have said above, that the government
+of the decemvirs was intended to be perpetual. The patricians gave
+up their consuls, and the plebeians their tribunes, on condition
+that each order was to be admitted to an equal share in the new
+decemviral college. But the tribunes were now restored in augmented
+number, and it was but natural that the patricians should insist on
+again occupying all places in the supreme magistracy. By common
+consent, as it would seem, the Comitia of the Centuries met and
+elected to the consulate the two patricians who had shown
+themselves the friends of both orders: L. Valerius Potitus and M.
+Horatius Barbatus. Thus ended the government of the
+decemvirate.</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="RULE4_3"></a>PERICLES RULES IN ATHENS</h2>
+<p class="center">B.C. 444</p>
+<p class="center">PLUTARCH</p>
+<p class="intros">Under the sway of Pericles many changes occurred
+in the civil affairs of Athens affecting the constitution of the
+state and the character and administration of its laws. Events of
+magnitude marked the struggles of the Athenians with other powers.
+The development of art and learning was carried to an unprecedented
+height, and the Age of Pericles is the most illustrious in ancient
+history.</p>
+<p class="intros">Pericles began his career by opposing the
+aristocratic party of Athens, led by Cimon. In this policy he was
+aided by complications arising with Sparta and Argos. Directing his
+attack particularly against the Areopagus, he succeeded in greatly
+modifying the composition of that body and diminishing its powers.
+The exile of Cimon, the strengthening of Athens by new alliances,
+and the vigorous prosecution of wars against Persia and Corinth
+combined to establish his supremacy, which was still further
+confirmed by the building of the long walls connecting Athens with
+the sea, and by the acquisition of neighboring territory.</p>
+<p class="intros">A favorable convention was concluded with Persia,
+Athens resumed a state of general peace, and Pericles found himself
+at the head of a powerful empire formed out of a confederacy
+previously existing. The strength of this empire was indeed soon
+impaired by ill-judged military movements, against the advice of
+Pericles himself, but during six years of peace which followed he
+succeeded in perfecting a state whose preeminence in intellectual,
+political, and artistic development has had no rival.</p>
+<p class="intros">In the later wars of Athens the renown of
+Pericles was still further enhanced; but his chief glory arose from
+the architectural adornment of the city, and especially from the
+building of the Parthenon and the splendid decoration of the
+Acropolis; while his work of judicial reform remains an added
+monument to his fame, and among the masters of eloquence his
+orations preserve for him a foremost place.</p>
+<p>Pericles was of the tribe Acamantis, and of the township of
+Cholargos, and was descended from the noblest families in Athens,
+on both his father's and mother's side. His father, Xanthippus,
+defeated the Persian generals at Mycale, while his mother,
+Agariste, was a descendant of Clisthenes, who drove the sons of
+Pisistratus out of Athens, put an end to their despotic rule, and
+established a new constitution admirably calculated to reconcile
+all parties and save the country. She dreamed that she had brought
+forth a lion, and a few days afterward was delivered of Pericles.
+His body was symmetrical, but his head was long, out of all
+proportion; for which reason, in nearly all his statues he is
+represented wearing a helmet, as the sculptors did not wish, I
+suppose, to reproach him with this blemish. The Attic poets called
+him squill-head, and the comic poet Cratinus, in his play
+<i>Chirones</i>, says;</p>
+<p class="poetry">"From Chronos old and faction<br/>
+ Is sprung a tyrant dread,<br/>
+And all Olympus calls him<br/>
+ The man-compelling head."</p>
+<p>And again in the play of <i>Nemesis</i>:</p>
+<p class="poetry">"Come, hospitable Zeus, with lofty head."</p>
+<p>Teleclides, too, speaks of him as sitting</p>
+<p class="poetry">"Bowed down<br/>
+ With a dreadful frown,<br/>
+Because matters of state have gone wrong,<br/>
+ Until at last,<br/>
+ From his head so vast,<br/>
+His ideas burst forth in a throng."</p>
+<p>And Eupolis, in his play of <i>Demoi</i>, asking questions about
+each of the great orators as they come up from the other world one
+after the other, when at last Pericles ascends, says:</p>
+<p class="poetry">"The great headpiece of those below."</p>
+<p>Most writers tell us that his tutor in music was Damon, whose
+name they say should be pronounced with the first syllable short.
+Aristotle, however, says that he studied under Pythoclides. This
+Damon, it seems, was a sophist of the highest order, who used the
+name of music to conceal this accomplishment from the world, but
+who really trained Pericles for his political contests just as a
+trainer prepares an athlete for the games. However, Damon's use of
+music as a pretext did not impose upon the Athenians, who banished
+him by ostracism, as a busybody and lover of despotism.</p>
+<p>Pericles greatly admired Anaxagoras, and became deeply
+interested in grand speculations, which gave him a haughty spirit
+and a lofty style of oratory far removed from vulgarity and low
+buffoonery, and also an imperturbable gravity of countenance and a
+calmness of demeanor and appearance which no incident could disturb
+as he was speaking, while the tone of his voice never showed that
+he heeded any interruption. These advantages greatly impressed the
+people. The poet Ion, however, says that Pericles was overbearing
+and insolent in conversation, and that his pride had in it a great
+deal of contempt for others, while he praises Cimon's civil,
+sensible, and polished address. But we may disregard Ion as a mere
+dramatic poet who always sees in great men something upon which to
+exercise his satiric vein; whereas Zeno used to invite those who
+called the haughtiness of Pericles a mere courting of popularity
+and affectation of grandeur, to court popularity themselves in the
+same fashion, since the acting of such a part might insensibly
+mould their dispositions until they resembled that of their
+model.</p>
+<p>Pericles when young greatly feared the people. He had a certain
+personal likeness to the despot Pisistratus; and as his own voice
+was sweet, and he was ready and fluent in speech, old men who had
+known Pisistratus were struck by his resemblance to him. He was
+also rich, of noble birth, and had powerful friends, so that he
+feared he might be banished by ostracism, and consequently held
+aloof from politics, but proved himself a brave and daring soldier
+in the wars. But when Aristides was dead, Themistocles banished,
+and Cimon generally absent on distant campaigns, Pericles engaged
+in public affairs, taking the popular side, that of the poor and
+many, against that of the rich and few; quite contrary to his own
+feelings, which were entirely aristocratic. He feared, it seems,
+that he might be suspected of a design to make himself despot, and
+seeing that Cimon took the side of the nobility, and was much
+beloved by them, he betook himself to the people, as a means of
+obtaining safety for himself, and a strong party to combat that of
+Cimon. He immediately altered his mode of life; was never seen in
+any street except that which led to the market-place and the
+national assembly, and declined all invitations to dinner and such
+like social gatherings. But Pericles feared to make himself too
+common even with the people, and only addressed them after long
+intervals; not speaking upon every subject, and not constantly
+addressing them, but, as Critolaus says, keeping himself like the
+Salaminian trireme for great crises, and allowing his friends and
+the other orators to manage matters of less moment.</p>
+<p>Wishing to adopt a style of speaking consonant with his haughty
+manner and lofty spirit, Pericles made free use of the instrument
+which Anaxagoras, as it were, put into his hand, and often tinged
+his oratory with natural philosophy. He far surpassed all others by
+using this "lofty intelligence and power of universal
+consummation," as the divine Plato calls it; in addition to his
+natural advantages, adorning his oratory with apt illustrations
+drawn from physical science. For this reason some think that he was
+nicknamed the Olympian; though some refer this to his improvement
+of the city by new and beautiful buildings, and others from his
+power both as a politician and a general. It is not by any means
+unlikely that these causes all combined to produce the name.</p>
+<p>Pericles was very cautious about his words, and, whenever he
+ascended the tribune to speak, used first to pray to the gods that
+nothing unfitted for the present occasion might fall from his lips.
+He left no writings, except the measures which he brought forward,
+and very few of his sayings are recorded.</p>
+<p>Thucydides represents the constitution under Pericles as a
+democracy in name, but really an aristocracy, because the
+government was all in the hands of one leading citizen. But as many
+other writers tell us that, during his administration, the people
+received grants of land abroad, and were indulged with dramatic
+entertainments, and payments for their services, in consequence of
+which they fell into bad habits, and became extravagant and
+licentious, instead of sober hard-working people as they had been
+before, let us consider the history of this change, viewing it by
+the light of the facts themselves. First of all, Pericles had to
+measure himself with Cimon, and to transfer the affections of the
+people from Cimon to himself. As he was not so rich a man as Cimon,
+who used from his own ample means to give a dinner daily to any
+poor Athenian who required it, clothe aged persons, and take away
+the fences round his property, so that anyone might gather the
+fruit, Pericles, unable to vie with him in this, turned his
+attention to a distribution of the public funds among the people,
+at the suggestion, we are told by Aristotle, of Damonides of Oia.
+By the money paid for public spectacles, for citizens acting as
+jurymen, and other paid offices, and largesses, he soon won over
+the people to his side, so that he was able to use them in his
+attack upon the senate of the Areopagus, of which he himself was
+not a member, never having been chosen <i>archon</i>, or
+<i>thesmothete</i>, or <i>king archon</i>, or <i>polemarch</i>.
+These offices had from ancient times been obtained by lot, and it
+was only through them that those who had approved themselves in the
+discharge of them were advanced to the Areopagus. For this reason
+it was that Pericles, when he gained strength with the populace,
+destroyed this senate, making Ephialtes bring forward a bill which
+restricted its judicial powers, while he himself succeeded in
+getting Cimon banished by ostracism, as a friend of Sparta and a
+hater of the people, although he was second to no Athenian in birth
+or fortune, and won most brilliant victories over the Persians, and
+had filled Athens with plunder and spoils of war. So great was the
+power of Pericles with the common people.</p>
+<p>One of the provisions of ostracism was that the person banished
+should remain in exile for ten years. But during this period the
+Lacedæmonians with a great force invaded the territory of
+Tanagra, and, as the Athenians at once marched out to attack them,
+Cimon came back from exile, took his place in full armor among the
+ranks of his own tribe, and hoped by distinguishing himself in the
+battle among his fellow-citizens to prove the falsehood of the
+Laconian sympathies with which he had been charged. However, the
+friends of Pericles drove him away, as an exile. On the other hand,
+Pericles fought more bravely in that battle than he had ever fought
+before, and surpassed everyone in reckless daring. The friends of
+Cimon also, whom Pericles had accused of Laconian leanings, fell,
+all together, in their ranks; and the Athenians felt great sorrow
+for their treatment of Cimon, and a great longing for his
+restoration, now that they had lost a great battle on the frontier,
+and expected to be hard pressed during the summer by the
+Lacedaemonians. Pericles, perceiving this, lost no time in
+gratifying the popular wish, but himself proposed the decree for
+his recall; and Cimon on his return reconciled the two states, for
+he was on familiar terms with the Spartans, who were hated by
+Pericles and the other leaders of the common people. Some say that,
+before Cimon's recall by Pericles, a secret compact was made with
+him by Elpinice, Cimon's sister, that Cimon was to proceed on
+foreign service against the Persians with a fleet of two hundred
+ships, while Pericles was to retain his power in the city. It is
+also said that, when Cimon was being tried for his life, Elpinice
+softened the resentment of Pericles, who was one of those appointed
+to impeach him. When Elpinice came to beg her brother's life of
+him, he answered with a smile, "Elpinice, you are too old to meddle
+in affairs of this sort." But, for all that, he spoke only once,
+for form's sake, and pressed Cimon less than any of his other
+prosecutors. How, then, can one put any faith in Idomeneus, when he
+accuses Pericles of procuring the assassination of his friend and
+colleague Ephialtes, because he was jealous of his reputation? This
+seems an ignoble calumny which Idomeneus has drawn from some
+obscure source to fling at a man who, no doubt, was not faultless,
+but of a generous spirit and noble mind, incapable of entertaining
+so savage and brutal a design. Ephialtes was disliked and feared by
+the nobles, and was inexorable in punishing those who wronged the
+people; wherefore his enemies had him assassinated by means of
+Aristodicus of Tanagra. This we are told by Aristotle. Cimon died
+in Cyprus while in command of the Athenian forces.</p>
+<p>The nobles now perceived that Pericles was the most important
+man in the state, and far more powerful than any other citizen;
+wherefore, as they still hoped to check his authority, and not
+allow him to be omnipotent, they set up Thucydides, of the township
+of Alopecae, as his rival, a man of good sense and a relative of
+Cimon, but less of a warrior and more of a politician, who, by
+watching his opportunities, and opposing Pericles in debate, soon
+brought about a balance of power. He did not allow the nobles to
+mix themselves up with the people in the public assembly as they
+had been wont to do, so that their dignity was lost among the
+masses; but he collected them into a separate body, and by thus
+concentrating their strength was able to use it to counterbalance
+that of the other party. From the beginning these two factions had
+been but imperfectly welded together, because their tendencies were
+different; but now the struggle for power between Pericles and
+Thucydides drew a sharp line of demarcation between them, and one
+was called the party of the Many, the other that of the Few.
+Pericles now courted the people in every way, constantly arranging
+public spectacles, festivals, and processions in the city, by which
+he educated the Athenians to take pleasure in refined amusements;
+and also he sent out sixty triremes to cruise every year, in which
+many of the people served for hire for eight months, learning and
+practising seamanship. Besides this he sent a thousand settlers to
+the Chersonese, five hundred to Naxos, half as many to Andros, a
+thousand to dwell among the Thracian tribe of the Bisaltae, and
+others to the new colony in Italy founded by the city of Sybaris,
+which was named Thurii. By this means he relieved the state of
+numerous idle agitators, assisted the necessitous, and overawed the
+allies of Athens by placing his colonists near them to watch their
+behavior.</p>
+<p>The building of the temples, by which Athens was adorned, the
+people delighted, and the rest of the world astonished, and which
+now alone prove that the tales of the ancient power and glory of
+Greece are no fables, was what particularly excited the spleen of
+the opposite faction, who inveighed against him in the public
+assembly, declaring that the Athenians had disgraced themselves by
+transferring the common treasury of the Greeks from the island of
+Delos to their own custody. "Pericles himself," they urged, "has
+taken away the only possible excuse for such an act—the fear
+that it might be exposed to the attacks of the Persians when at
+Delos, whereas it would be safe at Athens. Greece has been
+outraged, and feels itself openly tyrannized over, when it sees us
+using the funds—which we extorted from it for the war against
+the Persians—for gilding and beautifying our city as if it
+were a vain woman, and adorning it with precious marbles and
+statues and temples worth a thousand talents." To this Pericles
+replied that the allies had no right to consider how their money
+was spent, so long as Athens defended them from the Persians; while
+they supplied neither horses, ships, nor men, but merely money,
+which the Athenians had a right to spend as they pleased, provided
+they afforded them that security which it purchased. It was right,
+he argued, that after the city had provided all that was necessary
+for war, it should devote its surplus money to the erection of
+buildings which would be a glory to it for all ages, while these
+works would create plenty by leaving no man unemployed, and
+encouraging all sorts of handicraft, so that nearly the whole city
+would earn wages, and thus derive both its beauty and its profit
+from itself. For those who were in the flower of their age,
+military service offered a means of earning money from the common
+stock; while, as he did not wish the mechanics and lower classes to
+be without their share, nor yet to see them receive it without
+doing work for it, he had laid the foundations of great edifices
+which would require industries of every kind to complete them; and
+he had done this in the interests of the lower classes, who thus,
+although they remained at home, would have just as good a claim to
+their share of the public funds as those who were serving at sea,
+in garrison, or in the field. The different materials used, such as
+stone, brass, ivory, gold, ebony, cypress-wood, and so forth, would
+require special artisans for each, such as carpenters, modelers,
+smiths, stone-masons, dyers, melters and moulders of gold, and
+ivory painters, embroiderers, workers in relief; and also men to
+bring them to the city, such as sailors and captains of ships and
+pilots for such as came by sea; and, for those who came by land,
+carriage builders, horse breeders, drivers, ropemakers, linen
+manufacturers, shoemakers, road menders, and miners. Each trade,
+moreover, employed a number of unskilled laborers, so that, in a
+word, there would be work for persons of every age and every class,
+and general prosperity would be the result.</p>
+<p>These buildings were of immense size, and unequalled in beauty
+and grace, as the workmen endeavored to make the execution surpass
+the design in beauty; but what was most remarkable was the speed
+with which they were built. All these edifices, each of which one
+would have thought it would have taken many generations to
+complete, were all finished during the most brilliant period of one
+man's administration. In beauty each of them at once appeared
+venerable as soon as it was built; but even at the present day the
+work looks as fresh as ever, for they bloom with an eternal
+freshness which defies time, and seems to make the work instinct
+with an unfading spirit of youth.</p>
+<p>The overseer and manager of the whole was Phidias, although
+there were other excellent architects and workmen, such as
+Callicrates and Ictinus, who built the Parthenon on the site of the
+old Hecatompedon, which had been destroyed by the Persians, and
+Coroebus, who began to build the Temple of Initiation at Eleusis,
+but who only lived to see the columns erected and the architraves
+placed upon them. On his death, Metagenes, of Xypete, added the
+frieze and the upper row of columns, and Xenocles, of Cholargos,
+crowned it with the domed roof over the shrine. As to the long
+wall, about which Socrates says that he heard Pericles bring
+forward a motion, Callicrates undertook to build it. The Odeum,
+which internally consisted of many rows of seats and many columns,
+and externally of a roof sloping on all sides from a central point,
+was said to have been built in imitation of the king of Persia's
+tent, and was built under Pericles' direction.</p>
+<p>The Propylaea, before the Acropolis, were finished in five years
+by Mnesicles the architect; and a miraculous incident during the
+work seemed to show that the goddess did not disapprove, but rather
+encouraged and assisted the building. The most energetic and active
+of the workmen fell from a great height, and lay in a dangerous
+condition, given over by his doctors. Pericles grieved much for
+him; but the goddess appeared to him in a dream, and suggested a
+course of treatment by which Pericles quickly healed the workman.
+In consequence of this, he set up the brazen statue of Athene the
+Healer, near the old altar in the Acropolis. The golden statue of
+the goddess was made by Phidias, and his name appears upon the
+basement in the inscription. Almost everything was in his hands,
+and he gave his orders to all the workmen—as has been said
+before—because of his friendship with Pericles.</p>
+<p>When the speakers of Thucydides' party complained that Pericles
+had wasted the public money, and destroyed the revenue, he asked
+the people in the assembly whether they thought he had spent much.
+When they answered, "Very much indeed," he said in reply; "Do not,
+then, put it down to the public account, but to mine; and I will
+inscribe my name upon all the public buildings." When Pericles said
+this, the people, either in admiration of his magnificence of
+manner, or being eager to bear their share in the glory of the new
+buildings, shouted to him with one accord to take what money he
+pleased from the treasury, and spend it as he pleased, without
+stint. And finally, he underwent the trial of ostracism with
+Thucydides, and not only succeeded in driving him into exile, but
+broke up his party.</p>
+<p>As now there was no opposition to encounter in the city, and all
+parties had been blended into one, Pericles undertook the sole
+administration of the home and foreign affairs of Athens, dealing
+with the public revenue, the army, the navy, the islands and
+maritime affairs, and the great sources of strength which Athens
+derived from her alliances, as well with Greek as with foreign
+princes and states. Henceforth he became quite a different man: he
+no longer gave way to the people, and ceased to watch the breath of
+popular favor; but he changed the loose and licentious democracy
+which had hitherto existed, into a stricter aristocratic, or rather
+monarchical, form of government. This he used honorably and
+unswervingly for the public benefit, finding the people, as a rule,
+willing to second the measures which he explained to them to be
+necessary and to which he asked their consent, but occasionally
+having to use violence, and to force them, much against their will,
+to do what was expedient; like a physician dealing with some
+complicated disorder, who at one time allows his patient innocent
+recreation, and at another inflicts upon him sharp pains and bitter
+though salutary draughts. Every possible kind of disorder was to be
+found among a people possessing so great an empire as the
+Athenians, and he alone was able to bring them into harmony by
+playing alternately upon their hopes and fears, checking them when
+overconfident, and raising their spirits when they were cast down
+and disheartened. Thus, as Plato says, he was able to prove that
+oratory is the art of influencing men's minds, and to use it in its
+highest application, when it deals with men's passions and
+characters, which, like certain strings of a musical instrument,
+require a skilful and delicate touch. The secret of his power is to
+be found, however, as Thucydides says, not so much in his mere
+oratory as in his pure and blameless life, because he was so well
+known to be incorruptible, and indifferent to money; for though he
+made the city, which was a great one, into the greatest and richest
+city of Greece, and though he himself became more powerful than
+many independent sovereigns, who were able to leave their kingdoms
+to their sons, yet Pericles did not increase by one single drachma
+the estate which he received from his father. For forty years he
+held the first place among such men as Ephialtes, Leocrates,
+Myronides, Cimon, Tolmides, and Thucydides; and, after the fall and
+banishment of Thucydides by ostracism, he united in himself for
+five-and-twenty years all the various offices of state, which were
+supposed to last only for one year; and yet during the whole of
+that period proved himself incorruptible by bribes.</p>
+<p>As the Lacedaemonians began to be jealous of the prosperity of
+the Athenians, Pericles, wishing to raise the spirit of the people
+and to make them feel capable of immense operations, passed a
+decree, inviting all the Greeks, whether inhabiting Europe or Asia,
+whether living in large cities or small ones, to send
+representatives to a meeting at Athens to deliberate about the
+restoration of the Greek temples which had been burned by the
+barbarians, about the sacrifices which were due in consequence of
+the vows which they had made to the gods on behalf of Greece before
+joining battle, and about the sea, that all men might be able to
+sail upon it in peace and without fear. To carry out this decree
+twenty men, selected from the citizens over fifty years of age,
+were sent out, five of whom invited the Ionian and Dorian Greeks in
+Asia and the islands as far as Lesbos and Rhodes, five went to the
+inhabitants of the Hellespont and Thrace as far as Byzantium, and
+five more proceeded to Boeotia, Phocis, and Peloponnesus, passing
+from thence through Locris to the neighboring continent as far as
+Acarnania and Ambracia; while the remainder journeyed through
+Euboea to the Oetaeans and the Malian Gulf, and to the Achaeans of
+Phthia and the Thessalians, urging them to join the assembly and
+take part in the deliberations concerning the peace and well-being
+of Greece. However, nothing was effected, and the cities never
+assembled, in consequence it is said of the covert hostility of the
+Lacedaemonians, and because the attempt was first made in
+Peloponnesus and failed there: yet I have inserted an account of it
+in order to show the lofty spirit and the magnificent designs of
+Pericles.</p>
+<p>In his campaigns he was chiefly remarkable for caution, for he
+would not, if he could help it, begin a battle of which the issue
+was doubtful; nor did he wish to emulate those generals who have
+won themselves a great reputation by running risks and trusting to
+good luck. But he ever used to say to his countrymen, that none of
+them should come by their deaths through any act of his. Observing
+that Tolmides, the son of Tolmaeus, elated by previous successes
+and by the credit which he had gained as a general, was about to
+invade Boeotia in a reckless manner, and had persuaded a thousand
+young men to follow him without any support whatever, he endeavored
+to stop him, and made that memorable saying in the public assembly,
+that if Tolmides would not take the advice of Pericles, he would at
+any rate do well to consult that best of advisers, Time. This
+speech had but little success at the time; but when, a few days
+afterward, the news came that Tolmides had fallen in action at
+Coronea, and many noble citizens with him, Pericles was greatly
+respected and admired as a wise and patriotic man.</p>
+<p>His most successful campaign was that in the Chersonesus, which
+proved the salvation of the Greeks residing there: for he not only
+settled a thousand colonists there, and thus increased the
+available force of the cities, but built a continuous line of
+fortifications reaching across the isthmus from one sea to the
+other, by which he shut off the Thracians, who had previously
+ravaged the peninsula, and put an end to a constant and harassing
+border warfare to which the settlers were exposed, as they had for
+neighbors tribes of wild plundering barbarians.</p>
+<p>But that by which he obtained most glory and renown was when he
+started from Pegae, in the Megarian territory, and sailed round the
+Peloponnesus with a fleet of a hundred triremes; for he not only
+laid waste much of the country near the coast, as Tolmides had
+previously done, but he proceeded far inland, away from his ships,
+leading the troops who were on board, and terrified the inhabitants
+so much that they shut themselves up in their strongholds. The men
+of Sicyon alone ventured to meet him at Nemea, and them he
+overthrew in a pitched battle, and erected a trophy. Next he took
+on board troops from the friendly district of Achaia, and, crossing
+over to the opposite side of the Corinthian Gulf, coasted along
+past the mouth of the river Achelous, overran Acarnania, drove the
+people of Oeneadae to the shelter of their city walls, and after
+ravaging the country returned home, having made himself a terror to
+his enemies, and done good service to Athens; for not the least
+casualty, even by accident, befell the troops under his
+command.</p>
+<p>When he sailed into the Black Sea with a great and splendidly
+equipped fleet, he assisted the Greek cities there, and treated
+them with consideration, and showed the neighboring savage tribes
+and their chiefs the greatness of his force, and his confidence in
+his power, by sailing where he pleased, and taking complete control
+over that sea. He left at Sinope thirteen ships, and a land force
+under the command of Lamachus, to act against Timesileon, who had
+made himself despot of that city. When he and his party were driven
+out, Pericles passed a decree that six hundred Athenian volunteers
+should sail to Sinope, and become citizens there, receiving the
+houses and lands which had formerly been in the possession of the
+despot and his party. But in other cases he would not agree to the
+impulsive proposals of the Athenians, and he opposed them when,
+elated by their power and good fortune, they talked of recovering
+Egypt and attacking the seaboard of the Persian empire. Many, too,
+were inflamed with that ill-starred notion of an attempt on Sicily,
+which was afterward blown into a flame by Alcibiades and other
+orators. Some even dreamed of the conquest of Etruria and Carthage,
+in consequence of the greatness which the Athenian empire had
+already reached, and the full tide of success which seemed to
+attend it.</p>
+<p>Pericles, however, restrained these outbursts, and would not
+allow the people to meddle with foreign states, but used the power
+of Athens chiefly to preserve and guard her already existing
+empire, thinking it to be of paramount importance to oppose the
+Lacedaemonians, a task to which he bent all his energies, as is
+proved by many of his acts, especially in connection with the
+Sacred War. In this war the Lacedaemonians sent a force to Delphi,
+and made the Phocians, who held it, give it up to the people of
+Delphi: but as soon as they were gone Pericles made an expedition
+into the country, and restored the temple to the Phocians; and as
+the Lacedaemonians had scratched the oracle which the Delphians had
+given them, on the forehead of the brazen wolf there, Pericles got
+a response from the oracle for the Athenians, and carved it on the
+right side of the same wolf.</p>
+<p>Events proved that Pericles was right in confining the Athenian
+empire to Greece. First of all Euboea revolted, and he was obliged
+to lead an army to subdue that island. Shortly after this, news
+came that the Megarians had become hostile, and that an army, under
+the command of Plistoanax, king of the Lacedaemonians, was menacing
+the frontier of Attica. Pericles now in all haste withdrew his
+troops from Euboea, to meet the invader. He did not venture on an
+engagement with the numerous and warlike forces of the enemy,
+although repeatedly invited by them to fight: but, observing that
+Plistoanax was a very young man, and entirely under the influence
+of Cleandrides, whom the <i>ephors</i> had sent to act as his tutor
+and counsellor because of his tender years, he opened secret
+negotiations with the latter, who at once, for a bribe, agreed to
+withdraw the Peloponnesians from Attica. When their army returned
+and dispersed, the Lacedaemonians were so incensed that they
+imposed a fine on their king, and condemned Cleandrides, who fled
+the country, to be put to death. This Cleandrides was the father of
+Gylippus, who caused the ruin of the Athenian expedition in Sicily.
+Avarice seems to have been hereditary in the family, for Gylippus
+himself, after brilliant exploits in war, was convicted of taking
+bribes, and banished from Sparta in disgrace.</p>
+<p>When Pericles submitted the accounts of the campaign to the
+people, there was an item of ten talents, "for a necessary
+purpose," which the people passed without any questioning, or any
+curiosity to learn the secret. Some historians, among whom is
+Theophrastus the philosopher, say that Pericles sent ten talents
+annually to Sparta, by means of which he bribed the chief
+magistrates to defer the war, thus not buying peace, but time to
+make preparations for a better defence. He immediately turned his
+attention to the insurgents in Euboea, and proceeding thither with
+a fleet of fifty sail, and five thousand heavy armed troops, he
+reduced their cities to submission. He banished from Chalcis the
+"equestrian order," as it was called, consisting of men of wealth
+and station; and he drove all the inhabitants of Hestiaea out of
+their country, replacing them by Athenian settlers. He treated
+these people with this pitiless severity, because they had captured
+an Athenian ship, and put its crew to the sword. After this, as the
+Athenians and Lacedaemonians made a truce for thirty years,
+Pericles decreed the expedition against Samos, on the pretext that
+they had disregarded the commands of the Athenians to cease from
+their war with the Milesians.</p>
+<p>Pericles is accused of going to war with Samos to save the
+Milesians. These states were at war about the possession of the
+city of Priene, and the Samians, who were victorious, would not lay
+down their arms and allow the Athenians to settle the matter by
+arbitration, as they ordered them to do. For this reason Pericles
+proceeded to Samos, put an end to the oligarchical form of
+government there, and sent fifty hostages and as many children to
+Lemnos, to insure the good behavior of the leading men. It is said
+that each of these hostages offered him a talent for his own
+freedom, and that much more was offered by that party which was
+loath to see a democracy established in the city. Besides all this,
+Pissuthnes the Persian, who had a liking for the Samians, sent and
+offered him ten thousand pieces of gold if he would spare the city.
+Pericles, however, took none of these bribes, but dealt with Samos
+as he had previously determined, and returned to Athens. The
+Samians now at once revolted, as Pissuthnes managed to get them
+back their hostages, and furnished them with the means of carrying
+on the war. Pericles now made a second expedition against them, and
+found them in no mind to submit quietly, but determined to dispute
+the empire of the seas with the Athenians. Pericles gained a signal
+victory over them in a sea-fight off the Goats' Island, beating a
+fleet of seventy ships with only forty-four, twenty of which were
+transports.</p>
+<p>Simultaneously with his victory and the flight of the enemy he
+obtained command of the harbor of Samos, and besieged the Samians
+in their city. They, in spite of their defeat, still possessed
+courage enough to sally out and fight a battle under the walls; but
+soon a larger force arrived from Athens, and the Samians were
+completely blockaded.</p>
+<p>Pericles now with sixty ships sailed out of the Archipelago into
+the Mediterranean, according to the most current report intending
+to meet the Phoenician fleet which was coming to help the Samians,
+but, according to Stesimbrotus, with the intention of attacking
+Cyprus, which seems improbable. Whatever his intention may have
+been, his expedition was a failure, for Melissus, the son of
+Ithagenes, a man of culture, who was then in command of the Samian
+forces, conceiving a contempt for the small force of the Athenians
+and the want of experience of their leaders after Pericles'
+departure, persuaded his countrymen to attack them. In the battle
+the Samians proved victorious, taking many Athenians prisoners, and
+destroying many of their ships. By this victory they obtained
+command of the sea, and were able to supply themselves with more
+warlike stores than they had possessed before. Aristotle even says
+that Pericles himself was before this beaten by Melissus in a
+sea-fight. The Samians branded the figure of an owl on the
+foreheads of their Athenian prisoners, to revenge themselves for
+the branding of their own prisoners by the Athenians with the
+figure of a <i>samaina</i>. This is a ship having a beak turned up
+like a swine's snout, but with a roomy hull, so as both to carry a
+large cargo and sail fast. This class of vessel is called
+<i>samaina</i> because it was first built at Samos by Polycrates,
+the despot of that island.</p>
+<p>When Pericles heard of the disaster which had befallen his army,
+he returned in all haste to assist them. He beat Melissus, who came
+out to meet him, and, after putting the enemy to rout, at once
+built a wall round their city, preferring to reduce it by blockade
+to risking the lives of his countrymen in an assault. In the ninth
+month of the siege the Samians surrendered. Pericles demolished
+their walls, confiscated their fleet, and imposed a heavy fine upon
+them, some part of which was paid at once by the Samians, who gave
+hostages for the payment of the remainder at fixed periods.</p>
+<p>Pericles, after the reduction of Samos, returned to Athens,
+where he buried those who had fallen in the war in a magnificent
+manner, and was much admired for the funeral oration which, as is
+customary, was spoken by him over the graves of his countrymen. Ion
+says that his victory over the Samians wonderfully flattered his
+vanity. Agamemnon, he was wont to say, took ten years to take a
+barbarian city, but he in nine months had made himself master of
+the first and most powerful city in Ionia. And the comparison was
+not an unjust one, for truly the war was a very great undertaking,
+and its issue quite uncertain, since, as Thucydides tells us, the
+Samians came very near to wresting the empire of the sea from the
+Athenians.</p>
+<p>After these events, as the clouds were gathering for the
+Peloponnesian war, Pericles persuaded the Athenians to send
+assistance to the people of Corcyra, who were at war with the
+Corinthians, and thus to attach to their own side an island with a
+powerful naval force, at a moment when the Peloponnesians had all
+but declared war against them.</p>
+<p>When the people passed this decree, Pericles sent only ten ships
+under the command of Lacedaemonius, the son of Cimon, as if he
+designed a deliberate insult; for the house of Cimon was on
+peculiarly friendly terms with the Lacedaemonians. His design in
+sending Lacedaemonius out, against his will, and with so few ships,
+was that if he performed nothing brilliant he might be accused,
+even more than he was already, of leaning to the side of the
+Spartans. Indeed, by all means in his power, he always threw
+obstacles in the way of the advancement of Cimon's family,
+representing that by their very names they were aliens, one son
+being named Lacedaemonius, another Thessalus, another Elius.
+Moreover, the mother of all three was an Arcadian.</p>
+<p>Now Pericles was much reproached for sending these ten ships,
+which were of little value to the Corcyreans, and gave a great
+handle to his enemies to use against him, and in consequence sent a
+larger force after them to Corcyra, which arrived there after the
+battle. The Corinthians, enraged at this, complained in the
+congress of Sparta of the conduct of the Athenians, as did also the
+Megarians, who said that they were excluded from every market and
+every harbor which was in Athenian hands, contrary to the ancient
+rights and common privileges of the Hellenic race. The people of
+Aegina also considered themselves to be oppressed and ill-treated,
+and secretly bemoaned their grievances in the ears of the Spartans,
+for they dared not openly bring any charges against the Athenians.
+At this time, too, Potidaea, a city subject to Athens, but a colony
+of Corinth, revolted, and its siege materially hastened the
+outbreak of the war. Archidamus, indeed, the king of the
+Lacedaemonians, sent ambassadors to Athens, was willing to submit
+all disputed points to arbitration, and endeavored to moderate the
+excitement of his allies, so that war probably would not have
+broken out if the Athenians could have been persuaded to rescind
+their decree of exclusion against the Megarians, and to come to
+terms with them. And, for this reason, Pericles, who was
+particularly opposed to this, and urged the people not to give way
+to the Megarians, alone bore the blame of having begun the war.</p>
+<p>Pericles passed a decree for a herald to be sent to the
+Megarians, and then to go on to the Lacedaemonians to complain of
+their conduct. This decree of Pericles is worded in a candid and
+reasonable manner; but the herald, Anthemocritus, was thought to
+have met his death at the hands of the Megarians, and Charinus
+passed a decree to the effect that Athens should wage war against
+them to the death, without truce or armistice; that any Megarian
+found in Attica should be punished with death, and that the
+generals, when taking the usual oath for each year, should swear in
+addition that they would invade the Megarian territory twice every
+year; and that Anthemocritus should be buried near the city gate
+leading into the Thriasian plain, which is now called the Double
+Gate. How the dispute originated it is hard to say, but all writers
+agree in throwing on Pericles the blame of refusing to reverse the
+decree.</p>
+<p>Now, as the Lacedaemonians knew that if he could be removed from
+power they would find the Athenians much more easy to deal with,
+they bade them "drive forth the accursed thing," alluding to
+Pericles' descent from the Alcmaeonidae by his mother's side, as we
+are told by Thucydides the historian. But this attempt had just the
+contrary effect to that which they intended; for, instead of
+suspicion and dislike, Pericles met with much greater honor and
+respect from his countrymen than before, because they saw that he
+was an object of especial dislike to the enemy. For this reason,
+before the Peloponnesians, under Archidamus, invaded Attica, he
+warned the Athenians that if Archidamus, when he laid waste
+everything else, spared his own private estate because of the
+friendly private relations existing between them, or in order to
+give his personal enemies a ground for impeaching him, he should
+give both the land and the farm buildings upon it to the state.</p>
+<p>The Lacedaemonians invaded Attica with a great host of their own
+troops and those of their allies, led by Archidamus, their king.
+They proceeded, ravaging the country as they went, as far as
+Acharnae (close to Athens), where they encamped, imagining that the
+Athenians would never endure to see them there, but would be driven
+by pride and shame to come out and fight them. However, Pericles
+thought that it would be a very serious matter to fight for the
+very existence of Athens against sixty thousand Peloponnesian and
+Boeotian heavy-armed troops, and so he pacified those who were
+dissatisfied at his inactivity by pointing out that trees when cut
+down quickly grow again, but that when the men of a state are lost,
+it is hard to raise up others to take their place. He would not
+call an assembly of the people, because he feared that they would
+force him to act against his better judgment, but, just as the
+captain of a ship, when a storm comes on at sea, places everything
+in the best trim to meet it, and trusting to his own skill and
+seamanship, disregarding the tears and entreaties of the seasick
+and terrified passengers, so did Pericles shut the gates of Athens,
+place sufficient forces to insure the safety of the city at all
+points, and calmly carry out his own policy, taking little heed of
+the noisy grumblings of the discontented. Many of his friends
+besought him to attack, many of his enemies threatened him and
+abused him, and many songs and offensive jests were written about
+him, speaking of him as a coward, and one who was betraying the
+city to its enemies. Cleon too attacked him, using the anger which
+the citizens felt against him to advance his own personal
+popularity.</p>
+<p>Pericles was unmoved by any of these attacks, but quietly
+endured all this storm of obloquy. He sent a fleet of a hundred
+ships to attack Peloponnesus, but did not sail with it himself,
+remaining at home to keep a tight hand over Athens until the
+Peloponnesians drew off their forces. He regained his popularity
+with the common people, who suffered much from the war, by giving
+them allowances of money from the public revenue, and grants of
+land; for he drove out the entire population of the island of
+Aegina, and divided the land by lot among the Athenians. A certain
+amount of relief also was experienced by reflecting upon the
+injuries which they were inflicting on the enemy; for the fleet as
+it sailed round Peloponnesus destroyed many small villages and
+cities, and ravaged a great extent of country, while Pericles
+himself led an expedition into the territory of Megara and laid it
+all waste. By this it is clear that the allies, although they did
+much damage to the Athenians, yet suffered equally themselves, and
+never could have protracted the war for such a length of time as it
+really lasted, but, as Pericles foretold, must soon have desisted
+had not Providence interfered and confounded human counsels. For
+now the pestilence fell among the Athenians, and cut off the flower
+of their youth. Suffering both in body and mind they raved against
+Pericles, just as people when delirious with disease attack their
+fathers or their physicians. They endeavored to ruin him, urged on
+by his personal enemies, who assured them that he was the author of
+the plague, because he had brought all the country people into the
+city, where they were compelled to live during the heat of summer,
+crowded together in small rooms and stifling tents, living an idle
+life too, and breathing foul air instead of the pure country breeze
+to which they were accustomed. The cause of this, they said, was
+the man who, when the war began, admitted the masses of the country
+people into the city, and then made no use of them, but allowed
+them to be penned up together like cattle, and transmit the
+contagion from one to another, without devising any remedy or
+alleviation of their sufferings.</p>
+<p>Hoping to relieve them somewhat, and also to annoy the enemy,
+Pericles manned a hundred and fifty ships, placed on board, besides
+the sailors, many brave infantry and cavalry soldiers, and was
+about to put to sea. The Athenians conceived great hopes, and the
+enemy no less terror from so large an armament. When all was ready,
+and Pericles himself had just embarked in his own trireme, an
+eclipse of the sun took place, producing total darkness, and all
+men were terrified at so great a portent. Pericles sailed with the
+fleet, but did nothing worthy of so great a force. He besieged the
+sacred city of Epidaurus, but, although he had great hopes of
+taking it, he failed on account of the plague, which destroyed not
+only his own men, but every one who came in contact with them.
+After this he again endeavored to encourage the Athenians, to whom
+he had become an object of dislike. However, he did not succeed in
+pacifying them, but they condemned him by a public vote to be
+general no more, and to pay a fine which is stated at the lowest
+estimate to have been fifteen talents, and at the highest fifty.
+This was carried, according to Idomeneus, by Cleon, but, according
+to Theophrastus, by Simmias; while Heraclides of Pontus says that
+it was effected by Lacratides.</p>
+<p>He soon regained his public position, for the people's outburst
+of anger was quenched by the blow they had dealt him, just as a bee
+leaves its sting in the wound; but his private affairs were in
+great distress and disorder, as he had lost many of his relatives
+during the plague, while others were estranged from him on
+political grounds. Yet he would not yield, nor abate his firmness
+and constancy of spirit because of these afflictions, but was not
+observed to weep or mourn, or attend the funeral of any of his
+relations, until he lost Paralus, the last of his legitimate
+offspring. Crushed by this blow, he tried in vain to keep up his
+grand air of indifference, and when carrying a garland to lay upon
+the corpse he was overpowered by his feelings, so as to burst into
+a passion of tears and sobs, which he had never done before in his
+whole life.</p>
+<p>Athens made trial of her other generals and public men to
+conduct her affairs, but none appeared to be of sufficient weight
+or reputation to have such a charge intrusted to him. The city
+longed for Pericles, and invited him again to lead its counsels and
+direct its armies; and he, although dejected in spirits and living
+in seclusion in his own house, was yet persuaded by Alcibiades and
+his other friends to resume the direction of affairs.</p>
+<p>After this it appears that Pericles was attacked by the plague,
+not acutely or continuously, as in most cases, but in a slow
+wasting fashion, exhibiting many varieties of symptoms, and
+gradually undermining his strength. As he was now on his death-bed,
+the most distinguished of the citizens and his surviving friends
+collected round him and spoke admiringly of his nobleness and
+immense power, enumerating also the number of his exploits, and the
+trophies which he had set up for victories gained; for while in
+chief command he had won no less than nine victories for
+Athens.</p>
+<p>Events soon made the loss of Pericles felt and regretted by the
+Athenians. Those who during his lifetime had complained that his
+power completely threw them into the shade, when after his death
+they had made trial of other orators and statesmen, were obliged to
+confess that with all his arrogance no man ever was really more
+moderate, and that his real mildness in dealing with men was as
+remarkable as his apparent pride and assumption. His power, which
+had been so grudged and envied, and called monarchy and despotism,
+now was proved to have been the saving of the State; such an amount
+of corrupt dealing and wickedness suddenly broke out in public
+affairs, which he before had crushed and forced to hide itself, and
+so prevented its becoming incurable through impunity and
+license.</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="RULE4_4"></a>GREAT PLAGUE AT ATHENS</h2>
+<p class="center">B.C. 430</p>
+<p class="center">GEORGE GROTE</p>
+<p class="intros">Almost at the beginning of the Peloponnesian war,
+when the prosperity of Athens had placed her at the height of her
+power and given her unquestioned supremacy among the Grecian
+states, her strength was greatly impaired by a visitation against
+which there was nothing in military prowess or patriotic pride and
+devotion that could prevail.</p>
+<p class="intros">It is one of the tragic contrasts of
+history—the picture of Athens, in her full triumph and glory,
+smitten, at a moment when she needed to put forth her full
+strength, by a deadly foe against whose might mortal arms were
+vain. Her citizens were rejoicing in her social no less than her
+military pre&euml;minence, and they had already been trained in the
+hardships necessary to be endured in defence of an invaded country.
+Again they were prepared to undergo whatever service might be laid
+upon them in her behalf. They could foresee the arduous tasks and
+inevitable sufferings of a great war, but had no warning of an
+impending calamity far worse than those which even war, though
+always attended with horrors, usually entails. Pericles had lately
+delivered his great funeral oration at the public interment of
+soldiers who had fallen for Athens. "The bright colors and tone of
+cheerful confidence," says Grote, whose account of the plague
+follows, "which pervaded the discourse of Pericles, appear the more
+striking from being in immediate antecedence to the awful
+description of this distemper."</p>
+<p class="intros">The death of Pericles himself, who directly or
+indirectly fell a victim to the prevailing pestilence, marked a
+grievous crisis for Athens in what was already become a measureless
+public woe. During the autumn of the year B.C. 427 the epidemic
+again broke out, after a considerable intermission, and for one
+year continued, "to the sad ruin both of the strength and the
+comfort of the city."</p>
+<p>At the close of one year after the attempted surprise of Plataea
+by the Thebans, the belligerent parties in Greece remained in an
+unaltered position as to relative strength. Nothing decisive had
+been accomplished on either side, either by the invasion of Attica
+or by the flying descents round the coast of Peloponnesus. In spite
+of mutual damage inflicted—doubtless in the greatest measure
+upon Attica—no progress was yet made toward the fulfilment of
+those objects which had induced the Peloponnesians to go to war.
+Especially the most pressing among all their wishes—the
+relief of Potidaea—was in no way advanced; for the Athenians
+had not found it necessary to relax the blockade of that city, The
+result of the first year's operations had thus been to disappoint
+the hopes of the Corinthians and the other ardent instigators of
+war, while it justified the anticipations both of Pericles and of
+Archidamus.</p>
+<p>A second devastation of Attica was resolved upon for the
+commencement of spring; and measures were taken for carrying it all
+over that territory, since the settled policy of Athens, not to
+hazard a battle with the invaders, was now ascertained. About the
+end of March or beginning of April the entire Peloponnesian
+force—two-thirds from each confederate city as
+before—was assembled under the command of Archidamus and
+marched into Attica. This time they carried the work of systematic
+destruction not merely over the Thriasian plain and the plain
+immediately near to Athens, as before; but also to the more
+southerly portions of Attica, down even as far as the mines of
+Laurium. They traversed and ravaged both the eastern and the
+western coast, remaining not less than forty days in the country.
+They found the territory deserted as before, all the population
+having retired within the walls.</p>
+<p>In regard to this second invasion, Pericles recommended the same
+defensive policy as he had applied to the first; and apparently the
+citizens had now come to acquiesce in it, if not willingly, at
+least with a full conviction of its necessity. But a new visitation
+had now occurred, diverting their attention from the invader,
+though enormously aggravating their sufferings. A few days after
+Archidamus entered Attica, a pestilence or epidemic sickness broke
+out unexpectedly at Athens.</p>
+<p>It appears that this terrific disorder had been raging for some
+time throughout the regions round the Mediterranean; having begun,
+as was believed, in Ethiopia—thence passing into Egypt and
+Libya, and overrunning a considerable portion of Asia under the
+Persian government. About sixteen years before, there had been a
+similar calamity in Rome and in various parts of Italy. Recently it
+had been felt in Lemnos and some other islands of the Aegean, yet
+seemingly not with such intensity as to excite much notice
+generally in the Grecian world: at length it passed to Athens, and
+first showed itself in the Piraeus. The progress of the disease was
+as rapid and destructive as its appearance had been sudden; while
+the extraordinary accumulation of people within the city and long
+walls, in consequence of the presence of the invaders in the
+country, was but too favorable to every form of contagion. Families
+crowded together in close cabins and places of temporary
+shelter—throughout a city constructed, like most of those in
+Greece, with little regard to the conditions of salubrity and in a
+state of mental chagrin from the forced abandonment and sacrifice
+of their properties in the country, transmitted the disorder with
+fatal facility from one to the other. Beginning as it did about the
+middle of April, the increasing heat of summer further aided the
+disorder, the symptoms of which, alike violent and sudden, made
+themselves the more remarked because the year was particularly
+exempt from maladies of every other description.</p>
+<p>Of this plague—or, more properly, eruptive typhoid fever,
+distinct from, yet analogous to, the smallpox—a description
+no less clear than impressive has been left by the historian
+Thucydides, himself not only a spectator but a sufferer. It is not
+one of the least of his merits, that his notice of the symptoms,
+given at so early a stage of medical science and observation, is
+such as to instruct the medical reader of the present age, and to
+enable the malady to be understood and identified. The observations
+with which that notice is ushered in deserve particular attention.
+"In respect to this distemper (he says), let every man, physician
+or not, say what he thinks respecting the source from whence it may
+probably have arisen, and respecting the causes which he deems
+sufficiently powerful to have produced so great a revolution. But
+I, having myself had the distemper, and having seen others
+suffering under it, will state <i>what it actually was</i>, and
+will indicate in addition such other matters as will furnish any
+man, who lays them to heart, with knowledge and the means of
+calculation beforehand, in case the same misfortune should ever
+occur again."</p>
+<p>To record past facts, as a basis for rational prevision in
+regard to the future—the same sentiment which Thucydides
+mentions in his preface, as having animated him to the composition
+of his history—was at that time a duty so little understood
+that we have reason to admire not less the manner in which he
+performs it in practice than the distinctness with which he
+conceives it in theory. We infer from his language that speculation
+in his day was active respecting the causes of this plague,
+according to the vague and fanciful physics, and scanty stock of
+ascertained facts, which was all that could then be consulted. By
+resisting the itch of theorizing from one of those loose hypotheses
+which then appeared plausibly to explain everything, he probably
+renounced the point of view from which most credit and interest
+would be derivable at the time. But his simple and precise summary
+of observed facts carries with it an imperishable value, and even
+affords grounds for imagining that he was no stranger to the habits
+and training of his contemporary Hippocrates, and the other
+Asclepiads of Cos.</p>
+<p>It is hardly within the province of a historian of Greece to
+repeat after Thucydides the painful enumeration of symptoms,
+violent in the extreme and pervading every portion of the bodily
+system, which marked this fearful disorder. Beginning in Piraeus,
+it quickly passed into the city, and both the one and the other was
+speedily filled with sickness and suffering, the like of which had
+never before been known. The seizures were sudden, and a large
+proportion of the sufferers perished after deplorable agonies on
+the seventh or on the ninth day. Others, whose strength of
+constitution carried them over this period, found themselves the
+victims of exhausting and incurable diarrhoea afterward; with
+others again, after traversing both these stages, the distemper
+fixed itself in some particular member, the eyes, the genitals, the
+hands, or the feet, which were rendered permanently useless, or in
+some cases amputated, even where the patient himself recovered.</p>
+<p>There were also some whose recovery was attended with a total
+loss of memory, so that they no more knew themselves or recognized
+their friends. No treatment or remedy appearing, except in
+accidental cases, to produce any beneficial effect, the physicians
+or surgeons whose aid was invoked became completely at fault. While
+trying their accustomed means without avail, they soon ended by
+catching the malady themselves and perishing. The charms and
+incantations, to which the unhappy patient resorted, were not
+likely to be more efficacious. While some asserted that the
+Peloponnesians had poisoned the cisterns of water, others referred
+the visitation to the wrath of the gods, and especially to Apollo,
+known by hearers of the <i>Iliad</i> as author of pestilence in the
+Greek host before Troy. It was remembered that this Delphian god
+had promised the Lacedaemonians, in reply to their application
+immediately before the war, that he would assist them whether
+invoked or uninvoked; and the disorder now raging was ascribed to
+the intervention of their irresistible ally; while the elderly men
+further called to mind an oracular verse sung in the time of their
+youth: "The Dorian war will come, and pestilence along with it."
+Under the distress which suggested, and was reciprocally aggravated
+by these gloomy ideas, prophets were consulted, and supplications
+with solemn procession were held at the temples, to appease the
+divine wrath.</p>
+<p>When it was found that neither the priest nor the physician
+could retard the spread or mitigate the intensity of the disorder,
+the Athenians abandoned themselves to despair, and the space within
+the walls became a scene of desolating misery. Every man attacked
+with the malady at once lost his courage—a state of
+depression itself among the worst features of the case, which made
+him lie down and die, without any attempt to seek for
+preservatives. And although at first friends and relatives lent
+their aid to tend the sick with the usual family sympathies, yet so
+terrible was the number of these attendants who perished, "like
+sheep," from such contact, that at length no man would thus expose
+himself; while the most generous spirits, who persisted longest in
+the discharge of their duty, were carried off in the greatest
+numbers. The patient was thus left to die alone and unheeded.
+Sometimes all the inmates of a house were swept away one after the
+other, no man being willing to go near it: desertion on the one
+hand, attendance on the other, both tended to aggravate the
+calamity. There remained only those who, having had the disorder
+and recovered, were willing to tend the sufferers.</p>
+<p>These men formed the single exception to the all-pervading
+misery of the time—for the disorder seldom attacked anyone
+twice, and when it did the second attack was never fatal. Elate
+with their own escape, they deemed themselves out of the reach of
+all disease, and were full of compassionate kindness for others
+whose sufferings were just beginning. It was from them too that the
+principal attention to the bodies of deceased victims proceeded:
+for such was the state of dismay and sorrow that even the nearest
+relatives neglected the sepulchral duties, sacred beyond all others
+in the eyes of a Greek. Nor is there any circumstance which conveys
+to us so vivid an idea of the prevalent agony and despair as when
+we read, in the words of an eyewitness, that the deaths took place
+among this close-packed crowd without the smallest decencies of
+attention—that the dead and the dying lay piled one upon
+another not merely in the public roads, but even in the temples, in
+spite of the understood defilement of the sacred
+building—that half-dead sufferers were seen lying round all
+the springs, from insupportable thirst—that the numerous
+corpses thus unburied and exposed were in such a condition that the
+dogs which meddled with them died in consequence, while no vultures
+or other birds of the like habits ever came near.</p>
+<p>Those bodies which escaped entire neglect were burnt or buried
+without the customary mourning, and with unseemly carelessness. In
+some cases the bearers of a body, passing by a funeral pile on
+which another body was burning, would put their own there to be
+burnt also; or perhaps, if the pile was prepared ready for a body
+not yet arrived, would deposit their own upon it, set fire to the
+pile, and then depart. Such indecent confusion would have been
+intolerable to the feelings of the Athenians in any ordinary
+times.</p>
+<p>To all these scenes of physical suffering, death, and reckless
+despair was superadded another evil, which affected those who were
+fortunate enough to escape the rest. The bonds both of law and
+morality became relaxed, amid such total uncertainty of every man
+both for his own life and that of others. Men cared not to abstain
+from wrong, under circumstances in which punishment was not likely
+to overtake them, nor to put a check upon their passions, and
+endure privations, in obedience even to their strongest conviction,
+when the chance was so small of their living to reap reward or
+enjoy any future esteem. An interval, short and sweet, before their
+doom was realized—before they became plunged in the
+widespread misery which they witnessed around, and which affected
+indiscriminately the virtuous and the profligate—was all that
+they looked to enjoy; embracing with avidity the immediate
+pleasures of sense, as well as such positive gains, however
+ill-gotten, as could be made the means of procuring them, and
+throwing aside all thought both of honor and of long-sighted
+advantage. Life and property being alike ephemeral, there was no
+hope left but to snatch a moment of enjoyment, before the
+outstretched hand of destiny should fall upon its victims.</p>
+<p>The picture of society under the pressure of a murderous
+epidemic, with its train of physical torments, wretchedness, and
+demoralization, has been drawn by more than one eminent author, but
+by none with more impressive fidelity and conciseness than by
+Thucydides, who had no predecessor, nor anything but the reality,
+to copy from. We may remark that amid all the melancholy
+accompaniments of the time there are no human sacrifices, such as
+those offered up at Carthage during pestilence to appease the anger
+of the gods—there are no cruel persecutions against imaginary
+authors of the disease, such as those against the Untori (anointers
+of doors) in the plague of Milan in 1630.</p>
+<p>Three years altogether did this calamity desolate Athens:
+continuously, during the entire second and third years of the
+war—after which followed a period of marked abatement for a
+year and a half; but it then revived again, and lasted for another
+year, with the same fury as at first. The public loss, over and
+above the private misery, which this unexpected enemy inflicted
+upon Athens, was incalculable. Out of twelve hundred horsemen, all
+among the rich men of the state, three hundred died of the
+epidemic; besides forty-four hundred <i>hoplites</i> out of the
+roll formally kept, and a number of the poorer population so great
+as to defy computation. No efforts of the Peloponnesians could have
+done so much to ruin Athens, or to bring the war to a termination
+such as they desired: and the distemper told the more in their
+favor, as it never spread at all into Peloponnesus, though it
+passed from Athens to some of the more populous islands. The
+Lacedaemonian army was withdrawn from Attica somewhat earlier than
+it would otherwise have been, for fear of taking the contagion.</p>
+<p>But it was while the Lacedaemonians were yet in Attica, and
+during the first freshness of the terrible malady, that Pericles
+equipped and conducted from Piraeus an armament of one hundred
+triremes and four thousand hoplites to attack the coasts of
+Peloponnesus; three hundred horsemen were also carried in some
+horse-transports, prepared for the occasion out of old triremes. To
+diminish the crowd accumulated in the city was doubtless of
+beneficial tendency, and perhaps those who went aboard might
+consider it as a chance of escape to quit an infected home. But
+unhappily they carried the infection along with them, which
+desolated the fleet not less than the city, and crippled all its
+efforts. Reenforced by fifty ships of war from Chios and Lesbos,
+the Athenians first landed near Epidaurus in Peloponnesus, ravaging
+the territory and making an unavailing attempt upon the city; next
+they made like incursions on the most southerly portions of the
+Argolic peninsula—Troezen, Halieis, and Hermione—and
+lastly attacked and captured Prasiae, on the eastern coast of
+Laconia. On returning to Athens, the same armament was immediately
+conducted under Agnon and Cleopompus, to press the siege of
+Potidaea, the blockade of which still continued without any visible
+progress. On arriving there an attack was made on the walls by
+battering engines and by the other aggressive methods then
+practised; but nothing whatever was achieved. In fact, the armament
+became incompetent for all serious effort, from the aggravated
+character which the distemper here assumed, communicated by the
+soldiers fresh from Athens even to those who had before been free
+from it at Potidaea. So frightful was the mortality that out of the
+four thousand hoplites under Agnon no fewer than one thousand and
+fifty died in the short space of forty days. The armament was
+brought back in this distressed condition to Athens, while the
+reduction of Potidaea was left as before, to the slow course of
+blockade.</p>
+<p>On returning from the expedition against Peloponnesus, Pericles
+found his countrymen almost distracted with their manifold
+sufferings. Over and above the raging epidemic they had just gone
+over Attica and ascertained the devastations committed by the
+invaders throughout all the territory—except the Marathonian
+Tetrapolis and Deceleia, districts spared, as we are told, through
+indulgence founded on an ancient legendary sympathy—during
+their long stay of forty days. The rich had found their comfortable
+mansions and farms, the poor their modest cottages, in the various
+<i>demes</i>, torn down and ruined. Death, sickness, loss of
+property, and despair of the future now rendered the Athenians
+angry and intractable to the last degree. They vented their
+feelings against Pericles as the cause not merely of the war, but
+also of all that they were now enduring. Either with or without his
+consent, they sent envoys to Sparta to open negotiations for peace,
+but the Spartans turned a deaf ear to the proposition. This new
+disappointment rendered them still more furious against Pericles,
+whose long-standing political enemies now doubtless found strong
+sympathy in their denunciations of his character and policy. That
+unshaken and majestic firmness, which ranked first among his many
+eminent qualities, was never more imperiously required and never
+more effectively manifested.</p>
+<p>In his capacity of <i>strategus</i>, or general, Pericles
+convoked a formal assembly of the people, for the purpose of
+vindicating himself publicly against the prevailing sentiment, and
+recommending perseverance in his line of policy. The speeches made
+by his opponents, assuredly very bitter, are not given by
+Thucydides; but that of Pericles himself is set down at
+considerable length, and a memorable discourse it is. It strikingly
+brings into relief both the character of the man and the impress of
+actual circumstances—an impregnable mind conscious not only
+of right purposes, but of just and reasonable anticipations, and
+bearing up with manliness, or even defiance, against the natural
+difficulty of the case, heightened by an extreme of incalculable
+misfortune. He had foreseen, while advising the war originally, the
+probable impatience of his countrymen under its first hardships,
+but he could not foresee the epidemic by which that impatience had
+been exasperated into madness: and he now addressed them not merely
+with unabated adherence to his own deliberate convictions, but also
+in a tone of reproachful remonstrance against their unmerited
+change of sentiment toward him—seeking at the same time to
+combat that uncontrolled despair which for the moment overlaid both
+their pride and their patriotism. Far from humbling himself before
+the present sentiment, it is at this time that he sets forth his
+titles to their esteem in the most direct and unqualified manner,
+and claims the continuance of that which they had so long accorded,
+as something belonging to him by acquired right.</p>
+<p>His main object, through this discourse, is to fill the minds of
+his audience with patriotic sympathy for the weal of the entire
+city, so as to counterbalance the absorbing sense of private woe.
+If the collective city flourishes, he argues, private misfortunes
+may at least be borne; but no amount of private prosperity will
+avail if the collective city falls—a proposition literally
+true in ancient times and under the circumstances of ancient
+warfare, though less true at present. "Distracted by domestic
+calamity, ye are now angry both with me who advised you to go to
+war, and with yourselves who followed the advice. Ye listened to
+me, considering me superior to others in judgment, in speech, in
+patriotism, and in incorruptible probity—nor ought I now to
+be treated as culpable for giving such advice, when in point of
+fact the war was unavoidable and there would have been still
+greater danger in shrinking from it. I am the same man, still
+unchanged—but ye in your misfortunes cannot stand to the
+convictions which ye adopted when yet unhurt. Extreme and
+unforeseen, indeed, are the sorrows which have fallen upon you: yet
+inhabiting as ye do a great city, and brought up in dispositions
+suitable to it, ye must also resolve to bear up against the utmost
+pressure of adversity, and never to surrender your dignity. I have
+often explained to you that ye have no reason to doubt of eventual
+success in the war, but I will now remind you, more emphatically
+than before, and even with a degree of ostentation suitable as a
+stimulus to your present unnatural depression, that your naval
+force makes you masters not only of your allies, but of the entire
+sea—one-half of the visible field for action and employment.
+Compared with so vast a power as this, the temporary use of your
+houses and territory is a mere trifle, an ornamental accessory not
+worth considering: and this too, if ye preserve your freedom, ye
+will quickly recover. It was your fathers who first gained this
+empire, without any of the advantages which ye now enjoy; ye must
+not disgrace yourselves by losing what they acquired.</p>
+<p>"Delighting as ye all do in the honor and empire enjoyed by the
+city, ye must not shrink from the toils whereby alone that honor is
+sustained: moreover, ye now fight, not merely for freedom instead
+of slavery, but for empire against loss of empire, with all the
+perils arising out of imperial unpopularity. It is not safe for you
+now to abdicate, even if ye chose to do so; for ye hold your empire
+like a despotism—unjust perhaps in the original acquisition,
+but ruinous to part with when once acquired. Be not angry with me,
+whose advice ye followed in going to war, because the enemy have
+done such damage as might be expected from them: still less on
+account of this unforeseen distemper: I know that this makes me an
+object of your special present hatred, though very unjustly, unless
+ye will consent to give me credit also for any unexpected good-luck
+which may occur. Our city derives its particular glory from
+unshaken bearing up against misfortune: her power, her name, her
+empire of Greeks over Greeks, are such as have never before been
+seen; and if we choose to be great, we must take the consequence of
+that temporary envy and hatred which is the necessary price of
+permanent renown. Behave ye now in a manner worthy of that glory:
+display that courage which is essential to protect you against
+disgrace at present, as well as to guarantee your honor for the
+future. Send no further embassy to Sparta, and bear your
+misfortunes without showing symptoms of distress."</p>
+<p>The irresistible reason, as well as the proud and resolute
+bearing of this discourse, set forth with an eloquence which it was
+not possible for Thucydides to reproduce—together with the
+age and character of Pericles—carried the assent of the
+assembled people, who when in the Pnyx, and engaged according to
+habit on public matters, would for a moment forget their private
+sufferings in considerations of the safety and grandeur of Athens.
+Possibly, indeed, those sufferings, though still continuing, might
+become somewhat alleviated when the invaders quitted Attica, and
+when it was no longer indispensable for all the population to
+confine itself within the walls. Accordingly, the assembly resolved
+that no further propositions should be made for peace, and that the
+war should be prosecuted with vigor.</p>
+<p>But though the public resolution thus adopted showed the ancient
+habit of deference to the authority of Pericles, the sentiments of
+individuals taken separately were still those of anger against him
+as the author of that system which had brought them into so much
+distress. His political opponents—Cleon, Simmias, or
+Lacratidas, perhaps all three in conjunction—took care to
+provide an opportunity for this prevalent irritation to manifest
+itself in act, by bringing an accusation against him before the
+<i>dicastery</i>. The accusation is said to have been preferred on
+the ground of pecuniary malversation, and ended by his being
+sentenced to pay a considerable fine, the amount of which is
+differently reported—fifteen, fifty, or eighty talents, by
+different authors. The accusing party thus appeared to have carried
+their point, and to have disgraced, as well as excluded from
+reelection, the veteran statesman. The event, however, disappointed
+their expectations. The imposition of the fine not only satiated
+all the irritation of the people against him, but even occasioned a
+serious reaction in his favor, and brought back as strongly as ever
+the ancient sentiment of esteem and admiration. It was quickly
+found that those who had succeeded Pericles as generals neither
+possessed nor deserved in an equal degree the public confidence. He
+was accordingly soon reelected, with as much power and influence as
+he had ever in his life enjoyed.</p>
+<p>But that life, long, honorable, and useful, had already been
+prolonged considerably beyond the sixtieth year, and there were but
+too many circumstances, besides the recent fine, which tended to
+hasten as well as to embitter its close. At the very moment when
+Pericles was preaching to his countrymen, in a tone almost
+reproachful, the necessity of manful and unabated devotion to the
+common country in the midst of private suffering, he was himself
+among the greatest of sufferers, and most hardly pressed to set the
+example of observing his own precepts. The epidemic carried off not
+merely his two sons—the only two legitimate, Xanthippus and
+Paralus—but also his sister, several other relatives, and his
+best and most useful political friends. Amid this train of domestic
+calamities, and in the funeral obsequies of so many of his dearest
+friends, he remained master of his grief, and maintained his
+habitual self-command, until the last misfortune—the death of
+his favorite son Paralus, which left his house without any
+legitimate representative to maintain the family and the hereditary
+sacred rites. On this final blow, though he strove to command
+himself as before, yet at the obsequies of the young man, when it
+became his duty to place a wreath on the dead body, his grief
+became uncontrollable, and he burst out, for the first time in his
+life, into profuse tears and sobbing.</p>
+<p>In the midst of these several personal trials he received the
+intimation, through Alcibiades and some other friends, of the
+restored confidence of the people toward him, and of his reelection
+to the office of strategus. But it was not without difficulty that
+he was persuaded to present himself again at the public assembly
+and resume the direction of affairs. The regret of the people was
+formally expressed to him for the recent sentence—perhaps,
+indeed, the fine may have been repaid to him, or some evasion of it
+permitted, saving the forms of law—in the present temper of
+the city; which was further displayed toward him by the grant of a
+remarkable exemption from a law of his own original
+proposition.</p>
+<p>He had himself, some years before, been the author of that law
+whereby the citizenship of Athens was restricted to persons born
+both of Athenian fathers and Athenian mothers, under which
+restriction several thousand persons, illegitimate on the mother's
+side, are said to have been deprived of the citizenship, on
+occasion of a public distribution of corn. Invidious as it appeared
+to grant, to Pericles singly, an exemption from a law which had
+been strictly enforced against so many others, the people were now
+moved not less by compassion than by anxiety to redress their own
+previous severity. Without a legitimate heir, the house of
+Pericles, one branch of the great Alcmaeonid gens by his mother's
+side, would be left deserted, and the continuity of the family
+sacred rites would be broken—a misfortune painfully felt by
+every Athenian family, as calculated to wrong all the deceased
+members, and provoke their posthumous displeasure toward the city.
+Accordingly, permission was granted to Pericles to legitimize, and
+to inscribe in his own gens and phratry, his natural son by
+Aspasia, who bore his own name.</p>
+<p>It was thus that Pericles was reinstated in his post of
+strategus as well as in his ascendency over the public
+counsels—seemingly about August or September, B.C. 430. He
+lived about one year longer, and seems to have maintained his
+influence as long as his health permitted. Yet we hear nothing of
+him after this moment, and he fell a victim, not to the violent
+symptoms of the epidemic, but to a slow and wearing fever, which
+undermined his strength as well as his capacity. To a friend who
+came to ask after him when in this disease, Pericles replied by
+showing a charm or amulet which his female relations had hung about
+his neck—a proof how low he was reduced, and how completely
+he had become a passive subject in the hands of others.</p>
+<p>And according to another anecdote which we read—yet more
+interesting and equally illustrative of his character—it was
+during his last moments, when he was lying apparently unconscious
+and insensible, that the friends around his bed were passing in
+review the acts of his life, and the nine trophies which he had
+erected at different times for so many victories. He heard what
+they said, though they fancied that he was past hearing, and
+interrupted them by remarking: "What you praise in my life belongs
+partly to good fortune—and is, at best, common to me with
+many other generals. But the peculiarity of which I am most proud,
+you have not noticed—no Athenian has ever put on mourning
+through any action of mine."</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="RULE4_5"></a>DEFEAT OF THE ATHENIANS AT SYRACUSE</h2>
+<p class="center">B.C. 413</p>
+<p class="center">SIR EDWARD SHEPHERD CREASY</p>
+<p class="intros">That great writer of the history of the Romans,
+Thomas Arnold, says of the defeat of the Athenian fleet at
+Syracuse: "The Romans knew not, and could not know, how deeply the
+greatness of their own posterity, and the fate of the whole western
+world, were involved in the destruction of the fleet of Athens in
+the harbor of Syracuse. Had that great expedition proved
+victorious, the energies of Greece during the next eventful century
+would have found their field in the West no less than in the East;
+Greece, and not Rome; might have conquered Carthage; Greek instead
+of Latin might have been at this day the principal element of the
+language of Spain, of France, and of Italy; and the laws of Athens,
+rather than of Rome, might be the foundation of the law of the
+civilized world."</p>
+<p class="intros">The foregoing, the author's own selection, really
+sums up all that need be said as to the importance of the great
+event so finely treated by Creasy.</p>
+<p>Few cities have undergone more memorable sieges during ancient
+and mediaeval times than has the city of Syracuse. Athenian,
+Carthaginian, Roman, Vandal, Byzantine, Saracen, and Norman have in
+turns beleaguered her walls; and the resistance which she
+successfully opposed to some of her early assailants was of the
+deepest importance, not only to the fortunes of the generations
+then in being, but to all the subsequent current of human events.
+To adopt the eloquent expressions of Arnold respecting the check
+which she gave to the Carthaginian arms, "Syracuse was a breakwater
+which God's providence raised up to protect the yet immature
+strength of Rome." And her triumphant repulse of the great Athenian
+expedition against her was of even more widespread and enduring
+importance. It forms a decisive epoch in the strife for universal
+empire, in which all the great states of antiquity successively
+engaged and failed.</p>
+<p>The present city of Syracuse is a place of little or no military
+strength, as the fire of artillery from the neighboring heights
+would almost completely command it. But in ancient warfare its
+position, and the care bestowed on its walls, rendered it
+formidably strong against the means of offence which were then
+employed by besieging armies.</p>
+<p>The ancient city, in its most prosperous times, was chiefly
+built on the knob of land which projects into the sea on the
+eastern coast of Sicily, between two bays; one of which, to the
+north, was called the Bay of Thapsus, while the southern one formed
+the great harbor of the city of Syracuse itself. A small island, or
+peninsula (for such it soon was rendered), lies at the southeastern
+extremity of this knob of land, stretching almost entirely across
+the mouth of the great harbor, and rendering it nearly land-locked.
+This island comprised the original settlement of the first Greek
+colonists from Corinth, who founded Syracuse two thousand five
+hundred years ago; and the modern city has shrunk again into these
+primary limits. But, in the fifth century before our era, the
+growing wealth and population of the Syracusans had led them to
+occupy and include within their city walls portion after portion of
+the mainland lying next to the little isle, so that at the time of
+the Athenian expedition the seaward part of the land between the
+two bays already spoken of was built over, and fortified from bay
+to bay, and constituted the larger part of Syracuse.</p>
+<p>The landward wall, therefore, of this district of the city
+traversed this knob of land, which continues to slope upward from
+the sea, and which, to the west of the old fortifications, that is,
+toward the interior of Sicily, rises rapidly for a mile or two, but
+diminishes in width, and finally terminates in a long narrow ridge,
+between which and Mount Hybla a succession of chasms and uneven low
+ground extends. On each flank of this ridge the descent is steep
+and precipitous from its summits to the strips of level land that
+lie immediately below it, both to the southwest and northwest.</p>
+<p>The usual mode of assailing fortified towns in the time of the
+Peloponnesian war was to build a double wall round them
+sufficiently strong to check any sally of the garrison from within
+or any attack of a relieving force from without. The interval
+within the two walls of the circumvallation was roofed over, and
+formed barracks, in which the besiegers posted themselves, and
+awaited the effects of want or treachery among the besieged in
+producing a surrender; and in every Greek city of those days, as in
+every Italian republic of the Middle Ages, the rage of domestic
+sedition between aristocrats and democrats ran high. Rancorous
+refugees swarmed in the camp of every invading enemy; and every
+blockaded city was sure to contain within its walls a body of
+intriguing malcontents, who were eager to purchase a party triumph
+at the expense of a national disaster. Famine and faction were the
+allies on whom besiegers relied. The generals of that time trusted
+to the operation of these sure confederates as soon as they could
+establish a complete blockade. They rarely ventured on the attempt
+to storm any fortified post, for the military engines of antiquity
+were feeble in breaching masonry before the improvements which the
+first Dionysius effected in the mechanics of destruction; and the
+lives of spearmen the boldest and most high-trained would, of
+course, have been idly spent in charges against unshattered
+walls.</p>
+<p>A city built close to the sea, like Syracuse, was impregnable
+save by the combined operations of a superior hostile fleet and a
+superior hostile army; and Syracuse, from her size, her population,
+and her military and naval resources, not unnaturally thought
+herself secure from finding in another Greek city a foe capable of
+sending a sufficient armament to menace her with capture and
+subjection. But in the spring of B.C. 414 the Athenian navy was
+mistress of her harbor and the adjacent seas; an Athenian army had
+defeated her troops, and cooped them within the town; and from bay
+to bay a blockading wall was being rapidly carried across the
+strips of level ground and the high ridge outside the city (then
+termed Epipolae), which, if completed, would have cut the
+Syracusans off from all succor from the interior of Sicily, and
+have left them at the mercy of the Athenian generals. The
+besiegers' works were, indeed, unfinished; but every day the
+unfortified interval in their lines grew narrower, and with it
+diminished all apparent hope of safety for the beleaguered
+town.</p>
+<p>Athens was now staking the flower of her forces, and the
+accumulated fruits of seventy years of glory, on one bold throw for
+the dominion of the western world. As Napoleon from Mount Coeur de
+Lion pointed to St. Jean d'Acre, and told his staff that the
+capture of that town would decide his destiny and would change the
+face of the world, so the Athenian officers, from the heights of
+Epipolae, must have looked on Syracuse, and felt that with its fall
+all the known powers of the earth would fall beneath them. They
+must have felt also that Athens, if repulsed there, must pause
+forever from her career of conquest, and sink from an imperial
+republic into a ruined and subservient community.</p>
+<p>At Marathon, the first in date of the great battles of the
+world, we beheld Athens struggling for self-preservation against
+the invading armies of the East. At Syracuse she appears as the
+ambitious and oppressive invader of others. In her, as in other
+republics of old and of modern times, the same energy that had
+inspired the most heroic efforts in defence of the national
+independence soon learned to employ itself in daring and
+unscrupulous schemes of self-aggrandizement at the expense of
+neighboring nations. In the interval between the Persian and the
+Peloponnesian wars she had rapidly grown into a conquering and
+dominant state, the chief of a thousand tributary cities, and the
+mistress of the largest and best-manned navy that the Mediterranean
+had yet beheld. The occupations of her territory by Xerxes and
+Mardonius, in the second Persian war, had forced her whole
+population to become marines; and the glorious results of that
+struggle confirmed them in their zeal for their country's service
+at sea.</p>
+<p>The voluntary suffrage of the Greek cities of the coasts and
+islands of the Aegean first placed Athens at the head of the
+confederation formed for the further prosecution of the war against
+Persia. But this titular ascendency was soon converted by her into
+practical and arbitrary dominion. She protected them from piracy
+and the Persian power, which soon fell into decrepitude and decay,
+but she exacted in return implicit obedience to herself. She
+claimed and enforced a prerogative of taxing them at her
+discretion, and proudly refused to be accountable for her mode of
+expending their supplies. Remonstrance against her assessments was
+treated as factious disloyalty, and refusal to pay was promptly
+punished as revolt. Permitting and encouraging her subject allies
+to furnish all their contingents in money, instead of part
+consisting of ships and men, the sovereign republic gained the
+double object of training her own citizens by constant and
+well-paid service in her fleets, and of seeing her confederates
+lose their skill and discipline by inaction, and become more and
+more passive and powerless under her yoke. Their towns were
+generally dismantled, while the imperial city herself was fortified
+with the greatest care and sumptuousness; the accumulated revenues
+from her tributaries serving to strengthen and adorn to the utmost
+her havens, her docks, her arsenals, her theatres, and her shrines,
+and to array her in that plenitude of architectural magnificence
+the ruins of which still attest the intellectual grandeur of the
+age and people which produced a Pericles to plan and a Phidias to
+execute.</p>
+<p>All republics that acquire supremacy over other nations rule
+them selfishly and oppressively. There is no exception to this in
+either ancient or modern times. Carthage, Rome, Venice, Genoa,
+Florence, Pisa, Holland, and republican France, all tyrannized over
+every province and subject state where they gained authority. But
+none of them openly avowed their system of doing so upon principle
+with the candor which the Athenian republicans displayed when any
+remonstrance was made against the severe exactions which they
+imposed upon their vassal allies. They avowed that their empire was
+a tyranny, and frankly stated that they solely trusted to force and
+terror to uphold it. They appealed to what they called "the eternal
+law of nature, that the weak should be coerced by the strong."
+Sometimes they stated, and not without some truth, that the unjust
+hatred of Sparta against themselves forced them to be unjust to
+others in self-defence. To be safe, they must be powerful; and to
+be powerful, they must plunder and coerce their neighbors. They
+never dreamed of communicating any franchise, or share in office,
+to their dependants, but jealously monopolized every post of
+command and all political and judicial power; exposing themselves
+to every risk with unflinching gallantry; embarking readily in
+every ambitious scheme; and never suffering difficulty or disaster
+to shake their tenacity of purpose: in the hope of acquiring
+unbounded empire for their country, and the means of maintaining
+each of the thirty thousand citizens who made up the sovereign
+republic, in exclusive devotion to military occupations, and to
+those brilliant sciences and arts in which Athens already had
+reached the meridian of intellectual splendor.</p>
+<p>Her great political dramatist speaks of the Athenian empire as
+comprehending a thousand states. The language of the stage must not
+be taken too literally; but the number of the dependencies of
+Athens, at the time when the Peloponnesian confederacy attacked
+her, was undoubtedly very great. With a few trifling exceptions,
+all the islands of the Aegean, and all the Greek cities which in
+that age fringed the coasts of Asia Minor, the Hellespont, and
+Thrace, paid tribute to Athens, and implicitly obeyed her orders.
+The Aegean Sea was an Attic lake. Westward of Greece, her
+influence, though strong, was not equally predominant. She had
+colonies and allies among the wealthy and populous Greek
+settlements in Sicily and South Italy, but she had no organized
+system of confederates in those regions; and her galleys brought
+her no tribute from the Western seas. The extension of her empire
+over Sicily was the favorite project of her ambitious orators and
+generals. While her great statesman, Pericles, lived, his
+commanding genius kept his countrymen under control, and forbade
+them to risk the fortunes of Athens in distant enterprises, while
+they had unsubdued and powerful enemies at their own doors. He
+taught Athens this maxim; but he also taught her to know and to use
+her own strength; and when Pericles had departed, the bold spirit
+which he had fostered overleaped the salutary limits which he had
+prescribed.</p>
+<p>When her bitter enemies, the Corinthians, succeeded, B.C. 431,
+in inducing Sparta to attack her, and a confederacy was formed of
+five-sixths of the continental Greeks, all animated by anxious
+jealousy and bitter hatred of Athens; when armies far superior in
+numbers and equipment to those which had marched against the
+Persians were poured into the Athenian territory, and laid it waste
+to the city walls, the general opinion was that Athens would be
+reduced, in two or three years at the furthest, to submit to the
+requisitions of her invaders. But her strong fortifications, by
+which she was girt and linked to her principal haven, gave her, in
+those ages, almost all the advantages of an insular position.
+Pericles had made her trust to her empire of the seas. Every
+Athenian in those days was a practised seaman. A state, indeed,
+whose members, of an age fit for service, at no time exceeded
+thirty thousand, could only have acquired such a naval dominion as
+Athens once held by devoting and zealously training all its sons to
+service in its fleets. In order to man the numerous galleys which
+she sent out, she necessarily employed large numbers of hired
+mariners and slaves at the oar; but the staple of her crews was
+Athenian, and all posts of command were held by native citizens. It
+was by reminding them of this, of their long practice in
+seamanship, and the certain superiority which their discipline gave
+them over the enemy's marine, that their great minister mainly
+encouraged them to resist the combined power of Lacedaemon and her
+allies. He taught them that Athens might thus reap the fruit of her
+zealous devotion to maritime affairs ever since the invasion of the
+Medes; "she had not, indeed, perfected herself; but the reward of
+her superior training was the rule of the sea—a mighty
+dominion, for it gave her the rule of much fair land beyond its
+waves, safe from the idle ravages with which the Lacedaemonians
+might harass Attica, but never could subdue Athens."</p>
+<p>Athens accepted the war with which her enemies threatened her
+rather than descend from her pride of place; and though the awful
+visitation of the plague came upon her, and swept away more of her
+citizens than the Dorian spear laid low, she held her own gallantly
+against her enemies. If the Peloponnesian armies in irresistible
+strength wasted every spring her corn-lands, her vineyards, and her
+olive groves with fire and sword, she retaliated on their coasts
+with her fleets; which, if resisted, were only resisted to display
+the pre&euml;minent skill and bravery of her seamen. Some of her
+subject allies revolted, but the revolts were in general sternly
+and promptly quelled. The genius of one enemy had indeed inflicted
+blows on her power in Thrace which she was unable to remedy; but he
+fell in battle in the tenth year of the war, and with the loss of
+Brasidas the Lacedaemonians seemed to have lost all energy and
+judgment. Both sides at length grew weary of the war, and in 421 a
+truce for fifty years was concluded, which, though ill kept, and
+though many of the confederates of Sparta refused to recognize it,
+and hostilities still continued in many parts of Greece, protected
+the Athenian territory from the ravages of enemies, and enabled
+Athens to accumulate large sums out of the proceeds of her annual
+revenues. So also, as a few years passed by, the havoc which the
+pestilence and the sword had made in her population was repaired;
+and in 415 Athens was full of bold and restless spirits, who longed
+for some field of distant enterprise wherein they might signalize
+themselves and aggrandize the state, and who looked on the alarm of
+Spartan hostility as a mere old-woman's tale. When Sparta had
+wasted their territory she had done her worst; and the fact of its
+always being in her power to do so seemed a strong reason for
+seeking to increase the transmarine dominion of Athens.</p>
+<p>The West was now the quarter toward which the thoughts of every
+aspiring Athenian were directed. From the very beginning of the war
+Athens had kept up an interest in Sicily, and her squadron had,
+from time to time, appeared on its coasts and taken part in the
+dissensions in which the Sicilian Greeks were universally engaged
+one against the other. There were plausible grounds for a direct
+quarrel, and an open attack by the Athenians upon Syracuse.</p>
+<p>With the capture of Syracuse, all Sicily, it was hoped, would be
+secured. Carthage and Italy were next to be attacked. With large
+levies of Iberian mercenaries she then meant to overwhelm her
+Peloponnesian enemies. The Persian monarchy lay in hopeless
+imbecility, inviting Greek invasion; nor did the known world
+contain the power that seemed capable of checking the growing might
+of Athens, if Syracuse once should be hers.</p>
+<p>The national historian of Rome has left us an episode of his
+great work, a disquisition on the probable effects that would have
+followed if Alexander the Great had invaded Italy. Posterity has
+generally regarded that disquisition as proving Livy's patriotism
+more strongly than his impartiality or acuteness. Yet, right or
+wrong, the speculations of the Roman writer were directed to the
+consideration of a very remote possibility. To whatever age
+Alexander's life might have been prolonged, the East would have
+furnished full occupation for his martial ambition, as well as for
+those schemes of commercial grandeur and imperial amalgamation of
+nations in which the truly great qualities of his mind loved to
+display themselves. With his death the dismemberment of his empire
+among his generals was certain, even as the dismemberment of
+Napoleon's empire among his marshals would certainly have ensued if
+he had been cut off in the zenith of his power. Rome, also, was far
+weaker when the Athenians were in Sicily than she was a century
+afterward in Alexander's time. There can be little doubt but that
+Rome would have been blotted out from the independent powers of the
+West, had she been attacked at the end of the fifth century B.C. by
+an Athenian army, largely aided by Spanish mercenaries, and flushed
+with triumphs over Sicily and Africa, instead of the collision
+between her and Greece having been deferred until the latter had
+sunk into decrepitude, and the Roman Mars had grown into full
+vigor.</p>
+<p>The armament which the Athenians equipped against Syracuse was
+in every way worthy of the state which formed such projects of
+universal empire, and it has been truly termed "the noblest that
+ever yet had been sent forth by a free and civilized commonwealth."
+The fleet consisted of one hundred and thirty-four war-galleys,
+with a multitude of storeships. A powerful force of the best
+heavy-armed infantry that Athens and her allies could furnish was
+sent on board it, together with a smaller number of slingers and
+bowmen. The quality of the forces was even more remarkable than the
+number. The zeal of individuals vied with that of the republic in
+giving every galley the best possible crew and every troop the most
+perfect accoutrements. And with private as well as public wealth
+eagerly lavished on all that could give splendor as well as
+efficiency to the expedition, the fated fleet began its voyage for
+the Sicilian shores in the summer of 415.</p>
+<p>The Syracusans themselves, at the time of the Peloponnesian war,
+were a bold and turbulent democracy, tyrannizing over the weaker
+Greek cities in Sicily, and trying to gain in that island the same
+arbitrary supremacy which Athens maintained along the eastern coast
+of the Mediterranean. In numbers and in spirit they were fully
+equal to the Athenians, but far inferior to them in military and
+naval discipline. When the probability of an Athenian invasion was
+first publicly discussed at Syracuse, and efforts were made by some
+of the wiser citizens to improve the state of the national defences
+and prepare for the impending danger, the rumors of coming war and
+the proposal for preparation were received by the mass of the
+Syracusans with scornful incredulity. The speech of one of their
+popular orators is preserved to us in Thucydides.</p>
+<p>The Syracusan orator told his countrymen to dismiss with scorn
+the visionary terrors which a set of designing men among themselves
+strove to excite, in order to get power and influence thrown into
+their own hands. He told them that Athens knew her own interest too
+well to think of wantonly provoking their hostility: "Even if the
+enemies were to come," said he, "so distant from their resources,
+and opposed to such a power as ours, their destruction would be
+easy and inevitable. Their ships will have enough to do to get to
+our island at all, and to carry such stores of all sorts as will be
+needed. They cannot therefore carry, besides, an army large enough
+to cope with such a population as ours. They will have no fortified
+place from which to commence their operations, but must rest them
+on no better base than a set of wretched tents, and such means as
+the necessities of the moment will allow them. But, in truth, I do
+not believe that they would even be able to effect a
+disembarkation. Let us, therefore, set at naught these reports as
+altogether of home manufacture; and be sure that if any enemy does
+come, the state will know how to defend itself in a manner worthy
+of the national honor."</p>
+<p>Such assertions pleased the Syracusan assembly; but the invaders
+of Syracuse came, made good their landing in Sicily; and if they
+had promptly attacked the city itself, instead of wasting nearly a
+year in desultory operations in other parts of Sicily, the
+Syracusans must have paid the penalty of their self-sufficient
+carelessness in submission to the Athenian yoke. But, of the three
+generals who led the Athenian expedition, two only were men of
+ability, and one was most weak and incompetent. Fortunately for
+Syracuse, Alcibiades, the most skilful of the three, was soon
+deposed from his command by a factious and fanatic vote of his
+fellow-countrymen, and the other competent one, Lamachus, fell
+early in a skirmish; while, more fortunately still for her, the
+feeble and vacillating Nicias remained unrecalled and unhurt, to
+assume the undivided leadership of the Athenian army and fleet, and
+to mar, by alternate over-caution and over-carelessness, every
+chance of success which the early part of the operations offered.
+Still, even under him, the Athenians nearly won the town. They
+defeated the raw levies of the Syracusans, cooped them within the
+walls, and, as before mentioned, almost effected a continuous
+fortification from bay to bay over Epipolae, the completion of
+which would certainly have been followed by a capitulation.</p>
+<p>Alcibiades—the most complete example of genius without
+principle that history produces; the Bolingbroke of antiquity, but
+with high military talents superadded to diplomatic and oratorical
+powers—on being summoned home from his command in Sicily to
+take his trial before the Athenian tribunal, had escaped to Sparta,
+and had exerted himself there with all the selfish rancor of a
+renegade to renew the war with Athens and to send instant
+assistance to Syracuse.</p>
+<p>When we read his words in the pages of Thucydides—who was
+himself an exile from Athens at this period, and may probably have
+been at Sparta, and heard Alcibiades speak—we are at a loss
+whether most to admire or abhor his subtle counsels. After an
+artful exordium, in which he tried to disarm the suspicions which
+he felt must be entertained of him, and to point out to the
+Spartans how completely his interests and theirs were identified,
+through hatred of the Athenian democracy, he thus proceeded:</p>
+<p>"Hear me, at any rate, on the matters which require your grave
+attention, and which I, from the personal knowledge that I have of
+them, can and ought to bring before you. We Athenians sailed to
+Sicily with the design of subduing, first the Greek cities there,
+and next those in Italy. Then we intended to make an attempt on the
+dominions of Carthage, and on Carthage itself.[<a href="#note-24">24</a>] If all these projects succeeded—nor did we
+limit ourselves to them in these quarters—we intended to
+increase our fleet with the inexhaustible supplies of ship timber
+which Italy affords, to put in requisition the whole military force
+of the conquered Greek states, and also to hire large armies of the
+barbarians, of the Iberians,[<a href="#note-25">25</a>] and others
+in those regions, who are allowed to make the best possible
+soldiers. <i>Then</i>, when we had done all this, we intended to
+assail Peloponnesus with our collected force. Our fleets would
+blockade you by sea and desolate your coasts, our armies would be
+landed at different points and assail your cities. Some of these we
+expected to storm,[<a href="#note-26">26</a>] and others we meant
+to take by surrounding them with fortified lines. We thought that
+it would thus be an easy matter thoroughly to war you down; and
+then we should become the masters of the whole Greek race. As for
+expense, we reckoned that each conquered state would give us
+supplies of money and provisions sufficient to pay for its own
+conquest, and furnish the means for the conquest of its
+neighbors."</p>
+<p><a name="note-24"><!-- Note Anchor 24 --></a>[Footnote 24:
+Arnold, in his notes on this passage, well reminds the reader that
+Agathocles, with a Greek force far inferior to that of the
+Athenians at this period, did, some years afterward, very nearly
+conquer Carthage.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-25"><!-- Note Anchor 25 --></a>[Footnote 25: It
+will be remembered that Spanish infantry were the staple of the
+Carthaginian armies. Doubtless Alcibiades and other leading
+Athenians had made themselves acquainted with the Carthaginian
+system of carrying on war, and meant to adopt it. With the
+marvellous powers which Alcibiades possessed of ingratiating
+himself with men of every class and every nation, and his high
+military genius, he would have been as formidable a chief of an
+army of <i>condottieri</i> as Hannibal afterward was.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-26"><!-- Note Anchor 26 --></a>[Footnote 26:
+Alcibiades here alluded to Sparta itself, which was unfortified.
+His Spartan hearers must have glanced round them at these words
+with mixed alarm and indignation.]</p>
+<p>"Such are the designs of the present Athenian expedition to
+Sicily, and you have heard them from the lips of the man who, of
+all men living, is most accurately acquainted with them. The other
+Athenian generals, who remain with the expedition, will endeavor to
+carry out these plans. And be sure that without your speedy
+interference they will all be accomplished. The Sicilian Greeks are
+deficient in military training; but still, if they could at once be
+brought to combine in an organized resistance to Athens, they might
+even now be saved. But as for the Syracusans resisting Athens by
+themselves, they have already, with the whole strength of their
+population, fought a battle and been beaten; they cannot face the
+Athenians at sea; and it is quite impossible for them to hold out
+against the force of their invaders. And if this city falls into
+the hands of the Athenians, all Sicily is theirs, and presently
+Italy also; and the danger, which I warned you of from that
+quarter, will soon fall upon yourselves. You must, therefore, in
+Sicily, fight for the safety of Peloponnesus. Send some galleys
+thither instantly. Put men on board who can work their own way
+over, and who, as soon as they land, can do duty as regular troops.
+But, above all, let one of yourselves, let a man of Sparta, go over
+to take the chief command, to bring into order and effective
+discipline the forces that are in Syracuse, and urge those who at
+present hang back to come forward and aid the Syracusans. The
+presence of a Spartan general at this crisis will do more to save
+the city than a whole army."</p>
+<p>The renegade then proceeded to urge on them the necessity of
+encouraging their friends in Sicily, by showing that they
+themselves were in earnest in hostility to Athens. He exhorted them
+not only to march their armies into Attica again, but to take up a
+permanent fortified position in the country; and he gave them in
+detail information of all that the Athenians most dreaded, and how
+his country might receive the most distressing and enduring injury
+at their hands.</p>
+<p>The Spartans resolved to act on his advice, and appointed
+Gylippus to the Sicilian command. Gylippus was a man who, to the
+national bravery and military skill of a Spartan united political
+sagacity that was worthy of his great fellow-countryman Brasidas;
+but his merits were debased by mean and sordid vices; and his is
+one of the cases in which history has been austerely just, and
+where little or no fame has been accorded to the successful but
+venal soldier. But for the purpose for which he was required in
+Sicily, an abler man could not have been found in Lacedaemon. His
+country gave him neither men nor money, but she gave him her
+authority; and the influence of her name and of his own talents was
+speedily seen in the zeal with which the Corinthians and other
+Peloponnesian Greeks began to equip a squadron to act under him for
+the rescue of Sicily. As soon as four galleys were ready, he
+hurried over with them to the southern coast of Italy, and there,
+though he received such evil tidings of the state of Syracuse that
+he abandoned all hope of saving that city, he determined to remain
+on the coast, and do what he could in preserving the Italian cities
+from the Athenians.</p>
+<p>So nearly, indeed, had Nicias completed his beleaguering lines,
+and so utterly desperate had the state of Syracuse seemingly
+become, that an assembly of the Syracusans was actually convened,
+and they were discussing the terms on which they should offer to
+capitulate, when a galley was seen dashing into the great harbor,
+and making her way toward the town with all the speed which her
+rowers could supply. From her shunning the part of the harbor where
+the Athenian fleet lay, and making straight for the Syracusan side,
+it was clear that she was a friend; the enemy's cruisers, careless
+through confidence of success, made no attempt to cut her off; she
+touched the beach, and a Corinthian captain, springing on shore
+from her, was eagerly conducted to the assembly of the Syracusan
+people just in time to prevent the fatal vote being put for a
+surrender.</p>
+<p>Providentially for Syracuse, Gongylus, the commander of the
+galley, had been prevented by an Athenian squadron from following
+Gylippus to South Italy, and he had been obliged to push direct for
+Syracuse from Greece.</p>
+<p>The sight of actual succor, and the promise of more, revived the
+drooping spirits of the Syracusans. They felt that they were not
+left desolate to perish, and the tidings that a Spartan was coming
+to command them confirmed their resolution to continue their
+resistance. Gylippus was already near the city. He had learned at
+Locri that the first report which had reached him of the state of
+Syracuse was exaggerated, and that there was unfinished space in
+the besiegers' lines through which it was barely possible to
+introduce re&euml;nforcements into the town. Crossing the Straits
+of Messina, which the culpable negligence of Nicias had left
+unguarded, Gylippus landed on the northern coast of Sicily, and
+there began to collect from the Greek cities an army, of which the
+regular troops that he brought from Peloponnesus formed the
+nucleus. Such was the influence of the name of Sparta, and such
+were his own abilities and activity, that he succeeded in raising a
+force of about two thousand fully armed infantry, with a larger
+number of irregular troops. Nicias, as if infatuated, made no
+attempt to counteract his operation, nor, when Gylippus marched his
+little army toward Syracuse, did the Athenian commander endeavor to
+check him. The Syracusans marched out to meet him; and while the
+Athenians were solely intent on completing their fortifications on
+the southern side toward the harbor, Gylippus turned their position
+by occupying the high ground in the extreme rear of Epipolae. He
+then marched through the unfortified interval of Nicias' lines into
+the besieged town, and joining his troops with the Syracusan
+forces, after some engagements with varying success, gained the
+mastery over Nicias, drove the Athenians from Epipolae, and hemmed
+them into a disadvantageous position in the low grounds near the
+great harbor.</p>
+<p>The attention of all Greece was now fixed on Syracuse, and every
+enemy of Athens felt the importance of the opportunity now offered
+of checking her ambition, and, perhaps, of striking a deadly blow
+at her power. Larger reinforcements from Corinth, Thebes, and other
+cities now reached the Syracusans, while the baffled and dispirited
+Athenian general earnestly besought his countrymen to recall him,
+and represented the further prosecution of the siege as
+hopeless.</p>
+<p>But Athens had made it a maxim never to let difficulty or
+disaster drive her back from any enterprise once undertaken, so
+long as she possessed the means of making any effort, however
+desperate, for its accomplishment. With indomitable pertinacity,
+she now decreed, instead of recalling her first armament from
+before Syracuse, to send out a second, though her enemies near home
+had now renewed open warfare against her, and by occupying a
+permanent fortification in her territory had severely distressed
+her population, and were pressing her with almost all the hardships
+of an actual siege. She still was mistress of the sea, and she sent
+forth another fleet of seventy galleys, and another army, which
+seemed to drain almost the last reserves of her military
+population, to try if Syracuse could not yet be won, and the honor
+of the Athenian arms be preserved from the stigma of a retreat.
+Hers was, indeed, a spirit that might be broken, but never would
+bend. At the head of this second expedition she wisely placed her
+best general, Demosthenes, one of the most distinguished officers
+that the long Peloponnesian war had produced, and who, if he had
+originally held the Sicilian command, would soon have brought
+Syracuse to submission.</p>
+<p>The fame of Demosthenes the general has been dimmed by the
+superior lustre of his great countryman, Demosthenes the orator.
+When the name of Demosthenes is mentioned, it is the latter alone
+that is thought of. The soldier has found no biographer. Yet out of
+the long list of great men whom the Athenian republic produced,
+there are few that deserve to stand higher than this brave, though
+finally unsuccessful leader of her fleets and armies in the first
+half of the Peloponnesian war. In his first campaign in Aetolia he
+had shown some of the rashness of youth, and had received a lesson
+of caution by which he profited throughout the rest of his career,
+but without losing any of his natural energy in enterprise or in
+execution. He had performed the distinguished service of rescuing
+Naupactus from a powerful hostile armament in the seventh year of
+the war; he had then, at the request of the Acarnanian republics,
+taken on himself the office of commander-in-chief of all their
+forces, and at their head he had gained some important advantages
+over the enemies of Athens in Western Greece. His most celebrated
+exploits had been the occupation of Pylos on the Messenian coast,
+the successful defence of that place against the fleet and armies
+of Lacedaemon, and the subsequent capture of the Spartan forces on
+the isle of Sphacteria, which was the severest blow dealt to Sparta
+throughout the war, and which had mainly caused her to humble
+herself to make the truce with Athens.</p>
+<p>Demosthenes was as honorably unknown in the war of party
+politics at Athens as he was eminent in the war against the foreign
+enemy. We read of no intrigues of his on either the aristocratic or
+democratic side. He was neither in the interest of Nicias nor of
+Cleon. His private character was free from any of the stains which
+polluted that of Alcibiades. On all these points the silence of the
+comic dramatist is decisive evidence in his favor. He had also the
+moral courage, not always combined with physical, of seeking to do
+his duty to his country, irrespective of any odium that he himself
+might incur, and unhampered by any petty jealousy of those who were
+associated with him in command. There are few men named in ancient
+history of whom posterity would gladly know more or whom we
+sympathize with more deeply in the calamities that befell them than
+Demosthenes, the son of Alcisthenes, who, in the spring of the year
+413, left Piraeus at the head of the second Athenian expedition
+against Sicily.</p>
+<p>His arrival was critically timed; for Gylippus had encouraged
+the Syracusans to attack the Athenians under Nicias by sea as well
+as by land, and by one able stratagem of Ariston, one of the
+admirals of the Corinthian auxiliary squadron, the Syracusans and
+their confederates had inflicted on the fleet of Nicias the first
+defeat that the Athenian navy had ever sustained from a numerically
+inferior enemy. Gylippus was preparing to follow up his advantage
+by fresh attacks on the Athenians on both elements, when the
+arrival of Demosthenes completely changed the aspect of affairs and
+restored the superiority to the invaders. With seventy-three
+war-galleys in the highest state of efficiency, and brilliantly
+equipped, with a force of five thousand picked men of the regular
+infantry of Athens and her allies, and a still larger number of
+bowmen, javelin-men, and slingers on board, Demosthenes rowed round
+the great harbor with loud cheers and martial music, as if in
+defiance of the Syracusans and their confederates. His arrival had
+indeed changed their newly born hopes into the deepest
+consternation.</p>
+<p>The resources of Athens seemed inexhaustible, and resistance to
+her hopeless. They had been told that she was reduced to the last
+extremities, and that her territory was occupied by an enemy; and
+yet here they saw her sending forth, as if in prodigality of power,
+a second armament, to make foreign conquests, not inferior to that
+with which Nicias had first landed on the Sicilian shores.</p>
+<p>With the intuitive decision of a great commander, Demosthenes at
+once saw that the possession of Epipolae was the key to the
+possession of Syracuse, and he resolved to make a prompt and
+vigorous attempt to recover that position while his force was
+unimpaired and the consternation which its arrival had produced
+among the besieged remained unabated. The Syracusans and their
+allies had run out an outwork along Epipolae from the city walls,
+intersecting the fortified lines of circumvallation which Nicias
+had commenced, but from which he had been driven by Gylippus. Could
+Demosthenes succeed in storming this outwork, and in
+re&euml;stablishing the Athenian troops on the high ground, he
+might fairly hope to be able to resume the circumvallation of the
+city and become the conqueror of Syracuse; for when once the
+besiegers' lines were completed, the number of the troops with
+which Gylippus had garrisoned the place would only tend to exhaust
+the stores of provisions and accelerate its downfall.</p>
+<p>An easily repelled attack was first made on the outwork in the
+daytime, probably more with the view of blinding the besieged to
+the nature of the main operations than with any expectation of
+succeeding in an open assault, with every disadvantage of the
+ground to contend against. But, when the darkness had set in,
+Demosthenes formed his men in columns, each soldier taking with him
+five days' provisions, and the engineers and workmen of the camp
+following the troops with their tools and all portable implements
+of fortification, so as at once to secure any advantage of ground
+that the army might gain. Thus equipped and prepared, he led his
+men along by the foot of the southern flank of Epipolae, in a
+direction toward the interior of the island, till he came
+immediately below the narrow ridge that forms the extremity of the
+high ground looking westward. He then wheeled his vanguard to the
+right, sent them rapidly up the paths that wind along the face of
+the cliff, and succeeded in completely surprising the Syracusan
+outposts, and in placing his troops fairly on the extreme summit of
+the all-important Epipolae. Thence the Athenians marched eagerly
+down the slope toward the town, routing some Syracusan detachments
+that were quartered in their way, and vigorously assailing the
+unprotected side of the outwork.</p>
+<p>All at first favored them. The outwork was abandoned by its
+garrison, and the Athenian engineers began to dismantle it. In vain
+Gylippus brought up fresh troops to check the assault; the
+Athenians broke and drove them back, and continued to press hotly
+forward, in the full confidence of victory. But, amid the general
+consternation of the Syracusans and their confederates, one body of
+infantry stood firm. This was a brigade of their Boeotian allies,
+which was posted low down the slope of Epipolae, outside the city
+walls. Coolly and steadily the Boeotian infantry formed their line,
+and, undismayed by the current of flight around them, advanced
+against the advancing Athenians. This was the crisis of the battle.
+But the Athenian van was disorganized by its own previous
+successes; and, yielding to the unexpected charge thus made on it
+by troops in perfect order, and of the most obstinate courage, it
+was driven back in confusion upon the other divisions of the army
+that still continued to press forward. When once the tide was thus
+turned, the Syracusans passed rapidly from the extreme of panic to
+the extreme of vengeful daring, and with all their forces they now
+fiercely assailed the embarrassed and receding Athenians. In vain
+did the officers of the latter strive to reform their line. Amid
+the din and the shouting of the fight, and the confusion
+inseparable upon a night engagement, especially one where many
+thousand combatants were pent and whirled together in a narrow and
+uneven area, the necessary manoeuvres were impracticable; and
+though many companies still fought on desperately, wherever the
+moonlight showed them the semblance of a foe, they fought without
+concert or subordination; and not infrequently, amid the deadly
+chaos, Athenian troops assailed each other. Keeping their ranks
+close, the Syracusans and their allies pressed on against the
+disorganized masses of the besiegers, and at length drove them,
+with heavy slaughter, over the cliffs, which an hour or two before
+they had scaled full of hope and apparently certain of success.</p>
+<p>This defeat was decisive of the event of the siege. The
+Athenians afterward struggled only to protect themselves from the
+vengeance which the Syracusans sought to wreak in the complete
+destruction of their invaders. Never, however, was vengeance more
+complete and terrible. A series of sea-fights followed, in which
+the Athenian galleys were utterly destroyed or captured. The
+mariners and soldiers who escaped death in disastrous engagements,
+and a vain attempt to force a retreat into the interior of the
+island, became prisoners of war. Nicias and Demosthenes were put to
+death in cold blood, and their men either perished miserably in the
+Syracusan dungeons or were sold into slavery to the very persons
+whom, in their pride of power, they had crossed the seas to
+enslave.</p>
+<p>All danger from Athens to the independent nations of the West
+was now forever at an end. She, indeed, continued to struggle
+against her combined enemies and revolted allies with unparalleled
+gallantry, and many more years of varying warfare passed away
+before she surrendered to their arms. But no success in subsequent
+contests could ever have restored her to the pre&euml;minence in
+enterprise, resources, and maritime skill which she had acquired
+before her fatal reverses in Sicily. Nor among the rival Greek
+republics, whom her own rashness aided to crush her, was there any
+capable of reorganizing her empire, or resuming her schemes of
+conquest. The dominion of Western Europe was left for Rome and
+Carthage to dispute two centuries later, in conflicts still more
+terrible, and with even higher displays of military daring and
+genius than Athens had witnessed either in her rise, her meridian,
+or her fall.</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="RULE4_6"></a>RETREAT OF THE TEN THOUSAND GREEKS</h2>
+<p class="center">B.C. 401-399</p>
+<p class="center">XENOPHON</p>
+<p class="intros">The expedition of the Greeks, generally known as
+the "Retreat of the Ten Thousand," was conducted by Xenophon, a
+Greek historian, essayist, and military commander. Xenophon was a
+pupil of Socrates, of whom he left a famous memoir. In B.C. 401 he
+accepted the invitation of his friend Proxenus of Boeotia, a
+general of Greek mercenaries, to take service under Cyrus the
+Younger, brother of Artaxerxes Mnemon, king of Persia.</p>
+<p class="intros">Cyrus had considered himself as deeply wronged by
+his elder brother, who had thrown him into prison on the death of
+their father, Darius. Escaping from prison, he formed a design to
+wrest the throne from Artaxerxes. For this purpose he engaged the
+forces of Proxenus, and to this army Xenophon attached himself. The
+rendezvous was Sardis, from which the army marched east under the
+pretext of chastising the revolting mountaineers of Pisidia.
+Instead of attacking the Pisidians, the followers of Cyrus
+proceeded east through Asia and Babylonia till they met the forces
+of Artaxerxes at Cunaxa. A furious battle took place, and the rout
+of the king's army had begun when Cyrus, elated with the victory
+that seemed just within his grasp, challenged his brother to single
+combat. In the duel that ensued Cyrus was slain. Proxenus had
+already fallen, and the virtual command of the Greek army soon
+devolved upon Xenophon, who thereupon began the famous retreat.</p>
+<p class="intros">A vivid account of battles, and of hardships
+endured from the cold, in the struggle through mountain snows,
+through almost impassable forests, and across bridgeless rivers, is
+given in Xenophon's <i>Anabasis</i>, the celebrated work, in seven
+books, which forms the classical narrative of the campaign and the
+retreat. Soon after the death of Cyrus, in September, B.C. 401, the
+seizure and murder of the leading Greek generals by the treacherous
+Persian satrap, Tissaphernes, placed the Greek army in great peril.
+Xenophon, who now took practical command, counselled and exhorted
+the surviving leaders, and on the next day the Greeks formed in a
+hollow square, the baggage in the centre, and began their retreat,
+which led them along the Tigris to the territory of the Carduchi
+(Kurds), through Armenia, and across Georgia, the enemy often
+harassing them.</p>
+<p class="intros">At the point where the climax of the story, which
+is presented here, may be said to begin, the Greeks have entered
+Armenia, passed the sources of the Tigris, and reached the
+Teleboas. Having made a treaty with Tiribazus, governor of the
+province, and discovered his insincerity, and that he was ready to
+attack them in their passage over the mountains, they resolved upon
+a quick resumption of their march.</p>
+<p class="intros">When, in the fifth month of the retreat the
+Greeks at last from a hilltop beheld the Euxine, they sent up a
+cry, "The sea! the sea!" which has echoed through succeeding ages
+as one of the great historic jubilations of humanity. At the end of
+the retreat their numbers were reduced to about six thousand, and
+from the starting-point at Cunaxa to the middle of the southern
+coast of the Black Sea they had travelled as much as two thousand
+miles. From Ephesus to Cunaxa and thence to the Black Sea region
+they had marched in fifteen months (February, B.C. 401, to June,
+400), and nine months more passed before they joined the Spartan
+army in Asia Minor, and their task was fully accomplished. Their
+great performance is regarded as having prepared the way for
+Alexander's triumphant advances in the East. The young conqueror,
+on the eve of the battle of Issus, declared that he owed
+inspiration to the feat of the Ten Thousand.</p>
+<p>It was thought necessary to march away as fast as possible,
+before the enemy's force should be reassembled, and get possession
+of the pass.</p>
+<p>Collecting their baggage at once, therefore, they set forward
+through a deep snow, taking with them several guides, and, having
+the same day passed the height on which Tiribazus had intended to
+attack them, they encamped. Hence they proceeded three days'
+journey through a desert tract of country, a distance of fifteen
+<i>parasangs</i>, to the river Euphrates, and passed it without
+being wet higher than the middle. The sources of the river were
+said not to be far off. From hence they advanced three days' march,
+through much snow and a level plain, a distance of fifteen
+parasangs; the third day's march was extremely troublesome, as the
+north wind blew full in their faces, completely parching up
+everything and benumbing the men. One of the augurs, in
+consequence, advised that they should sacrifice to the wind, and a
+sacrifice was accordingly offered, when the vehemence of the wind
+appeared to everyone manifestly to abate. The depth of the snow was
+a fathom, so that many of the baggage cattle and slaves perished,
+with about thirty of the soldiers.</p>
+<p>They continued to burn fires through the whole night, for there
+was plenty of wood at the place of encampment. But those who came
+up late could get no wood; those, therefore, who had arrived before
+and had kindled fires would not admit the late comers to the fire
+unless they gave them a share of the corn or other provisions that
+they had brought. Thus they shared with each other what they
+respectively had. In the places where the fires were made, as the
+snow melted, there were formed large pits that reached down to the
+ground, and here there was accordingly opportunity to measure the
+depth of the snow.</p>
+<p>From hence they marched through snow the whole of the following
+day, and many of the men contracted the <i>bulimia</i>.[<a href="#note-28">28</a>] Xenophon, who commanded in the rear, finding in
+his way such of the men as had fallen down with it, knew not what
+disease it was. But as one of these acquainted with it told him
+that they were evidently affected with bulimia, and that they would
+get up if they had something to eat, he went round among the
+baggage and wherever he saw anything eatable he gave it out, and
+sent such as were able to run to distribute it among those
+diseased, who, as soon as they had eaten, rose up and continued
+their march. As they proceeded, Chirisophus came, just as it grew
+dark, to a village, and found, at a spring in front of the rampart,
+some women and girls belonging to the place fetching water. The
+women asked them who they were, and the interpreter answered, in
+the Persian language, that they were people going from the king to
+the satrap. They replied that he was not there, but about a
+parasang off.</p>
+<p><a name="note-28"><!-- Note Anchor 28 --></a>[Footnote 28:
+Spelman quotes a description of the bulimia from Galen, in which it
+is said to be "a disease in which the patient frequently craves for
+food, loses the use of his limbs, falls down, turns pale, feels his
+extremities become cold, his stomach oppressed, and his pulse
+feeble." Here, however, it seems to mean little more than a
+faintness from long fasting.]</p>
+<p>However, as it was late, they went with the water-carriers
+within the rampart, to the head man of the village, and here
+Chirisophus and as many of the troops as could come up encamped;
+but of the rest, such as were unable to get to the end of the
+journey spent the night on the way without food or fire, and some
+of the soldiers lost their lives on that occasion. Some of the
+enemy too, who had collected themselves into a body, pursued our
+rear, and seized any of the baggage-cattle that were unable to
+proceed, fighting with one another for the possession of them. Such
+of the soldiers also as had lost their sight from the effects of
+the snow, or had their toes mortified by the cold, were left
+behind. It was found to be a relief to the eyes against the snow,
+if the soldiers kept something black before them on the march, and
+to the feet, if they kept constantly in motion, and allowed
+themselves no rest, and if they took off their shoes in the night.
+But as to such as slept with their shoes on, the straps worked into
+their feet, and the soles were frozen about them, for when their
+old shoes had failed them, shoes of raw hides had been made by the
+men themselves from the newly skinned oxen.</p>
+<p>From such unavoidable sufferings some of the soldiers were left
+behind, who, seeing a piece of ground of a black appearance, from
+the snow having disappeared there, conjectured that it must have
+melted, and it had in fact melted in the spot from the effect of a
+fountain, which was sending up vapor in a wooded hollow close at
+hand. Turning aside thither, they sat down and refused to proceed
+farther. Xenophon, who was with the rear-guard, as soon as he heard
+this tried to prevail on them by every art and means not to be left
+behind, telling them, at the same time, that the enemy were
+collected and pursuing them in great numbers. At last he grew
+angry, and they told him to kill them, as they were quite unable to
+go forward. He then thought it the best course to strike a terror,
+if possible, into the enemy that were behind, lest they should fall
+upon the exhausted soldiers. It was now dark, and the enemy were
+advancing with a great noise, quarrelling about the booty that they
+had taken, when such of the rear-guard as were not disabled started
+up and rushed toward them, while the tired men, shouting as loud as
+they could, clashed their spears against their shields. The enemy,
+struck with alarm, threw themselves among the snow into the hollow,
+and no one of them afterward made himself heard from any
+quarter.</p>
+<p>Xenophon and those with him, telling the sick men that a party
+should come to their relief next day, proceeded on their march, but
+before they had gone four <i>stadia</i> they found other soldiers
+resting by the way in the snow, and covered up with it, no guard
+being stationed over them. They roused them up, but they said that
+the head of the army was not moving forward. Xenophon, going past
+them and sending on some of the ablest of the <i>peltasts</i>,
+ordered them to ascertain what it was that hindered their progress.
+They brought word that the whole army was in that manner taking
+rest. Xenophon and his men, therefore, stationing such a guard as
+they could, took up their quarters there without fire or supper.
+When it was near day, he sent the youngest of his men to the sick,
+telling them to rouse them and oblige them to proceed. At this
+juncture Chirisophus sent some of his people from the village to
+see how the rear were faring. The young men were rejoiced to see
+them, and gave them the sick to conduct to the camp, while they
+themselves went forward, and, before they had gone twenty stadia,
+found themselves at the village in which Chirisophus was quartered.
+When they came together, it was thought safe enough to lodge the
+troops up and down in the village. Chirisophus accordingly remained
+where he was, and the other officers, appropriating by lot the
+several villages that they had in sight, went to their respective
+quarters with their men.</p>
+<p>Here Polycrates, an Athenian captain, requested leave of
+absence, and taking with him the most active of his men, and
+hastening to the village to which Xenophon had been allotted,
+surprised all the villagers and their head man in their houses,
+together with seventeen colts that were bred as a tribute for the
+king, and the head man's daughter, who had been but nine days
+married; her husband was gone out to hunt hares, and was not found
+in any of the villages. Their houses were underground, the entrance
+like the mouth of a well, but spacious below; there were passages
+dug into them for the cattle, but the people descended by ladders.
+In the houses were goats, sheep, cows, and fowls, with their young;
+all the cattle were kept on fodder within the walls.[<a href="#note-29">29</a>] There were also wheat, barley, leguminous
+vegetables, and barley wine[<a href="#note-30">30</a>] in large
+bowls; the grains of barley floated in it even with the brim of the
+vessels, and reeds also lay in it, some larger and some smaller,
+without joints; and these, when any one was thirsty, he was to take
+in his mouth and suck.[<a href="#note-31">31</a>] The liquor was
+very strong, unless one mixed water with it, and a very pleasant
+drink to those accustomed to it.</p>
+<p><a name="note-29"><!-- Note Anchor 29 --></a>[Footnote 29: This
+description of a village on the Armenian uplands applies itself to
+many that I visited in the present day. The descent by wells is now
+rare, but is still to be met with; but in exposed and elevated
+situations the houses are uniformly semi-subterraneous and entered
+by as small an aperture as possible, to prevent the cold getting
+in. Whatever the kind of cottage used, cows, sheep, goats, and
+fowls participate with the family in the warmth and protection
+thereof.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-30"><!-- Note Anchor 30 --></a>[Footnote 30:
+Something like our ale.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-31"><!-- Note Anchor 31 --></a>[Footnote 31: The
+reeds were used, says Krueger, that none of the grains of barley
+might be taken into the mouth.]</p>
+<p>Xenophon made the chief man of his village sup with him, and
+told him to be of good courage, assuring him that he should not be
+deprived of his children, and that they would not go away without
+filling his house with provisions in return for what they took, if
+he would but prove himself the author of some service to the army
+till they should reach another tribe. This he promised, and, to
+show his good-will, pointed out where some wine[<a href="#note-32">32</a>] was buried. This night, therefore, the soldiers
+rested in their several quarters in the midst of great abundance,
+setting a guard over the chief, and keeping his children at the
+same time under their eye. The following day Xenophon took the head
+man and went with him to Chirisophus, and wherever he passed by a
+village he turned aside to visit those who were quartered in it,
+and found them in all parts feasting and enjoying themselves; nor
+would they anywhere let them go till they had set refreshments
+before them; and they placed everywhere upon the same table lamb,
+kid, pork, veal, and fowl, with plenty of bread, both of wheat and
+barley. Whenever any person, to pay a compliment, wished to drink
+to another, he took him to the large bowl, where he had to stoop
+down and drink, sucking like an ox. The chief they allowed to take
+whatever he pleased, but he accepted nothing from them; where he
+found any of his relatives, however, he took them with him.</p>
+<p><a name="note-32"><!-- Note Anchor 32 --></a>[Footnote 32:
+Xenophon seems to mean <i>grape</i> wine, rather than to refer to
+the barley wine just before mentioned, of which the taste does not
+appear to have been much liked by the Greeks. Wine from grapes was
+not made, it is probable, in these parts, on account of the cold,
+but Strabo speaks of the fruit wine of Armenia Minor as not
+inferior to any of the Greek wines.—<i>Schneider</i>.]</p>
+<p>When they came to Chirisophus, they found his men also feasting
+in their quarters, crowned with wreaths made of hay, and Armenian
+boys, in their barbarian dress, waiting upon them, to whom they
+made signs what they were to do as if they had been deaf and dumb.
+When Chirisophus and Xenophon had saluted one another, they both
+asked the chief man, through the interpreter who spoke the Persian
+language, what country it was. He replied that it was Armenia. They
+then asked him for whom the horses were bred, and he said that they
+were a tribute for the king, and added that the neighboring country
+was that of Chalybes, and told them in what direction the road lay.
+Xenophon then went away, conducting the chief back to his family,
+giving him the horse that he had taken, which was rather old, to
+fatten and offer in sacrifice (for he had heard that it had been
+consecrated to the sun), being afraid, indeed, that it might die,
+as it had been injured by the journey. He then took some of the
+young horses, and gave one of them to each of the other generals
+and captains. The horses in this country were smaller than those of
+Persia, but far more spirited. The chief instructed the men to tie
+little bags round the feet of the horses and other cattle when they
+drove them through the snow, for without such bags they sunk up to
+their bellies.</p>
+<p>When the eighth day was come, Xenophon committed the guide to
+Chirisophus. He left the chief[<a href="#note-33">33</a>] all the
+members of his family, except his son, a youth just coming to
+mature age; him he gave in charge to Episthenes of Amphipolis, in
+order that if the father should conduct them properly he might
+return home with him. At the same time they carried to his house as
+many provisions as they could, and then broke up their camp and
+resumed their march. The chief conducted them through the snow,
+walking at liberty. When he came to the end of the third day's
+march, Chirisophus was angry at him for not guiding them to some
+villages. He said that there was none in that part of the country.
+Chirisophus then struck him, but did not confine him, and in
+consequence he ran off in the night, leaving his son behind him.
+This affair, the ill-treatment and neglect of the guide, was the
+only cause of dissension between Chirisophus and Xenophon during
+the march. Episthenes conceived an affection for the youth, and,
+taking him home, found him extremely attached to him.</p>
+<p><a name="note-33"><!-- Note Anchor 33 --></a>[Footnote 33: This
+is rather oddly expressed, for the guide and the chief were the
+same person.]</p>
+<p>After this occurrence they proceeded seven days' journey, five
+parasangs each day, till they came to the river Phasis, the breadth
+of which is a <i>plethrum</i>. Hence they advanced two days'
+journey, ten parasangs, when, on the pass that led over the
+mountains into the plain, the Chalybes, Taochi, and Phasians were
+drawn up to oppose their progress. Chirisophus, seeing these
+enemies in possession of the height, came to a halt, at the
+distance of about thirty stadia, that he might not approach them
+while leading the army in a column. He accordingly ordered the
+other officers to bring up their companies, that the whole force
+might be formed in line.</p>
+<p>When the rear-guard was come up, he called together the generals
+and captains and spoke to them as follows: "The enemy, as you see,
+is in possession of the pass over the mountains, and it is proper
+for us to consider how we may encounter them to the best advantage.
+It is my opinion, therefore, that we should direct the troops to
+get their dinner and that we ourselves should hold a council, in
+the mean time, whether it is advisable to cross the mountain to-day
+or to-morrow."</p>
+<p>"It seems best to me," exclaimed Cleanor, "to march at once, as
+soon as we have dined and resumed our arms, against the enemy; for
+if we waste the present day in inaction the enemy, who are now
+looking down upon us, will grow bolder, and it is likely that, as
+their confidence is increased, others will join them in greater
+numbers."</p>
+<p>After him Xenophon said: "I am of opinion that if it be
+necessary to fight, we ought to make our arrangements so as to
+fight with the greatest advantage; but that if we propose to pass
+the mountains as easily as possible, we ought to consider how we
+may incur the fewest wounds and lose the fewest men. The range of
+hills, as far as we see, extends more than sixty stadia in length;
+but the people nowhere seem to be watching us except along the line
+of road; and it is, therefore, better, I think, to endeavor to try
+to seize unobserved some part of the unguarded range, and to get
+possession of it, if we can, beforehand, than to attack a strong
+post and men prepared to resist us, for it is far less difficult to
+march up a steep ascent without fighting than along a level road
+with enemies on each side; and in the night, if men are not obliged
+to fight, they can see better what is before them than by day if
+engaged with enemies; while a rough road is easier to the feet to
+those who are marching without molestation than a smooth one to
+those who are pelted on the head with missiles. Nor do I think it
+at all impracticable for us to steal a way for ourselves, as we can
+march by night, so as not to be seen, and can keep at such a
+distance from the enemy as to allow no possibility of being heard.
+We seem likely, too, in my opinion, if we make a pretended attack
+on this point, to find the rest of the range still less guarded,
+for the enemy will so much the more probably stay where they are.
+But why should I speak doubtfully about stealing? For I hear that
+you Lacedaemonians, O Chirisophus, such of you at least as are of
+the better class, practise stealing from your boyhood, and it is
+not a disgrace, but an honor, to steal whatever the law does not
+forbid; while, in order that you may steal with the utmost
+dexterity, and strive to escape discovery, it is appointed by law
+that, if you are caught stealing, you are scourged. It is now high
+time for you, therefore, to give proof of your education, and to
+take care that we may not receive many stripes."</p>
+<p>"But I hear that you Athenians also," rejoined Chirisophus, "are
+very clever at stealing the public money, though great danger
+threatens him that steals it; and that your best men steal it most,
+if indeed your best men are thought worthy to be your magistrates;
+so that it is time for you likewise to give proof of your
+education."</p>
+<p>"I am then ready," exclaimed Xenophon, "to march with the
+rear-guard, as soon as we have supped, to take possession of the
+hills. I have guides too, for our light-armed men captured some of
+the marauders following us, by lying in ambush, and from them I
+learn that the mountains are not impassable, but are grazed over by
+goats and oxen, so that if we once gain possession of any part of
+the range, there will be tracks also for our baggage cattle. I
+expect also that the enemy will no longer keep their ground, when
+they see us upon a level with them on the heights, for they will
+not now come down to be upon a level with us." Chirisophus then
+said: "But why should you go, and leave the charge of the rear?
+Rather send others, unless some volunteers present themselves."
+Upon this Aristonymus of Methydria came forward with his
+heavy-armed men, and Aristeas of Chios and Nichomachus of Oeta with
+their light-armed; and they made an arrangement that as soon as
+they should reach the top they should light a number of fires.
+Having settled these points, they went to dinner; and after dinner
+Chirisophus led forward the whole army ten stadia toward the enemy,
+that he might appear to be fully resolved to march against them on
+that quarter.</p>
+<p>When they had taken their supper, and night came on, those
+appointed for the service went forward and got possession of the
+hills; the other troops rested where they were. The enemy, when
+they saw the heights occupied, kept watch and burned a number of
+fires all night. As soon as it was day, Chirisophus, after having
+offered sacrifice, marched forward along the road; while those who
+had gained the heights advanced by the ridge. Most of the enemy,
+meanwhile, stayed at the pass, but a part went to meet the troops
+coming along the heights. But before the main bodies came together,
+those on the ridge closed with one another, and the Greeks had the
+advantage, and put the enemy to flight. At the same time the
+Grecian peltasts ran up from the plain to attack the enemy drawn up
+to receive them, and Chirisophus followed at a quick pace with the
+heavy-armed men. The enemy at the pass, however, when they saw
+those above defeated, took to flight. Not many of them were killed,
+but a great number of shields were taken, which the Greeks, by
+hacking them with their swords, rendered useless. As soon as they
+had gained the ascent, and had sacrificed and erected a trophy,
+they went down into the plain before them, and arrived at a number
+of villages stored with abundance of excellent provisions.</p>
+<p>From hence they marched five days' journey, thirty parasangs, to
+the country of the Taochi, where provisions began to fail them; for
+the Taochi inhabited strong fastnesses, in which they had laid up
+all their supplies. Having at length, however, arrived at one place
+which had no city or houses attached to it, but in which men and
+women and a great number of cattle were assembled, Chirisophus, as
+soon as he came before it, made it the object of an attack; and
+when the first division that assailed it began to be tired, another
+succeeded, and then another, for it was not possible for them to
+surround it in a body, as there was a river about it. When Xenophon
+came up with his rear-guard, peltasts, and heavy-armed men,
+Chirisophus exclaimed: "You come seasonably, for we must take this
+place, as there are no provisions for the army unless we take
+it."</p>
+<p>They then deliberated together, and Xenophon asking what
+hindered them from taking the place, Chirisophus replied: "The only
+approach to it is the one which you see; but when any of our men
+attempt to pass along it, the enemy roll down stones over yonder
+impending rock, and whoever is struck is treated as you behold;"
+and he pointed, at the same moment, to some of the men who had had
+their legs and ribs broken. "But if they expend all their stones,"
+rejoined Xenophon, "is there anything else to prevent us from
+advancing? For we see, in front of us, only a few men, and but two
+or three of them armed. The space, too, through which we have to
+pass under exposure to the stones is, as you see, only about a
+hundred and fifty feet in length; and of this about a hundred feet
+is covered with large pine trees in groups, against which, if the
+men place themselves, what would they suffer either from the flying
+stones or the rolling ones? The remaining part of the space is not
+above fifty feet, over which, when the stones cease, we must pass
+at a running pace."</p>
+<p>"But," said Chirisophus, "the instant we offer to go to the part
+covered with trees, the stones fly in great numbers."</p>
+<p>"That," cried Xenophon, "would be the very thing we want, for
+thus they will exhaust their stones the sooner. Let us then
+advance, if we can, to the point whence we shall have but a short
+way to run, and from which we may, if we please, easily
+retreat."</p>
+<p>Chirisophus and Xenophon, with Callimachus of Parrhasia, one of
+the captains, who had that day the lead of all the other captains
+of the rear-guard, then went forward, all the rest of the captains
+remaining out of danger. Next, about seventy of the men advanced
+under the trees, not in a body, but one by one, each sheltering
+himself as he could. Agasias of Stymphalus, and Aristonymus of
+Methydria, who were also captains of the rear-guard, with some
+others were at the same time standing behind, without the trees,
+for it was not safe for more than one company to stand under them.
+Callimachus then adopted the following stratagem: he ran forward
+two or three paces from the tree under which he was sheltered, and
+when the stones began to be hurled, hastily drew back; and at each
+of his sallies more than ten cartloads of stones were spent.</p>
+<p>Agasias, observing what Callimachus was doing, and that the eyes
+of the whole army were upon him, and fearing that he himself might
+not be the first to enter the place, began to advance
+alone—neither calling to Aristonymus who was next him, nor to
+Eurylochus of Lusia, both of whom were his intimate friends, nor to
+any other person—and passed by all the rest. Callimachus,
+seeing him rushing by, caught hold of the rim of his shield, and at
+that moment Aristonymus of Methydria ran past them both, and after
+him Eurylochus of Lusia, for all these sought distinction for
+valor, and were rivals to one another; and thus, in mutual
+emulation, they got possession of the place, for when they had once
+rushed in, not a stone was hurled from above. But a dreadful
+spectacle was then to be seen; for the women, flinging their
+children over the precipice, threw themselves after them; and the
+men followed their example. Æneas of Stymphalus, a captain,
+seeing one of them, who had on a rich garment, running to throw
+himself over, caught hold of it with intent to stop him. But the
+man dragged him forward, and they both went rolling down the rocks
+together, and were killed. Thus very few prisoners were taken, but
+a great number of oxen, asses, and sheep.</p>
+<p>Hence they advanced, seven days' journey, a distance of fifty
+parasangs, through the country of the Chalybes. These were the most
+warlike people of all that they passed through, and came to close
+combat with them. They had linen cuirasses, reaching down to the
+groin, and, instead of skirts, thick cords twisted. They had also
+greaves and helmets, and at their girdles a short falchion, as
+large as a Spartan crooked dagger, with which they cut the throats
+of all whom they could master, and then, cutting off their heads,
+carried them away with them. They sang and danced when the enemy
+were likely to see them. They carried also a spear of about fifteen
+cubits in length, having one spike.[<a href="#note-34">34</a>] They
+stayed in their villages till the Greeks had passed by, when they
+pursued and perpetually harassed them. They had their dwellings in
+strong places, in which they had also laid up their provisions, so
+that the Greeks could get nothing from that country, but lived upon
+the cattle which they had taken from the Taochi.</p>
+<p><a name="note-34"><!-- Note Anchor 34 --></a>[Footnote 34:
+Having one iron point at the upper end, and no point at the lower
+for fixing the spear in the ground.]</p>
+<p>The Greeks next arrived at the river Harpasus, the breadth of
+which was four <i>plethra</i>. Hence they proceeded through the
+territory of the Scythini, four days' journey, making twenty
+parasangs, over a level tract, until they came to some villages, in
+which they halted three days and collected provisions. From this
+place they advanced four days' journey, twenty parasangs, to a
+large, rich and populous city, called Gymnias, from which the
+governor of the country sent the Greeks a guide to conduct them
+through a region at war with his own people. The guide, when he
+came, said that he would take them in five days to a place whence
+they should see the sea; if not, he would consent to be put to
+death. When, as he proceeded, he entered the country of their
+enemies, he exhorted them to burn and lay waste the lands; whence
+it was evident that he had come for this very purpose, and not from
+any good-will to the Greeks.</p>
+<p>On the fifth day they came to the mountain; and the name of it
+was Theches. When the men who were in the front had mounted the
+height, and looked down upon the sea, a great shout proceeded from
+them; and Xenophon and the rearguard, on hearing it, thought that
+some new enemies were assailing the front, for in the rear, too,
+the people from the country that they had burned were following
+them, and the rear-guard, by placing an ambuscade, had killed some,
+and taken others prisoners, and had captured about twenty shields
+made of raw ox-hides with the hair on. But as the noise still
+increased, and drew nearer, and as those who came up from time to
+time kept running at full speed to join those who were continually
+shouting, the cries becoming louder as the men became more
+numerous, it appeared to Xenophon that it must be something of very
+great moment. Mounting his horse, therefore, and taking with him
+Lycius and the cavalry, he hastened forward to give aid, when
+presently they heard the soldiers shouting, "The sea, the sea!" and
+cheering on one another. They then all began to run, the rear-guard
+as well as the rest, and the baggage-cattle and horses were put to
+their speed; and when they had all arrived at the top, the men
+embraced one another and their generals and captains, with tears in
+their eyes. Suddenly, whoever it was that suggested it, the
+soldiers brought stones, and raised a large mound, on which they
+laid a number of raw ox-hides, staves, and shields taken from the
+enemy. The shields the guide himself hacked in pieces, and exhorted
+the rest to do the same. Soon after, the Greeks sent away the
+guide, giving him presents from the common stock: a horse, a silver
+cup, a Persian robe, and ten <i>darics</i>; but he showed most
+desire for the rings on their fingers, and obtained many of them
+from the soldiers. Having then pointed out to them a village where
+they might take up their quarters, and the road by which they were
+to proceed to the Macrones, when the evening came on he departed,
+pursuing his way during the night.</p>
+<p>Hence the Greeks advanced three days' journey, a distance of ten
+parasangs, through the country of the Macrones. On the first day
+they came to a river which divides the territories of the Macrones
+from those of the Scythini. On their right they had an eminence
+extremely difficult of access, and on their left another river,
+into which the boundary river, which they had to cross, empties
+itself. This stream was thickly edged with trees, not indeed large,
+but growing closely together. These the Greeks, as soon as they
+came to the spot, cut down,[<a href="#note-35">35</a>] being in
+haste to get out of the country as soon as possible. The Macrones,
+however, equipped with wicker shields, and spears, and hair tunics,
+were drawn up on the opposite side of the crossing-place; they were
+animating one another and throwing stones into the river.[<a href="#note-36">36</a>] They did not hit our men or cause them any
+inconvenience.</p>
+<p><a name="note-35"><!-- Note Anchor 35 --></a>[Footnote 35: The
+Greeks cut down the trees in order to throw them into the stream,
+and form a kind of bridge on which they might cross.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-36"><!-- Note Anchor 36 --></a>[Footnote 36: They
+threw stones into the river that they might stand on them and
+approach nearer to the Greeks, so as to use their weapons with more
+effect.]</p>
+<p>At this juncture one of the peltasts came up to Xenophon, saying
+that he had been a slave at Athens, and adding that he knew the
+language of these men. "I think, indeed," said he, "that this is my
+country, and, if there is nothing to prevent, I should wish to
+speak to the people."</p>
+<p>"There is nothing to prevent," replied Xenophon; "so speak to
+them, and first ascertain what people they are." When he asked
+them, they said that they were the Macrones. "Inquire, then," said
+Xenophon, "why they are drawn up to oppose us and wish to be our
+enemies." They replied, "Because you come against our country." The
+generals then told him to acquaint them that we were not come with
+any wish to do them injury, but that we were returning to Greece
+after having been engaged in war with the king, and that we were
+desirous to reach the sea. They asked if the Greeks would give
+pledges to this effect; and the Greeks replied that they were
+willing both to give and receive them. The Macrones accordingly
+presented the Greeks with a barbarian lance, and the Greeks gave
+them a Grecian one; for they said that such were their usual
+pledges. Both parties called the gods to witness.</p>
+<p>After these mutual assurances, the Macrones immediately assisted
+them in cutting away the trees and made a passage for them as if to
+bring them over, mingling freely among the Greeks; they also gave
+such facilities as they could for buying provisions, and conducted
+them through their country for three days, until they brought them
+to the confines of the Colchians. Here was a range of hills, high,
+but accessible, and upon them the Colchians were drawn up in array.
+The Greeks, at first, drew up against them in a line, with the
+intention of marching up the hill in this disposition; but
+afterward the generals thought proper to assemble and deliberate
+how they might engage with the best effect.</p>
+<p>Xenophon then said it appeared to him that they ought to
+relinquish the arrangement in line, and to dispose the troops in
+columns; "for a line," pursued he, "will be broken at once, as we
+shall find the hills in some parts impassable, though in others
+easy of access; and this disruption will immediately produce
+despondency in the men, when, after being ranged in a regular line,
+they find it dispersed. Again, if we advance drawn up very many
+deep, the enemy will stretch beyond us on both sides, and will
+employ the parts that outreach us in any way they may think proper;
+and if we advance only a few deep, it would not be at all
+surprising if our line be broken through by showers of missiles and
+men falling upon us in large bodies. If this happen in any part, it
+will be ill for the whole extent of the line. I think, then, that
+having formed our companies in columns, we should keep them so far
+apart from each other as that the last companies on each side may
+be beyond the enemy's wings. Thus our extreme companies will both
+outflank the line of the enemy, and, as we march in file, the
+bravest of our men will close with the enemy first, and wherever
+the ascent is easiest, there each division will direct its course.
+Nor will it be easy for the enemy to penetrate into the intervening
+spaces when there are companies on each side, nor will it be easy
+to break through a column as it advances; while, if any one of the
+companies be hard pressed, the neighboring one will support it; and
+if but one of the companies can by any path attain the summit, the
+enemy will no longer stand their ground."</p>
+<p>This plan was approved, and they threw the companies into
+columns. Xenophon, riding along from the right wing to the left,
+said: "Soldiers, the enemy whom you see before you is now the only
+obstacle to hinder us from being where we have long been eager to
+be. These, if we can, we must eat up alive."</p>
+<p>When the men were all in their places, and they had formed the
+companies into columns, there were about eighty companies of
+heavy-armed men, and each company consisted of about eighty men.
+The peltasts and archers they divided into three bodies, each about
+six hundred men, one of which they placed beyond the left wing,
+another beyond the right, and the third in the centre. The generals
+then desired the soldiers to make their vows to the gods; and
+having made them, and sung the paean, they moved forward.
+Chirisophus and Xenophon, and the peltasts that they had with them,
+who were beyond the enemy's flanks, pushed on; and the enemy,
+observing their motions, and hurrying forward to receive them, was
+drawn off, some to the right and others to the left, and left a
+great void in the centre of the line; when the peltasts in the
+Arcadian division, whom Aeschines the Acarnanian commanded, seeing
+the Colchians separate, ran forward in all haste, thinking that
+they were taking to flight; and these were the first that reached
+the summit. The Arcadian heavy-armed troop, of which Clearnor the
+Orchomenian was captain, followed them. But the enemy, when once
+the Greeks began to run, no longer stood its ground, but went off
+in flight, some one way and some another.</p>
+<p>Having passed the summit, the Greeks encamped in a number of
+villages containing abundance of provisions. As to other things
+here, there was nothing at which they were surprised; but the
+number of bee-hives was extraordinary, and all the soldiers that
+ate of the combs lost their senses, vomited, and were affected with
+purging, and not any of them was able to stand upright; such as had
+eaten a little were like men greatly intoxicated, and such as had
+eaten much were like madmen, and some like persons at the point of
+death. They lay upon the ground, in consequence, in great numbers,
+as if there had been a defeat; and there was general dejection. The
+next day no one of them was found dead; and they recovered their
+senses about the same hour that they had lost them on the preceding
+day; and on the third and fourth days they got up as if after
+having taken physic.[<a href="#note-37">37</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-37"><!-- Note Anchor 37 --></a>[Footnote 37: That
+there was honey in these parts, with intoxicating qualities, was
+well known to antiquity. Pliny mentions two sorts of it, one
+produced at Heraclea in Pontus, and the other among the Sanni or
+Macrones. The peculiarities of the honey arose from the herbs to
+which the bees resorted; the first came from the flower of a plant
+called <i>oegolethron</i>, or goatsbane; the other from a species
+of rhododendron. Tournefort, when he was in that country, saw honey
+of this description. Ainsworth found that the intoxicating honey
+had a bitter taste. This honey is also mentioned by
+Dioscorides.]</p>
+<p>From hence they proceeded two days' march, seven parasangs, and
+arrived at Trebizond, a Greek city, of large population, on the
+Euxine Sea; a colony of Sinope, but lying in the territory of the
+Colchians. Here they stayed about thirty days, encamping in the
+villages of the Colchians, whence they made excursions and
+plundered the country of Colchis. The people of Trebizond provided
+a market for the Greeks in the camp, and entertained them in the
+city; and made them presents of oxen, barley-meal, and wine. They
+negotiated with them also on behalf of the neighboring Colchians,
+those especially who dwelt in the plain, and from them too were
+brought presents of oxen.</p>
+<p>Soon after, they prepared to perform the sacrifice which they
+had vowed. Oxen enough had been brought them to offer to Jupiter
+the Preserver, and to Hercules, for their safe conduct, and
+whatever they had vowed to the other gods. They also celebrated
+gymnastic games upon the hill where they were encamped, and chose
+Dracontius, a Spartan—who had become an exile from his
+country when quite a boy, for having involuntarily killed a child
+by striking him with a dagger—to prepare the course and
+preside at the contests. When the sacrifice was ended, they gave
+the hides[<a href="#note-38">38</a>] to Dracontius, and desired him
+to conduct them to the place where he had made the course.
+Dracontius, pointing to the place where they were standing, said,
+"This hill is an excellent place for running, in whatever direction
+the men may wish."</p>
+<p><a name="note-38"><!-- Note Anchor 38 --></a>[Footnote 38: Lion
+and Kuehner have a notion that these skins were to be given as
+prizes to the victors, referring to Herodotus, who says that the
+Egyptians, in certain games which they celebrate in honor of
+Perseus, offer as prizes cattle, cloaks, and hides. Krueger doubts
+whether they were intended for prizes, or were given as a present
+to Dracontius.]</p>
+<p>"But how will they be able," said they, "to wrestle on ground so
+rough and bushy?"</p>
+<p>"He that falls," said he, "will suffer the more." Boys, most of
+them from among the prisoners, contended in the short course, and
+in the long course above sixty Cretans ran; while others were
+matched in wrestling, boxing, and the <i>pancratium</i>. It was a
+fine sight; for many entered the lists, and as their friends were
+spectators, there was great emulation. Horses also ran; and they
+had to gallop down the steep, and, turning round in the sea, to
+come up again to the altar. In the descent, many rolled down; but
+in the ascent, against the exceedingly steep ground, the horses
+could scarcely get up at a walking pace. There was consequently
+great shouting and laughter and cheering from the people.</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="RULE4_7"></a>CONDEMNATION AND DEATH OF SOCRATES</h2>
+<p class="center">B.C. 399</p>
+<p class="center">PLATO</p>
+<p class="intros">The death of Socrates was brought about under the
+restored democracy by three of his enemies—Lycon, Meletus,
+and Anytus, the last a man of high rank and reputation in the
+state. Socrates was accused by them of despising the ancient gods
+of the state, introducing new divinities and corrupting the youth
+of Athens. He was charged with having taught his followers, young
+men of the first Athenian families, to despise the established
+government, to be turbulent and seditious, and his accusors pointed
+to Alcibiades and Critias, notorious for their lawlessness, as
+examples of the fruits of his teaching.</p>
+<p class="intros">It is quite certain that Socrates disliked the
+Athenian government and considered democracy as tyrannical as
+despotism. But there was no law at Athens by which he could be put
+to death for his words and actions, and the vague charge could
+never have been made unless the whole trial of the philosopher had
+been a party movement, headed by men like Lycon and Anytus, whose
+support of the unjust measure made the condemnation of Socrates a
+foregone conclusion. Xenophon, the pupil and admirer of the
+philosopher, expresses in his <i>Memorabilia of Socrates</i> his
+surprise that the Athenians should have condemned to death a man of
+such exalted character and transparent innocence. But the influence
+of the teacher with his pupils, most of them sons of the wealthiest
+citizens, might well have been dreaded by those in office and
+engaged in the conduct of public business. By them, the common
+politicians of the day, Socrates, with his keen and witty criticism
+of political corruption and demagogism, must have been considered a
+formidable adversary.</p>
+<p class="intros">Accordingly, by the decision of the Athenian
+court, the philosopher was sentenced to death by drinking a cup of
+hemlock. Although it was usual for criminals to be executed the day
+following their condemnation, he enjoyed a respite of thirty days,
+during which time his friends had access to his prison cell. It was
+the time when the ceremonial galley was crowned and sent on her
+pilgrimage to the holy Isle of Delos, and no criminal could be
+executed until her return. Socrates exhibited heroic constancy and
+cheerfulness during this interval, and repudiated the offers of his
+friends to aid in his escape, though they had chartered a ship to
+carry him to Thessaly. With calm composure he reasoned on the
+immortality of the soul, and cheered his visitors with words of
+hope.</p>
+<p class="intros">The literary portraits of Socrates furnished by
+himself, and the writings of Plato, are among the most precious
+monuments of antiquity, and the life and death of such a man form a
+memorable era in the moral and intellectual history of mankind.</p>
+<p class="intros">Plato, in his <i>Phædo, or the Immortality
+of the Soul</i>, gives the following dialogue between Echecrates
+and Phædo—two friends and disciples of the late
+philosopher—evidently with no other purpose in view than to
+lend to the account of the great teacher's last hours, and the last
+words his followers were to hear from his lips, the additional
+force and dramatic value of a personal narrative in the mouth of a
+loving pupil and an actual eyewitness of his death.</p>
+<p>Echecrates. Were you personally present, Phaedo, with Socrates
+on that day when he drank the poison in prison? or did you hear an
+account of it from someone else?</p>
+<p><i>Phæd.</i> I was there myself, Echecrates.</p>
+<p><i>Ech.</i> What then did he say before his death? and how did
+he die? for I should be glad to hear; for scarcely any citizen of
+Phlius[<a href="#note-39">39</a>] ever visits Athens now, nor has
+any stranger for a long time come from thence, who was able to give
+us a clear account of the particulars, except that he died from
+drinking poison; but he was unable to tell us anything more.</p>
+<p><a name="note-39"><!-- Note Anchor 39 --></a>[Footnote 39:
+Phlius, to which Echecrates belonged, was a town of Sicyonia in
+Peloponnesus.]</p>
+<p><i>Phæd.</i> And did you not hear about the trial how it
+went off?</p>
+<p><i>Ech.</i> Yes; some one told me this; and I wondered, that as
+it took place so long ago, he appears to have died long afterward.
+What was the reason of this, Phaedo?</p>
+<p><i>Phæd.</i> An accidental circumstance happened in his
+favor, Echecrates: for the poop of the ship which the Athenians
+send to Delos, chanced to be crowned on the day before the
+trial.</p>
+<p><i>Ech.</i> But what is this ship?</p>
+<p><i>Phæd.</i> It is the ship, as the Athenians say, in
+which Theseus formerly conveyed the fourteen boys and girls to
+Crete and saved both them and himself. They, therefore, made a vow
+to Apollo on that occasion, as it is said, that if they were saved
+they would every year despatch a solemn embassy to Delos; which,
+from that time to the present, they send yearly to the god. When
+they begin the preparations for this solemn embassy, they have a
+law that the city shall be purified during this period, and that no
+public execution shall take place until the ship has reached Delos,
+and returned to Athens: and this occasionally takes a long time,
+when the winds happen to impede their passage. The commencement of
+the embassy is when the priest of Apollo has crowned the poop of
+the ship. And this was done, as I said, on the day before the
+trial: on this account Socrates had a long interval in prison
+between the trial and his death.</p>
+<p><i>Ech.</i> And what, Phædo, were the circumstances of his
+death? what was said and done? and who of his friends were with
+him? or would not the magistrates allow them to be present, but did
+he die destitute of friends?</p>
+<p><i>Phæd.</i> By no means; but some, indeed several, were
+present.</p>
+<p><i>Ech.</i> Take the trouble, then, to relate to me all the
+particulars as clearly as you can, unless you have any pressing
+business.</p>
+<p><i>Phæd.</i> I am at leisure, and will endeavor to give
+you a full account: for to call Socrates to mind, whether speaking
+myself or listening to some one else, is always most delightful to
+me.</p>
+<p><i>Ech.</i> And indeed, Phaedo, you have others to listen to you
+who are of the same mind. However, endeavor to relate everything as
+accurately as you can.</p>
+<p><i>Phæd.</i> I was indeed wonderfully affected by being
+present, for I was not impressed with a feeling of pity, like one
+present at the death of a friend; for the man appeared to me to be
+happy, Echecrates, both from his manner and discourse, so
+fearlessly and nobly did he meet his death: so much so that it
+occurred to me that in going to Hades he was not going without a
+divine destiny, but that when he arrived there he would be happy,
+if anyone ever was. For this reason I was entirely uninfluenced by
+any feeling of pity, as would seem likely to be the case with one
+present on so mournful an occasion; nor was I affected by pleasure
+from being engaged in philosophical discussions, as was our custom;
+for our conversation was of that kind. But an altogether
+unaccountable feeling possessed me, a kind of unusual mixture
+compounded of pleasure and pain together, when I considered that he
+was immediately about to die. And all of us who were present were
+affected in much the same manner, at one time laughing, at another
+weeping one of us especially, Apollodorus, for you know the man and
+his manner.</p>
+<p><i>Ech.</i> How should I not?</p>
+<p><i>Phæd.</i> He, then, was entirely overcome by these
+emotions; and I too was troubled, as well as the others.</p>
+<p><i>Ech.</i> But who were present, Phaedo?</p>
+<p><i>Phæd.</i> Of his fellow-countrymen, this Apollodorus
+was present, and Critobulus, and his father Crito, moreover
+Hermogenes, Epigenes, Æschines, and Antisthenes; Ctesippus
+the Pæanian, Menexenus, and some other of his countrymen were
+also there: Plato I think was sick.</p>
+<p><i>Ech.</i> Were any strangers present?</p>
+<p><i>Phæd.</i> Yes: Simmias the Theban, Cebes, and
+Phaedondes: and from Megara, Euclides and Terpsion.</p>
+<p><i>Ech.</i> But what! were not Aristippus and Cleombrotus
+present?</p>
+<p><i>Phæd.</i> No: for they were said to be at
+Ægina.</p>
+<p><i>Ech.</i> Was anyone else there?</p>
+<p><i>Phæd.</i> I think that these were nearly all who were
+present.</p>
+<p><i>Ech.</i> Well, now, what do you say was the subject of
+conversation?</p>
+<p><i>Phæd.</i> I will endeavor to relate the whole to you
+from the beginning. On the preceding days I and the others were
+constantly in the habit of visiting Socrates, meeting early in the
+morning at the court-house where the trial took place, for it was
+near the prison. Here then we waited every day till the prison was
+opened, conversing with each other; for it was not opened very
+early, but, as soon as it was opened we went in to Socrates, and
+usually spent the day with him. On that occasion, however, we met
+earlier than usual; for on the preceding day, when we left the
+prison in the evening, we heard that the ship had arrived from
+Delos. We therefore urged each other to come as early as possible
+to the accustomed place; accordingly we came, and the porter, who
+used to admit us, coming out, told us to wait, and not enter until
+he called us. "For," he said, "the Eleven are now freeing Socrates
+from his bonds, and announcing to him that he must die to-day." But
+in no long time he returned, and bade us enter.</p>
+<p>When we entered, we found Socrates just freed from his bonds,
+and Xantippe (you know her), holding his little boy and sitting by
+him. As soon as Xantippe saw us, she wept aloud and said such
+things as women usually do on such occasions, as, "Socrates, your
+friends will now converse with you for the last time, and you with
+them." But Socrates, looking toward Crito, said, "Crito, let some
+one take her home." Upon which some of Crito's attendants led her
+away, wailing and beating herself.</p>
+<p>But Socrates, sitting up in bed, drew up his leg and rubbed it
+with his hand, and as he rubbed it said: "What an unaccountable
+thing, my friends, that seems to be which men call pleasure; and
+how wonderfully is it related toward that which appears to be its
+contrary, pain; in that they will not both be present to a man at
+the same time, yet, if anyone pursues and attains the one, he is
+almost always compelled to receive the other, as if they were both
+united together from one head.</p>
+<p>"And it seems to me," he said, "that if Æsop had observed
+this he would have made a fable from it, how the Deity, wishing to
+reconcile these warring principles, when he could not do so, united
+their heads together, and from hence whomsoever the one visits the
+other attends immediately after; as appears to be the case with me,
+since I suffered pain in my leg before from the chain, but now
+pleasure seems to have succeeded."</p>
+<p>Hereupon Cebes, interrupting him, said: "By Jupiter, Socrates,
+you have done well in reminding me. With respect to the poems which
+you made, by putting into metre those Fables of Æsop and the
+hymn to Apollo, several other persons asked me, and especially
+Evenus recently, with what design you made them after you came
+here, whereas before, you had never made any. If, therefore, you
+care at all that I should be able to answer Evenus when he asks me
+again—for I am sure he will do so—tell me what I must
+say to him."</p>
+<p>"Tell him the truth then, Cebes," he replied, "that I did not
+make them from a wish to compete with him, or his poems, for I knew
+that this would be no easy matter; but that I might discover the
+meaning of certain dreams, and discharge my conscience, if this
+should happen to be the music which they have often ordered me to
+apply myself to. For they were to the following purport: often in
+my past life the same dream visited me, appearing at different
+times in different forms, yet always saying the same thing.
+'Socrates,' it said, 'apply yourself to and practise music.' And I
+formerly supposed that it exhorted and encouraged me to continue
+the pursuit I was engaged in, as those who cheer on racers, so that
+the dream encouraged me to continue the pursuit I was engaged in,
+namely, to apply myself to music, since philosophy is the highest
+music, and I was devoted to it. But now since my trial took place,
+and the festival of the god retarded my death, it appeared to me
+that, if by chance the dream so frequently enjoined me to apply
+myself to popular music, I ought not to disobey it but do so, for
+that it would be safer for me not to depart hence before I had
+discharged my conscience by making some poems in obedience to the
+dream. Thus, then, I first of all composed a hymn to the god whose
+festival was present, and after the god, considering that a poet,
+if he means to be a poet, ought to make fables and not discourses,
+and knowing that I was not skilled in making fables, I therefore
+put into verse those fables of Æsop, which were at hand, and
+were known to me, and which first occurred to me.</p>
+<p>"Tell this then to Evenus, Cebes, and bid him farewell, and, if
+he is wise, to follow me as soon as he can. But I depart, as it
+seems, to-day; for so the Athenians order."</p>
+<p>To this Simmias said: "What is this, Socrates, which you exhort
+Evenus to do? for I often meet with him; and from what I know of
+him, I am pretty certain that he will not at all be willing to
+comply with your advice."</p>
+<p>"What then," said he, "is not Evenus a philosopher?"</p>
+<p>"To me he seems to be so," said Simmias.</p>
+<p>"Then he will be willing," rejoined Socrates, "and so will
+everyone who worthily engages in this study; perhaps indeed he will
+not commit violence on himself, for that they say is not
+allowable." And as he said this he let down his leg from the bed on
+the ground, and in this posture continued during the remainder of
+the discussion.</p>
+<p>Cebes then asked him: "What do you mean, Socrates, by saying
+that it is not lawful to commit violence on one's self, but that a
+philosopher should be willing to follow one who is dying?"</p>
+<p>"What, Cebes, have not you and Simmias, who have conversed
+familiarly with Philolaus[<a href="#note-40">40</a>] on this
+subject, heard?"</p>
+<p><a name="note-40"><!-- Note Anchor 40 --></a>[Footnote 40: A
+Pythagorean of Crotona.]</p>
+<p>"Nothing very clearly, Socrates."</p>
+<p>"I however speak only from hearsay; what then I have heard I
+have no scruple in telling. And perhaps it is most becoming for one
+who is about to travel there, to inquire and speculate about the
+journey thither, what kind we think it is. What else can one do in
+the interval before sunset?"</p>
+<p>"Why, then, Socrates, do they say that it is not allowable to
+kill one's self? for I, as you asked just now, have heard both
+Philolaus, when he lived with us, and several others say that it
+was not right to do this; but I never heard anything clear upon the
+subject from anyone."</p>
+<p>"Then you should consider it attentively," said Socrates, "for
+perhaps you may hear: probably, however, it will appear wonderful
+to you, if this alone of all other things is an universal
+truth,[<a href="#note-41">41</a>] and it never happens to a man, as
+is the case in all other things, that at some times and to some
+persons only it is better to die than to live; yet that these men
+for whom it is better to die—this probably will appear
+wonderful to you—may not, without impiety, do this good to
+themselves, but must await another benefactor."</p>
+<p><a name="note-41"><!-- Note Anchor 41 --></a>[Footnote 41:
+Namely, "that it is better to die than live."]</p>
+<p>Then Cebes, gently smiling, said, speaking in his own dialect,
+"Jove be witness."</p>
+<p>"And indeed," said Socrates, "it would appear to be
+unreasonable, yet still perhaps it has some reason on its side. The
+maxim indeed given on this subject in the mystical
+doctrines,[<a href="#note-42">42</a>] that we men are in a kind of
+prison, and that we ought not to free ourselves from it and escape,
+appears to me difficult to be understood, and not easy to
+penetrate. This however appears to me, Cebes, to be well said, that
+the gods take care of us, and that we men are one of their
+possessions. Does it not seem so to you?"</p>
+<p><a name="note-42"><!-- Note Anchor 42 --></a>[Footnote 42: Of
+Pythagoras.]</p>
+<p>"It does," replied Cebes.</p>
+<p>"Therefore," said he, "if one of your slaves were to kill
+himself, without your having intimated that you wished him to die,
+should you not be angry with him, and should you not punish him if
+you could?"</p>
+<p>"Certainly," he replied.</p>
+<p>"Perhaps then, in this point of view, it is not unreasonable to
+assert, that a man ought not to kill himself before the deity lays
+him under a necessity of doing so, such as that now laid on
+me."</p>
+<p>"This, indeed," said Cebes, "appears to be probable. But what
+you said just now, Socrates, that philosophers should be very
+willing to die, appears to be an absurdity, if what we said just
+now is agreeable to reason, that it is God who takes care of us,
+and that we are his property. For that the wisest men should not be
+grieved at leaving that service in which they govern them who are
+the best of all masters, namely, the gods, is not consistent with
+reason. For surely he cannot think that he will take better care of
+himself when he has become free: but a foolish man might perhaps
+think thus, that he should fly from his master, and would not
+reflect that he ought not to fly from a good one, but should cling
+to him as much as possible, therefore he would fly against all
+reason; but a man of sense would desire to be constantly with one
+better than himself. Thus, Socrates, the contrary of what you just
+now said is likely to be the case; for it becomes the wise to be
+grieved at dying, but the foolish to rejoice."</p>
+<p>Socrates, on hearing this, appeared to me to be pleased with the
+pertinacity of Cebes, and looking toward us said: "Cebes, you see,
+always searches out arguments, and is not at all willing to admit
+at once anything one has said."</p>
+<p>Whereupon Simmias replied: "But indeed, Socrates, Cebes appears
+to me, now, to say something to the purpose; for with what design
+should men really wise fly from masters who are better than
+themselves, and so readily leave them? And Cebes appears to me to
+direct his argument against you, because you so easily endure to
+abandon both us and those good rulers—as you yourself
+confess—the gods."</p>
+<p>"You speak justly," said Socrates, "for I think you mean that I
+ought to make my defence to this charge, as if I were in a court of
+justice."</p>
+<p>"Certainly," replied Simmias.</p>
+<p>"Come then," said he, "I will endeavor to defend myself more
+successfully before you than before the judges. For," he proceeded,
+"Simmias and Cebes, if I did not think that I should go first of
+all among other deities who are both wise and good, and next among
+men who have departed this life better than any here, I should be
+wrong in not grieving at death: but now be assured, I hope to go
+among good men, though I would not positively assert it; that,
+however, I shall go among gods who are perfectly good masters, be
+assured I can positively assert this, if I can anything of the
+kind. So that, on this account, I am not so much troubled, but I
+entertain a good hope that something awaits those who die, and
+that, as was said long since, it will be far better for the good
+than the evil."</p>
+<p>"What then, Socrates," said Simmias, "would you go away keeping
+this persuasion to yourself, or would you impart it to us? For this
+good appears to me to be also common to us; and at the same time it
+will be an apology for you, if you can persuade us to believe what
+you say."</p>
+<p>"I will endeavor to do so," he said. "But first let us attend to
+Crito here, and see what it is he seems to have for some time
+wished to say."</p>
+<p>"What else, Socrates," said Crito, "but what he who is to give
+you the poison told me some time ago, that I should tell you to
+speak as little as possible? For he says that men become too much
+heated by speaking, and that nothing of this kind ought to
+interfere with the poison, and that, otherwise, those who did so
+were sometimes compelled to drink two or three times."</p>
+<p>To which Socrates replied: "Let him alone, and let him attend to
+his own business, and prepare to give it me twice, or, if occasion
+requires, even thrice."</p>
+<p>"I was almost certain what you would say," answered Crito, "but
+he has been some time pestering me."</p>
+<p>"Never mind him," he rejoined.</p>
+<p>"But now I wish to render an account to you, my judges, of the
+reason why a man who has really devoted his life to philosophy,
+when he is about to die appears to me, on good grounds, to have
+confidence, and to entertain a firm hope that the greatest good
+will befall him in the other world, when he has departed this life.
+How then this comes to pass, Simmias and Cebes, I will endeavor to
+explain.</p>
+<p>"For as many as rightly apply themselves to philosophy seem to
+have left all others in ignorance, that they aim at nothing else
+than to die and be dead. If this then is true, it would surely be
+absurd to be anxious about nothing else than this during their
+whole life, but when it arrives, to be grieved at what they have
+been long anxious about and aimed at."</p>
+<p>Upon this, Simmias, smiling, said: "By Jupiter, Socrates, though
+I am not now at all inclined to smile, you have made me do so; for
+I think that the multitude, if they heard this, would think it was
+very well said in reference to philosophers, and that our
+countrymen particularly would agree with you, that true
+philosophers do desire death, and that they are by no means
+ignorant that they deserve to suffer it."</p>
+<p>"And indeed, Simmias, they would speak the truth, except in
+asserting that they are not ignorant; for they are ignorant of the
+sense in which true philosophers desire to die, and in what sense
+they deserve death, and what kind of death. But," he said, "let us
+take leave of them, and speak to one another. Do we think that
+death is anything?"</p>
+<p>"Certainly," replied Simmias.</p>
+<p>"Is it anything else than the separation of the soul from the
+body? and is not this to die, for the body to be apart by itself
+separated from the soul, and for the soul to subsist apart by
+itself separated from the body? Is death anything else than
+this?"</p>
+<p>"No, but this," he replied.</p>
+<p>"Consider then, my good friend, whether you are of the same
+opinion as me; for thus I think we shall understand better the
+subject we are considering. Does it appear to you to be becoming in
+a philosopher to be anxious about pleasures, as they are called,
+such as meats and drinks?"</p>
+<p>"By no means, Socrates," said Simmias.</p>
+<p>"But what? about the pleasures of love?"</p>
+<p>"Not at all"</p>
+<p>"What then? does such a man appear to you to think other bodily
+indulgences of value? for instance, does he seem to you to value or
+despise the possession of magnificent garments and sandals, and
+other ornaments of the body, except so far as necessity compels him
+to use them?"</p>
+<p>"The true philosopher," he answered, "appears to me to despise
+them."</p>
+<p>"Does not, then," he continued, "the whole employment of such a
+man appear to you to be, not about the body, but to separate
+himself from it as much as possible, and be occupied about his
+soul?"</p>
+<p>"It does."</p>
+<p>"First of all, then, in such matters, does not the philosopher,
+above all other men, evidently free his soul as much as he can from
+communion with the body?"</p>
+<p>"It appears so."</p>
+<p>"And it appears, Simmias, to the generality of men, that he who
+takes no pleasure in such things, and who does not use them, does
+not deserve to live; but that he nearly approaches to death who
+cares nothing for the pleasures that subsist through the body."</p>
+<p>"You speak very truly."</p>
+<p>"But what with respect to the acquisition of wisdom, is the body
+an impediment or not, if anyone takes it with him as a partner in
+the search? What I mean is this: Do sight and hearing convey any
+truth to men, or are they such as the poets constantly sing, who
+say that we neither hear nor see anything with accuracy? If,
+however, these bodily senses are neither accurate nor clear, much
+less can the others be so: for they are all far inferior to these.
+Do they not seem so to you?"</p>
+<p>"Certainly," he replied.</p>
+<p>"When, then," said he, "does the soul light on the truth? for,
+when it attempts to consider anything in conjunction with the body,
+it is plain that it is then led astray by it."</p>
+<p>"You say truly."</p>
+<p>"Must it not then be by reasoning, if at all, that any of the
+things that really are become known to it?"</p>
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+<p>"And surely the soul then reasons best when none of these things
+disturbs it, neither hearing, nor sight, nor pain, nor pleasure of
+any kind, but it retires as much as possible within itself, taking
+leave of the body, and, as far as it can, not communicating or
+being in contact with it, it aims at the discovery of that which
+is."</p>
+<p>"Such is the case."</p>
+<p>"Does not then the soul of the philosopher, in these cases,
+despise the body, and flee from it, and seek to retire within
+itself?"</p>
+<p>"It appears so."</p>
+<p>"But what as to such things as these, Simmias? Do we say that
+justice itself is something or nothing?"</p>
+<p>"We say it is something, by Jupiter."</p>
+<p>"And that beauty and goodness are something?"</p>
+<p>"How not?"</p>
+<p>"Now, then, have you ever seen anything of this kind with your
+eyes?"</p>
+<p>"By no means," he replied.</p>
+<p>"Did you ever lay hold of them by any other bodily sense? but I
+speak generally, as of magnitude, health, strength, and, in a word,
+of the essence of everything, that is to say, what each is. Is then
+the exact truth of these perceived by means of the body, or is it
+thus, whoever among us habituates himself to reflect most deeply
+and accurately on each several thing about which he is considering,
+he will make the nearest approach to the knowledge of it?"</p>
+<p>"Certainly."</p>
+<p>"Would not he, then, do this with the utmost purity, who should
+in the highest degree approach each subject by means of the mere
+mental faculties, neither employing the sight in conjunction with
+the reflective faculty, nor introducing any other sense together
+with reasoning; but who, using pure reflection by itself, should
+attempt to search out each essence purely by itself, freed as much
+as possible from the eyes and ears, and, in a word, from the whole
+body, as disturbing the soul, and not suffering it to acquire truth
+and wisdom, when it is in communion with it. Is not he the person,
+Simmias, if any one can, who will arrive at the knowledge of that
+which is?"</p>
+<p>"You speak with wonderful truth, Socrates," replied Simmias.</p>
+<p>"Wherefore," he said, "it necessarily follows from all this,
+that some such opinion as this should be entertained by genuine
+philosophers, so that they should speak among themselves as
+follows: 'A by-path, as it were, seems to lead us on in our
+researches undertaken by reason,' because as long as we are
+encumbered with the body, and our soul is contaminated with such an
+evil, we can never fully attain to what we desire; and this, we
+say, is truth. For the body subjects us to innumerable hinderances
+on account of its necessary support, and moreover if any diseases
+befall us, they impede us in our search after that which is; and it
+fills us with longings, desires, fears, all kinds of fancies, and a
+multitude of absurdities, so that, as it is said in real truth, by
+reason of the body it is never possible for us to make any advances
+in wisdom.</p>
+<p>"For nothing else but the body and its desires occasions wars,
+seditions, and contests; for all wars among us arise on account of
+our desire to acquire wealth; and we are compelled to acquire
+wealth on account of the body, being enslaved to its service; and
+consequently on all these accounts we are hindered in the pursuit
+of philosophy. But the worst of all is, that if it leaves us any
+leisure, and we apply ourselves to the consideration of any
+subject, it constantly obtrudes itself in the midst of our
+researches, and occasions trouble and disturbance, and confounds us
+so that we are not able by reason of it to discern the truth. It
+has then in reality been demonstrated to us, that if we are ever to
+know anything purely, we must be separated from the body, and
+contemplate the things themselves by the mere soul. And then, as it
+seems, we shall obtain that which we desire, and which we profess
+ourselves to be lovers of, wisdom, when we are dead, as reason
+shows, but not while we are alive. For if it is not possible to
+know anything purely in conjunction with the body, one of these two
+things must follow, either that we can never acquire knowledge, or
+only after we are dead; for then the soul will subsist apart by
+itself, separate from the body, but not before. And while we live,
+we shall thus, as it seems, approach nearest to knowledge, if we
+hold no intercourse or communion at all with the body, except what
+absolute necessity requires, nor suffer ourselves to be polluted by
+its nature, but purify ourselves from it, until God himself shall
+release us. And thus being pure, and freed from the folly of body,
+we shall in all likelihood be with others like ourselves, and shall
+of ourselves know the whole real essence, and that probably is
+truth; for it is not allowable for the impure to attain to the
+pure. Such things, I think, Simmias, all true lovers of wisdom must
+both think and say to one another. Does it not seem so to you?"</p>
+<p>"Most assuredly, Socrates."</p>
+<p>"If this, then," said Socrates, "is true, my friend, there is
+great hope for one who arrives where I am going, there, if
+anywhere, to acquire that perfection for the sake of which we have
+taken so much pains during our past life; so that the journey now
+appointed me is set out upon with good hope, and will be so by any
+other man who thinks that his mind has been as it were
+purified.</p>
+<p>"This earth and the whole region here are decayed and corroded,
+as things in the sea by the saltness; for nothing of any value
+grows in the sea, nor, in a word, does it contain anything perfect,
+but there are caverns, and sand, and mud in abundance, and filth in
+whatever parts of the sea there is earth, nor are they at all
+worthy to be compared with the beautiful things with us. But, on
+the other hand, those things in the upper regions of the earth
+would appear far more to excel the things with us. For, if we may
+tell a beautiful fable, it is well worth hearing, Simmias, what
+kind the things are on the earth beneath the heavens."</p>
+<p>"Indeed, Socrates," said Simmias, "we should be very glad to
+hear that fable."</p>
+<p>"First of all, then, my friend," he continued, "this earth, if
+anyone should survey it from above, is said to have the appearance
+of balls covered with twelve different pieces of leather,
+variegated and distinguished with colors, of which the colors found
+here, and which painters use, are as it were copies. But there the
+whole earth is composed of such, and far more brilliant and pure
+than these; for one part of it is purple, and of wonderful beauty,
+part of a golden color, and part of white, more white than chalk or
+snow, and in like manner composed of other colors, and those more
+in number and more beautiful than any we have ever beheld. And
+those very hollow parts of the earth, though filled with water and
+air, exhibit a certain species of color, shining among the variety
+of other colors, so that one continually variegated aspect presents
+itself to the view. In this earth, being such, all things that grow
+grow in a manner proportioned to its nature—trees, flowers,
+and fruits; and again, in like manner, its mountains and stones
+possess, in the same proportion, smoothness and transparency and
+more beautiful colors; of which the well-known stones here that are
+so highly prized are but fragments, such as sardin-stones, jaspers,
+and emeralds, and all of that kind. But there, there is nothing
+subsists that is not of this character, and even more beautiful
+than these.</p>
+<p>"But the reason of this is, because the stones there are pure,
+and not eaten up and decayed, like those here, by rottenness and
+saltness, which flow down hither together, and which produce
+deformity and disease in the stones and the earth, and in other
+things, even animals and plants. But that earth is adorned with all
+these, and moreover with gold and silver, and other things of the
+kind: for they are naturally conspicuous, being numerous and large,
+and in all parts of the earth; so that to behold it is a sight for
+the blessed. There are also many other animals and men upon it,
+some dwelling in mid-earth, others about the air, as we do about
+the sea, and others in islands which the air flows round, and which
+are near the continent: and in one word, what water and the sea are
+to us for our necessities, the air is to them; and what air is to
+us, that ether is to them.</p>
+<p>"But their seasons are of such a temperament that they are free
+from disease, and live for a much longer time than those here, and
+surpass us in sight, hearing, and smelling, and everything of this
+kind, as much as air excels water, and ether air, in purity.
+Moreover, they have abodes and temples of the gods, in which gods
+really dwell, and voices and oracles, and sensible visions of the
+gods, and such-like intercourse with them; the sun, too, and moon,
+and stars, are seen by them such as they really are, and their
+felicity in other respects is correspondent with these things.</p>
+<p>"And such, indeed, is the nature of the whole earth and the
+parts about the earth; but there are many places all round it
+throughout its cavities, some deeper and more open than that in
+which we dwell: but others that are deeper have less chasm than in
+our region, and other are shallower in depth than they are here,
+and broader.</p>
+<p>"But all these are in many places perforated one into another
+under the earth, some with narrower and some with wider channels,
+and have passages through, by which a great quantity of water flows
+from one into another, as into basins, and there are immense bulks
+of ever-flowing rivers under the earth, both of hot and cold water,
+and a great quantity of fire, and mighty rivers of fire, and many
+of liquid mire, some purer and some more miry, as in Sicily there
+are rivers of mud that flow before the lava, and the lava itself,
+and from these the several places are filled, according as the
+overflow from time to time happens to come to each of them. But all
+these move up and down as it were by a certain oscillation existing
+in the earth. And this oscillation proceeds from such natural cause
+as this: one of the chasms of the earth is exceedingly large, and
+perforated through the entire earth, and is that which
+Homer[<a href="#note-43">43</a>] speaks of, 'very far off, where is
+the most profound abyss beneath the earth,' which elsewhere both he
+and many other poets have called Tartarus. For into this chasm all
+rivers flow together, and from it flow out again, but they
+severally derive their character from the earth through which they
+flow."</p>
+<p><a name="note-43"><!-- Note Anchor 43 --></a>[Footnote 43:
+<i>Iliad</i>, lib. viii., v. 14.]</p>
+<p>"And the reason why all streams flow out from thence and flow
+into it is because this liquid has neither bottom nor base.
+Therefore it oscillates and fluctuates up and down, and the air and
+the wind around it do the same; for they accompany it, both when it
+rushes to those parts of the earth, and when to these. And as in
+respiration the flowing breath is continually breathed out and
+drawn in, so there the wind, oscillating with the liquid, causes
+certain vehement and irresistible winds both as it enters and goes
+out. When, therefore, the water rushing in descends to the place
+which we call the lower region, it flows through the earth into the
+streams there and fills them, just as men pump up water. But when
+again it leaves those regions and rushes hither, it again fills the
+rivers here, and these, when filled, flow through channels and
+through the earth, and having severally reached the several places
+to which they are journeying, they make seas, lakes, rivers, and
+fountains.</p>
+<p>"Then sinking again from thence beneath the earth, some of them
+having gone round longer and more numerous places, and others round
+fewer and shorter, they again discharge themselves into Tartarus,
+some much lower than they were drawn up, others only a little so,
+but all of them flow in again beneath the point at which they
+flowed out. And some issue out directly opposite the place by which
+they flow in, others on the same side: there are also some which
+having gone round altogether in a circle, folding themselves once
+or several times round the earth, like serpents, when they had
+descended as low as possible, discharge themselves again; and it is
+possible for them to descend on either side as far as the middle,
+but not beyond; for in each direction there is an acclivity to the
+streams both ways.</p>
+<p>"Now there are many other large and various streams, and among
+this great number there are four certain streams, of which the
+largest, and that which flows most outwardly round the earth, is
+called Ocean, but directly opposite this, and flowing in a contrary
+direction, is Acheron, which flows through other desert places, and
+moreover passing under the earth, reaches the Acherusian lake,
+where the souls of most who die arrive, and having remained there
+for certain destined periods, some longer and some shorter, are
+again sent forth into the generations of animals. A third river
+issues midway between these, and near its source falls into a vast
+region, burning with abundance of fire, and forms a lake larger
+than our sea, boiling with water and mud; from hence it proceeds in
+a circle, turbulent and muddy, and folding itself round it reaches
+both other places and the extremity of the Acherusian lake, but
+does not mingle with its water; but folding itself oftentimes
+beneath the earth, it discharges itself into the lower parts of
+Tartarus. And this is the river which they call Pyriphlegethon,
+whose burning streams emit dissevered fragments in whatever part of
+the earth they happen to be. Opposite to this again the fourth
+river first falls into a place dreadful and savage, as it is said,
+having its whole color like <i>cyanus</i>: this they call Stygian,
+and the lake which the river forms by its discharge, Styx. This
+river having fallen in here, and received awful power in the water,
+sinking beneath the earth, proceeds, folding itself round, in an
+opposite course to Pyriphlegethon, and meets it in the Acherusian
+lake from a contrary direction. Neither does the water of this
+river mingle with any other, but it, too, having gone round in a
+circle, discharges itself into Tartarus opposite to Pyriphlegethon.
+Its name, as the poets say, is Cocytus.</p>
+<p>"These things being thus constituted, when the dead arrive at
+the place to which their demon leads them severally, first of all
+they are judged, as well those who have lived well and piously as
+those who have not. And those who appear to have passed a middle
+kind of life, proceeding to Acheron, and embarking in the vessels
+they have, on these arrive at the lake, and there dwell, and when
+they are purified, and have suffered punishment for the iniquities
+they may have committed, they are set free, and each receives the
+reward of his good deeds, according to his deserts: but those who
+appear to be incurable, through the magnitude of their offences,
+either from having committed many and great sacrileges, or many
+unjust and lawless murders, or other similar crimes, these a
+suitable destiny hurls into Tartarus, whence they never come
+forth.</p>
+<p>"But those who appear to have been guilty of curable yet great
+offences, such as those who through anger have committed any
+violence against father or mother, and have lived the remainder of
+their life in a state of penitence, or they who have become
+homicides in a similar manner, these must of necessity fall into
+Tartarus, but after they have fallen, and have been there for a
+year, the wave casts them forth, the homicides into Cocytus, but
+the parricides and matricides into Pyriphlegethon: but when, being
+borne along, they arrive at the Acherusian lake, there they cry out
+to and invoke, some those whom they slew, others those whom they
+injured, and invoking them they entreat and implore them to suffer
+them to go out into the lake, and to receive them, and if they
+persuade them they go out and are freed from their sufferings; but
+if not, they are borne back to Tartarus, and thence again to the
+rivers, and they do not cease from suffering this until they have
+persuaded those whom they have injured, for this sentence was
+imposed on them by the judges.</p>
+<p>"But those who are found to have lived an eminently holy life,
+these are they who, being freed and set at large from these regions
+in the earth, as from a prison, arrive at the pure abode above, and
+dwell on the upper parts of the earth. And among these, they who
+have sufficiently purified themselves by philosophy shall live
+without bodies, throughout all future time, and shall arrive at
+habitations yet more beautiful than these, which it is neither easy
+to describe nor at present is there sufficient time for the
+purpose.</p>
+<p>"But for the sake of these things which we have described, we
+should use every endeavor, Simmias, so as to acquire virtue and
+wisdom in this life; for the reward is noble, and the hope
+great.</p>
+<p>"To affirm positively, indeed, that these things are exactly as
+I have described them does not become a man of sense; that however
+either this or something of the kind takes place with respect to
+our souls and their habitations—since our soul is certainly
+immortal—this appears to me most fitting to be believed, and
+worthy the hazard for one who trusts in its reality; for the hazard
+is noble, and it is right to allure ourselves with such things, as
+with enchantments; for which reason I have prolonged my story to
+such a length.</p>
+<p>"On account of these things, then, a man ought to be confident
+about his soul who during this life has disregarded all the
+pleasures and ornaments of the body as foreign from his nature, and
+who, having thought that they do more harm than good, has zealously
+applied himself to the acquirement of knowledge, and who having
+adorned his soul not with a foreign but its own proper
+ornament—temperance, justice, fortitude, freedom, and
+truth—thus waits for his passage to Hades, as one who is
+ready to depart whenever destiny shall summon him. You, then," he
+continued, "Simmias and Cebes, and the rest, will each of you
+depart at some future time; but now 'destiny summons me,' as a
+tragic writer would say, and it is nearly time for me to betake
+myself to the bath; for it appears to me to be better to drink the
+poison after I have bathed myself, and not to trouble the women
+with washing my dead body."</p>
+<p>When he had thus spoken, Crito said: "So be it, Socrates, but
+what commands have you to give to these or to me, either respecting
+your children or any other matter, in attending to which we can
+most oblige you?"</p>
+<p>"What I always say, Crito," he replied, "nothing new; that by
+taking care of yourselves you will oblige both me and mine and
+yourselves, whatever you do, though you should not now promise it;
+but if you neglect yourselves, and will not live as it were in the
+footsteps of what has been now and formerly said, even though you
+should promise much at present, and that earnestly, you will do no
+good at all."</p>
+<p>"We will endeavor then so to do," he said; "but how shall we
+bury you?"</p>
+<p>"Just as you please," he said, "if only you can catch me, and I
+do not escape from you." And at the same time smiling gently, and
+looking round on us, he said: "I cannot persuade Crito, my friends,
+that I am that Socrates who is now conversing with you, and who
+methodizes each part of the discourse; but he thinks that I am he
+whom he will shortly behold dead, and asks how he should bury me.
+But that which I some time since argued at length, that when I have
+drunk the poison I shall no longer remain with you, but shall
+depart to some happy state of the blessed, this I seem to have
+urged to him in vain, though I meant at the same time to console
+both you and myself. Be ye then my sureties to Crito," he said, "in
+an obligation contrary to that which he made to the judges; for he
+undertook that I should remain; but do you be sureties that, when I
+die, I shall not remain, but shall depart, that Crito may more
+easily bear it, and when he sees my body either burnt or buried,
+may not be afflicted for me, as if I suffered some dreadful thing,
+nor say at my interment that Socrates is laid out, or is carried
+out, or is buried.</p>
+<p>"For be well assured," he said, "most excellent Crito, that to
+speak improperly is not only culpable as to the thing itself, but
+likewise occasions some injury to our souls. You must have a good
+courage, then, and say that you bury my body, and bury it in such a
+manner as is pleasing to you, and as you think is most agreeable to
+our laws."</p>
+<p>When he had said thus he rose and went into a chamber to bathe,
+and Crito followed him, but he directed us to wait for him. We
+waited, therefore, conversing among ourselves about what had been
+said, and considering it again, and sometimes speaking about our
+calamity, how severe it would be to us, sincerely thinking that,
+like those who are deprived of a father, we should pass the rest of
+our life as orphans. When he had bathed, and his children were
+brought to him, for he had two little sons, and one grown up; and
+the women belonging to his family were come, having conversed with
+them in the presence of Crito and given them such injunctions as he
+wished, he directed the women and children to go away, and then
+returned to us. And it was now near sunset; for he spent a
+considerable time within.</p>
+<p>But when he came from bathing he sat down, and did not speak
+much afterward; then the officer of the Eleven came in, and
+standing near him, said: "Socrates, I shall not have to find that
+fault with you that I do with others, that they are angry with me
+and curse me, when, by order of the archons, I bid them drink the
+poison. But you, on all other occasions during the time you have
+been here, I have found to be the most noble, meek, and excellent
+man of all that ever came into this place; and therefore I am now
+well convinced that you will not be angry with me (for you know who
+are to blame) but with them. Now, then, for you know what I came to
+announce to you, farewell; and endeavor to bear what is inevitable
+as easily as possible." And at the same time, bursting into tears,
+he turned away and withdrew.</p>
+<p>And Socrates, looking after him, said: "And thou too, farewell;
+we will do as you direct." At the same time turning to us, he said:
+"How courteous the man is; during the whole time I have been here
+he has visited me, and conversed with me sometimes, and proved the
+worthiest of men; and now how generously he weeps for me. But come,
+Crito, let us obey him, and let some one bring the poison, if it is
+ready pounded, but if not, let the man pound it."</p>
+<p>Then Crito said: "But I think, Socrates, that the sun is still
+on the mountains and has not yet set. Besides, I know that others
+have drunk the poison very late, after it had been announced to
+them, and have supped and drunk freely, and some even have enjoyed
+the objects of their love. Do not hasten, then, for there is yet
+time."</p>
+<p>Upon this Socrates replied: "These men whom you mention, Crito,
+do these things with good reason, for they think they shall gain by
+so doing, and I too with good reason shall not do so; for I think I
+shall gain nothing by drinking a little later, except to become
+ridiculous to myself, in being so fond of life, and sparing of it
+when none any longer remains. Go, then," he said, "obey, and do not
+resist."</p>
+<p>Crito having heard this, nodded to the boy that stood near. And
+the boy having gone out, and stayed for some time, came, bringing
+with him the man that was to administer the poison, who brought it
+ready pounded in a cup. And Socrates, on seeing the man, said:
+"Well, my good friend, as you are skilled in these matters, what
+must I do?"</p>
+<p>"Nothing else," he replied, "than when you have drunk it walk
+about until there is a heaviness in your legs, then lie down; thus
+it will do its purpose." And at the same time he held out the cup
+to Socrates. And he having received it very cheerfully, Echecrates,
+neither trembling nor changing at all in color or countenance, but,
+as he was wont, looking steadfastly at the man, said: "What say you
+of this potion, with respect to making a libation to anyone, is it
+lawful or not?"</p>
+<p>"We only pound so much, Socrates," he said, "as we think
+sufficient to drink."</p>
+<p>"I understand you," he said; "but it is certainly both lawful
+and right to pray to the gods, that my departure hence thither may
+be happy; which therefore I pray, and so may it be." And as he said
+this he drank it off readily and calmly. Thus far, most of us were
+with difficulty able to restrain ourselves from weeping, but when
+we saw him drinking, and having finished the draught, we could do
+so no longer; but in spite of myself the tears came in full
+torrent, so that, covering my face, I wept for myself, for I did
+not weep for him, but for my own fortune, in being deprived of such
+a friend. But Crito, even before me when he could not restrain his
+tears, had risen up.</p>
+<p>But Apollodorus, even before this, had not ceased weeping, and
+then bursting into an agony of grief, weeping and lamenting, he
+pierced the heart of everyone present except Socrates himself. But
+he said: "What are you doing, my admirable friends? I indeed, for
+this reason chiefly, sent away the women that they might not commit
+any folly of this kind. For I have heard that it is right to die
+with good omens. Be quiet, therefore, and bear up."</p>
+<p>When we heard this we were ashamed and restrained our tears. But
+he, having walked about, when he said that his legs were growing
+heavy, laid down on his back; for the man so directed him. And at
+the same time he who gave him the poison, taking hold of him, after
+a short interval examined his feet and legs; and then having
+pressed his foot hard, he asked if he felt it.</p>
+<p>He said that he did not.</p>
+<p>And after this he pressed his thighs; and thus going higher, he
+showed us that he was growing cold and stiff.</p>
+<p>Then Socrates touched himself, and said that when the poison
+reached his heart he should then depart.</p>
+<p>But now the parts around the lower belly were almost cold; when,
+uncovering himself (for he had been covered over), he said, and
+they were his last words: "Crito, we owe a cock to Aesculapius; pay
+it, therefore, and do not neglect it!"</p>
+<p>"It shall be done," said Crito; "but consider whether you have
+anything else to say?"</p>
+<p>To this question he gave no reply; but shortly after he gave a
+convulsive movement, and the man covered him, and his eyes were
+fixed; and Crito, perceiving it, closed his mouth and eyes.</p>
+<p>This, Echecrates, was the end of our friend, a man, as we may
+say, the best of all of his time that we have known, and, moreover,
+the most wise and just.</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="RULE4_8"></a>BRENNUS BURNS ROME</h2>
+<p class="center">B.C. 388</p>
+<p class="center">BARTHOLD GEORG NIEBUHR</p>
+<p class="intros">Julius Caesar is the first writer who gives us an
+authentic and enlightening account of the Gauls, whom he divided
+into three groups. The Gauls were the chief branch of the great
+original stock of Celts. They were a nomadic people, and from their
+home in Western Europe they spread to Britain, invaded Spain, and
+swarmed over the Alps into Italy, and it is from the latter event
+that this tall, fair, and fighting nation first came into the
+region of history.</p>
+<p class="intros">Before the Gauls had come within the borders of
+Italy, Camillus, the Dictator, had dealt the death-blow to the
+Etruscan League through his capture and destruction of its
+stronghold, Veii. But at the very summit of his triumph he lost the
+grace of his countrymen by demanding a tenth of their spoil taken
+at Veii, and which he claimed to have vowed to Apollo. It was
+popularly considered a ruse to increase his private fortune.
+Furthermore, a counter-claim was brought against him for
+appropriating bronze gates, which in Rome at that time were nothing
+less than actual money—bronze being the medium of currency.
+Camillus went into exile in consequence of the accusation. His
+parting prayer was that his country might feel his need and call
+him back. His desire was fulfilled, for soon after "the Gaul was at
+the gates" under the leadership of the haughty Brennus, who had
+come upon the Romans at a most opportune moment. This event of the
+overthrow of the Romans on the Alia has been the occasion for the
+well-known tale of the cackling of the geese in the temple of Juno,
+which alarmed the garrison. The episode also gave rise to the
+saying of the conqueror, Brennus, who, when reproached by his
+antagonists with using false weights, cast his sword into the
+scale, crying, "Woe to the conquered!"</p>
+<p>At that time no Roman foresaw the calamity which was threatening
+the empire. Rome had become great, because the country which she
+had conquered was weak through its oligarchical institutions; the
+subjects of the other states gladly joined the Romans, because
+under them their lot was more favorable, and probably because they
+were kindred nations. But matters went with the Romans as they did
+with Basilius, who subdued the Armenians when they were threatened
+by the Turks, and who soon after attacked the whole Greek empire
+and took away far more than had been gained before.</p>
+<p>The expedition of the Gauls into Italy must be regarded as a
+migration, and not as an invasion for the purpose of conquest: as
+for the historical account of it, we must adhere to Polybius and
+Diodorus, who place it shortly before the taking of Rome by the
+Gauls. We can attach no importance to the statement of Livy that
+they had come into Italy as early as the time of Tarquinius
+Priscus, having been driven from their country by a famine. It
+undoubtedly arose from the fact that some Greek writer, perhaps
+Timaeus, connected this migration with the settlement of the
+Phocians at Massilia. It is possible that Livy even here made use
+of Dionysius; and that the latter followed Timaeus; for as Livy
+made use of Dionysius in the eighth book, why not also in the
+fifth? He himself knew very little of Greek history;[<a href="#note-44">44</a>] but Justin's account is here evidently opposed
+to Livy.</p>
+<p><a name="note-44"><!-- Note Anchor 44 --></a>[Footnote 44: Comp.
+<i>Hist. of Rome</i>, vol. iii. n. 485.]</p>
+<p>Trogus Pompeius was born in the neighborhood of Massilia, and in
+writing his forty-third book he obviously made use of native
+chronicles, for from no other source could he derive the account of
+the <i>decreta honorifica</i> of the Romans to the Massilians for
+the friendship which the latter had shown to the Romans during the
+Gallic war; and from the same source must he have obtained his
+information about the maritime wars of Massilia against Carthage.
+Trogus knows nothing of the story that the Gauls assisted the
+Phocians on their arrival; but according to him, they met with a
+kind reception among the Ligurians, who continued to inhabit those
+parts for a long time after. Even the story of the <i>lucumo</i>
+who is said to have invited the Gauls is opposed to him, and if it
+were referred to Clusium alone it would be absurd. Polybius places
+the passage of the Gauls across the Alps about ten or twenty years
+before the taking of Rome; and Diodorus describes them as advancing
+toward Rome by an uninterrupted march. It is further stated that
+Melpum in the country of the Insubrians was destroyed on the same
+day as Veii: without admitting this coincidence, we have no reason
+to doubt that the statement is substantially true; and it is made
+by Cornelius Nepos, who, as a native of Gallia Transpadana, might
+possess accurate information, and whose chronological accounts were
+highly esteemed by the Romans.</p>
+<p>There was no other passage for the Gauls except either across
+the Little St. Bernard or across the Simplon; it is not probable
+that they took the former road, because their country extended only
+as far as the Ticinus, and if they had come across the Little St.
+Bernard, they would naturally have occupied also all the country
+between that mountain and the Ticinus. The Salassi may indeed have
+been a Gallic people, but it is by no means certain; moreover,
+between them and the Gauls who had come across the Alps the Laevi
+also lived; and there can be no doubt that at that time Ligurians
+still continued to dwell on the Ticinus.</p>
+<p>Melpum must have been situated in the district of Milan. The
+latter place has an uncommonly happy situation: often as it has
+been destroyed, it has always been restored, so that it is not
+impossible that Melpum may have been situated on the very spot
+afterward occupied by Milan. The Gallic migration undoubtedly
+passed by like a torrent with irresistible rapidity: how then is it
+possible to suppose that Melpum resisted them for two centuries, or
+that they conquered it and yet did not disturb the Etruscans for
+two hundred years? It would be absurd to believe it, merely to save
+an uncritical expression of Livy. According to the common
+chronology, the Triballi, who in the time of Herodotus inhabited
+the plains, and were afterward expelled by the Gauls, appeared in
+Thrace twelve years after the taking of Rome—according to a
+more correct chronology it was only nine years after that event. It
+was the same movement assuredly which led the Gauls to the
+countries through which the middle course of the Danube extends,
+and to the Po; and could the people who came in a few days from
+Clusium to Rome, and afterward appeared in Apulia, have been
+sitting quiet in a corner of Italy for two hundred years? If they
+had remained there because they had not the power to advance, they
+would have been cut to pieces by the Etruscans. We must therefore
+look upon it as an established fact, that the migration took place
+at the late period mentioned by Polybius and Diodorus.</p>
+<p>These Gauls were partly Celts, and partly (indeed principally)
+Belgae or Cymri, as may be perceived from the circumstance that
+their king, as well as the one who appeared before Delphi, is
+called Brennus. <i>Brenin</i>, according to Adelung, in his
+<i>Mithridates</i>, signifies in the language of Wales and Lower
+Brittany a <i>king</i>. But what caused this whole emigration? The
+statement of Livy, that the Gauls were compelled by famine to leave
+their country, is quite in keeping with the nature of all
+traditions about migrations, such as we find them in Saxo
+Grammaticus, in Paul Warnefried from the sagas of the Swedes, in
+the Tyrrhenian traditions of Lydia, and others. However, in the
+case of a people like the Celts, every specific statement of this
+kind, in which even the names of their leaders are mentioned, is of
+no more value than the traditions of other barbarous nations which
+were unacquainted with the art of writing. It is indeed, well known
+that the Celts in writing used the Greek alphabet, but they
+probably employed it only in the transactions of daily life; for we
+know that they were not allowed to commit their ancient songs to
+writing.</p>
+<p>During the Gallic migration we are again made aware how little
+we know of the history of Italy generally: our knowledge is limited
+to Rome, so that we are in the same predicament there, as if of all
+the historical authorities of the whole German empire we had
+nothing but the annals of a single imperial city. According to
+Livy's account, it would seem as if the only object of the Gauls
+had been to march to Rome; and yet this immigration changed the
+whole aspect of Italy. After the Gauls had once crossed the
+Apennines, there was no further obstacle to prevent their marching
+to the south of Italy by any road they pleased; and it is in fact
+mentioned that they did proceed farther south. The Umbrians still
+inhabited the country on the lower Po, in the modern Romagna and
+Urbino, parts of which were occupied by Liburnians. Polybius says
+that many people there became tributary to the Gauls, and that this
+was the case with the Umbrians is quite certain.</p>
+<p>The first historical appearance of the Gauls is at Clusium,
+whither a noble Clusine is said to have invited them for the
+purpose of taking vengeance on his native city. Whether this
+account is true, however, must remain undecided, and if there is
+any truth in it, it is more probable that the offended Clusine went
+across the Apennines and fetched his avengers. Clusium has not been
+mentioned since the time of Porsena; the fact of the Clusines
+soliciting the aid of Rome is a proof how little that northern city
+of Etruria was concerned about the fate of the southern towns, and
+makes us even suspect that it was allied with Rome; however, the
+danger was so great that all jealousy must have been suppressed.
+The natural road for the Gauls would have been along the Adriatic,
+then through the country of Umbrians who were tributary to them and
+already quite broken down, and thence through the Romagna across
+the Apennines.</p>
+<p>But the Apennines which separate Tuscany from the Romagna are
+very difficult to cross, especially for sumpter-horses; as
+therefore the Gauls could not enter Etruria on that
+side—which the Etruscans had intentionally allowed to grow
+wild—and as they had been convinced of this in an
+unsuccessful attempt, they crossed the Apennines in the
+neighborhood of Clusium, and appeared before that city. Clusium was
+the great bulwark of the valley of the Tiber; and if it were taken,
+the roads along the Tiber and the Arno would be open, and the Gauls
+might reach Arezzo from the rear: the Romans therefore looked upon
+the fate of Clusium as decisive of their own. The Clusines sued for
+a treaty with the mighty city of Rome, and the Romans were wise
+enough readily to accept the offer: they sent ambassadors to the
+Gauls, ordering them to withdraw. According to a very probable
+account, the Gauls had demanded of the Clusines a division of their
+territory as the condition of peace, and not, as was customary with
+the Romans, as a tax upon a people already subdued: if this is
+correct, the Romans sent the embassy confiding in their own
+strength. But the Gauls scorned the ambassadors, and the latter,
+allowing themselves to be carried away by their warlike
+disposition, joined the Etruscans in a fight against the Gauls.
+This was probably only an insignificant and isolated engagement.
+Such is the account of Livy, who goes on to say that the Gauls, as
+soon as they perceived this violation in the law of nations, gave
+the signal for a retreat, and, having called upon the gods to
+avenge the wrong, marched against Rome.</p>
+<p>This is evidently a mere fiction, for a barbarous nation like
+the Gauls cannot possibly have had such ideas, nor was there in
+reality any violation of the law of nations, as the Romans stood in
+no kind of connection with the Gauls. But it was a natural feeling
+with the Romans to look upon the fall of their city as the
+consequence of a <i>nefas</i> which no human power could resist.
+Roman vanity also is at work here, inasmuch as the Roman
+ambassadors are said to have so distinguished themselves that they
+were recognized by the barbarians among the hosts of Etruscans.
+Now, according to another tradition directly opposed to these
+statements, the Gauls sent to Rome to demand the surrender of those
+ambassadors: as the senate was hesitating and left the decision to
+the people, the latter not only rejected the demand, but appointed
+the same ambassadors to the office of military tribunes, whereupon
+the Gauls with all their forces at once marched toward Rome.</p>
+<p>Livy here again speaks of the <i>populus</i> as the people to
+whom the senate left the decision: this must have been the
+patricians only, for they alone had the right to decide upon the
+fate of the members of their own order. It is not fair to accuse
+the Romans on that occasion of dishonesty; but this account
+assuredly originated with later writers, who transferred to
+barbarians the right belonging to a nation standing in a legal
+relation to another. The statement that the three ambassadors, all
+of whom were Fabii, were appointed military tribunes, is not even
+the usual one, for there is another in Diodorus, who must here have
+used Roman authorities written in Greek, that is, Fabius; since he
+calls the Cærites [Greek: Kairioi] and not [Greek:
+Agullaioi]. He speaks of a single ambassador, who being a son of a
+military tribune fought against the Gauls. This is at least a sign
+how uncertain history yet is. The battle on the Alia was fought on
+the 16th of July; the military tribunes entered upon their office
+on the first of that month; and the distance between Clusium and
+Rome is only three good days' marches. It is impossible to restore
+the true history, but we can discern what is fabulous from what is
+really historical.</p>
+<p>An innumerable host of Gauls now marched from Clusium toward
+Rome. For a long time the Gauls were most formidable to the Romans,
+as well as to all other nations with whom they came in contact,
+even as far east as the Ukraine; as to Rome, we see this as late as
+the Cisalpine war of the year A.U. 527. Polybius and Diodorus are
+our best guides in seeking for information about the manners of the
+Gauls, for in the time of Caesar they had already become changed.
+In the description of their persons we partly recognize the modern
+Gael, or the inhabitants of the Highlands of Scotland: huge bodies,
+blue eyes, bristly hair; even their dress and armor are those of
+the Highlanders, for they wore the checked and variegated tartans;
+their arms consisted of the broad, unpointed battle-sword, the same
+weapon as the claymore among the Highlanders. They had a vast
+number of horns, which were used in the Highlands for many
+centuries after, and threw themselves upon the enemy in immense
+irregular masses with terrible fury, those standing behind
+impelling those stationed in front, whereby they became
+irresistible by the tactics of those times.</p>
+<p>The Romans ought to have used against them their phalanx and
+doubled it, until they were accustomed to this enemy and were
+enabled by their greater skill to repel them. If the Romans had
+been able to withstand their first shock, the Gauls would have
+easily been thrown into disorder, and put to flight. The Gauls who
+were subsequently conquered by the Romans were the descendants of
+such as were born in Italy, and had lost much of their courage and
+strength. The Goths under Vitiges, not fifty years after the
+immigration of Theodoric into Italy, were cowards, and unable to
+resist the twenty thousand men of Belisarius: showing how easily
+barbarians degenerate in such climates.</p>
+<p>The Gauls, moreover, were terrible on account of their inhuman
+cruelty, for, wherever they settled, the original towns and their
+inhabitants completely disappeared from the face of the earth. In
+their own country they had the feudal system and a priestly
+government: the Druids were their only rulers, who avenged the
+oppressed people on the lords, but in their turn became tyrants:
+all the people were in the condition of serfs, a proof that the
+Gauls, in their own country too, were the conquerors who had
+subdued an earlier population. We always find mention of the wealth
+of the Gauls in gold, and yet France has no rivers that carry
+gold-sand, and the Pyrenees were then no longer in their
+possession: the gold must therefore have been obtained by barter.
+Much may be exaggeration; and the fact of some noble individuals
+wearing gold chains was probably transferred by ancient poets to
+the whole nation, since popular poetry takes great liberty,
+especially in such embellishments.</p>
+<p>Pliny states that previous to the Gallic calamity the census
+amounted to one hundred and fifty thousand persons, which probably
+refers only to men entitled to vote in the assemblies, and does not
+comprise women, children, slaves, and strangers. If this be
+correct, the number of citizens was enormous; but it must not be
+supposed to include the inhabitants of the city only, the
+population of which was doubtless much smaller. The statement of
+Diodorus that all men were called to arms to resist the Gauls, and
+that the number amounted to forty thousand, is by no means
+improbable: according to the testimony of Polybius, Latins and
+Hernicans also were enlisted. Another account makes the Romans take
+the field against the Gauls with twenty-four thousand men, that is,
+with four field legions and four civic legions: the field legions
+were formed only of plebeians, and served, according to the order
+of the classes, probably in <i>maniples</i>; the civic legions
+contained all those who belonged neither to the patricians nor to
+the plebeians, that is, all the <i>aerarii, proletarii</i>,
+freedmen, and artisans who had never before faced an enemy. They
+were certainly not armed with the <i>pilum</i>, nor drawn up in
+<i>maniples</i>; but used pikes and were employed in phalanxes.</p>
+<p>Now as for the field legions, each consisted half of Latins and
+half of Romans, there being in each <i>maniple</i> one century of
+Roman and one of Latins. There were at that time four legions, and
+as a legion, including the reserve troops, contained three thousand
+men, the total is twelve thousand; now the account which mentions
+twenty-four thousand men must have presumed that there were four
+field legions and four irregular civic ones. There would
+accordingly have been no more than six thousand plebeians, and,
+even if the legions were all made up of Romans, only twelve
+thousand; if in addition to these we take twelve thousand irregular
+troops and sixteen thousand allies, the number of forty thousand
+would be completed. In this case, the population of Rome would not
+have been as large as that of Athens in the Peloponnesian war, and
+this is indeed very probable. The cavalry is not included in this
+calculation: but forty thousand must be taken as the maximum of the
+whole army. There seems to be no exaggeration in this statement,
+and the battle on the Alia, speaking generally, is an historical
+event.</p>
+<p>It is surprising that the Romans did not appoint a dictator to
+command in the battle; it cannot be said indeed that they regarded
+this war as an ordinary one, for in that case they would not have
+raised so great a force, but they cannot have comprehended the
+danger in all its greatness. New swarms continued to come across
+the Alps; the Senones also now appeared to seek habitations for
+themselves; they, like the Germans in after-times, demanded land,
+as they found the Insubrians, Boians, and others already settled;
+the latter had taken up their abode in Umbria, but only until they
+should find a more extensive and suitable territory.</p>
+<p>The Romans committed the great mistake of fighting with their
+hurriedly collected troops a battle against an enemy who had
+hitherto been invincible. The hills along which the right wing is
+said to have been drawn up are no longer discernible, and they were
+probably nothing but little mounds of earth: at any rate it was
+senseless to draw up a long line against the immense mass of
+enemies. The Gauls, on the other hand, were enabled without any
+difficulty to turn off to the left. They proceeded to a higher part
+of the river, where it was more easily fordable, and with great
+prudence threw themselves with all their force upon the right wing,
+consisting of the civic legions. The latter at first resisted, but
+not long; and when they fled, the whole remaining line, which until
+then seems to have been useless and inactive, was seized with a
+panic.</p>
+<p>Terror preceded the Gauls as they laid waste everything on their
+way, and this paralyzed the courage of the Romans, instead of
+rousing them to a desperate resistance. The Romans therefore were
+defeated on the Alia in the most inglorious manner. The Gauls had
+taken them in their rear, and cut off their return to Rome. A
+portion fled toward the Tiber, where some effected a retreat across
+the river, and others were drowned; another part escaped into a
+forest. The loss of life must have been prodigious, and it is
+inconceivable how Livy could have attached so much importance to
+the mere disgrace. If the Roman army had not been almost
+annihilated, it would not have been necessary to give up the
+defence of the city, as was done, for the city was left undefended
+and deserted by all. Many fled to Veii instead of returning to
+Rome: only a few, who had escaped along the high road, entered the
+city by the Colline gate.</p>
+<p>Rome was exhausted, her power shattered, her legions
+defenceless, and her warlike allies had partly been beaten in the
+same battle, and were partly awaiting the fearful enemy in their
+own countries. At Rome it was believed that the whole army was
+destroyed, for nothing was known of those who had reached Veii. In
+the city itself there were only old men, women, and children, so
+that there was no possibility of defending it. It is, however,
+inconceivable that the gates should have been left open, and that
+the Gauls, from fear of a stratagem, should have encamped for
+several days outside the gates. A more probable account is that the
+gates were shut and barricaded. We may form a vivid conception of
+the condition of Rome after this battle, by comparing it with that
+of Moscow before the conflagration: the people were convinced that
+a long defence was impossible, since there was probably a want of
+provisions.</p>
+<p>Livy gives a false notion of the evacuation of the city, as if
+the defenceless citizens had remained immovable in their
+consternation, and only a few had been received into the Capitol.
+The determination, in fact, was to defend the Capitol, and the
+tribune Sulpicius had taken refuge there, with about one thousand
+men. There was on the Capitol an ancient well which still exists,
+and without which the garrison would soon have perished. This well
+remained unknown to all antiquaries, till I discovered it by means
+of information gathered from the people who live there. Its depth
+in the rock descends to the level of the Tiber, but the water is
+now not fit to drink. The Capitol was a rock which had been hewn
+steep, and thereby made inaccessible, but a <i>clivus</i>, closed
+by gates both below and above, led up from the Forum and the Sacred
+Way. The rock, indeed, was not so steep as in later times, as is
+clear from the account of the attempt to storm it; but the Capitol
+was nevertheless very strong. Whether some few remained in the
+city, as at Moscow, who in their stupefaction did not consider what
+kind of enemy they had before them, cannot be decided. The
+narrative is very beautiful, and reminds us of the taking of the
+Acropolis of Athens by the Persians, where, likewise, the old men
+allowed themselves to be cut down by the Persians.</p>
+<p>Notwithstanding the improbability of the matter, I am inclined
+to believe that a number of aged patricians—their number may
+not be exactly historical—sat down in the Forum, in their
+official robes, on their curule chairs, and that the chief pontiff
+devoted them to death. Such devotions are a well-known Roman
+custom. It is certainly not improbable that the Gauls were amazed
+when they found the city deserted, and only these old men sitting
+immovable, that they took them for statues or supernatural visions,
+and did nothing to them, until one of them struck a Gaul who
+touched him, whereupon all were slaughtered. To commit suicide was
+repugnant to the customs of the Romans, who were guided in many
+things by feelings more correct and more resembling our own, than
+many other ancient nations. The old men, indeed, had given up the
+hope of their country being saved; but the Capitol might be
+maintained, and the survivors preferred dying in the attempt of
+self-defence to taking refuge at Veii, where after all they could
+not have maintained themselves in the end.</p>
+<p>The sacred treasures were removed to Caere, and the hope of the
+Romans now was that the barbarians would be tired of the long
+siege. Provisions for a time had been conveyed to the Capitol,
+where a couple of thousand men may have been assembled, and where
+all buildings, temples, as well as public and private houses, were
+used as habitations. The Gauls made fearful havoc at Rome, even
+more fearful than the Spaniards and Germans did in the year 1527.
+Soldiers plunder, and when they find no human beings they engage in
+the work of destruction; and fires break out, as at Moscow, without
+the existence of any intention to cause a conflagration. The whole
+city was changed into a heap of ashes, with the exception of a few
+houses on the Palatine, which were occupied by the leaders of the
+Gauls. It is astonishing to find, nevertheless, that a few
+monuments of the preceding period, such as statues, situated at
+some distance from the Capitol, are mentioned as having been
+preserved; but we must remember that <i>travertino</i> is tolerably
+fireproof. That Rome was burned down is certain; and when it was
+rebuilt, not even the ancient streets were restored.</p>
+<p>The Gauls were now encamped in the city. At first they attempted
+to storm the <i>clivus</i>, but were repelled with great loss,
+which is surprising, since we know that at an earlier time the
+Romans succeeded in storming it against Appius Herdonius. Afterward
+they discovered the footsteps of a messenger who had been sent from
+Veii, in order that the State might be taken care of in due form;
+for the Romans in the Capitol were patricians, and represented the
+<i>curies</i> and the Government, whereas those assembled at Veii
+represented the tribes, but had no leaders. The latter had resolved
+to recall Camillus, and raise him to the dictatorship. For this
+reason Pontius Cominius had been sent to Rome to obtain the
+sanction of the senate and the curies. This was quite in the spirit
+of the ancient times. If the curies had interdicted him <i>aqua et
+igni</i>, they alone could recall him, if they previously obtained
+a resolution of the senate authorizing them to do so; but if he had
+gone into voluntary exile, and had given up his Roman franchise by
+becoming a citizen of Ardea before a sentence had been passed upon
+him by the centuries, it was again in the power of the curies
+alone, he being a patrician, to recall him as a citizen; and
+otherwise he could not have become dictator, nor could he have
+regarded himself as such.</p>
+<p>It was the time of the dog-days when the Gauls came to Rome, and
+as the summer at Rome is always pestilential, especially during the
+two months and a half before the first of September, the
+unavoidable consequence must have been, as Livy relates, that the
+barbarians, bivouacking on the ruins of the city in the open air,
+were attacked by disease and carried off, like the army of
+Frederick Barbarossa when encamped before the castle of St. Angelo.
+The whole army of the Gauls, however, was not in the city, but only
+as many as were necessary to blockade the garrison of the Capitol;
+the rest were scattered far and wide over the face of the country,
+and were ravaging all the unprotected places and isolated farms in
+Latium; many an ancient town, which is no longer mentioned after
+this time, may have been destroyed by the Gauls. None but fortified
+places like Ostia, which could obtain supplies by sea, made a
+successful resistance, for the Gauls were unacquainted with the art
+of besieging.</p>
+<p>The Ardeatans, whose territory was likewise invaded by the
+Gauls, opposed them, under the command of Camillus; the Etruscans
+would seem to have endeavored to avail themselves of the
+opportunity of recovering Veii, for we are told that the Romans at
+Veii, commanded by Caedicius, gained a battle against them, and
+that, encouraged by this success, they began to entertain a hope of
+regaining Rome, since by this victory they got possession of
+arms.</p>
+<p>A Roman of the name of Fabius Dorso is said to have offered up,
+in broad daylight, a <i>gentilician</i> sacrifice on the Quirinal;
+and the astonished Gauls are said to have done him no harm—a
+tradition which is not improbable.</p>
+<p>The provisions in the Capitol were exhausted, but the Gauls
+themselves being seized with epidemic diseases became tired of
+their conquests, and were not inclined to settle in a country so
+far away from their own home. They once more attempted to take the
+Capitol by storm, having observed that the messenger from Veii had
+ascended the rock, and come down again near the Porta Carmentalis,
+below Araceli. The ancient rock is now covered with rubbish, and no
+longer discernible. The besieged did not think of a storm on that
+side; it may be that formerly there had in that part been a wall,
+which had become decayed; and in southern countries an abundant
+vegetation always springs up between the stones, and if this had
+actually been neglected it cannot have been very difficult to climb
+up. The Gauls had already gained a firm footing, as there was no
+wall at the top—the rock which they stormed was not the
+Tarpeian, but the Arx—when Manlius, who lived there, was
+roused by the screaming of the geese: he came to the spot and
+thrust down those who were climbing up.</p>
+<p>This rendered the Gauls still more inclined to commence
+negotiations; they were, moreover, called back by an inroad of some
+Alpine tribes into Lombardy, where they had left their wives and
+children: they offered to depart if the Romans would pay them a
+ransom of a thousand pounds of gold, to be taken no doubt from the
+Capitoline treasury. Considering the value of money at that time,
+the sum was enormous: in the time of Theodosius, indeed, there were
+people at Rome who possessed several hundredweight of gold, nay,
+one is said to have had an annual revenue of two hundredweight.
+There can be no doubt that the Gauls received the sum they
+demanded, and quitted Rome; that in weighing it they scornfully
+imposed upon the Romans is very possible, and the <i>vae victis</i>
+too may be true: we ourselves have seen similar things before the
+year 1813.</p>
+<p>But there can be no truth in the story told by Livy, that while
+they were disputing Camillus appeared with an army and stopped the
+proceedings, because the military tribunes had had no right to
+conclude the treaty. He is there said to have driven the Gauls from
+the city, and afterward in a twofold battle to have so completely
+defeated them that not even a messenger escaped. Beaufort, inspired
+by Gallic patriotism, has most excellently shown what a complete
+fable this story is. To attempt to disguise the misfortunes of our
+forefathers by substituting fables in their place is mere
+childishness. This charge does not affect Livy, indeed, for he
+copied only what others had written before him; but he did not
+allow his own conviction to appear as he generally does, for he
+treats the whole of the early history with a sort of irony, half
+believing, half disbelieving it.</p>
+<p>According to another account in Diodorus, the Gauls besieged a
+town allied with Rome—its name seems to be mis-written, but
+is probably intended for Vulsinii—and the Romans relieved it
+and took back from the Gauls the gold which they had paid them; but
+this siege of Vulsinii is quite unknown to Livy. A third account in
+Strabo and also mentioned by Diodorus does not allow this honor to
+the Romans, but states that the Caerites pursued the Gauls,
+attacked them in the country of the Sabines, and completely
+annihilated them. In like manner the Greeks endeavored to disguise
+the fact that the Gauls took the money from the Delphic treasury,
+and that in a quite historical period (Olymp. 120). The true
+explanation is undoubtedly the one found in Polybius, that the
+Gauls were induced to quit Rome by an insurrection of the Alpine
+tribes, after it had experienced the extremity of humiliation.</p>
+<p>Whatever the enemy had taken as booty was consumed; they had not
+made any conquests, but only indulged in plunder and devastation;
+they had been staying at Rome for seven or eight months, and could
+have gained nothing further than the Capitol and the very money
+which they received without taking that fortress. The account of
+Polybius throws light upon many discrepant statements, and all of
+them, not even excepting Livy's fairy-tale-like embellishment, may
+be explained by means of it. The Romans attempted to prove that the
+Gauls had actually been defeated, by relating that the gold
+afterward taken from the Gauls and buried in the Capitol was double
+the sum paid to them as a ransom; but it is much more probable that
+the Romans paid their ransom out of the treasury of the temple of
+the Capitoline Jupiter and of other temples, and that afterward
+double this sum was made up by a tax; which agrees with a statement
+in the history of Manlius, that a tax was imposed for the purpose
+of raising the Gallic ransom: surely this could not have been done
+at the time of the siege, when the Romans were scattered in all
+parts of the country, but must have taken place afterward for the
+purpose of restoring the money that had been taken. Now if at a
+later time there actually existed in the Capitol such a quantity of
+gold, it is clear that it was believed to be a proof that the Gauls
+had not kept the gold which was paid to them.</p>
+<p>Even as late as the time of Cicero and Caesar, the spot was
+shown at Rome in the Carinae, where the Gauls had heaped up and
+burned their dead; it was called <i>busta Gallica</i>, which was
+corrupted in the Middle Ages into Protogallo, whence the church
+which was built there was in reality called <i>S. Andreas in bustis
+Gallicis</i>, or, according to the later Latinity, <i>in busta
+Gallica—busta Gallica</i> not being declined.</p>
+<p>The Gauls departed with their gold, which the Romans had been
+compelled to pay on account of the famine that prevailed in the
+Capitol, which was so great that they pulled the leather from their
+shields and cooked it, just as was done during the siege of
+Jerusalem. The Gauls were certainly not destroyed. Justin has
+preserved the remarkable statement that the same Gauls who sacked
+Rome went to Apulia, and there offered for money their assistance
+to the elder Dionysius of Syracuse. From this important statement
+it is at any rate clear that they traversed all Italy, and then
+probably returned along the shore of the Adriatic: their
+devastations extended over many parts of Italy, and there is no
+doubt that the Æquians received their death-blow at that
+time, for henceforth we hear no more of the hostilities of the
+Æquians against Rome. Praeneste, on the other hand, which
+must formerly have been subject to the Æquians, now appears
+as an independent town. The Æquians, who inhabited small and
+easily destructible towns, must have been annihilated during the
+progress of the Gauls.</p>
+<p>There is nothing so strange in the history of Livy as his view
+of the consequences of the Gallic calamity; he must have conceived
+it as a transitory storm by which Rome was humbled but not broken.
+The army, according to him, was only scattered, and the Romans
+appear afterward just as they had been before, as if the preceding
+period had only been an evil dream, and as if there had been
+nothing to do but to rebuild the city. But assuredly the
+devastation must have been tremendous throughout the Roman
+territory: for eight months the barbarians had been ravaging the
+country, every trace of cultivation, every farmer's house, all the
+temples and public buildings were destroyed; the walls of the city
+had been purposely pulled down, a large number of its inhabitants
+were led into slavery, the rest were living in great misery at
+Veii; and what they had saved scarcely sufficed to buy their bread.
+In this condition they returned to Rome. Camillus as dictator is
+called a second Romulus, and to him is due the glory of not having
+despaired in those distressing circumstances.</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="RULE4_9"></a>TARTAR INVASION OF CHINA BY MEHA</h2>
+<p class="center">B.C. 341</p>
+<p class="center">DEMETRIUS CHARLES BOULGER</p>
+<p class="intros">The first Chinese are supposed to have been a
+nomad tribe in the provinces of Shensi, which lies in the northwest
+of China, and among them at last appeared a ruler, Fohi, whose name
+at least has been preserved. His deeds and his person are mythical,
+but he is credited with having given his country its first regular
+institutions.</p>
+<p class="intros">The annalists of the Chinese chronicles placed
+the date of the Creation at a point of time two millions of years
+before Confucius; this interval they filled up with lines of
+dynasties. Preceding the Chow dynasty the chronicles give ten
+epochs—prior to the eighth of these there is no authentic
+history. Yew-chow She (the "Nest-having") taught the people to
+build huts of the boughs of trees. Fire was discovered by Say-jin
+She (the "Fire producer"). Fuh-he (B.C. 2862) was the discoverer of
+iron. With Yaou (B.C. 2356) is the period whence Confucius begins
+his story. He says of that epoch: "The house door could safely be
+left open." Yaou greatly extended and strengthened the empire and
+established fairs and marts over the land.</p>
+<p class="intros">One of China's most notable rulers was Tsin Chi
+Hwangti, who was studious in providing for the security of his
+empire, and with this object began the construction of a fortified
+wall across the northern frontier to serve as a defence against the
+troublesome Hiongnou tribes, who are identified with the Huns of
+Attila. This wall, which he began in the first years of his
+reign—about the close of the third century B.C.—was
+finished before his death. It still exists, known as the Great Wall
+of China, and has long been considered one of the wonders of the
+world. Every third man of the whole empire was employed on this
+work. It is said that five hundred thousand of them died of
+starvation. The contents of the Great Wall would be enough to build
+two walls six feet high and two feet thick around the equator. It
+is the largest artificial structure in the world; carried for
+fourteen hundred miles over height and hollow, reaching in one
+place the level of five thousand feet—nearly one
+mile—above the sea. Earth, gravel, brick, and stone were used
+in its construction.</p>
+<p class="intros">The weak successors of Hwangti finally gave way
+to the usurper, Kaotsou, who had been originally the ruler of a
+small town, and had borne the name of Lieou Pang.</p>
+<p class="intros">The reign of Kaotsou was distinguished by the
+consolidation of the empire; the connection of Western with Eastern
+China by high walls and bridges, some of which are still in perfect
+condition, and the institution of an elaborate code of court
+etiquette. His attention to these things was, however, rudely
+interrupted by an irruption of the Hiongnou Tartars.</p>
+<p>The death of Tsin Chi Hwangti proved the signal for the outbreak
+of disturbances throughout the realm. Within a few months five
+princes had founded as many kingdoms, each hoping, if not to become
+supreme, at least to remain independent. Moungtien, beloved by the
+army, and at the head, as he tells us in his own words, of three
+hundred thousand soldiers, might have been the arbiter of the
+empire; but a weak feeling of respect for the imperial authority
+induced him to obey an order, sent by Eulchi, Hwangti's son and
+successor, commanding him "to drink the waters of eternal life."
+Eulchi's brief reign of three years was a succession of
+misfortunes. The reins of office were held by the eunuch Chow-kow,
+who first murdered the minister Lissep and then Eulchi himself.</p>
+<p>Ing Wang, a grandson of Hwangti, was the next and last of the
+Tsin emperors. On coming to power, he at once caused Chow-kow,
+whose crimes had been discovered, to be arrested and executed. This
+vigorous commencement proved very transitory, for when he had
+enjoyed nominal authority during six weeks, Ing Wang's troops,
+after a reverse in the field, went over in a body to Lieou Pang,
+the leader of a rebel force. Ing Wang put an end to his existence,
+thus terminating, in a manner not less ignominious than any of its
+predecessors, the dynasty of the Tsins, which Hwangti had hoped to
+place permanently on the throne of China, and to which his genius
+gave a lustre far surpassing that of many other families who had
+enjoyed the same privilege during a much longer period.</p>
+<p>The crisis in the history of the country had afforded one of
+those great men who rise periodically from the ranks of the people
+to give law to nations the opportunity for advancing his personal
+interests at the same time that he made them appear to be identical
+with the public weal. Of such geniuses, if the test applied be the
+work accomplished, there have been few with higher claims to
+respectful and admiring consideration than Lieou Pang, who after
+the fall of the Tsins became the founder of the Han dynasty under
+the style of Kaotsou. Originally the governor of a small town, he
+had, soon after the death of Hwangti, gathered round him the
+nucleus of a formidable army, and while nominally serving under one
+of the greater princes, he scarcely affected to conceal that he was
+fighting for his own interest. On the other hand, he was no mere
+soldier of fortune, and the moderation which he showed after
+victory enhanced his reputation as a general. The path to the
+throne being thus cleared, the successful general became
+emperor.</p>
+<p>His first act was to proclaim an amnesty to all those who had
+borne arms against him. In a public proclamation he expressed his
+regret at the suffering of the people "from the evils which follow
+in the train of war." During the earlier years of his reign he
+chose the city of Loyang as his capital—now the flourishing
+and populous town of Honan—but at a later period he removed
+it to Singanfoo, in the western province of Shensi. His dynasty
+became known by the name of the small state where he was born, and
+which had fallen early in his career into his hands.</p>
+<p>Kaotsou sanctioned or personally undertook various important
+public works, which in many places still exist to testify to the
+greatness of his character. Prominent among those must be placed
+the bridges constructed along the great roads of Western China.
+Some of them are still believed to be in perfect condition. No act
+of Kaotsou's reign places him higher in the scale of sovereigns
+than the improvement of the roads and the construction of those
+remarkable bridges. Kaotsou loved splendor and sought to make his
+receptions and banquets imposing by their brilliance. He drew up a
+special ceremonial which must have proved a trying ordeal for his
+courtiers, and dire was the offence if it were infringed in the
+smallest particular. He kept up festivities at Singanfoo for
+several weeks, and on one of these occasions he exclaimed: "To-day
+I feel I am emperor and perceive all the difference between a
+subject and his master."</p>
+<p>Kaotsou's attention was rudely summoned away from these
+trivialities by the outbreak of revolts against his authority and
+by inroads on the part of the Tartars. The latter were the more
+serious. The disturbances that followed Hwangti's death were a
+fresh inducement to these clans to again gather round a common head
+and prey upon the weakness of China, for Kaotsou's authority was
+not yet recognized in many of the tributary states which had been
+fain to admit the supremacy of the great Tsin emperor. About this
+time the Hiongnou[<a href="#note-45">45</a>] Tartars were governed
+by two chiefs in particular, one named Tonghou, the other Meha or
+Mehe. Of these the former appears to have been instigated by a
+reckless ambition or an overweening arrogance, and at first it
+seemed that the forbearance of Meha would allow his
+pretensions[<a href="#note-46">46</a>] to pass unchallenged.</p>
+<p><a name="note-45"><!-- Note Anchor 45 --></a>[Footnote 45:
+Probably the same race as the Huns.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-46"><!-- Note Anchor 46 --></a>[Footnote 46: Meha
+had become chief of his clan by murdering his father, Teou-man, who
+was on the point of ordering his son's assassination when thus
+forestalled in his intention. Tonghou sent to demand from him a
+favorite horse, which Meha sent him. His kinsmen advised him to
+refuse compliance; but he replied: "What! Would you quarrel with
+your neighbors for a horse?" Shortly afterward Tonghou sent to ask
+for one of the wives of the former chief. This also Meha granted,
+saying: "Why should we undertake a war for the sake of a woman?" It
+was only when Tonghou menaced his possessions that Meha took up
+arms.]</p>
+<p>Meha's successes followed rapidly upon each other. Issuing from
+the desert, and marching in the direction of China, he wrested many
+fertile districts from the feeble hands of those who held them; and
+while establishing his personal authority on the banks of the
+Hoangho, his lieutenants returned laden with plunder from
+expeditions into the rich provinces of Shensi and Szchuen. He won
+back all the territory lost by his ancestors to Hwangti and
+Moungtien, and he paved the way to greater success by the siege and
+capture of the city of Maye, thus obtaining possession of the key
+of the road to Tsinyang. Several of the border chiefs and of the
+Emperor's lieutenants, dreading the punishment allotted in China to
+want of success, went over to the Tartars, and took service under
+Meha.</p>
+<p>The Emperor, fully aroused to the gravity of the danger,
+assembled his army, and placing himself at its head marched against
+the Tartars. Encouraged by the result of several preliminary
+encounters, the Emperor was eager to engage Meha's main army, and
+after some weeks' searching and manoeuvring, the two forces halted
+in front of each other. Kaotsou, imagining that victory was within
+his grasp, and believing the stories brought to him by spies of the
+weakness of the Tartar army, resolved on an immediate attack. He
+turned a deaf ear to the cautious advice of one of his generals,
+who warned him that "in war we should never despise an enemy," and
+marched in person at the head of his advance guard to find the
+Tartars. Meha, who had been at all these pains to throw dust in the
+Emperor's eyes and to conceal his true strength, no sooner saw how
+well his stratagem had succeeded, and that Kaotsou was rushing into
+the trap so elaborately laid for him, than by a skilful movement he
+cut off his communications with the main body of his army, and,
+surrounding him with an overwhelming force, compelled him to take
+refuge in the city of Pingching in Shensi.</p>
+<p>With a very short supply of provisions, and hopelessly
+outnumbered, it looked as if the Chinese Emperor could not possibly
+escape the grasp of the desert chief. In this strait one of his
+officers suggested as a last chance that the most beautiful virgin
+in the town should be discovered, and sent as a present to mollify
+the conqueror. Kaotsou seized at this suggestion, as the drowning
+man will catch at a straw, and the story is preserved, though her
+name has passed into oblivion, of how the young Chinese girl
+entered into the plan and devoted all her wits to charming the
+Tartar conqueror. She succeeded as much as their fondest hopes
+could have led them to believe; and Meha permitted Kaotsou, after
+signing an ignominious treaty, to leave his place of confinement
+and rejoin his army, glad to welcome the return of the Emperor, yet
+without him helpless to stir a hand to effect his release. Meha
+retired to his own territory, well satisfied with the material
+results of the war and the rich booty which had been obtained in
+the sack of Chinese cities, while Kaotsou, like the ordinary type
+of an oriental ruler, vented his discomfiture on his
+subordinates.</p>
+<p>The closing acts of the war were the lavishing of rewards on the
+head of the general to whose warnings he had paid no heed, and the
+execution of the scouts who had been misled by the wiles of
+Meha.</p>
+<p>The success which had attended this incursion and the spoil of
+war were potent inducements to the Tartars to repeat the invasion.
+While Kaotsou was meditating over the possibility of revenge, and
+considering schemes for the better protection of his frontier, the
+Tartars, disregarding the truce that had been concluded, retraced
+their steps, and pillaged the border districts with impunity. In
+this year (B.C. 199) they were carrying everything before them, and
+the Emperor, either unnerved by recent disaster or appalled at the
+apparently irresistible energy of the followers of Meha, remained
+apathetic in his palace. The representations of his ministers and
+generals failed to rouse him from his stupor, and the weapon to
+which he resorted was the abuse of his opponent, and not his prompt
+chastisement. Meha was "a wicked and faithless man, who had risen
+to power by the murder of his father, and one with whom oaths and
+treaties carried no weight." In the mean while the Tartars were
+continuing their victorious career. The capital itself could not be
+pronounced safe from their assaults, or from the insult of their
+presence.</p>
+<p>In this crisis counsels of craft and dissimulation alone found
+favor in the Emperor's cabinet. No voice was raised in support of
+the bold and only true course of going forth to meet the national
+enemy. The capitulation of Pingching had for the time destroyed the
+manhood of the race, and Kaotsou held in esteem the advice of men
+widely different to those who had placed him on the throne. Kaotsou
+opened fresh negotiations with Meha, who concluded a treaty on
+condition of the Emperor's daughter being given to him in marriage,
+and on the assumption that he was an independent ruler. With these
+terms Kaotsou felt obliged to comply, and thus for the first time
+this never-ceasing collision between the tribes of the desert and
+the agriculturists of the plains of China closed with the admitted
+triumph of the former. The contest was soon to be renewed with
+different results, but the triumph of Meha was beyond
+question.[<a href="#note-47">47</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-47"><!-- Note Anchor 47 --></a>[Footnote 47: One
+historian had the courage to declare that "Never was so great a
+shame inflicted on the Middle Kingdom, which then lost its dignity
+and honor."]</p>
+<p>The weakness thus shown against a foreign foe brought its own
+punishment in domestic troubles. The palace became the scene of
+broils, plots, and counterplots, and so badly did Kaotsou manage
+his affairs at this epoch that one of his favorite generals raised
+the standard of revolt against him through apparently a mere
+misunderstanding. In this instance Kaotsou easily put down the
+rising, but others followed which, if not pregnant with danger,
+were at the least extremely troublesome. The murder of Hansin, to
+whose aid Kaotsou owed his elevation to the throne as much as to
+any other, by order of the empress, during a reception at the
+palace, shook confidence still more in the ruler, and many of his
+followers were forced into open rebellion through dread of personal
+danger. What wonder that, as he has said, "the very name of revolt
+inspired Kaotsou with apprehension."</p>
+<p>In B.C. 195 we find Kaotsou going out of his way to visit the
+tomb of Confucius. Shortly after this event it became evident that
+he was approaching his end. His eldest son Hiaohoei was proclaimed
+heir apparent. Kaotsou died in the fifty-third year of his age,
+having reigned as emperor during eight years. The close of his
+reign did not bear out all the promise of its commencement; and the
+extent of his authority was greatly curtailed by the disastrous
+effects of the war with the Tartars and the subsequent revolts
+among his generals.</p>
+<p>Despite these reverses there remains much in favor of his
+character. He had performed his part in the consolidation of the
+Hans; it remained for those who came after him to complete what he
+left half finished.</p>
+<p>Under Hoeiti, the Tartar King Meha sent an envoy to the capital,
+but either the form or the substance of his message enraged the
+empress-mother, who ordered his execution. The two peoples were
+thus again brought to the brink of war, but eventually the
+difference was sunk for the time, and the Chinese chroniclers have
+represented that the satisfactory turn in the question was due to
+Meha seeing the error of his ways.[<a href="#note-48">48</a>] Not
+long afterward the Tartar King died, and was succeeded by his son
+Lao Chang.</p>
+<p><a name="note-48"><!-- Note Anchor 48 --></a>[Footnote 48:
+Meha's letter of excuse is thus given: "In the barbarous country
+which I govern both virtue and the decencies of life are unknown. I
+have been unable to free myself from them, and, therefore, I blush.
+China has her wise men; that is a happiness which I envy. They
+would have prevented my being wanting in the respect due to your
+rank."]</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="RULE4_10"></a>ALEXANDER REDUCES TYRE: LATER FOUNDS ALEXANDRIA</h2>
+<p class="center">B.C. 332</p>
+<p class="center">OLIVER GOLDSMITH</p>
+<p class="intros">The master spirit who could sigh for more worlds
+to conquer was at this time high in his dazzling flight. Alexander
+has always been considered one of the most striking and picturesque
+characters of history. His personality was pleasing, his endurance
+remarkable, and courage dauntless. Educated by Aristotle, his keen
+mind was well trained. He was skilled in horsemanship, and his
+control over the fiery Bucephalus, untamable by others, has become
+a household tale in all lands. There never was a more kingly
+prince.</p>
+<p class="intros">A king at twenty, his career has been an object
+of wonder to succeeding generations. He shot like a meteor across
+the sky of ancient civilization. His military achievements were
+remarkable for quickness of conception and rapidity of execution;
+his life was a progress from conquest to conquest. Alexander's
+army, with its solid phalanx, its darting cavalry, and light
+troops, had become irresistible. He possessed Napoleon's ability to
+select good generals and to make the most of his talents. In battle
+Alexander was entirely devoid of fear. After a victory his chief
+thoughts were for the wounded. Like Napoleon, he also possessed
+that personal equation of absolute popularity with his soldiers.
+Their devotion to him was simply complete.</p>
+<p class="intros">After Thebes came the invasion of Asia. The
+invincible Macedonian had fought and won the battle of the
+Granicus. In this battle nearly all of the Persian leaders were
+slain, and its result spread terror throughout Persia.
+Halicarnassus was next reduced. The march of Alexander was ever
+onward. In the citadel of Gordium he cut the "Gordian knot," and
+prophecy marked him for the lord of Asia.</p>
+<p class="intros">And now Darius marched to meet him, making a
+fatally bad choice of battle-ground. Darius was totally defeated at
+the celebrated battle of Issus, although he had anticipated a
+victory. After the Persian rout and the flight of Darius, whose
+numbers counted for nothing before the Macedonian's skill, Lindon
+welcomed the invaders, and Alexander determined to take Tyre. This
+was accomplished after a siege, which was attended with much
+cruelty.</p>
+<p class="intros">The siege of Gaza followed, in which nearly all
+of the citizens perished. In B.C. 332 Alexander began his
+expedition to Egypt. He conciliated the natives by paying honors to
+their gods. In his progress he was struck by the advantages of a
+certain site for a city, and founded there the town which is now
+called Alexandria.</p>
+<p>All Phoenicia was subdued except Tyre, the capital city. This
+city was justly entitled the "Queen of the Sea," that element
+bringing to it the tribute of all nations. She boasted of having
+first invented navigation and taught mankind the art of braving the
+winds and waves by the assistance of a frail bark. The happy
+situation of Tyre, at the upper end of the Mediterranean; the
+conveniency of its ports, which were both safe and capacious; and
+the character of its inhabitants, who were industrious, laborious,
+patient, and extremely courteous to strangers, invited thither
+merchants from all parts of the globe; so that it might be
+considered, not so much a city belonging to any particular nation,
+as the common city of all nations and the centre of their
+commerce.</p>
+<p>Alexander thought it necessary, both for his glory and his
+interest, to take this city. The spring was now coming on. Tyre was
+at that time seated on an island of the sea, about a quarter of a
+league from the continent. It was surrounded by a strong wall, a
+hundred and fifty feet high, which the waves of the sea washed; and
+the Carthaginians, a colony from Tyre, a mighty people, and
+sovereigns of the ocean, promised to come to the assistance of
+their parent State. Encouraged, therefore, by these favorable
+circumstances, the Tyrians determined not to surrender, but to hold
+out the place to the last extremity. This resolution, however
+imprudent, was certainly magnanimous, but it was soon after
+followed by an act which was as blamable as the other was
+praiseworthy.</p>
+<p>Alexander was desirous of gaining the place rather by treaty
+than by force of arms, and with this in view sent heralds into the
+town with offers of peace; but the inhabitants were so far from
+listening to his proposals, or endeavoring to avert his resentment
+by any kind of concession, that they actually killed his
+ambassadors and threw their bodies from the top of the walls into
+the sea. It is easy to imagine what effect so shocking an outrage
+must produce in a mind like Alexander's. He instantly resolved to
+besiege the place, and not to desist until he had made himself
+master of it and razed it to the ground.</p>
+<p>As Tyre was divided from the continent by an arm of the sea,
+there was necessity for filling up the intermediate space with a
+bank or pier, before the place could be closely invested. This
+work, accordingly, was immediately undertaken and in a great
+measure completed; when all the wood, of which it was principally
+composed, was unexpectedly burned by means of a fire-ship sent in
+by the enemy. The damage, however, was very soon repaired, and the
+mole rendered more perfect than formerly, and carried nearer to the
+town, when all of a sudden a furious tempest arose, which,
+undermining the stonework that supported the wood, laid the whole
+at once in the bottom of the sea.</p>
+<p>Two such disasters, following so closely on the heels of each
+other, would have cooled the ardor of any man except Alexander, but
+nothing could daunt his invincible spirit, or make him relinquish
+an enterprise he had once undertaken. He, therefore, resolved to
+prosecute the siege; and in order to encourage his men to second
+his views, he took care to inspire them with the belief that heaven
+was on their side and would soon crown their labors with the
+wished-for success. At one time he gave out that Apollo was about
+to abandon the Tyrians to their doom, and that, to prevent his
+flight, they had bound him to his pedestal with a golden chain; at
+another, he pretended that Hercules, the tutelar deity of Macedon,
+had appeared to him, and, having opened prospects of the most
+glorious kind, had invited him to proceed to take possession of
+Tyre.</p>
+<p>These favorable circumstances were announced by the augurs as
+intimations from above; and every heart was in consequence cheered.
+The soldiers, as if that moment arrived before the city, forgetting
+all the toils they had undergone and the disappointments they had
+suffered, began to raise a new mole, at which they worked
+incessantly.</p>
+<p>To protect them from being annoyed by the ships of the enemy,
+Alexander fitted out a fleet, with which he not only secured his
+own men, but offered the Tyrians battle, which, however, they
+thought proper to decline, and withdrew all their galleys into the
+harbor.</p>
+<p>The besiegers, now allowed to proceed unmolested, went on with
+the work with the utmost vigor, and in a little time completed it
+and brought it close to the walls. A general attack was therefore
+resolved on, both by sea and land, and with this in view the King,
+having manned his galleys and joined them together with strong
+cables, ordered them to approach the walls about midnight and
+attack the city with resolution. But just as the assault was going
+to begin, a dreadful storm arose, which not only shook the ships
+asunder, but even shattered them in a terrible manner, so that they
+were all obliged to be towed toward the shore, without having made
+the least impression on the city.</p>
+<p>The Tyrians were elated with this gleam of good fortune; but
+that joy was of short duration, for in a little time they received
+intelligence from Carthage that they must expect no assistance from
+that quarter, as the Carthaginians themselves were then overawed by
+a powerful army of Syracusans, who had invaded their country.
+Reduced, therefore, to the hard necessity of depending entirely
+upon their own strength and their own resources, the Tyrians sent
+all their women and children to Carthage, and prepared to encounter
+the very last extremities. For now the enemy was attacking the
+place with greater spirit and activity than ever. And, to do the
+Tyrians justice, it must be acknowledged that they employed a
+number of methods of defence which, considering the rude state of
+the art of war at that early period, were really astonishing. They
+warded off the darts discharged from the ballisters against them,
+by the assistance of turning wheels, which either broke them to
+pieces or carried them another way. They deadened the violence of
+the stones that were hurled at them, by setting up sails and
+curtains made of a soft substance which easily gave way.</p>
+<p>To annoy the ships which advanced against their walls, they
+fixed grappling irons and scythes to joists or beams; then,
+straining their catapultas—an enormous kind of
+crossbow—they laid those great pieces of timber upon them
+instead of arrows, and shot them off on a sudden at the enemy.
+These crushed some of their ships by their great weight, and, by
+means of the hooks or hanging scythes, tore others to pieces. They
+also had brazen shields, which they drew red-hot out of the fire;
+and filling these with burning sand, hurled them in an instant from
+the top of the wall upon the enemy.</p>
+<p>There was nothing the Macedonians dreaded so much as this fatal
+instrument; for the moment the burning sand got to the flesh
+through the crevices of the armor, it penetrated to the very bone,
+and stuck so close that there was no pulling it off; so that the
+soldiers, throwing down their arms, and tearing their clothes to
+pieces, were in this manner exposed, naked and defenceless, to the
+shot of the enemy.</p>
+<p>Alexander, finding the resources and even the courage of the
+Tyrians increased in proportion as the siege continued, resolved to
+make a last effort, and attack them at once both by sea and land,
+in order, if possible, to overwhelm them with the multiplicity of
+dangers to which they would be thus exposed. With this view, having
+manned his galleys with some of the bravest of his troops, he
+commanded them to advance against the enemy's fleet, while he
+himself took his post at the head of his men on the mole.</p>
+<p>And now the attack began on all sides with irresistible and
+unremitting fury. Wherever the battering-rams had beat down any
+part of the wall, and the bridges were thrown out, instantly the
+argyraspides mounted the breach with the utmost valor, being led on
+by Admetus, one of the bravest officers in the army, who was killed
+by the thrust of a spear as he was encouraging his soldiers.</p>
+<p>The presence of the King, and the example he set, fired his
+troops with unusual bravery. He himself ascended one of the towers
+on the mole, which was of a prodigious height, and there was
+exposed to the greatest dangers he had ever yet encountered; for
+being immediately known by his insignia and the richness of his
+armor, he served as a mark for all the arrows of the enemy. On this
+occasion he performed wonders, killing with javelins several of
+those who defended the wall; then, advancing nearer to them, he
+forced some with his sword, and others with his shield, either into
+the city or the sea, the tower on which he fought almost touching
+the wall.</p>
+<p>He soon ascended the wall, followed by his principal officers,
+and possessed himself of two towers and the space between them. The
+battering-rams had already made several breaches; the fleet had
+forced its way into the harbor; and some of the Macedonians had
+possessed themselves of the towers which were abandoned. The
+Tyrians, seeing the enemy masters of their rampart, retired toward
+an open place, called Agenor, and there stood their ground; but
+Alexander, marching up with his regiment of bodyguards, killed part
+of them and obliged the rest to fly.</p>
+<p>At the same time, Tyre being taken on that side which lay toward
+the harbor, a general carnage of the citizens ensued, and none was
+spared, except the few that fell into the hands of the Siclonians
+in Alexander's army, who—considering the Tyrians as
+countrymen—granted them protection and carried them privately
+on board their ships.</p>
+<p>The number that was slaughtered on this occasion is almost
+incredible; even after conquest, the victor's resentment did not
+subside. He ordered no less than five thousand men, who were taken
+in the storming, to be nailed to crosses along the shore. The
+number of prisoners amounted to thirty thousand and were all sold
+as slaves in different parts of the world. Thus fell Tyre, that had
+been for many ages the most flourishing city in the world, and had
+spread the arts and commerce into the remotest regions.</p>
+<p>While Alexander was employed in the siege of Tyre he received a
+second letter from Darius, in which that monarch treated him with
+greater respect than before. He now gave him the title of king; he
+offered him ten thousand talents as a ransom for his captive mother
+and queen; and he promised him his daughter Statira in marriage,
+with all the country he had conquered, as far as the river
+Euphrates, provided he would agree to a peace. These terms were so
+advantageous that, when the King debated upon them in council,
+Parmenio, one of his generals, could not help observing that he
+would certainly accept of them were he Alexander. "And so would I,"
+replied the King, "were I Parmenio!" But deeming it inconsistent
+with his dignity to listen to any proposals from a man whom he had
+so lately overcome, he haughtily rejected them, and scorned to
+accept of that as a favor which he already considered his own by
+conquest.</p>
+<p>From Tyre, Alexander marched to Jerusalem, fully determined to
+punish that city for having refused to supply his army with
+provisions during the siege; but his resentment was mollified by a
+deputation of the citizens coming out to meet him, with their high
+priest, Taddua, before them, dressed in white, and having a mitre
+on his head, on the front of which the name of God was written. The
+moment the King perceived the high priest, he advanced toward him
+with an air of the most profound respect, bowed his body, adored
+the august name upon his front, and saluted him who wore it with
+religious veneration.</p>
+<p>And when some of his courtiers expressed their surprise that he,
+who was adored by everyone, should adore the high priest of the
+Jews: "I do not," said he, "adore the high priest, but the God
+whose minister he is; for while I was at Dium in Macedonia, my mind
+wholly fixed on the great design of the Persian war, as I was
+revolving the methods how to conquer Asia, this very man, dressed
+in the same robes, appeared to me in a dream, exhorted me to banish
+my fear, bade me cross the Hellespont boldly, and assured me that
+God would march at the head of my army and give me the victory over
+the Persians." This speech, delivered with an air of sincerity, no
+doubt had its effect in encouraging the army and establishing an
+opinion that his mission was from heaven.</p>
+<p>From Jerusalem he went to Gaza, where, having met with a more
+obstinate resistance than he expected, he cut to pieces the whole
+garrison, consisting of ten thousand men. Not satisfied with this
+act of cruelty, he caused holes to be bored through the heels of
+Boetis, the governor, and tying him with cords to the back of his
+chariot dragged him in this manner around the walls of the city.
+This he did in imitation of Achilles, whom Homer describes as
+having dragged Hector around the walls of Troy in the same manner.
+It was reading the past to very little, or rather, indeed, to very
+bad purpose, to imitate this hero in the most unworthy part of his
+character.</p>
+<p>Alexander, having left a garrison in Gaza, turned his arms
+toward Egypt; of which he made himself master without opposition.
+Here he formed the design of visiting the temple of Jupiter, which
+was situated in the sandy deserts of Lybia at the distance of
+twelve days' journey from Memphis, the capital of Egypt. His chief
+object in going thither was to get himself acknowledged the son of
+Jupiter, an honor he had long aspired to. In this journey he
+founded the city of Alexandria, which soon became one of the
+greatest towns in the world for commerce.</p>
+<p>Nothing could be more dreary than the desert through which he
+passed, nor anything more charming—according to the fabulous
+accounts of the poets—than the particular spot where the
+temple was situated.</p>
+<p>It was a perfect paradise in the midst of an immeasurable
+wilderness. At last, having reached the place, and appeared before
+the altar of the deity, the priest, who was no stranger to
+Alexander's wishes, declared him to be the son of Jupiter.</p>
+<p>The conqueror, elated with this high compliment, asked whether
+he should have success in his expedition. The priest answered that
+he should be monarch of the world. The conqueror inquired if his
+father's murderers were punished. The priest replied that his
+father Jupiter was immortal, but that the murderers of Philip had
+all been extirpated.</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="RULE4_11"></a>THE BATTLE OF ARBELA</h2>
+<p class="center">B.C. 331</p>
+<p class="center">SIR EDWARD SHEPHERD CREASY</p>
+<p class="intros">When Alexander, having returned from his campaign
+against the barbarians of the North, had suppressed a revolt which
+meanwhile had broken out in Greece, he found himself free for
+undertaking those great foreign conquests which he had planned.
+When he left Greece to conquer the world, he said farewell to his
+own country forever. Crossing the Hellespont into Asia Minor with a
+small but well equipped and disciplined army, he advanced unopposed
+until he reached the river Granicus, where he found himself
+confronted with a Persian host. Upon this army he inflicted a
+defeat so signal as to bring at once to submission nearly the whole
+of Asia Minor. He next advanced into Syria and met the Persian
+king, Darius III, who in person commanded an immense body of
+soldiers, against which the young conqueror fought at Issus,
+winning a decisive victory. He not only captured the Persian camp,
+but also secured the King's treasures and took his family
+prisoners. From this time Alexander held complete mastery of the
+western dominions of Darius, whom the conqueror afterward
+dethroned.</p>
+<p class="intros">After he had next invaded and subjugated Egypt
+and there founded the city of Alexandria, he pursued King Darius,
+who had taken flight, into the very heart of his empire, where the
+Persian monarch, on the plains of Gaugamela, near the village of
+Arbela, made his last stand against his invincible foe. Of the
+battle to which Arbela gave its name, and which proved the
+death-blow of the Persian empire, Creasy's narrative furnishes a
+realistic description.</p>
+<p>A long and not uninstructive list might be made out of
+illustrious men whose characters have been vindicated during recent
+times from aspersions which for centuries had been thrown on them.
+The spirit of modern inquiry, and the tendency of modern
+scholarship, both of which are often said to be solely negative and
+destructive, have, in truth, restored to splendor, and almost
+created anew, far more than they have assailed with censure or
+dismissed from consideration as unreal.</p>
+<p>The truth of many a brilliant narrative of brilliant exploits
+has of late years been triumphantly demonstrated, and the
+shallowness of the sceptical scoffs with which little minds have
+carped at the great minds of antiquity has been in many instances
+decisively exposed. The laws, the politics, and the lines of action
+adopted or recommended by eminent men and powerful nations have
+been examined with keener investigation and considered with more
+comprehensive judgment than formerly were brought to bear on these
+subjects. The result has been at least as often favorable as
+unfavorable to the persons and the states so scrutinized, and many
+an oft-repeated slander against both measures and men has thus been
+silenced, we may hope forever.</p>
+<p>The veracity of Herodotus, the pure patriotism of Pericles, of
+Demosthenes, and of the Gracchi, the wisdom of Clisthenes and of
+Licinius as constitutional reformers, may be mentioned as facts
+which recent writers have cleared from unjust suspicion and
+censure. And it might be easily shown that the defensive tendency
+which distinguishes the present and recent great writers of
+Germany, France, and England has been equally manifested in the
+spirit in which they have treated the heroes of thought and heroes
+of action who lived during what we term the Middle Ages, and whom
+it was so long the fashion to sneer at or neglect.</p>
+<p>The name of the victor of Arbela has led to these reflections;
+for, although the rapidity and extent of Alexander's conquests have
+through all ages challenged admiration and amazement, the grandeur
+of genius which he displayed in his schemes of commerce,
+civilization, and of comprehensive union and unity among nations,
+has, until lately, been comparatively unhonored. This
+long-continued depreciation was of early date. The ancient
+rhetoricians—a class of babblers, a school for lies and
+scandal, as Niebuhr justly termed them—chose, among the stock
+themes for their commonplaces, the character and exploits of
+Alexander.</p>
+<p>They had their followers in every age; and, until a very recent
+period, all who wished to "point a moral or adorn a tale," about
+unreasoning ambition, extravagant pride, and the formidable
+frenzies of free will when leagued with free power, have never
+failed to blazon forth the so-called madman of Macedonia as one of
+the most glaring examples. Without doubt, many of these writers
+adopted with implicit credence traditional ideas, and supposed,
+with uninquiring philanthropy, that in blackening Alexander they
+were doing humanity good service. But also, without doubt, many of
+his assailants, like those of other great men, have been mainly
+instigated by "that strongest of all antipathies, the antipathy of
+a second-rate mind to a first-rate one," and by the envy which
+talent too often bears to genius.</p>
+<p>Arrian, who wrote his history of Alexander when Hadrian was
+emperor of the Roman world, and when the spirit of declamation and
+dogmatism was at its full height, but who was himself, unlike the
+dreaming pedants of the schools, a statesman and a soldier of
+practical and proved ability, well rebuked the malevolent
+aspersions which he heard continually thrown upon the memory of the
+great conqueror of the East.</p>
+<p>He truly says: "Let the man who speaks evil of Alexander not
+merely bring forward those passages of Alexander's life which were
+really evil, but let him collect and review <i>all</i> the actions
+of Alexander, and then let him thoroughly consider first who and
+what manner of man he himself is, and what has been his own career;
+and then let him consider who and what manner of man Alexander was,
+and to what an eminence of human grandeur <i>he</i> arrived. Let
+him consider that Alexander was a king, and the undisputed lord of
+the two continents, and that his name is renowned throughout the
+whole earth.</p>
+<p>"Let the evil-speaker against Alexander bear all this in mind,
+and then let him reflect on his own insignificance, the pettiness
+of his own circumstances and affairs, and the blunders that he
+makes about these, paltry and trifling as they are. Let him then
+ask himself whether he is a fit person to censure and revile such a
+man as Alexander. I believe that there was in his time no nation of
+men, no city, nay, no single individual with whom Alexander's name
+had not become a familiar word. I therefore hold that such a man,
+who was like no ordinary mortal, was not born into the world
+without some special providence."</p>
+<p>And one of the most distinguished soldiers and writers, Sir
+Walter Raleigh, though he failed to estimate justly the full merits
+of Alexander, has expressed his sense of the grandeur of the part
+played in the world by "the great Emathian conqueror" in language
+that well deserves quotation:</p>
+<p>"So much hath the spirit of some one man excelled as it hath
+undertaken and effected the alteration of the greatest states and
+commonweals, the erection of monarchies, the conquest of kingdoms
+and empires, guided handfuls of men against multitudes of equal
+bodily strength, contrived victories beyond all hope and discourse
+of reason, converted the fearful passions of his own followers into
+magnanimity, and the valor of his enemies into cowardice; such
+spirits have been stirred up in sundry ages of the world, and in
+divers parts thereof, to erect and cast down again, to establish
+and to destroy, and to bring all things, persons, and states to the
+same certain ends which the infinite spirit of the
+<i>Universal</i>, piercing, moving, and governing all things, hath
+ordained. Certainly, the things that this King did were marvellous
+and would hardly have been undertaken by anyone else; and though
+his father had determined to have invaded the Lesser Asia, it is
+like enough that he would have contented himself with some part
+thereof, and not have discovered the river of Indus, as this man
+did."</p>
+<p>A higher authority than either Arrian or Raleigh may now be
+referred to by those who wish to know the real merit of Alexander
+as a general, and how far the commonplace assertions are true that
+his successes were the mere results of fortunate rashness and
+unreasoning pugnacity. Napoleon selected Alexander as one of the
+seven greatest generals whose noble deeds history has handed down
+to us, and from the study of whose campaigns the principles of war
+are to be learned. The critique of the greatest conqueror of modern
+times on the military career of the great conqueror of the Old
+World is no less graphic than true:</p>
+<p>"Alexander crossed the Dardanelles B.C. 334, with an army of
+about forty thousand men, of which one-eighth was cavalry; he
+forced the passage of the Granicus in opposition to an army under
+Memnon, the Greek, who commanded for Darius on the coast of Asia,
+and he spent the whole of the year 333 in establishing his power in
+Asia Minor. He was seconded by the Greek colonies, who dwelt on the
+borders of the Black Sea and on the Mediterranean, and in Sardis,
+Ephesus, Tarsus, Miletus, etc. The kings of Persia left their
+provinces and towns to be governed according to their own
+particular laws. Their empire was a union of confederated states,
+and did not form one nation; this facilitated its conquest. As
+Alexander only wished for the throne of the monarch, he easily
+effected the change by respecting the customs, manners, and laws of
+the people, who experienced no change in their condition.</p>
+<p>"In the year 332 he met with Darius at the head of sixty
+thousand men, who had taken up a position near Tarsus, on the banks
+of the Issus, in the province of Cilicia. He defeated him, entered
+Syria, took Damascus, which contained all the riches of the Great
+King, and laid siege to Tyre. This superb metropolis of the
+commerce of the world detained him nine months.</p>
+<p>"He took Gaza after a siege of two months; crossed the desert in
+seven days; entered Pelusium and Memphis, and founded Alexandria.
+In less than two years, after two battles and four or five sieges,
+the coasts of the Black Sea, from Phasis to Byzantium, those of the
+Mediterranean as far as Alexandria, all Asia Minor, Syria, and
+Egypt, had submitted to his arms.</p>
+<p>"In 331 he repassed the desert, encamped in Tyre, re-crossed
+Syria, entered Damascus, passed the Euphrates and Tigris, and
+defeated Darius on the field of Arbela when he was at the head of a
+still stronger army than that which he commanded on the Issus, and
+Babylon opened her gates to him. In 330 he overran Susa and took
+that city, Persepolis, and Pasargada, which contained the tomb of
+Cyrus. In 329 he directed his course northward, entered Ecbatana,
+and extended his conquests to the coasts of the Caspian, punished
+Bessus, the cowardly assassin of Darius, penetrated into Scythia,
+and subdued the Scythians.</p>
+<p>"In 328 he forced the passage of the Oxus, received sixteen
+thousand recruits from Macedonia, and reduced the neighboring
+people to subjection. In 327 he crossed the Indus, vanquished Porus
+in a pitched battle, took him prisoner, and treated him as a king.
+He contemplated passing the Ganges, but his army refused. He sailed
+down the Indus, in the year 326, with eight hundred vessels; having
+arrived at the ocean, he sent Nearchus with a fleet to run along
+the coasts of the Indian Ocean and the Persian Gulf as far as the
+mouth of the Euphrates. In 325 he took sixty days in crossing from
+Gedrosia, entered Keramania, returned to Pasargada, Persepolis, and
+Susa, and married Statira, the daughter of Darius. In 324 he
+marched once more to the north, passed Echatana, and terminated his
+career at Babylon."</p>
+<p>The enduring importance of Alexander's conquests is to be
+estimated, not by the duration of his own life and empire, or even
+by the duration of the kingdoms which his generals after his death
+formed out of the fragments of that mighty dominion. In every
+region of the world that he traversed, Alexander planted Greek
+settlements and founded cities, in the populations of which the
+Greek element at once asserted its predominance. Among his
+successors, the Seleucidae and the Ptolemies imitated their great
+captain in blending schemes of civilization, of commercial
+intercourse, and of literary and scientific research with all their
+enterprises of military aggrandizement and with all their systems
+of civil administration.</p>
+<p>Such was the ascendency of the Greek genius, so wonderfully
+comprehensive and assimilating was the cultivation which it
+introduced, that, within thirty years after Alexander crossed the
+Hellespont, the Greek language was spoken in every country from the
+shores of the Ægean to the Indus, and also throughout
+Egypt—not, indeed, wholly to the extirpation of the native
+dialects, but it became the language of every court, of all
+literature, of every judicial and political function, and formed a
+medium of communication among the many myriads of mankind
+inhabiting these large portions of the Old World.</p>
+<p>Throughout Asia Minor, Syria, and Egypt the Hellenic character
+that was thus imparted remained in full vigor down to the time of
+the Mahometan conquests. The infinite value of this to humanity in
+the highest and holiest point of view has often been pointed out,
+and the workings of the finger of Providence have been gratefully
+recognized by those who have observed how the early growth and
+progress of Christianity were aided by that diffusion of the Greek
+language and civilization throughout Asia Minor, Syria, and Egypt
+which had been caused by the Macedonian conquest of the East.</p>
+<p>In Upper Asia, beyond the Euphrates, the direct and material
+influence of Greek ascendency was more short-lived. Yet, during the
+existence of the Hellenic kingdoms in these regions, especially of
+the Greek kingdom of Bactria, the modern Bokhara, very important
+effects were produced on the intellectual tendencies and tastes of
+the inhabitants of those countries, and of the adjacent ones, by
+the animating contact of the Grecian spirit. Much of Hindu science
+and philosophy, much of the literature of the later Persian kingdom
+of the Arsacidæ, either originated from or was largely
+modified by Grecian influences. So, also, the learning and science
+of the Arabians were in a far less degree the result of original
+invention and genius than the reproduction, in an altered form, of
+the Greek philosophy and the Greek lore acquired by the Saracenic
+conquerors, together with their acquisition of the provinces which
+Alexander had subjugated, nearly a thousand years before the armed
+disciples of Mahomet commenced their career in the East.</p>
+<p>It is well known that Western Europe in the Middle Ages drew its
+philosophy, its arts, and its science principally from Arabian
+teachers. And thus we see how the intellectual influence of ancient
+Greece, poured on the Eastern world by Alexander's victories, and
+then brought back to bear on mediæval Europe by the spread of
+the Saracenic powers, has exerted its action on the elements of
+modern civilization by this powerful though indirect channel, as
+well as by the more obvious effects of the remnants of classic
+civilization which survived in Italy, Gaul, Britain, and Spain,
+after the irruption of the Germanic nations.</p>
+<p>These considerations invest the Macedonian triumphs in the East
+with never-dying interest, such as the most showy and sanguinary
+successes of mere "low ambition and the pride of kings," however
+they may dazzle for a moment, can never retain with posterity.
+Whether the old Persian empire which Cyrus founded could have
+survived much longer than it did, even if Darius had been
+victorious at Arbela, may safely be disputed. That ancient
+dominion, like the Turkish at the present time, labored under every
+cause of decay and dissolution. The satraps, like the modern
+pachas, continually rebelled against the central power, and Egypt
+in particular was almost always in a state of insurrection against
+its nominal sovereign. There was no longer any effective central
+control, or any internal principle of unity fused through the huge
+mass of the empire, and binding it together.</p>
+<p>Persia was evidently about to fall; but, had it not been for
+Alexander's invasion of Asia, she would most probably have fallen
+beneath some other oriental power, as Media and Babylon had
+formerly fallen before herself, and as, in after-times, the
+Parthian supremacy gave way to the revived ascendency of Persia in
+the East, under the sceptres of the Arsacidæ. A revolution
+that merely substituted one Eastern power for another would have
+been utterly barren and unprofitable to mankind.</p>
+<p>Alexander's victory at Arbela not only overthrew an oriental
+dynasty, but established European rulers in its stead. It broke the
+monotony of the eastern world by the impression of western energy
+and superior civilization, even as England's present mission is to
+break up the mental and moral stagnation of India and Cathay by
+pouring upon and through them the impulsive current of Anglo-Saxon
+commerce and conquest.</p>
+<p>Arbela, the city which has furnished its name to the decisive
+battle which gave Asia to Alexander, lies more than twenty miles
+from the actual scene of conflict. The little village, then named
+Gaugamela, is close to the spot where the armies met, but has ceded
+the honor of naming the battle to its more euphonious neighbor.
+Gaugamela is situated in one of the wide plains that lie between
+the Tigris and the mountains of Kurdistan. A few undulating
+hillocks diversify the surface of this sandy tract; but the ground
+is generally level and admirably qualified for the evolutions of
+cavalry, and also calculated to give the larger of two armies the
+full advantage of numerical superiority.</p>
+<p>The Persian King—who, before he came to the throne, had
+proved his personal valor as a soldier and his skill as a
+general—had wisely selected this region for the third and
+decisive encounter between his forces and the invader. The previous
+defeats of his troops, however severe they had been, were not
+looked on as irreparable. The Granicus had been fought by his
+generals rashly and without mutual concert; and, though Darius
+himself had commanded and been beaten at Issus, that defeat might
+be attributed to the disadvantageous nature of the ground, where,
+cooped up between the mountains, the river, and the sea, the
+numbers of the Persians confused and clogged alike the general's
+skill and the soldiers' prowess, and their very strength had been
+made their weakness. Here, on the broad plains of Kurdistan, there
+was scope for Asia's largest host to array its lines, to wheel, to
+skirmish, to condense or expand its squadrons, to manoeuvre, and to
+charge at will. Should Alexander and his scanty band dare to plunge
+into that living sea of war, their destruction seemed
+inevitable.</p>
+<p>Darius felt, however, the critical nature to himself as well as
+to his adversary of the coming encounter. He could not hope to
+retrieve the consequences of a third overthrow. The great cities of
+Mesopotamia and Upper Asia, the central provinces of the Persian
+empire, were certain to be at the mercy of the victor. Darius knew
+also the Asiatic character well enough to be aware how it yields to
+<i>prestige</i> of success and the apparent career of destiny. He
+felt that the diadem was now either to be firmly replaced on his
+own brow or to be irrevocably transferred to the head of his
+European conqueror. He, therefore, during the long interval left
+him after the battle of Issus, while Alexander was subjugating
+Syria and Egypt, assiduously busied himself in selecting the best
+troops which his vast empire supplied, and in training his varied
+forces to act together with some uniformity of discipline and
+system.</p>
+<p>The hardy mountaineers of Afghanistan, Bokhara, Khiva, and Tibet
+were then, as at present, far different from the generality of
+Asiatics in warlike spirit and endurance. From these districts
+Darius collected large bodies of admirable infantry; and the
+countries of the modern Kurds and Turkomans supplied, as they do
+now, squadrons of horsemen, hardy, skilful, bold, and trained to a
+life of constant activity and warfare. It is not uninteresting to
+notice that the ancestors of our own late enemies, the Sikhs,
+served as allies of Darius against the Macedonians. They are spoken
+of in Arrian as Indians who dwelt near Bactria. They were attached
+to the troops of that satrapy, and their cavalry was one of the
+most formidable forces in the whole Persian army.</p>
+<p>Besides these picked troops, contingents also came in from the
+numerous other provinces that yet obeyed the Great King.
+Altogether, the horse are said to have been forty thousand, the
+scythe-bearing chariots two hundred, and the armed elephants
+fifteen in number. The amount of the infantry is uncertain; but the
+knowledge which both ancient and modern times supply of the usual
+character of oriental armies, and of their populations of
+camp-followers, may warrant us in believing that many myriads were
+prepared to fight or to encumber those who fought for the last
+Darius.</p>
+<p>The position of the Persian King near Mesopotamia was chosen
+with great military skill. It was certain that Alexander, on his
+return from Egypt, must march northward along the Syrian coast
+before he attacked the central provinces of the Persian empire. A
+direct eastward march from the lower part of Palestine across the
+great Syrian Desert was then, as ever, utterly impracticable.
+Marching eastward from Syria, Alexander would, on crossing the
+Euphrates, arrive at the vast Mesopotamian plains. The wealthy
+capitals of the empire, Babylon, Susa, and Persepolis, would then
+lie to the south; and if he marched down through Mesopotamia to
+attack them, Darius might reasonably hope to follow the Macedonians
+with his immense force of cavalry, and, without even risking a
+pitched battle, to harass and finally overwhelm them.</p>
+<p>We may remember that three centuries afterward a Roman army
+under Crassus was thus actually destroyed by the oriental archers
+and horsemen in these very plains, and that the ancestors of the
+Parthians who thus vanquished the Roman legions served by thousands
+under King Darius. If, on the contrary, Alexander should defer his
+march against Babylon, and first seek an encounter with the Persian
+army, the country on each side of the Tigris in this latitude was
+highly advantageous for such an army as Darius commanded, and he
+had close in his rear the mountainous districts of Northern Media,
+where he himself had in early life been satrap, where he had
+acquired reputation as a soldier and a general, and where he justly
+expected to find loyalty to his person, and a safe refuge in case
+of defeat.[<a href="#note-49">49</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-49"><!-- Note Anchor 49 --></a>[Footnote 49:
+Mitford's remarks on the strategy of Darius in his last campaign
+are very just. After having been unduly admired as a historian,
+Mitford is now unduly neglected. His partiality and his deficiency
+in scholarship have been exposed sufficiently to make him no longer
+a dangerous guide as to Greek politics, while the clearness and
+brilliance of his narrative, and the strong common sense of his
+remarks (where his party prejudices do not interfere), must always
+make his volumes valuable as well as entertaining.]</p>
+<p>His great antagonist came on across the Euphrates against him,
+at the head of an army which Arrian, copying from the journals of
+Macedonian officers, states to have consisted of forty thousand
+foot and seven thousand horse. In studying the campaigns of
+Alexander, we possess the peculiar advantage of deriving our
+information from two of Alexander's generals of division, who bore
+an important part in all his enterprises. Aristobulus and
+Ptolemy—who afterward became king of Egypt—kept regular
+journals of the military events which they witnessed, and these
+journals were in the possession of Arrian when he drew up his
+history of Alexander's expedition.</p>
+<p>The high character of Arrian for integrity makes us confident
+that he used them fairly, and his comments on the occasional
+discrepancies between the two Macedonian narratives prove that he
+used them sensibly. He frequently quotes the very words of his
+authorities; and his history thus acquires a charm such as very few
+ancient or modern military narratives possess. The anecdotes and
+expressions which he records we fairly believe to be genuine, and
+not to be the coinage of a rhetorician, like those in Curtius. In
+fact, in reading Arrian, we read General Aristobulus and General
+Ptolemy on the campaigns of the Macedonians, and it is like reading
+General Jomini or General Foy on the campaigns of the French.</p>
+<p>The estimate which we find in Arrian of the strength of
+Alexander's army seems reasonable enough, when we take into account
+both the losses which he had sustained and the re&euml;nforcements
+which he had received since he left Europe. Indeed, to Englishmen,
+who know with what mere handfuls of men our own generals have, at
+Plassy, at Assaye, at Meeanee, and other Indian battles, routed
+large hosts of Asiatics, the disparity of numbers that we read of
+in the victories won by the Macedonians over the Persians presents
+nothing incredible. The army which Alexander now led was wholly
+composed of veteran troops in the highest possible state of
+equipment and discipline, enthusiastically devoted to their leader,
+and full of confidence in his military genius and his victorious
+destiny.</p>
+<p>The celebrated Macedonian phalanx formed the main strength of
+his infantry. This force had been raised and organized by his
+father, Philip, who, on his accession to the Macedonian throne,
+needed a numerous and quickly formed army, and who, by lengthening
+the spear of the ordinary Greek phalanx, and increasing the depth
+of the files, brought the tactics of armed masses to the highest
+extent of which it was capable with such materials as he possessed.
+He formed his men sixteen deep, and placed in their grasp the
+<i>sarissa</i>, as the Macedonian pike was called, which was
+four-and-twenty feet in length, and, when couched for action,
+reached eighteen feet in front of the soldier; so that, as a space
+of about two feet was allowed between the ranks, the spears of the
+five files behind him projected in front of each front-rank
+man.</p>
+<p>The phalangite soldier was fully equipped in the defensive armor
+of the regular Greek infantry. And thus the phalanx presented a
+ponderous and bristling mass, which, as long as its order was kept
+compact, was sure to bear down all opposition. The defects of such
+an organization are obvious, and were proved in after-years, when
+the Macedonians were opposed to the Roman legions. But it is clear
+that under Alexander the phalanx was not the cumbrous, unwieldy
+body which it was at Cynoscephate and Pydna. His men were veterans;
+and he could obtain from them an accuracy of movement and
+steadiness of evolution such as probably the recruits of his father
+would only have floundered in attempting, and such as certainly
+were impracticable in the phalanx when handled by his successors,
+especially as under them it ceased to be a standing force, and
+became only a militia.</p>
+<p>Under Alexander the phalanx consisted of an aggregate of
+eighteen thousand men, who were divided into six brigades of three
+thousand each. These were again subdivided into regiments and
+companies; and the men were carefully trained to wheel, to face
+about, to take more ground, or to close up, as the emergencies of
+the battle required. Alexander also arrayed troops armed in a
+different manner in the intervals of the regiments of his
+phalangites, who could prevent their line from being pierced and
+their companies taken in flank, when the nature of the ground
+prevented a close formation, and who could be withdrawn when a
+favorable opportunity arrived for closing up the phalanx or any of
+its brigades for a charge, or when it was necessary to prepare to
+receive cavalry.</p>
+<p>Besides the phalanx, Alexander had a considerable force of
+infantry who were called shield-bearers: they were not so heavily
+armed as the phalangites, or as was the case with the Greek regular
+infantry in general, but they were equipped for close fight as well
+as for skirmishing, and were far superior to the ordinary irregular
+troops of Greek warfare. They were about six thousand strong.
+Besides these, he had several bodies of Greek regular infantry; and
+he had archers, slingers, and javelin-men, who fought also with
+broadsword and target, and who were principally supplied him by the
+highlanders of Illyria and Thracia.</p>
+<p>The main strength of his cavalry consisted in two chosen
+regiments of cuirassiers, one Macedonian and one Thessalian, each
+of which was about fifteen hundred strong. They were provided with
+long lances and heavy swords, and horse as well as man was fully
+equipped with defensive armor. Other regiments of regular cavalry
+were less heavily armed, and there were several bodies of
+light-horsemen, whom Alexander's conquests in Egypt and Syria had
+enabled him to mount superbly.</p>
+<p>A little before the end of August, Alexander crossed the
+Euphrates at Thapsacus, a small corps of Persian cavalry under
+Mazaeus retiring before him. Alexander was too prudent to march
+down through the Mesopotamian deserts, and continued to advance
+eastward with the intention of passing the Tigris, and then, if he
+was unable to find Darius and bring him to action, of marching
+southward on the left side of that river along the skirts of a
+mountainous district where his men would suffer less from heat and
+thirst, and where provisions would be more abundant.</p>
+<p>Darius, finding that his adversary was not to be enticed into
+the march through Mesopotamia against his capital, determined to
+remain on the battle-ground, which he had chosen on the left of the
+Tigris; where, if his enemy met a defeat or a check, the
+destruction of the invaders would be certain with two such rivers
+as the Euphrates and the Tigris in their rear.</p>
+<p>The Persian King availed himself to the utmost of every
+advantage in his power. He caused a large space of ground to be
+carefully levelled for the operation of his scythe-armed chariots;
+and he deposited his military stores in the strong town of Arbela,
+about twenty miles in his rear. The rhetoricians of after-ages have
+loved to describe Darius Codomanus as a second Xerxes in
+ostentation and imbecility; but a fair examination of his
+generalship in this his last campaign shows that he was worthy of
+bearing the same name as his great predecessor, the royal son of
+Hystaspes.</p>
+<p>On learning that Darius was with a large army on the left of the
+Tigris, Alexander hurried forward and crossed that river without
+opposition. He was at first unable to procure any certain
+intelligence of the precise position of the enemy, and after giving
+his army a short interval of rest he marched for four days down the
+left bank of the river.</p>
+<p>A moralist may pause upon the fact that Alexander must in this
+march have passed within a few miles of the ruins of Nineveh, the
+great city of the primæval conquerors of the human race.
+Neither the Macedonian King nor any of his followers knew what
+those vast mounds had once been. They had already sunk into utter
+destruction; and it is only within the last few years that the
+intellectual energy of one of our own countrymen has rescued
+Nineveh from its long centuries of oblivion.</p>
+<p>On the fourth day of Alexander's southward march, his advance
+guard reported that a body of the enemy's cavalry was in sight. He
+instantly formed his army in order for battle, and directing them
+to advance steadily he rode forward at the head of some squadrons
+of cavalry and charged the Persian horse, whom he found before him.
+This was a mere reconnoitring party, and they broke and fled
+immediately; but the Macedonians made some prisoners, and from them
+Alexander found that Darius was posted only a few miles off, and
+learned the strength of the army that he had with him. On receiving
+this news Alexander halted, and gave his men repose for four days,
+so that they should go into action fresh and vigorous. He also
+fortified his camp and deposited in it all his military stores and
+all his sick and disabled soldiers, intending to advance upon the
+enemy with the serviceable part of his army perfectly
+unencumbered.</p>
+<p>After this halt, he moved forward, while it was yet dark, with
+the intention of reaching the enemy, and attacking them at break of
+day. About half way between the camps there were some undulations
+of the ground, which concealed the two armies from each other's
+view; but, on Alexander arriving at their summit, he saw, by the
+early light, the Persian host arrayed before him, and he probably
+also observed traces of some engineering operation having been
+carried on along part of the ground in front of them.</p>
+<p>Not knowing that these marks had been caused by the Persians
+having levelled the ground for the free use of their war chariots,
+Alexander suspected that hidden pitfalls had been prepared with a
+view of disordering the approach of his cavalry. He summoned a
+council of war forthwith. Some of the officers were for attacking
+instantly, at all hazards; but the more prudent opinion of Parmenio
+prevailed, and it was determined not to advance farther till the
+battle-ground had been carefully surveyed.</p>
+<p>Alexander halted his army on the heights, and, taking with him
+some light-armed infantry and some cavalry, he passed part of the
+day in reconnoitring the enemy and observing the nature of the
+ground which he had to fight on. Darius wisely refrained from
+moving from his position to attack the Macedonians on the eminences
+which they occupied, and the two armies remained until night
+without molesting each other.</p>
+<p>On Alexander's return to his headquarters, he summoned his
+generals and superior officers together, and telling them that he
+knew well that <i>their</i> zeal wanted no exhortation, he besought
+them to do their utmost in encouraging and instructing those whom
+each commanded, to do their best in the next day's battle. They
+were to remind them that they were now not going to fight for a
+province as they had hitherto fought, but they were about to decide
+by their swords the dominion of all Asia. Each officer ought to
+impress this upon his subalterns, and they should urge it on their
+men. Their natural courage required no long words to excite its
+ardor; but they should be reminded of the paramount importance of
+steadiness in action. The silence in the ranks must be unbroken as
+long as silence was proper; but when the time came for the charge,
+the shout and the cheer must be full of terror for the foe. The
+officers were to be alert in receiving and communicating orders;
+and everyone was to act as if he felt that the whole result of the
+battle depended on his own single good conduct.</p>
+<p>Having thus briefly instructed his generals, Alexander ordered
+that the army should sup and take their rest for the night.</p>
+<p>Darkness had closed over the tents of the Macedonians when
+Alexander's veteran general, Parmenio, came to him and proposed
+that they should make a night attack on the Persians. The King is
+said to have answered that he scorned to filch a victory, and that
+Alexander must conquer openly and fairly. Arrian justly remarks
+that Alexander's resolution was as wise as it was spirited. Besides
+the confusion and uncertainty which are inseparable from night
+engagements, the value of Alexander's victory would have been
+impaired if gained under circumstances which might supply the enemy
+with any excuse for his defeat, and encourage him to renew the
+contest. It was necessary for Alexander not only to beat Darius,
+but to gain such a victory as should leave his rival without
+apology and without hope of recovery.</p>
+<p>The Persians, in fact, expected and were prepared to meet a
+night attack. Such was the apprehension that Darius entertained of
+it that he formed his troops at evening in order of battle, and
+kept them under arms all night. The effect of this was that the
+morning found them jaded and dispirited, while it brought their
+adversaries all fresh and vigorous against them.</p>
+<p>The written order of battle which Darius himself caused to be
+drawn up fell into the hands of the Macedonians after the
+engagement, and Aristobulus copied it into his journal. We thus
+possess, through Arrian, unusually authentic information as to the
+composition and arrangement of the Persian army. On the extreme
+left were the Bactrian, Daan, and Arachosian cavalry. Next to these
+Darius placed the troops from Persia proper, both horse and foot.
+Then came the Susians, and next to these the Cadusians. These
+forces made up the left wing.</p>
+<p>Darius' own station was in the centre. This was composed of the
+Indians, the Carians, the Mardian archers, and the division of
+Persians who were distinguished by the golden apples that formed
+the knobs of their spears. Here also were stationed the bodyguard
+of the Persian nobility. Besides these, there were, in the centre,
+formed in deep order, the Uxian and Babylonian troops and the
+soldiers from the Red Sea. The brigade of Greek mercenaries whom
+Darius had in his service, and who alone were considered fit to
+stand the charge of the Macedonian phalanx, was drawn up on either
+side of the royal chariot.</p>
+<p>The right wing was composed of the Coelosyrians and
+Mesopotamians, the Medes, the Parthians, the Sacians, the
+Tapurians, Hyrcanians, Albanians, and Sacesinae. In advance of the
+line on the left wing were placed the Scythian cavalry, with a
+thousand of the Bactrian horse and a hundred scythe-armed chariots.
+The elephants and fifty scythe-armed chariots were ranged in front
+of the centre; and fifty more chariots, with the Armenian and
+Cappadocian cavalry, were drawn up in advance of the right
+wing.</p>
+<p>Thus arrayed, the great host of King Darius passed the night
+that to many thousands of them was the last of their existence. The
+morning of the first of October[<a href="#note-50">50</a>] dawned
+slowly to their wearied watching, and they could hear the note of
+the Macedonian trumpet sounding to arms, and could see King
+Alexander's forces descend from their tents on the heights and form
+in order of battle on the plain.</p>
+<p><a name="note-50"><!-- Note Anchor 50 --></a>[Footnote 50: The
+battle was fought eleven days after an eclipse of the moon, which
+gives the means of fixing the precise date.]</p>
+<p>There was deep need of skill, as well as of valor, on
+Alexander's side; and few battle-fields have witnessed more
+consummate generalship than was now displayed by the Macedonian
+King. There were no natural barriers by which he could protect his
+flanks; and not only was he certain to be overlapped on either wing
+by the vast lines of the Persian army, but there was imminent risk
+of their circling round him, and charging him in the rear, while he
+advanced against their centre. He formed, therefore, a second, or
+reserve line, which was to wheel round, if required, or to detach
+troops to either flank, as the enemy's movements might necessitate;
+and thus, with their whole army ready at any moment to be thrown
+into one vast hollow square, the Macedonians advanced in two lines
+against the enemy, Alexander himself leading on the right wing, and
+the renowned phalanx forming the centre, while Parmenio commanded
+on the left.</p>
+<p>Such was the general nature of the disposition which Alexander
+made of his army. But we have in Arrian the details of the position
+of each brigade and regiment; and as we know that these details
+were taken from the journals of Macedonian generals, it is
+interesting to examine them, and to read the names and stations of
+King Alexander's generals and colonels in this the greatest of his
+battles.</p>
+<p>The eight regiments of the royal horse-guards formed the right
+of Alexander's line. Their colonels were Clitus—whose
+regiment was on the extreme right, the post of peculiar
+danger—Glaucias, Ariston, Sopolis, Heraclides, Demetrias,
+Meleager, and Hegelochus. Philotas was general of the whole
+division. Then came the shield-bearing infantry: Nicanor was their
+general. Then came the phalanx in six brigades. Coenus' brigade was
+on the right, and nearest to the shield-bearers; next to this stood
+the brigade of Perdiccas, then Meleager's, then Polysperchon's; and
+then the brigade of Amynias, but which was now commanded by
+Simmias, as Amynias had been sent to Macedonia to levy recruits.
+Then came the infantry of the left wing, under the command of
+Craterus.</p>
+<p>Next to Craterus' infantry were placed the cavalry regiments of
+the allies, with Eriguius for their general. The Thessalian
+cavalry, commanded by Philippus, were next, and held the extreme
+left of the whole army. The whole left wing was intrusted to the
+command of Parmenio, who had round his person the Pharsalian
+regiment of cavalry, which was the strongest and best of all the
+Thessalian horse regiments.</p>
+<p>The centre of the second line was occupied by a body of
+phalangite infantry, formed of companies which were drafted for
+this purpose from each of the brigades of their phalanx. The
+officers in command of this corps were ordered to be ready to face
+about if the enemy should succeed in gaining the rear of the army.
+On the right of this reserve of infantry, in the second line, and
+behind the royal horse-guards, Alexander placed half the Agrian
+light-armed infantry under Attalus, and with them Brison's body of
+Macedonian archers and Cleander's regiment of foot. He also placed
+in this part of his army Menidas' squadron of cavalry and Aretes'
+and Ariston's light horse. Menidas was ordered to watch if the
+enemy's cavalry tried to turn their flank, and, if they did so, to
+charge them before they wheeled completely round, and so take them
+in flank themselves.</p>
+<p>A similar force was arranged on the left of the second line for
+the same purpose. The Thracian infantry of Sitalces were placed
+there, and Coeranus' regiment of the cavalry of the Greek allies,
+and Agathon's troops of the Odrysian irregular horse. The extreme
+left of the second line in this quarter was held by Andromachus'
+cavalry. A division of Thracian infantry was left in guard of the
+camp. In advance of the right wing and centre was scattered a
+number of light-armed troops, of javelin-men and bowmen, with the
+intention of warding off the charge of the armed chariots.[<a href="#note-51">51</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-51"><!-- Note Anchor 51 --></a>[Footnote 51:
+Kleber's arrangement of his troops at the battle of Heliopolis,
+where, with ten thousand Europeans, he had to encounter eighty
+thousand Asiatics in an open plain, is worth comparing with
+Alexander's tactics at Arbela. See Thiers' <i>Histoire du
+Consulat</i>.]</p>
+<p>Conspicuous by the brilliancy of his armor, and by the chosen
+band of officers who were round his person, Alexander took his own
+station, as his custom was, in the right wing, at the head of his
+cavalry; and when all the arrangements for the battle were
+complete, and his generals were fully instructed how to act in each
+probable emergency, he began to lead his men toward the enemy.</p>
+<p>It was ever his custom to expose his life freely in battle, and
+to emulate the personal prowess of his great ancestor, Achilles.
+Perhaps, in the bold enterprise of conquering Persia, it was
+politic for Alexander to raise his army's daring to the utmost by
+the example of his own heroic valor; and, in his subsequent
+campaigns, the love of the excitement, of "the raptures of the
+strife," may have made him, like Murat, continue from choice a
+custom which he commenced from duty. But he never suffered the
+ardor of the soldier to make him lose the coolness of the
+general.</p>
+<p>Great reliance had been placed by the Persian King on the
+effects of the scythe-bearing chariots. It was designed to launch
+these against the Macedonian phalanx, and to follow them up by a
+heavy charge of cavalry, which, it was hoped, would find the ranks
+of the spearmen disordered by the rush of the chariots, and easily
+destroy this most formidable part of Alexander's force. In front,
+therefore, of the Persian centre, where Darius took his station,
+and which it was supposed that the phalanx would attack, the ground
+had been carefully levelled and smoothed, so as to allow the
+chariots to charge over it with their full sweep and speed.</p>
+<p>As the Macedonian army approached the Persian, Alexander found
+that the front of his whole line barely equalled the front of the
+Persian centre, so that he was outflanked on his right by the
+entire left wing of the enemy, and by their entire right wing on
+his left. His tactics were to assail some one point of the hostile
+army, and gain a decisive advantage, while he refused, as far as
+possible, the encounter along the rest of the line. He therefore
+inclined his order of march to the right, so as to enable his right
+wing and centre to come into collision with the enemy on as
+favorable terms as possible, although the manoeuvre might in some
+respect compromise his left.</p>
+<p>The effect of this oblique movement was to bring the phalanx and
+his own wing nearly beyond the limits of the ground which the
+Persians had prepared for the operations of the chariots; and
+Darius, fearing to lose the benefit of this arm against the most
+important parts of the Macedonian force, ordered the Scythian and
+Bactrian cavalry, who were drawn up in advance on his extreme left,
+to charge round upon Alexander's right wing, and check its farther
+lateral progress. Against these assailants Alexander sent from his
+second line Menidas' cavalry. As these proved too few to make head
+against the enemy, he ordered Ariston also from the second line
+with his right horse, and Cleander with his foot, in support of
+Menidas.</p>
+<p>The Bactrians and Scythians now began to give way; but Darius
+reenforced them by the mass of Bactrian cavalry from his main line,
+and an obstinate cavalry fight now took place. The Bactrians and
+Scythians were numerous, and were better armed than the horsemen
+under Menidas and Ariston; and the loss at first was heaviest on
+the Macedonian side. But still the European cavalry stood the
+charge of the Asiatics, and at last, by their superior discipline,
+and by acting in squadrons that supported each other,[<a href="#note-52">52</a>] instead of fighting in a confused mass like the
+barbarians, the Macedonians broke their adversaries and drove them
+off the field.</p>
+<p><a name="note-52"><!-- Note Anchor 52 --></a>[Footnote 52: The
+best explanation of this may be found in Napoleon's account of the
+cavalry fights between the French and the mamelukes: "Two mamelukes
+were able to make head against three Frenchmen, because they were
+better armed, better mounted, and better trained; they had two pair
+of pistols, a blunderbuss, a carbine, a helmet with a visor, and a
+coat of mail; they had several horses, and several attendants on
+foot. One hundred cuirassiers, however, were not afraid of one
+hundred mamelukes; three hundred could beat an equal number, and
+one thousand could easily put to the rout fifteen hundred, so great
+is the influence of tactics, order, and evolutions! Leclerc and
+Lasalle presented their men to the mamelukes in several lines. When
+the Arabs were on the point of overwhelming the first, the second
+came to its assistance on the right and left; the mamelukes then
+halted and wheeled, in order to turn the wings of this new line;
+this moment was always seized upon to charge them, and they were
+uniformly broken."]</p>
+<p>Darius now directed the scythe-armed chariots to be driven
+against Alexander's horse-guards and the phalanx, and these
+formidable vehicles were accordingly sent rattling across the
+plain, against the Macedonian line. When we remember the alarm
+which the war chariots of the Britons created among Cæsar's
+legions, we shall not be prone to deride this arm of ancient
+warfare as always useless. The object of the chariots was to create
+unsteadiness in the ranks against which they were driven, and
+squadrons of cavalry followed close upon them to profit by such
+disorder. But the Asiatic chariots were rendered ineffective at
+Arbela by the light-armed troops, whom Alexander had specially
+appointed for the service, and who, wounding the horses and drivers
+with their missile weapons, and running alongside so as to cut the
+traces or seize the reins, marred the intended charge; and the few
+chariots that reached the phalanx passed harmlessly through the
+internals which the spearmen opened for them, and were easily
+captured in the rear.</p>
+<p>A mass of the Asiatic cavalry was now, for the second time,
+collected against Alexander's extreme right, and moved round it,
+with the view of gaining the flank of his army. At the critical
+moment, when their own flanks were exposed by this evolution,
+Aretes dashed on the Persian squadrons with his horsemen from
+Alexander's second line. While Alexander thus met and baffled all
+the flanking attacks of the enemy with troops brought up from his
+second line, he kept his own horse-guards and the rest of the front
+line of his wing fresh, and ready to take advantage of the first
+opportunity for striking a decisive blow.</p>
+<p>This soon came. A large body of horse, who were posted on the
+Persian left wing nearest to the centre, quitted their station, and
+rode off to help their comrades in the cavalry fight that still was
+going on at the extreme right of Alexander's wing against the
+detachments from his second line. This made a huge gap in the
+Persian array, and into this space Alexander instantly charged with
+his guard and all the cavalry of his wing; and then, pressing
+toward his left, he soon began to make havoc in the left flank of
+the Persian centre. The shield-bearing infantry now charged also
+among the reeling masses of the Asiatics; and five of the brigades
+of the phalanx, with the irresistible might of their sarissas, bore
+down the Greek mercenaries of Darius, and dug their way through the
+Persian centre.</p>
+<p>In the early part of the battle Darius had showed skill and
+energy; and he now, for some time, encouraged his men, by voice and
+example, to keep firm. But the lances of Alexander's cavalry and
+the pikes of the phalanx now pressed nearer and nearer to him. His
+charioteer was struck down by a javelin at his side; and at last
+Darius' nerve failed him, and, descending from his chariot, he
+mounted on a fleet horse and galloped from the plain, regardless of
+the state of the battle in other parts of the field, where matters
+were going on much more favorably for his cause, and where his
+presence might have done much toward gaining a victory.</p>
+<p>Alexander's operations with his right and centre had exposed his
+left to an immensely preponderating force of the enemy. Parmenio
+kept out of action as long as possible; but Mazaeus, who commanded
+the Persian right wing, advanced against him, completely outflanked
+him, and pressed him severely with reiterated charges by superior
+numbers.</p>
+<p>Seeing the distress of Parmenio's wing, Simmias, who commanded
+the sixth brigade of the phalanx, which was next to the left wing,
+did not advance with the other brigades in the great charge upon
+the Persian centre, but kept back to cover Parmenio's troops on
+their right flank, as otherwise they would have been completely
+surrounded and cut off from the rest of the Macedonian army. By so
+doing, Simmias had unavoidably opened a gap in the Macedonian left
+centre; and a large column of Indian and Persian horse, from the
+Persian right centre, had galloped forward through this interval,
+and right through the troops of the Macedonian second line. Instead
+of then wheeling round upon Parmenio, or upon the rear of
+Alexander's conquering wing, the Indian and Persian cavalry rode
+straight on to the Macedonian camp, overpowered the Thracians who
+were left in charge of it, and began to plunder. This was stopped
+by the phalangite troops of the second line, who, after the enemy's
+horsemen had rushed by them, faced about, countermarched upon the
+camp, killed many of the Indians and Persians in the act of
+plundering, and forced the rest to ride off again.</p>
+<p>Just at this crisis, Alexander had been recalled from his
+pursuit of Darius by tidings of the distress of Parmenio and of his
+inability to bear up any longer against the hot attacks of Mazaeus.
+Taking his horse-guards with him, Alexander rode toward the part of
+the field where his left wing was fighting; but on his way thither
+he encountered the Persian and Indian cavalry on their return from
+his camp.</p>
+<p>These men now saw that their only chance of safety was to cut
+their way through, and in one huge column they charged desperately
+upon the Macedonian regiments. There was here a close hand-to-hand
+fight, which lasted some time, and sixty of the royal horse-guards
+fell, and three generals, who fought close to Alexander's side,
+were wounded. At length the Macedonian discipline and valor again
+prevailed, and a large number of the Persian and Indian horsemen
+were cut down, some few only succeeding in breaking through and
+riding away.</p>
+<p>Relieved of these obstinate enemies, Alexander again formed his
+regiments of horse-guards, and led them toward Parmenio; but by
+this time that general also was victorious. Probably the news of
+Darius' flight had reached Mazæus, and had damped the ardor
+of the Persian right wing, while the tidings of their comrades'
+success must have proportionally encouraged the Macedonian forces
+under Parmenio. His Thessalian cavalry particularly distinguished
+themselves by their gallantry and persevering good conduct; and by
+the time that Alexander had ridden up to Parmenio, the whole
+Persian army was in full flight from the field.</p>
+<p>It was of the deepest importance to Alexander to secure the
+person of Darius, and he now urged on the pursuit. The river Lycus
+was between the field of battle and the city of Arbela, whither the
+fugitives directed their course, and the passage of this river was
+even more destructive to the Persians than the swords and spears of
+the Macedonians had been in the engagement.[<a href="#note-53">53</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-53"><!-- Note Anchor 53 --></a>[Footnote 53: I
+purposely omit any statement of the loss in the battle. There is a
+palpable error of the transcribers in the numbers which we find in
+our present manuscripts of Arrian, and Curtius is of no
+authority.]</p>
+<p>The narrow bridge was soon choked up by the flying thousands who
+rushed toward it, and vast numbers of the Persians threw
+themselves, or were hurried by others, into the rapid stream, and
+perished in its waters. Darius had crossed it, and had ridden on
+through Arbela without halting. Alexander reached the city on the
+next day, and made himself master of all Darius' treasure and
+stores; but the Persian King, unfortunately for himself, had fled
+too fast for his conqueror, but had only escaped to perish by the
+treachery of his Bactrian satrap, Bessus.</p>
+<p>A few days after the battle Alexander entered Babylon, "the
+oldest seat of earthly empire" then in existence, as its
+acknowledged lord and master. There were yet some campaigns of his
+brief and bright career to be accomplished. Central Asia was yet to
+witness the march of his phalanx. He was yet to effect that
+conquest of Afghanistan in which England since has failed. His
+generalship, as well as his valor, was yet to be signalized on the
+banks of the Hydaspes and the field of Chillianwallah; and he was
+yet to precede the queen of England in annexing the Punjab to the
+dominions of a European sovereign. But the crisis of his career was
+reached; the great object of his mission was accomplished; and the
+ancient Persian empire, which once menaced all the nations of the
+earth with subjection, was irreparably crushed when Alexander had
+won his crowning victory at Arbela.</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="RULE4_12"></a>FIRST BATTLE BETWEEN GREEKS AND ROMANS</h2>
+<p class="center">B.C. 280-279</p>
+<p class="center">PLUTARCH</p>
+<p class="intros">The Romans, in B.C. 290, had conquered the
+Samnites and this extended the Roman power to the very gates of the
+Grecian cities on the Gulf of Tarentine. Tarentum, the chief city
+among them, was almost totally controlled by a party which advised
+a peaceful submission to the Roman conquerors. The opposing party
+of patriots, against such cowardly measures, looked abroad for aid
+and found a ready ally in Pyrrhus, the Molossian king of Epirus. He
+was warlike and adventurous, and a member of the royal family of
+Macedonia, through Olympias, who was the mother of Alexander the
+Great.</p>
+<p class="intros">Pyrrhus had established a reputation for
+fighting. Not alone had he fought at the memorable battle of Ipsus,
+in Phrygia, but he had proven a formidable opponent to Demetinus,
+king of Macedonia, having forced the latter powerful monarch to
+conclude a truce with him, though afterward he had been conquered
+and driven back to his little kingdom of Epirus. At the time the
+Tarentines sent to him to help them against Rome he was eager for a
+field in which he might do something to prove his mettle. This was
+the greatest opportunity of his life, and he seized upon it. The
+campaign is memorable for having brought the Romans and Greeks into
+conflict on the battle-field for the first time.</p>
+<p>Pyrrhus, now that he had lost Macedonia, might have spent his
+days peacefully ruling his own subjects in Epirus; but he could not
+endure repose, thinking that not to trouble others and be troubled
+by them was a life of unbearable ennui, and, like Achilles in the
+<i>Iliad</i>,</p>
+<p class="poetry"> "he could not rest in indolence at home,<br/>
+He longed for battle, and the joys of war."</p>
+<p>As he desired some new adventures he embraced the following
+opportunity. The Romans were at war with the Tarentines; and as
+that people were not sufficiently powerful to carry on the war, and
+yet were not allowed by the audacious folly of their mob orators to
+make peace, they proposed to make Pyrrhus their leader and to
+invite him to be their ally in the war, because he was more at
+leisure than any of the other kings, and also was the best general
+of them all. Of the older and more sensible citizens some
+endeavored to oppose this fatal decision, but were overwhelmed by
+the clamor of the war party, while the rest, observing this, ceased
+to attend the public assembly.</p>
+<p>There was one citizen of good repute, named Meton, who, on the
+day when the final decision was to be made, when the people were
+all assembled, took a withered garland and a torch, and like a
+drunkard, reeled into the assembly with a girl playing the flute
+before him. At this, as one may expect in a disorderly popular
+meeting, some applauded and some laughed, but no one stopped him.
+They next bade the girl play, and Meton come forward and dance to
+the music; and he made as though he would do so. When he had
+obtained silence he said: "Men of Tarentum, you do well in
+encouraging those who wish to be merry and amuse themselves while
+they may. If you are wise you will all enjoy your freedom now, for
+when Pyrrhus is come to our city you will have very different
+things to think of and will live very differently." By these words
+he made an impression on the mass of the Tarentine people, and a
+murmur ran through the crowd that he had spoken well. But those
+politicians who feared that if peace were made they should be
+delivered up to the Romans, reproached the people for allowing
+anyone to insult them by such a disgraceful exhibition, and
+prevailed on them to turn Meton out of the assembly.</p>
+<p>Thus the vote for war was passed, and ambassadors were sent to
+Epirus, not from Tarentum alone, but from the other Greek cities in
+Italy, carrying with them presents for Pyrrhus, with instructions
+to tell him that they required a leader of skill and renown, and
+that they possessed a force of Lucanians, Messapians, Samnites, and
+Tarentines, which amounted to twenty thousand cavalry and three
+hundred and fifty thousand infantry. This not only excited Pyrrhus,
+but also made all the Epirotes eager to take part in the
+campaign.</p>
+<p>There was one Cineas, a Thessalian, who was thought to be a man
+of good sense, and who, having heard Demosthenes the orator speak,
+was better able than any of the speakers of his age to delight his
+hearers with an imitation of the eloquence of that great master of
+rhetoric. He was now in the service of Pyrrhus, and being sent
+about to various cities, proved the truth of the Euripidean saw,
+that</p>
+<p class="poetry"> "All can be done by words<br/>
+Which foemen wish to do with conquering swords."</p>
+<p>Pyrrhus at any rate used to say that more cities were won for
+him by Cineas with words than he himself won by force of arms. This
+man, observing that Pyrrhus was eagerly preparing for his Italian
+expedition, once when he was at leisure conversed with him in the
+following manner. "Pyrrhus," said he, "the Romans are said to be
+good soldiers, and to rule over many warlike nations. Now, if
+heaven grants us the victory over them, what use shall we make of
+it?"</p>
+<p>"You ask what is self-evident," answered Pyrrhus. "If we can
+conquer the Romans, there is no city, Greek or barbarian, that can
+resist us, and we shall gain possession of the whole of Italy, a
+country whose size, richness, and power no one knows better than
+yourself." Cineas then, after waiting for a short time, said: "O
+King, when we have taken Italy, what shall we do then?"</p>
+<p>Pyrrhus, not yet seeing his drift, answered: "Close to it Sicily
+invites us, a noble and populous island, and one which is very easy
+to conquer; for, my Cineas, now that Agathocles is dead, there is
+nothing there but revolution and faction and the violence of party
+spirit."</p>
+<p>"What you say," answered Cineas, "is very probably true. But is
+this conquest of Sicily to be the extreme limit of our
+campaign?"</p>
+<p>"Heaven," answered Pyrrhus, "alone can give us victory and
+success; but these conquests would merely prove to us the
+stepping-stones to greater things. Who could refrain from making an
+attempt upon Carthage and Libya when he was so close to them,
+countries which were all but conquered by Agathocles when he ran
+away from Syracuse with only a few ships? and if we were masters of
+these countries, none of the enemies who now give themselves such
+airs at our expense will dare to resist us."</p>
+<p>"Certainly not," answered Cineas; "with such a force at our
+disposal we clearly could recover Macedonia, and have the whole of
+Greece at our feet. And after we have made all these conquests,
+what shall we do then?"</p>
+<p>Pyrrhus laughing answered: "We will take our ease and carouse
+every day, and enjoy pleasant conversation with one another."</p>
+<p>Having brought Pyrrhus to say this, Cineas asked in reply: "But
+what prevents our carousing and taking our ease now, since we have
+already at hand all those things which we propose to obtain with
+much bloodshed, and great toils and perils, and after suffering
+much ourselves and causing much suffering to others?"</p>
+<p>By talking in this manner Cineas vexed Pyrrhus, because he made
+him reflect on the pleasant home which he was leaving, but his
+reasoning had no effect in turning him from his purpose.</p>
+<p>He first despatched Cineas to Tarentum with three thousand men;
+next he collected from Tarentum many horse-transports, decked
+vessels, and boats of all sorts, and embarked upon them twenty
+elephants, twenty-three thousand cavalry, twenty-two thousand
+infantry, and five hundred slingers. When all was ready he put to
+sea; and when half way across a storm burst upon him from the
+north, which was unusual at that season of the year. He himself,
+though his ship was carried away by the tempest, yet, by the great
+pains and skill of the sailors and pilots, resisted it and reached
+the land, with great toil to the rowers, and beyond everyone's
+expectation; for the rest of the fleet was overpowered by the gale
+and scattered. Some ships were driven off the Italian coast
+altogether, and forced into the Libyan and Sicilian seas, and some
+which could not weather the Iapygian Cape were overtaken by night,
+and being dashed by a violent and boisterous sea against that
+harborless coast were utterly lost, except only the King's ship.
+She was so large and strongly built as to resist the waves as long
+as they broke upon her from the seaward; but when the wind changed
+and blew directly off the shore, the ship, which now met the waves
+directly with her head, was in great danger of going to pieces,
+while to let her drive out to sea again now that it was so rough,
+and the wind changed so frequently, seemed more terrible than to
+remain where they were.</p>
+<p>Pyrrhus rose and leaped into the water, and at once was eagerly
+followed by his friends and his bodyguard. The darkness of night
+and the violent recoil of the roaring waves made it hard for them
+to help him, and it was not until daybreak, when the wind abated,
+that he reached the land, faint and helpless in body, but with his
+spirit invincible in misfortune. The Messapians, upon whose coast
+he had been thrown, now assembled from the neighboring villages and
+offered their help, while some of the ships which had outlived the
+storm appeared, bringing a few horsemen, about two thousand foot,
+and two elephants.</p>
+<p>With these Pyrrhus marched to Tarentum; Cineas, as soon as he
+heard of his arrival, bringing out the Tarentine army to meet him.
+When he reached the city he did nothing to displease the Tarentines
+until his fleet returned to the coast and he had assembled the
+greater part of his army. But then, as he saw that the populace,
+unless ruled by a strong hand, could neither help him nor help
+themselves, but intended to stay idling about their baths and
+entertainments at home, while he fought their battles in the field,
+he closed the gymnasia and public walks, in which the people were
+wont to waste their time in empty talk about the war. He forbade
+all drinking, feasting, and unseasonable revels, and forced the
+people to take up arms, proving himself inexorable to everyone who
+was on the muster-roll of able-bodied citizens. This conduct made
+him much disliked, and many of the Tarentines left the city in
+disgust; for they were so unused to discipline that they considered
+that not to be able to pass their lives as they chose was no better
+than slavery.</p>
+<p>When news came that Laevinus, the Roman consul, was marching to
+attack him with a large force, and was plundering the country of
+Lucania as he advanced, while Pyrrhus' allies had not yet arrived,
+he thought it a shameful thing to allow the enemy to proceed any
+farther, and marched out with his army. He sent before him a herald
+to the Roman general, informing him that he was willing to act as
+arbitrator in the dispute between the Romans and the Greek cities
+of Italy, if they chose to terminate it peacefully. On receiving
+for an answer that the Romans neither wished for Pyrrhus as an
+arbitrator, nor feared him as an enemy, he marched forward, and
+encamped in the plain between the city of Pandosia and
+Heraclea.</p>
+<p>Learning that the Romans were close by, and were encamping on
+the farther side of the river Siris (the river Aciris, now called
+Agri), he rode up to the river to view them; and when he observed
+their even ranks, their orderly movements, and their well-arranged
+camp, he was surprised, and said to the nearest of his friends:
+"These barbarians, Megacles, have nothing barbarous in their
+military discipline; but we shall soon learn what they can do." He
+began indeed already to feel some uncertainty as to the issue of
+the campaign, and determined to wait until his allies came up, and
+till then to observe the movements of the Romans, and prevent their
+crossing the river. They, however, perceiving his object, at once
+crossed the river, the infantry at a ford, the cavalry at many
+points at once, so that the Greeks feared they might be surrounded,
+and drew back. Pyrrhus, perceiving this, ordered his officers
+instantly to form the troops in order of battle and wait under arms
+while he himself charged with the cavalry, three thousand strong,
+hoping to catch the Romans in the act of crossing the river and
+consequently in disorder.</p>
+<p>When he saw many shields of the Roman infantry appearing over
+the river bank, and their horsemen all ranged in order, he closed
+up his own ranks and charged them first himself, a conspicuous
+figure in his beautiful glittering armor, and proving by his
+exploits that he deserved his high reputation; especially as
+although he fought personally, and engaged in combat with the
+enemy, yet he continually watched the whole battle, and handled his
+troops with as much facility as though he were not in the thick of
+the fight, appearing always wherever his presence was required, and
+reenforcing those who seemed likely to give way. In this battle
+Leonnatus the Macedonian, observing one of the Italians watching
+Pyrrhus and constantly following him about the field, said to him:
+"My King, do you see that barbarian on the black horse with white
+feet? He seems to be meditating some desperate deed. He is a man of
+spirit and courage, and he never takes his eyes off you, and takes
+no notice of anyone else. Beware of that man."</p>
+<p>Pyrrhus answered: "Leonnatus, no man can avoid his fate; but
+neither that Italian nor anyone else who attacks me will do so with
+impunity." While they were yet talking the Italian levelled his
+lance and urged his horse in full career against Pyrrhus. He struck
+the King's horse with his spear, and at the same instant his own
+horse was struck a sidelong blow by Leonnatus. Both horses fell;
+Pyrrhus was saved by his friends, and the Italian perished
+fighting. He was of the nation of the Frentani, Hoplacus by name,
+and was the captain of a troop of horse.</p>
+<p>This incident taught Pyrrhus to be more cautious. He observed
+that his cavalry were inclined to give way, and therefore sent for
+his phalanx, and arrayed it against the enemy. Then he gave his
+cloak and armor to one of his companions, Megacles, and after
+partially disguising himself in those of his friend, led his main
+body to attack the Roman army. The Romans stoutly resisted him, and
+an obstinate battle took place, for it is said that the combatants
+alternately yielded and again pressed forward no less than seven
+distinct times. The King's exchange of armor, too, though it saved
+his life, yet very nearly lost him the victory: for many attacked
+Megacles, and the man who first struck him down, who was named
+Decius, snatched up his cloak and helmet, and rode with them to
+Lævinus, displaying them and shouting aloud that he had slain
+Pyrrhus.</p>
+<p>The Romans, when they saw these spoils carried in triumph along
+their ranks, raised a joyful cry, while the Greeks were
+correspondingly disheartened, until Pyrrhus, learning what had
+taken place, rode along the line with his head bare, stretching out
+his hands to his soldiers and telling them that he was safe. At
+length he was victorious, chiefly by means of a sudden charge of
+his Thessalian horse on the Romans after they had been thrown into
+disorder by the advance of the elephants. The Roman horses were
+terrified at these animals, and, long before they came near, ran
+away with their riders in panic. The slaughter was very great:
+Dionysius says that of the Romans there fell but little short of
+fifteen thousand, but Hieronymus reduces this to seven thousand,
+while on Pyrrhus' side there fell, according to Dionysius, thirteen
+thousand, but according to Hieronymus less than four thousand.</p>
+<p>These, however, were the very flower of Pyrrhus' army; for he
+lost all his most trusty officers and his most intimate personal
+friends. Still, he captured the Roman camp, which was abandoned by
+the enemy, induced several of their allied cities to join him,
+plundered a vast extent of country, and advanced within three
+hundred stades—less than forty English miles—of Rome
+itself. After the battle many of the Lucanians and Samnites came
+up; these allies he reproached for their dilatory movements, but
+was evidently well pleased at having conquered the great Roman army
+with no other forces but his own Epirotes and the Tarentines.</p>
+<p>The Romans did not remove Laevinus from his office of consul,
+although Caius Fabricius is reported to have said that it was not
+the Epirotes who had conquered the Romans, but Pyrrhus who had
+conquered Laevinus; meaning that he thought that the defeat was
+owing not to the greater force but the superior generalship of the
+enemy. They astonished Pyrrhus by quickly filling up their ranks
+with fresh levies, and talking about the war in a spirit of
+fearless confidence. He decided to try whether they were disposed
+to make terms with him, as he perceived that to capture Rome and
+utterly subdue the Roman people would be a work of no small
+difficulty, and that it would be vain to attempt it with the force
+at his disposal, while after his victory he could make peace on
+terms which would reflect great lustre on himself. Cineas was sent
+as ambassador to conduct this negotiation.</p>
+<p>He conversed with the leading men of Rome, and offered their
+wives and children presents from the King. No one, however, would
+accept them, but they all, men and women alike, replied that if
+peace were publicly concluded with the King, they would then have
+no objection to regard him as a friend. And when Cineas spoke
+before the senate in a winning and persuasive manner he could not
+make any impression upon his audience, although he announced to
+them that Pyrrhus would restore the prisoners he had taken without
+any ransom, and would assist them in subduing all Italy, while all
+that he asked in return was that he should be regarded as a friend,
+and that the people of Tarentum should not be molested. The common
+people, however, were evidently eager for peace, in consequence of
+their having been defeated in one great battle, and expecting that
+they would have to fight another against a larger force, because
+the Italian states would join Pyrrhus.</p>
+<p>At this crisis Appius Claudius, an illustrious man, but who had
+long since been prevented by old age and blindness from taking any
+active part in politics, when he heard of the proposals of Pyrrhus,
+and that the question of peace or war was about to be voted upon by
+the senate, could no longer endure to remain at home, but caused
+his slaves to carry him through the Forum to the senate house in a
+litter. When he reached the doors of the senate house his sons and
+sons-in-law supported him and guided him into the house, while all
+the assembly observed a respectful silence.</p>
+<p>Speaking from where he stood, he addressed them as follows: "My
+countrymen, I used to grieve at the loss of my sight, but now I am
+sorry not to be deaf also, when I hear the disgraceful propositions
+with which you are tarnishing the glory of Rome. What has become of
+that boast which we were so fond of making before all mankind, that
+if Alexander the Great had invaded Italy, and had met us when we
+were young, and our fathers when they were in the prime of life, he
+would not have been reputed invincible, but would either have fled
+or perhaps even have fallen, and added to the glory of Rome?</p>
+<p>"You now prove that this was mere empty vaporing, by your terror
+of these Chaonians and Molossians, nations who have always been a
+prey and a spoil to the Macedonians, and by your fear of this
+Pyrrhus, who used formerly to dance attendance on one of
+Alexander's bodyguards,[<a href="#note-54">54</a>] and who has now
+wandered hither not so much in order to assist the Greeks in Italy
+as to escape from his enemies at home, and promises to be our
+friend and protector, forsooth, when the army he commands did not
+suffice to keep for him the least portion of that Macedonia which
+he once acquired. Do not imagine that you will get rid of this man
+by making a treaty with him. Rather you will encourage other Greek
+princes to invade you, for they will despise you and think you an
+easy prey to all men if you let Pyrrhus go home again without
+paying the penalty of his outrages upon you, nay, with the power to
+boast that he has made Rome a laughing-stock for Tarentines and
+Samnites."</p>
+<p><a name="note-54"><!-- Note Anchor 54 --></a>[Footnote 54:
+Demetrius.]</p>
+<p>By these words Appius roused a warlike spirit in the Romans, and
+they dismissed Cineas with the answer that if Pyrrhus would leave
+Italy they would, if he wished, discuss the question of an alliance
+with him, but that while he remained in arms in their country the
+Romans would fight him to the death, however many Laevinuses he
+might defeat. It is related that Cineas, during his mission to
+Rome, took great interest in observing the national life of the
+Romans, and fully appreciated the excellence of their political
+constitution, which he learned by conversing with many of the
+leading men of the State. On his return he told Pyrrhus that the
+senate seemed to him like an assembly of kings, and that as to the
+populace he feared that the Greeks might find in them a new
+Lernæan hydra; for twice as many troops had been enrolled in
+the consul's army as he had before, and yet there remained many
+more Romans capable of bearing arms.</p>
+<p>After this Caius Fabricius came to arrange terms for the
+exchange of prisoners; a man whom Cineas said the Romans especially
+valued for his virtue and bravery, but who was excessively poor.
+Pyrrhus, in consequence of this, entertained Fabricius privately,
+and made him an offer of money, not as a bribe for any act of
+baseness, but speaking of it as a pledge of friendship and
+sincerity. As Fabricius refused this, Pyrrhus waited till the next
+day, when, desirous of making an impression on him, as he had never
+seen an elephant, he had his largest elephant placed behind
+Fabricius during their conference, concealed by a curtain. At a
+given signal, the curtain was withdrawn, and the creature reached
+out his trunk over the head of Fabricius with a harsh and terrible
+cry. Fabricius, however, quietly turned round, and then said to
+Pyrrhus with a smile, "You could not move me by your gold
+yesterday, nor can you with your beast to-day."</p>
+<p>At table that day they conversed upon all subjects, but chiefly
+about Greece and Greek philosophy. Cineas repeated the opinion of
+Epicurus and his school, about the gods, and the practice of
+political life, and the objects at which we should aim, how they
+considered pleasure to be the highest good, and held aloof from
+taking any active part in politics, because it spoiled and
+destroyed perfect happiness; and about how they thought that the
+gods lived far removed from hopes and fears, and interest in human
+affairs, in a placid state of eternal fruition.[<a href="#note-55">55</a>] While he was speaking in this strain Fabricius
+burst out: "Hercules!" cried he, "may Pyrrhus and the Samnites
+continue to waste their time on these speculations as long as they
+remain at war with us!" Pyrrhus, at this, was struck by the spirit
+and noble disposition of Fabricius, and longed more than ever to
+make Rome his friend instead of his enemy. He begged him to arrange
+terms of peace, and after they were concluded to come and live with
+him as the first of his friends and officers.</p>
+<p><a name="note-55"><!-- Note Anchor 55 --></a>[Footnote 55: I
+have translated the above passages almost literally from the Greek.
+Yet I am inclined to think that Arnold has penetrated the true
+meaning, and shows us the reason for Fabricius' exclamation when he
+states the Epicurean philosophy, as expounded by Cineas, to be
+"that war and state affairs were but toil and trouble, and that the
+wise man should imitate the blissful rest of the gods, who,
+dwelling in their own divinity, regarded not the vain turmoil of
+this lower world."]</p>
+<p>Fabricius is said to have quietly answered: "That, O King, will
+not be to your advantage; for those who now obey you, and look up
+to you, if they had any experience of me, would prefer me to you
+for their king." Pyrrhus was not angry at this speech, but spoke to
+all his friends about the magnanimous conduct of Fabricius, and
+intrusted the prisoners to him alone, on the condition that, if the
+senate refused to make peace, they should be allowed to embrace
+their friends, and spend the festival of the Saturnalia with them,
+and then be sent back to him. And they were sent back after the
+Saturnalia, for the senate decreed that any of them who remained
+behind should be put to death.</p>
+<p>After this, when C. Fabricius was consul, a man came into his
+camp bringing a letter from King Pyrrhus' physician, in which he
+offered to poison the King if he could be assured of a suitable
+reward for his services in thus bringing the war to an end without
+a blow. Fabricius, disgusted at the man's treachery, brought his
+colleague to share his views, and in haste sent off a letter to
+Pyrrhus, bidding him be on his guard. The letter ran as follows:
+"Caius Fabricius and Quintus Æmilius, the Roman consuls,
+greet King Pyrrhus. You appear to be a bad judge both of your
+friends and of your enemies. You will perceive, by reading the
+enclosed letter which has been sent to us, that you are fighting
+against good and virtuous men, and trusting to wicked and
+treacherous ones. We do not give you this information out of any
+love we bear you, but for fear that we might be charged with having
+assassinated you and be thought to have brought the war to a close
+by treachery because we could not do so by manhood."</p>
+<p>Pyrrhus on receiving this letter, and discovering the plot
+against his life, punished his physician, and, in return for the
+kindness of Fabricius and the Romans, delivered up their prisoners
+without ransom, and sent Cineas a second time to arrange terms of
+peace. However, the Romans refused to receive their prisoners back
+without ransom, being unwilling either to receive a favor from
+their enemy or to be rewarded for having abstained from treachery
+toward him, but set free an equal number of Tarentines and
+Samnites, and sent them to him. As to terms of peace, they refused
+to entertain the question unless Pyrrhus first placed his entire
+armament on board the ships in which it came, and sailed back to
+Epirus with it.</p>
+<p>As it was now necessary that Pyrrhus should fight another
+battle, he advanced with his army to the city of Asculum, and
+attacked the Romans. Here he was forced to fight on rough ground,
+near the swampy banks of a river, where his elephants and cavalry
+were of no service, and he was forced to attack with his phalanx.
+After a drawn battle, in which many fell, night parted the
+combatants. Next day Pyrrhus manoeuvred so as to bring the Romans
+fairly into the plain, where his elephants could act upon the
+enemy's line. He occupied the rough ground on either side, placed
+many archers and slingers among his elephants, and advanced with
+his phalanx in close order and irresistible strength.</p>
+<p>The Romans, who were unable on the level ground to practise the
+bush-fighting and skirmishing of the previous day, were compelled
+to attack the phalanx in front. They endeavored to force their way
+through that hedge of spears before the elephants could come up,
+and showed marvellous courage in hacking at the spears with their
+swords, exposing themselves recklessly, careless of wounds or
+death. After a long struggle, it is said that they first gave way
+at the point where Pyrrhus was urging on his soldiers in person,
+though the defeat was chiefly due to the weight and crushing charge
+of the elephants. The Romans could not find any opportunity in this
+sort of battle for the display of their courage, but thought it
+their duty to stand aside and save themselves from a useless death,
+just as they would have done in the case of a wave of the sea or an
+earthquake coming upon them. In the flight to their camp, which was
+not far off, Hieronymus says that six thousand Romans perished, and
+that in Pyrrhus' commentaries his loss is stated at three thousand
+five hundred and five.</p>
+<p>Dionysius, on the other hand, does not admit that there were two
+battles at Asculum, or that the Romans suffered a defeat, but tells
+us that they fought the whole of one day until sunset, and then
+separated, Pyrrhus being wounded in the arm by a javelin, and the
+Samnites having plundered his baggage. He also states the total
+loss on both sides to be above fifteen thousand.</p>
+<p>The armies separated after the battle, and it is said that
+Pyrrhus, when congratulated on his victory by his friends, said in
+reply: "If we win one more such victory over the Romans, we shall
+be utterly ruined." For a large part of the force which he had
+brought with him had perished, and very nearly all his friends and
+officers, and there were no more to send for at home.</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="RULE4_13"></a>THE PUNIC WARS</h2>
+<p class="center">B.C. 264-219-149</p>
+<p class="center">FLORUS</p>
+<p class="intros">The three Punic wars stand out in history as a
+mighty "duel <i>à l'outrance</i>" (a fight to the death), as
+Victor Hugo says, in the final scene of which Rome, having herself
+been brought near to defeat, "rises again, uses the limits of her
+strength in a last blow, throws herself on Carthage, and effaces
+her from the world."</p>
+<p class="intros">Jealousy and antagonism had long existed between
+Rome and Carthage, but it was the preeminence of the African city
+which held Roman ambition in check and for generations deferred the
+final struggle. But when at last Rome had acquired the strength she
+needed in order to assert her rivalry, it was only a question of
+actual preparation, and the first cause of quarrel was sure to be
+seized upon by either party, especially by the growing and haughty
+Italian Power.</p>
+<p class="intros">The immediate object of contention was the island
+of Sicily, lying between the territory of Rome and that of
+Carthage. In Sicily the First Punic War, lasting about twenty-three
+years, was mainly carried on by the Romans with success, while on
+the sea Carthage for a long time maintained superiority.</p>
+<p class="intros">During the intervals between the Punic wars two
+things appear with striking force in the history of these
+events—the passive strength and recuperative power of
+Carthage, which enabled her to return again and again to the
+struggle from almost crushing defeat, and the marvellous
+development of resources and aggressive vigor on the part of Rome,
+in whose case the rise of powerful individual leaders more than
+offset the weight of long-accumulated energies, supplemented as
+these were by the genius and achievement of great Carthaginian
+warriors.</p>
+<p class="intros">The wars progressed in a spirit of deadly hatred,
+constantly intensified on both sides, and the Roman determination,
+of which Cato was the mouthpiece, that Carthage must be destroyed,
+met its stubborn answer in the endeavors of the Carthaginians to
+turn this vengeance against Rome herself.</p>
+<p class="intros">Carthage had been mistress of the world, the
+richest and most powerful of cities. Her naval supremacy alone had
+sufficed to secure her safety and superiority over all rivals or
+possible combinations of force. But the strength of her government
+lay not so much in her people, or even in her statesmen and
+soldiers, as in her men of wealth. A political establishment
+founded upon such supports was peculiarly liable to all the dangers
+of corruption and of public ignorance and apathy in the conduct of
+affairs. These causes appear conspicuously in the history of the
+Punic wars, as contributing largely to the overthrow and final
+extinguishment of Carthage, which left to her successful rival the
+open way to universal dominion.</p>
+<p class="intros">The account of Florus presents in a style at once
+comprehensive and succinct a splendid narrative of these wars, with
+their decisive and world-changing events.</p>
+<p class="center">THE FIRST PUNIC WAR</p>
+<p>The victor-people of Italy, having now spread over the land as
+far as the sea, checked its course for a little, like a fire,
+which, having consumed the woods lying in its track, is stopped by
+some intervening river. But soon after, seeing at no great distance
+a rich prey, which seemed in a manner detached and torn away from
+their own Italy, they were so inflamed with a desire to possess it
+that, since it could neither be joined to their country by a mole
+or bridge, they resolved that it should be secured by arms and war,
+and reunited, as it were, to their continent. And behold! as if the
+Fates themselves opened a way for them, an opportunity was not
+wanting, for Messana, a city of Sicily in alliance with them,
+happened then to make a complaint concerning the tyranny of the
+Carthaginians.</p>
+<p>As the Romans coveted Sicily, so likewise did the people of
+Carthage; and both at the same time, with equal desires and equal
+forces, contemplated the attainment of the empire of the world.
+Under the pretext, therefore, of assisting their allies, but in
+reality being allured by the prey, that rude people, that people
+sprung from shepherds, and merely accustomed to the land, made it
+appear, though the strangeness of the attempt startled them (yet
+such confidence is there in true courage), that to the brave it is
+indifferent whether a battle be fought on horseback or in ships, by
+land or by sea.</p>
+<p>It was in the consulship of Appius Claudius that they first
+ventured upon that strait which has so ill a name from the strange
+things related of it, and so impetuous a current. But they were so
+far from being affrighted, that they regarded the violence of the
+rushing tide as something in their favor, and, sailing forward
+immediately and without delay, they defeated Hiero, king of
+Syracuse, with so much rapidity that he owned he was conquered
+before he saw the enemy. In the consulship of Duilius and
+Cornelius, they likewise had courage to engage at sea, and then the
+expedition used in equipping the fleet was a presage of victory;
+for within sixty days after the timber was felled, a navy of a
+hundred and sixty ships lay at anchor; so that the vessels did not
+seem to have been made by art, but the trees themselves appeared to
+have been turned into ships by the aid of the gods. The aspect of
+the battle, too, was wonderful; as the heavy and slow ships of the
+Romans closed with the swift and nimble barks of the enemy. Little
+availed their naval arts, such as breaking off the oars of a ship,
+and eluding the beaks of the enemy by turning aside; for the
+grappling-irons and other instruments, which, before the
+engagement, had been greatly derided by the enemy, were fastened
+upon their ships, and they were compelled to fight as on solid
+ground. Being victorious, therefore, at Liparæ, by sinking
+and scattering the enemy's fleet, they celebrated their first naval
+triumph. And how great was the exultation at it! Duilius, the
+commander, not content with one day's triumph, ordered, during all
+the rest of his life, when he returned from supper, lighted torches
+to be carried, and flutes to play, before him, as if he would
+triumph every day. The loss in this battle was trifling, in
+comparison with the greatness of the victory; though the other
+consul, Cornelius Asina, was cut off, being invited by the enemy to
+a pretended conference, and put to death; an instance of
+Carthaginian perfidy.</p>
+<p>Under the dictatorship of Calatinus, the Romans expelled almost
+all the garrisons of the Carthaginians from Agrigentum, Drepanum,
+Panormus, Eryx, and Lilybæum. Some alarm was experienced at
+the forest of Camarina, but we were rescued by the extraordinary
+valor of Calpurnius Flamma, a tribune of the soldiers, who, with a
+choice troop of three hundred men, seized upon an eminence occupied
+by the enemy, to our annoyance, and so kept them in play till the
+whole army escaped; thus, by eminent success, equalling the fame of
+Thermopylæ and Leonidas, though our hero was indeed more
+illustrious, inasmuch as he escaped and outlived so great an
+effort, notwithstanding he wrote nothing with his blood.</p>
+<p>In the consulship of Lucius Cornelius Scipio, when Sicily was
+become as a suburban province of the Roman people, and the war was
+spreading farther, they crossed over into Sardinia, and into
+Corsica, which lies near it. In the latter they terrified the
+natives by the destruction of the city of Olbia, in the former by
+that of Aleria; and so effectually humbled the Carthaginians, both
+by land and sea, that nothing remained to be conquered but Africa
+itself. Accordingly, under the leadership of Marcus Atilius
+Regulus, the war passed over into Africa. Nor were there wanting
+some on the occasion who mutinied at the mere name and dread of the
+Punic sea, a tribune named Mannius increasing their alarm; but the
+general, threatening him with the axe if he did not obey, produced
+courage for the voyage by the terror of death. They then hastened
+their course by the aid of winds and oars, and such was the terror
+of the Africans at the approach of the enemy that Carthage was
+almost surprised with its gates opened.</p>
+<p>The first prize taken in the war was the city of Clypea, which
+juts out from the Carthaginian shore as a fortress or watch-tower.
+Both this and more than three hundred fortresses besides were
+destroyed. Nor had the Romans to contend only with men, but with
+monsters also; for a serpent of vast size, born, as it were, to
+avenge Africa, harassed their camp on the Bagrada. But Regulus, who
+overcame all obstacles, having spread the terror of his name far
+and wide, having killed or taken prisoners a great number of the
+enemy's force, and their captains themselves, and having despatched
+his fleet, laden with much spoil and stored with materials for a
+triumph, to Rome, proceeded to besiege Carthage itself, the origin
+of the war, and took his position close to the gates of it. Here
+fortune was a little changed; but it was only that more proofs of
+Roman fortitude might be given, the greatness of which was
+generally best shown in calamities. For the enemy applying for
+foreign assistance, and Lacedaemon having sent them Xanthippus as a
+general, we were defeated by a captain so eminently skilled in
+military affairs. It was then that by an ignominious defeat, such
+as the Romans had never before experienced, their most valiant
+commander fell alive into the enemy's hands. But he was a man able
+to endure so great a calamity; as he was neither humbled by his
+imprisonment at Carthage nor by the deputation which he headed to
+Rome; for he advised what was contrary to the injunctions of the
+enemy, and recommended that no peace should be made, and no
+exchange of prisoners admitted. Even by his voluntary return to his
+enemies, and by his last sufferings, whether in prison or on the
+cross, the dignity of the man was not at all obscured. But being
+rendered, by all these occurrences, even more worthy of admiration,
+what can be said of him but that, when conquered, he was superior
+to his conquerors, and that, though Carthage had not submitted, he
+triumphed over Fortune herself?</p>
+<p>The Roman people were now much keener and more ardent to revenge
+the fate of Regulus than to obtain victory. Under the consul
+Metellus, therefore, when the Carthaginians were growing insolent,
+and when the war had returned into Sicily, they gave the enemy such
+a defeat at Panormus that they thought no more of that island. A
+proof of the greatness of this victory was the capture of about a
+hundred elephants, a vast prey, even if they had taken that number,
+not in war, but in hunting.[<a href="#note-56">56</a>] Under the
+consulship of Appius Claudius, they were overcome, not by the
+enemy, but by the gods themselves, whose auspices they had
+despised, their fleet being sunk in that very place where the
+consul had ordered the chickens to be thrown overboard, because he
+was warned by them not to fight. Under the consulship of Marcus
+Fabius Buteo, they overthrew, near Ægimurus, in the African
+sea, a fleet of the enemy which was just sailing for Italy. But,
+oh! how great materials for a triumph were then lost by a storm,
+when the Roman fleet, richly laden with spoil, and driven by
+contrary winds, covered with its wreck the coasts of Africa and the
+Syrtes, and of all the islands lying amid those seas! A great
+calamity! But not without some honor to this eminent people, from
+the circumstance that their victory was intercepted only by a
+storm, and that the matter for their triumph was lost only by a
+shipwreck. Yet, though the Punic spoils were scattered abroad, and
+thrown up by the waves on every promontory and island, the Romans
+still celebrated a triumph. In the consulship of Lutatius Catulus,
+an end was at last put to the war near the islands named
+Ægates. Nor was there any greater fight during this war; for
+the fleet of the enemy was laden with provisions, troops, towers,
+and arms; indeed, all Carthage, as it were, was in it; a state of
+things which proved its destruction, as the Roman fleet, on the
+contrary, being active, light, free from encumbrance, and in some
+degree resembling a land-camp, was wheeled about by its oars like
+cavalry in a battle by their reins; and the beaks of the vessels,
+directed now against one part of the enemy and now against another,
+presented the appearance of living creatures. In a very short time,
+accordingly, the ships of the enemy were shattered to pieces, and
+filled the whole sea between Sicily and Sardinia with their wrecks.
+So great, indeed, was the victory that there was no thought of
+demolishing the enemy's city; since it seemed superfluous to pour
+their fury on towers and walls, when Carthage had already been
+destroyed at sea.</p>
+<p><a name="note-56"><!-- Note Anchor 56 --></a>[Footnote 56: "A
+vast prey—not in war, but in hunting." The sense is, it would
+have been a considerable capture if he had taken these hundred
+elephants, not in battle, but in hunting, in which more are often
+taken.]</p>
+<p class="center">THE SECOND PUNIC WAR</p>
+<p>After the first Carthaginian war there was scarcely a rest of
+four years, when there was another war, inferior, indeed, in length
+of time, for it occupied but eighteen years, but so much more
+terrible, from the direfulness of its havoc, that if anyone
+compares the losses on both sides, the people that conquered was
+more like one defeated. What provoked this noble people was that
+the command of the sea was forced from them, that their islands
+were taken, and that they were obliged to pay tribute which they
+had before been accustomed to impose. Hannibal, when but a boy,
+swore to his father, before an altar, to take revenge on the
+Romans; nor was he backward to execute his oath. Saguntum,
+accordingly, was made the occasion of a war; an old and wealthy
+city of Spain, and a great but sad example of fidelity to the
+Romans. This city, though granted, by the common treaty, the
+special privilege of enjoying its liberty, Hannibal, seeking
+pretences for new disturbances, destroyed with his own hands and
+those of its inhabitants, in order that, by an infraction of the
+compact, he might open a passage for himself into Italy.</p>
+<p>Among the Romans there is the highest regard to treaties, and
+consequently, on hearing of the siege of an allied city, and
+remembering, too, the compact made with the Carthaginians, they did
+not at once have recourse to arms, but chose rather to expostulate
+on legal grounds. In the mean time the Saguntines, exhausted with
+famine, the assaults of machines, and the sword, and their fidelity
+being at last carried to desperation, raised a vast pile in the
+market-place, on which they destroyed, with fire and sword,
+themselves, their wives and children, and all that they possessed.
+Hannibal, the cause of this great destruction, was required to be
+given up. The Carthaginians hesitating to comply, Fabius, who was
+at the head of the embassy, exclaimed: "What is the meaning of this
+delay? In the fold of this garment I carry war and peace; which of
+the two do you choose?" As they cried out "War," "Take war, then,"
+he rejoined, and, shaking out the fore-part of his toga in the
+middle of the senate house, as if he really carried war in its
+folds, he spread it abroad, not without awe on the part of the
+spectators.</p>
+<p>The sequel of the war was in conformity with its commencement;
+for, as if the last imprecations of the Saguntines, at their public
+self-immolation and burning of the city, had required such
+obsequies to be performed to them, atonement was made to their
+<i>manes</i> by the devastation of Italy, the reduction of Africa,
+and the destruction of the leaders and kings who engaged in that
+contest. When once, therefore, that sad and dismal force and storm
+of the Punic War had arisen in Spain, and had forged, in the fire
+of Saguntum, the thunderbolt long before intended for the Romans,
+it immediately burst, as if hurried along by resistless violence,
+through the middle of the Alps, and descended, from those snows of
+incredible altitude, on the plains of Italy, as if it had been
+hurled from the skies. The violence of its first assault burst,
+with a mighty sound, between the Po and the Ticinus. There the army
+under Scipio was routed; and the general himself, being wounded,
+would have fallen into the hands of the enemy, had not his son,
+then quite a boy, covered his father with his shield, and rescued
+him from death. This was the Scipio who grew up for the conquest of
+Africa, and who was to receive a name from its ill-fortune.</p>
+<p>To Ticinus succeeded Trebia, where, in the consulship of
+Sempronius, the second outburst of the Punic War was spent. On that
+occasion, the crafty enemy, having chosen a cold and snowy day, and
+having first warmed themselves at their fires, and anointed their
+bodies with oil, conquered us, though they were men that came from
+the south and a warm sun, by the aid (strange to say!) of our own
+winter.</p>
+<p>The third thunderbolt of Hannibal fell at the Trasimene lake,
+when Flaminius was commander. There also was employed a new
+stratagem of Carthaginian subtlety; for a body of cavalry, being
+concealed by a mist rising from the lake, and by the osiers growing
+in the fens, fell upon the rear of the Romans as they were
+fighting. Nor can we complain of the gods; for swarms of bees
+settling upon the standards, the reluctance of the eagles to move
+forward, and a great earthquake that happened at the commencement
+of the battle—unless, indeed, it was the tramping of horse
+and foot, and the violent concussion of arms, that produced this
+trembling of the ground—had forewarned the rash leader of
+approaching defeat.</p>
+<p>The fourth and almost mortal wound of the Roman Empire was at
+Cannæ, an obscure village of Apulia; which, however, became
+famous by the greatness of the defeat, its celebrity being acquired
+by the slaughter of forty thousand men. Here the general, the
+ground, the face of heaven, the day, indeed, all nature conspired
+together for the destruction of the unfortunate army. For Hannibal,
+the most artful of generals, not content with sending pretended
+deserters among the Romans, who fell upon their rear as they were
+fighting, but having also noted the nature of the ground in those
+open plains, where the heat of the sun is extremely violent, the
+dust very great, and the wind blows constantly, and as it were
+statedly, from the east, drew up his army in such a position that,
+while the Romans were exposed to all these inconveniences, he
+himself, having heaven, as it were, on his side, fought with wind,
+dust, and sun in his favor. Two vast armies, in consequence, were
+slaughtered till the enemy were satiated, and till Hannibal said to
+his soldiers, "Put up your swords." Of the two commanders, one
+escaped, the other was slain; which of them showed the greater
+spirit is doubtful. Paulus was ashamed to survive; Varrodid not
+despair. Of the greatness of the slaughter the following proofs may
+be noticed: that the Aufidus was for some time red with blood; that
+a bridge was made of dead bodies, by order of Hannibal, over the
+torrent of Vergellus, and that two <i>modii</i> of rings were sent
+to Carthage, and the equestrian dignity estimated by measure.</p>
+<p>It was afterward not doubted but that Rome might have seen its
+last day, and that Hannibal, within five days, might have feasted
+in the Capitol, if—as they say that Adherbal, the
+Carthaginian, the son of Bomilcar, observed—"he had known as
+well how to use his victory as how to gain it." But at that crisis,
+as is generally said, either the fate of the city that was to be
+empress of the world, or his own want of judgment, and the
+influence of deities unfavorable to Carthage, carried him in a
+different direction. When he might have taken advantage of his
+victory, he chose rather to seek enjoyment from it, and, leaving
+Rome, to march into Campania and to Tarentum, where both he and his
+army soon lost their vigor, so that it was justly remarked that
+"Capua proved a Cannæ to Hannibal"; since the sunshine of
+Campania and the warm springs of Baiæ subdued—who could
+have believed it?—him who had been unconquered by the Alps
+and unshaken in the field. In the mean time the Romans began to
+recover and to rise, as it were, from the dead. They had no arms,
+but they took them down from the temples; men were wanting, but
+slaves were freed to take the oath of service; the treasury was
+exhausted, but the senate willingly offered their wealth for the
+public service, leaving themselves no gold but what was contained
+in their children's <i>bullæ</i>[<a href="#note-57">57</a>]
+and in their own belts and rings. The knights followed their
+example, and the common people that of the knights; so that when
+the wealth of private persons was brought to the public
+treasury—in the consulship of Lævinus and
+Marcellus—the registers scarcely sufficed to contain the
+account of it, or the hands of the clerks to record it.</p>
+<p><a name="note-57"><!-- Note Anchor 57 --></a>[Footnote 57: A
+sort of ornament suspended from the necks of children, which, among
+the wealthy, was made of gold. It was in the shape of a bubble on
+water, or, as Pliny says, of a heart.]</p>
+<p>But how can I sufficiently praise the wisdom of the centuries in
+the choice of magistrates, when the younger sought advice from the
+elder as to what consuls should be created? They saw that against
+an enemy so often victorious, and so full of subtlety, it was
+necessary to contend, not only with courage, but with his own
+wiles. The first hope of the empire now recovering, and, if I may
+use the expression, coming to life again, was Fabius, who found a
+new mode of conquering Hannibal, which was, <i>not to fight</i>.
+Hence he received that new name, so salutary to the commonwealth,
+of <i>Cunctator</i>, or Delayer. Hence too it happened that he was
+called by the people <i>the shield of the empire</i>. Through the
+whole of Samnium, and through the Falerian and Gauran forests, he
+so harassed Hannibal that he who could not be reduced by valor was
+weakened by delay. The Romans then ventured, under the command of
+Claudius Marcellus, to engage him; they came to close quarters with
+him, drove him out of his dear Campania, and forced him to raise
+the siege of Nola. They ventured likewise, under the leadership of
+Sempronius Gracchus, to pursue him through Lucania, and to press
+hard upon his rear as he retired; though they then fought him (sad
+dishonor!) with a body of slaves, for to this extremity had so many
+disasters reduced them, but they were rewarded with liberty, and
+from slaves they made them Romans.</p>
+<p>O amazing confidence in the midst of so much adversity! O
+extraordinary courage and spirit of the Roman people in such
+oppressive and distressing circumstances! At a time when they were
+uncertain of preserving their own Italy, they yet ventured to look
+to other countries; and when the enemy were at their throat, flying
+through Campania and Apulia, and making an Africa in the middle of
+Italy, they at the same time both withstood that enemy and
+dispersed their arms over the earth into Sicily, Sardinia, and
+Spain.</p>
+<p>Sicily was assigned to Marcellus, and did not long resist his
+efforts; for the whole island was conquered in the conquest of one
+city. Syracuse, its great and, till that period, unconquered
+capital, though defended by the genius of Archimedes, was at last
+obliged to yield. Its triple wall and three citadels, its marble
+harbor and the celebrated fountain of Arethusa, were no defence to
+it, except so far as to procure consideration for its beauty when
+it was conquered.</p>
+<p>Sardinia Gracchus reduced; the savageness of the inhabitants,
+and the vastness of its Mad Mountains—for so they are
+called—availed it nothing. Great severity was exercised upon
+its cities, and upon Caralis, the city of its cities, that a
+nation, obstinate and regardless of death, might at least be
+humbled by concern for the soil of its country.</p>
+<p>Into Spain were sent the two Scipios, Cnaeus, and Publius, who
+wrested almost the whole of it from the Carthaginians; but, being
+surprised by the artifices of Punic subtlety, they again lost it,
+even after they had slaughtered the enemy's forces in great
+battles. The wiles of the Carthaginians cut off one of them by the
+sword as he was pitching his camp, and the other by surrounding him
+with lighted fagots after he had made his escape into a tower. But
+the other Scipio, to whom the Fates had decreed so great a name
+from Africa, being sent with an army to revenge the death of his
+father and uncle, recovered all that warlike country of Spain, so
+famous for its men and arms, that seminary of the enemy's force,
+that instructress of Hannibal, from the Pyrenean
+mountains—the account is scarcely credible—to the
+Pillars of Hercules and the ocean, whether with greater speed or
+good fortune is difficult to decide; how great was his speed, four
+years bear witness; how remarkable his good fortune, even one city
+proves, for it was taken on the same day in which siege was laid to
+it, and it was an omen of the conquest of Africa that Carthage in
+Spain was so easily reduced. It is certain, however, that what most
+contributed to make the province submit was the eminent virtue of
+the general, who restored to the barbarians certain captive youths
+and maidens of extraordinary beauty, not allowing them even to be
+brought into his sight, that he might not seem, even by a single
+glance, to have detracted from their virgin purity.</p>
+<p>These actions the Romans performed in different parts of the
+world, yet were they unable, notwithstanding, to remove Hannibal,
+who was lodged in the heart of Italy. Most of the towns had
+revolted to the enemy, whose vigorous commander used even the
+strength of Italy against the Romans. However, we had now forced
+him out of many towns and districts. Tarentum had returned to our
+side; and Capua, the seat, home, and second country of Hannibal,
+was again in our hands; the loss of which caused the Punic leader
+so much affliction that he then directed all his force against
+Rome.</p>
+<p>O people worthy of the empire of the world, worthy of the favor
+and admiration of all, not only men, but gods! Though they were
+brought into the greatest alarm, they desisted not from their
+original design; though they were concerned for their own city,
+they did not abandon their attempts on Capua; but, part of their
+army being left there with the consul Appius, and part having
+followed Flaccus to Rome, they fought both at home and abroad at
+the same time. Why then should we wonder that the gods themselves,
+the gods, I say—nor shall I be ashamed[<a href="#note-58">58</a>] to admit it—again opposed Hannibal as he
+was preparing to march forward when at three miles' distance from
+Rome. For, at every movement of his force, so copious a flood of
+rain descended, and such a violent storm of wind arose, that it was
+evident the enemy was repulsed by divine influence, and the tempest
+proceeded, not from heaven, but from the walls of the city and the
+Capitol. He therefore fled and departed, and withdrew to the
+farthest corner of Italy, leaving the city in a manner adored. It
+is but a small matter to mention, yet sufficiently indicative of
+the magnanimity of the Roman people, that during those very days in
+which the city was besieged, the ground which Hannibal occupied
+with his camp was offered for sale at Rome, and, being put up to
+auction, actually found a purchaser. Hannibal, on the other side,
+wished to imitate such confidence, and put up for sale the bankers'
+houses in the city; but no buyer was found; so that it was evident
+that the Fates had their presages.</p>
+<p><a name="note-58"><!-- Note Anchor 58 --></a>[Footnote 58: Why
+should he be ashamed to admit that Rome was saved by the aid of the
+gods? To receive assistance from the gods was a proof of merit. The
+gods help those who help themselves, says the proverb. When he says
+that the gods "<i>again</i> opposed Hannibal," he seems to refer to
+what he said above in speaking of the battle of Cannae, that the
+deities, averse to Carthage, prevented Hannibal from marching at
+that time to Rome.]</p>
+<p>But as yet nothing had been effectually accomplished by so much
+valor, or even through such eminent favor from the gods; for
+Hasdrubal, the brother of Hannibal, was approaching with a new
+army, new strength, and every fresh requisite for war. There had
+doubtless been an end of Rome, if that general had united himself
+with his brother; but Claudius Nero, in conjunction with Livius
+Salinator, overthrew him as he was pitching his camp. Nero was at
+that time keeping Hannibal at bay in the farthest corner of Italy;
+while Livius had marched to the very opposite quarter, that is, to
+the very entrance and confines of Italy; and of the ability and
+expedition with which the consuls joined their forces—though
+so vast a space, that is, the whole of Italy where it is longest,
+lay between them—and defeated the enemy with their combined
+strength, when they expected no attack, and without the knowledge
+of Hannibal, it is difficult to give a notion. When Hannibal,
+however, had knowledge of the matter, and saw his brother's head
+thrown down before his camp, he exclaimed, "I perceive the evil
+destiny of Carthage." This was his first confession of that kind,
+not without a sure presage of his approaching fate; and it was now
+certain, even from his own acknowledgment, that Hannibal might be
+conquered. But the Roman people, full of confidence from so many
+successes, thought it would be a noble enterprise to subdue such a
+desperate enemy in his own Africa. Directing their whole force,
+therefore, under the leadership of Scipio, upon Africa itself, they
+began to imitate Hannibal, and to avenge upon Africa the sufferings
+of their own Italy. What forces of Hasdrubal (good gods!), what
+armies of Syphax, did that commander put to flight! How great were
+the camps of both that he destroyed in one night by casting
+firebrands into them! At last, not at three miles distance, but by
+a close siege, he shook the very gates of Carthage itself. And thus
+he succeeded in drawing off Hannibal when he was still clinging to
+and brooding over Italy. There was no more remarkable day, during
+the whole course of the Roman Empire, than that on which those two
+generals, the greatest of all that ever lived, whether before or
+after them, the one the conqueror of Italy, and the other of Spain,
+drew up their forces for a close engagement. But previously a
+conference was held between them concerning conditions of peace.
+They stood motionless awhile in admiration of each other. When they
+could not agree on a peace, they gave the signal for battle. It is
+certain, from the confession of both, that no troops could have
+been better drawn up, and no fight more obstinately maintained.
+This Hannibal acknowledged concerning the army of Scipio, and
+Scipio concerning that of Hannibal. But Hannibal was forced to
+yield, and Africa became the prize of the victory; and the whole
+earth soon followed the fate of Africa.</p>
+<p class="center">THE THIRD PUNIC WAR</p>
+<p>The third war with Africa was both short in its
+duration—for it was finished in four years—and,
+compared with those that preceded it, of much less difficulty; as
+we had to fight not so much against troops in the field as against
+the city itself; but it was far the greatest of the three in its
+consequences, for in it Carthage was at last destroyed. And if
+anyone contemplates the events of the three periods, he will
+understand that the war was begun in the first, greatly advanced in
+the second, and entirely finished in the third.</p>
+<p>The cause of this war was that Carthage, in violation of an
+article in the treaty, had once fitted out a fleet and army against
+the Numidians, and had frequently threatened the frontiers of
+Masinissa. But the Romans were partial to this good king, who was
+also their ally.</p>
+<p>When the war had been determined upon, they had to consider
+about the end of it. Cato, even when his opinion was asked on any
+other subject, pronounced, with implacable enmity, that Carthage
+should be destroyed. Scipio Nasica gave his voice for its
+preservation, lest, if the fear of the rival city were removed, the
+exultation of Rome should grow extravagant. The senate decided on a
+middle course, resolving that the city should only be removed from
+its place; for nothing appeared to them more glorious than that
+there should be a Carthage which should not be feared. In the
+consulship of Manlius and Censorinus, therefore, the Roman people
+having attacked Carthage, but giving them some hopes of peace,
+burned their fleet, which they voluntarily delivered up, in sight
+of the city. Having next summoned the chief men, they commanded
+them to quit the place if they wished to preserve their lives. This
+requisition, from its cruelty, so incensed them that they chose
+rather to submit to the utmost extremities. They accordingly
+bewailed their necessities publicly, and shouted with one voice
+<i>to arms</i>; and a resolution was made to resist the enemy by
+every means in their power; not because any hope of success was
+left, but because they had rather their birthplace should be
+destroyed by the hands of the enemy than by their own. With what
+spirit they resumed the war may be understood from the facts that
+they pulled down their roofs and houses for the equipment of a new
+fleet; that gold and silver, instead of brass and iron, were melted
+in their forges for the construction of arms; and that the women
+parted with their hair to make cordage for the engines of war.</p>
+<p>Under the command of the consul Mancinus, the siege was warmly
+conducted both by land and sea. The harbor was dismantled of its
+works, and a first, second, and even third wall taken, while
+nevertheless the Byrsa, which was the name of the citadel, held out
+like another city. But though the destruction of the place was thus
+very far advanced, it was the name of the Scipios only that seemed
+fatal to Africa. The Government, accordingly, applying to another
+Scipio, desired from him a termination of the war. This Scipio, the
+son of Paulus Macedonicus, the son of the great Africanus had
+adopted as an honor to his family, and, as it appeared, with this
+destiny, that the grandson should overthrow the city which the
+grandfather had shaken. But as the bites of dying beasts are wont
+to be most fatal, so there was more trouble with Carthage
+half-ruined than when it was in its full strength. The Romans
+having shut the enemy up in their single fortress, had also
+blockaded the harbor; but upon this they dug another harbor on the
+other side of the city, not with a design to escape, but because no
+one supposed that they could even force an outlet there. Here a new
+fleet, as if just born, started forth; and, in the mean while,
+sometimes by day and sometimes by night, some new mole, some new
+machine, some new band of desperate men perpetually started up,
+like a sudden flame from a fire sunk in ashes. At last, their
+affairs becoming desperate, forty thousand men, and (what is hardly
+credible) with Hasdrubal at their head, surrendered themselves. How
+much more nobly did a woman behave, the wife of the general, who,
+taking hold of her two children, threw herself from the top of her
+house into the midst of the flames, imitating the queen that built
+Carthage. How great a city was then destroyed is shown, to say
+nothing of other things, by the duration of the fire, for the
+flames could scarcely be extinguished at the end of seventeen days;
+flames which the enemy themselves had raised in their houses and
+temples, that, since the city could not be rescued from the Romans,
+all matter for triumph might at least be burned.</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="RULE4_14"></a>BATTLE OF THE METAURUS</h2>
+<p class="center">B.C. 207</p>
+<p class="center">SIR EDWARD SHEPHERD CREASY</p>
+<p class="intros">During the closing years of the Second Punic War
+the resources of the Romans were drained to such an extent as to
+bring great disheartenment to their rulers and generals. Under the
+stress of financial difficulties, the cost of living greatly
+increased, and the State was compelled to resort to loans of
+various kinds, and to levy upon citizens of means for the pay of
+seamen. This scheme for raising Roman "ship money" was one of the
+most significant indications of the extreme weight resting upon the
+republic in the prosecution of this arduous war. A war with Sicily
+was fortunately terminated, releasing some additional force for
+employment against the Carthaginians; but for some time little
+headway was made by the Roman commanders, and when, in B.C. 207,
+the people were called upon to elect consuls, their affairs were
+still in a condition which caused serious anxiety. The consuls
+chosen in that year were Marcus Livius and Caius Claudius Nero, and
+without delay they went to take command in southern Italy, which
+the Carthaginians under Hannibal, though not in much strength, had
+invaded.</p>
+<p class="intros">But when, later in the season, Hasdrubal crossed
+the Alps from the north to join his brother, Hannibal, the aspect
+of the war became still more grave in the eyes of the Romans.
+Hasdrubal solicited the support of the Gauls, but to little
+purpose. Meanwhile Hannibal made skilful use of his small forces in
+eluding the consul Nero; but the capture by the Romans of
+despatches from Hasdrubal disclosed his plans, and Nero at once
+formed his own for intercepting him. The result was that Nero and
+Livius joined their forces in Hasdrubal's front, and to the
+Carthaginian they offered immediate battle. Hasdrubal attempted a
+retreat, but was compelled to give battle on the banks of the
+Metaurus. Of this, one of the "decisive battles of the world,"
+Creasy has left an authoritative and graphic account, which here
+follows. The part of the consul Nero in the campaign is thus
+remarked upon by Lord Byron:</p>
+<p class="intros">"The consul Nero, who made the unequalled march
+which deceived Hannibal and deceived Hasdrubal, thereby
+accomplished an achievement almost unrivalled in military annals.
+The first intelligence of his return, to Hannibal, was the sight of
+Hasdrubal's head thrown into his camp. When Hannibal saw this, he
+exclaimed, with a sigh, that 'Rome would now be the mistress of the
+world.' To this victory of Nero's it might be owing that his
+imperial namesake reigned at all. But the infamy of the one has
+eclipsed the glory of the other. When the name of Nero is heard,
+who thinks of the consul? But such are human things."</p>
+<p>About midway between Rimini and Ancona a little river falls into
+the Adriatic, after traversing one of those districts of Italy in
+which a vain attempt has lately been made to revive, after long
+centuries of servitude and shame, the spirit of Italian nationality
+and the energy of free institutions. That stream is still called
+the Metauro, and wakens by its name the recollections of the
+resolute daring of ancient Rome, and of the slaughter that stained
+its current two thousand and sixty-three years ago, when the
+combined consular armies of Livius and Nero encountered and crushed
+near its banks the varied hosts which Hannibal's brother was
+leading from the Pyrenees, the Rhone, the Alps, and the Po, to aid
+the great Carthaginian in his stern struggle to annihilate the
+growing might of the Roman republic, and make the Punic power
+supreme over all the nations of the world.</p>
+<p>The Roman historian,[<a href="#note-59">59</a>] who termed that
+struggle the most memorable of all wars that ever were carried on,
+wrote in no spirit of exaggeration; for it is not in ancient, but
+in modern history that parallels for its incidents and its heroes
+are to be found. The similitude between the contest which Rome
+maintained against Hannibal, and that which England was for many
+years engaged in against Napoleon, has not passed unobserved by
+recent historians. "Twice," says Arnold, "has there been witnessed
+the struggle of the highest individual genius against the resources
+and institutions of a great nation, and in both cases the nation
+has been victorious. For seventeen years Hannibal strove against
+Rome; for sixteen years Napoleon Bonaparte strove against England:
+the efforts of the first ended in Zama; those of the second in
+Waterloo."</p>
+<p><a name="note-59"><!-- Note Anchor 59 --></a>[Footnote 59:
+Livy.]</p>
+<p>One point, however, of the similitude between the two wars has
+scarcely been adequately dwelt on; that is, the remarkable parallel
+between the Roman general who finally defeated the great
+Carthaginian, and the English general who gave the last deadly
+overthrow to the French Emperor. Scipio and Wellington both held
+for many years commands of high importance, but distant from the
+main theatres of warfare. The same country was the scene of the
+principal military career of each. It was in Spain that Scipio,
+like Wellington, successively encountered and overthrew nearly all
+the subordinate generals of the enemy before being opposed to the
+chief champion and conqueror himself. Both Scipio and Wellington
+restored their countrymen's confidence in arms when shaken by a
+series of reverses, and each of them closed a long and perilous war
+by a complete and overwhelming defeat of the chosen leader and the
+chosen veterans of the foe.</p>
+<p>Nor is the parallel between them limited to their military
+characters and exploits. Scipio, like Wellington, became an
+important leader of the aristocratic party among his countrymen,
+and was exposed to the unmeasured invectives of the violent section
+of his political antagonists. When, early in the last reign, an
+infuriated mob assaulted the Duke of Wellington in the streets of
+the English capital on the anniversary of Waterloo, England was
+even more disgraced by that outrage than Rome was by the factious
+accusations which demagogues brought against Scipio, but which he
+proudly repelled on the day of trial by reminding the assembled
+people that it was the anniversary of the battle of Zama. Happily,
+a wiser and a better spirit has now for years pervaded all classes
+of our community, and we shall be spared the ignominy of having
+worked out to the end the parallel of national ingratitude. Scipio
+died a voluntary exile from the malevolent turbulence of Rome.
+Englishmen of all ranks and politics have now long united in
+affectionate admiration of our modern Scipio; and even those who
+have most widely differed from the duke on legislative or
+administrative questions, forget what they deem the political
+errors of that time-honored head, while they gratefully call to
+mind the laurels that have wreathed it.</p>
+<p>Scipio at Zama trampled in the dust the power of Carthage, but
+that power had been already irreparably shattered in another field,
+where neither Scipio nor Hannibal commanded. When the Metaurus
+witnessed the defeat and death of Hasdrubal, it witnessed the ruin
+of the scheme by which alone Carthage could hope to organize
+decisive success—the scheme of enveloping Rome at once from
+the north and the south of Italy by two chosen armies, led by two
+sons of Hamilcar. That battle was the determining crisis of the
+contest, not merely between Rome and Carthage, but between the two
+great families of the world, which then made Italy the arena of
+their oft-renewed contest for pre&euml;minence.</p>
+<p>The French historian, Michelet, whose <i>Histoire Romaine</i>
+would have been invaluable if the general industry and accuracy of
+the writer had in any degree equalled his originality and
+brilliancy, eloquently remarks: "It is not without reason that so
+universal and vivid a remembrance of the Punic wars has dwelt in
+the memories of men. They formed no mere struggle to determine the
+lot of two cities or two empires; but it was a strife on the event
+of which depended the fate of two races of mankind, whether the
+dominion of the world should belong to the Indo-Germanic or to the
+Semitic family of nations. Bear in mind that the first of these
+comprises, besides the Indians and the Persians, the Greeks, the
+Romans, and the Germans. In the other are ranked the Jews and the
+Arabs, the Phoenicians and the Carthaginians. On the one side is
+the genius of heroism, of art, and legislation; on the other is the
+spirit of industry, of commerce, of navigation.</p>
+<p>"The two opposite races have everywhere come into contact,
+everywhere into hostility. In the primitive history of Persia and
+Chaldaea, the heroes are perpetually engaged in combat with their
+industrious and perfidious neighbors. The struggle is renewed
+between the Phoenicians and the Greeks on every coast of the
+Mediterranean. The Greek supplants the Phoenician in all his
+factories, all his colonies in the East: soon will the Roman come,
+and do likewise in the West. Alexander did far more against Tyre
+than Shalmaneser or Nebuchadnezzar had done. Not content with
+crushing her, he took care that she never should revive; for he
+founded Alexandria as her substitute, and changed forever the track
+of the commerce of the world. There remained Carthage—the
+great Carthage, and her mighty empire—mighty in a far
+different degree than Phoenicia's had been. Rome annihilated it.
+Then occurred that which has no parallel in history—an entire
+civilization perished at one blow—banished, like a falling
+star. The <i>Periplus</i> of Hanno, a few coins, a score of lines
+in Plautus, and, lo, all that remains of the Carthaginian
+world!</p>
+<p>"Many generations must needs pass away before the struggle
+between the two races could be renewed; and the Arabs, that
+formidable rear-guard of the Semitic world, dashed forth from their
+deserts. The conflict between the two races then became the
+conflict of two religions. Fortunate was it that those daring
+Saracenic cavaliers encountered in the East the impregnable walls
+of Constantinople, in the West the chivalrous valor of Charles
+Martel and the sword of the Cid. The crusades were the natural
+reprisals for the Arab invasions, and form the last epoch of that
+great struggle between the two principal families of the human
+race."</p>
+<p>It is difficult, amid the glimmering light supplied by the
+allusions of the classical writers, to gain a full idea of the
+character and institutions of Rome's great rival. But we can
+perceive how inferior Carthage was to her competitor in military
+resources, and how far less fitted than Rome she was to become the
+founder of centralized and centralizing dominion that should endure
+for centuries, and fuse into imperial unity the narrow
+nationalities of the ancient races that dwelt around and near the
+shores of the Mediterranean Sea?</p>
+<p>Carthage was originally neither the most ancient nor the most
+powerful of the numerous colonies which the Phoenicians planted on
+the coast of Northern Africa. But her advantageous position, the
+excellence of her constitution—of which, though ill-informed
+as to its details, we know that it commanded the admiration of
+Aristotle—and the commercial and political energy of her
+citizens gave her the ascendency over Hippo, Utica, Leptis, and her
+other sister Phoenician cities in those regions; and she finally
+reduced them to a condition of dependency similar to that which the
+subject allies of Athens occupied relatively to that once imperial
+city. When Tyre and Sidon and the other cities of Phoenicia itself
+sank from independent republics into mere vassal states of the
+great Asiatic monarchies, and obeyed by turns a Babylonian, a
+Persian, and a Macedonian master, their power and their traffic
+rapidly declined, and Carthage succeeded to the important maritime
+and commercial character which they had previously maintained.</p>
+<p>The Carthaginians did not seek to compete with the Greeks on the
+northeastern shores of the Mediterranean, or in the three inland
+seas which are connected with it; but they maintained an active
+intercourse with the Phoenicians, and through them with Lower and
+Central Asia; and they, and they alone, after the decline and fall
+of Tyre, navigated the waters of the Atlantic. They had the
+monopoly of all the commerce of the world that was carried on
+beyond the Straits of Gibraltar. We have yet extant (in a Greek
+translation) the narrative of the voyage of Hanno, one of their
+admirals, along the western coast of Africa as far as Sierra Leone;
+and in the Latin poem of Festus Avienus frequent references are
+made to the records of the voyages of another celebrated
+Carthaginian admiral, Himilco, who had explored the northwestern
+coast of Europe. Our own islands are mentioned by Himilco as the
+lands of the Hiberni and Albioni. It is indeed certain that the
+Carthaginians frequented the Cornish coast—as the Phoenicians
+had done before them—for the purpose of procuring tin; and
+there is every reason to believe that they sailed as far as the
+coasts of the Baltic for amber. When it is remembered that the
+mariner's compass was unknown in those ages, the boldness and skill
+of the seamen of Carthage, and the enterprise of her merchants, may
+be paralleled with any achievements that the history of modern
+navigation and commerce can produce.</p>
+<p>In their Atlantic voyages along the African shores the
+Carthaginians followed the double object of traffic and
+colonization. The numerous settlements that were planted by them
+along the coast from Morocco to Senegal provided for the needy
+members of the constantly increasing population of a great
+commercial capital, and also strengthened the influence which
+Carthage exercised among the tribes of the African coast. Besides
+her fleets, her caravans gave her a large and lucrative trade with
+the native Africans; nor must we limit our belief of the extent of
+the Carthaginian trade with the tribes of Central and Western
+Africa by the narrowness of the commercial intercourse which
+civilized nations of modern times have been able to create in those
+regions.</p>
+<p>Although essentially a mercantile and seafaring people, the
+Carthaginians by no means neglected agriculture. On the contrary,
+the whole of their territory was cultivated like a garden. The
+fertility of the soil repaid the skill and toil bestowed on it; and
+every invader, from Agathocles to Scipio Æmilianus, was
+struck with admiration at the rich pasture lands carefully
+irrigated, the abundant harvests, the luxuriant vineyards, the
+plantations of fig and olive trees, the thriving villages, the
+populous towns, and the splendid villas of the wealthy
+Carthaginians, through which his march lay, as long as he was on
+Carthaginian ground.</p>
+<p>Although the Carthaginians abandoned the Ægean and the
+Pontus to the Greek, they were by no means disposed to relinquish
+to those rivals the commerce and the dominion of the coasts of the
+Mediterranean westward of Italy. For centuries the Carthaginians
+strove to make themselves masters of the islands that lie between
+Italy and Spain. They acquired the Balearic Islands, where the
+principal harbor, Port Mahon, still bears the name of a
+Carthaginian admiral. They succeeded in reducing the greater part
+of Sardinia; but Sicily could never be brought into their power.
+They repeatedly invaded that island, and nearly overran it; but the
+resistance which was opposed to them by the Syracusans under Gelon,
+Dionysius, Timoleon, and Agathocles preserved the island from
+becoming Punic, though many of its cities remained under the
+Carthaginian rule until Rome finally settled the question to whom
+Sicily was to belong by conquering it for herself.</p>
+<p>With so many elements of success, with almost unbounded wealth,
+with commercial and maritime activity, with a fertile territory,
+with a capital city of almost impregnable strength, with a
+constitution that insured for centuries the blessing of social
+order, with an aristocracy singularly fertile in men of the highest
+genius, Carthage yet failed signally and calamitously in her
+contest for power with Rome. One of the immediate causes of this
+may seem to have been the want of firmness among her citizens,
+which made them terminate the First Punic War by begging peace,
+sooner than endure any longer the hardships and burdens caused by a
+state of warfare, although their antagonists had suffered far more
+severely than themselves. Another cause was the spirit of faction
+among their leading men, which prevented Hannibal in the second war
+from being properly re&euml;nforced and supported. But there were
+also more general causes why Carthage proved inferior to Rome.
+These were her position relatively to the mass of the inhabitants
+of the country which she ruled, and her habit of trusting to
+mercenary armies in her wars.</p>
+<p>Our clearest information as to the different races of men in and
+about Carthage is derived from Diodorus Siculus. That historian
+enumerates four different races: first, he mentions the Phoenicians
+who dwelt in Carthage; next, he speaks of the Liby-Phoenicians:
+these, he tells us, dwelt in many of the maritime cities, and were
+connected by intermarriage with the Phoenicians, which was the
+cause of their compound name; thirdly, he mentions the Libyans, the
+bulk and the most ancient part of the population, hating the
+Carthaginians intensely on account of the oppressiveness of their
+domination; lastly, he names the Numidians, the nomad tribes of the
+frontier.</p>
+<p>It is evident, from this description, that the native Libyans
+were a subject class, without franchise or political rights; and,
+accordingly, we find no instance specified in history of a Libyan
+holding political office or military command. The half-castes, the
+Liby-Phoenicians, seem to have been sometimes sent out as
+colonists; but it may be inferred, from what Diodorus says of their
+residence, that they had not the right of the citizenship of
+Carthage; and only a single solitary case occurs of one of this
+race being intrusted with authority, and that, too, not emanating
+from the home government. This is the instance of the officer sent
+by Hannibal to Sicily after the fall of Syracuse, whom Polybius
+calls Myttinus the Libyan, but whom, from the fuller account in
+Livy, we find to have been a Liby-Phoenician; and it is expressly
+mentioned what indignation was felt by the Carthaginian commanders
+in the island that this half-caste should control their
+operations.</p>
+<p>With respect to the composition of their armies, it is
+observable that, though thirsting for extended empire, and though
+some of her leading men became generals of the highest order, the
+Carthaginians, as a people, were anything but personally warlike.
+As long as they could hire mercenaries to fight for them, they had
+little appetite for the irksome training and the loss of valuable
+time which military service would have entailed on themselves.</p>
+<p>As Michelet remarks: "The life of an industrious merchant, of a
+Carthaginian, was too precious to be risked, as long as it was
+possible to substitute advantageously for it that of a barbarian
+from Spain or Gaul. Carthage knew, and could tell to a drachma,
+what the life of a man of each nation came to. A Greek was worth
+more than a Campanian, a Campanian worth more than a Gaul or a
+Spaniard. When once this tariff of blood was correctly made out,
+Carthage began a war as a mercantile speculation. She tried to make
+conquests in the hope of getting new mines to work or to open fresh
+markets for her exports. In one venture she could afford to spend
+fifty thousand mercenaries, in another rather more. If the returns
+were good, there was no regret felt for the capital that had been
+sunk in the investment; more money got more men, and all went on
+well."</p>
+<p>Armies composed of foreign mercenaries have in all ages been as
+formidable to their employers as to the enemy against whom they
+were directed. We know of one occasion—between the First and
+Second Punic wars—when Carthage was brought to the very brink
+of destruction by a revolt of her foreign troops. Other mutinies of
+the same kind must from time to time have occurred. Probably one of
+these was the cause of the comparative weakness of Carthage at the
+time of the Athenian expedition against Syracuse, so different from
+the energy with which she attacked Gelon half a century earlier and
+Dionysius half a century later. And even when we consider her
+armies with reference only to their efficiency in warfare, we
+perceive at once the inferiority of such bands of
+<i>condottieri</i>, brought together without any common bond of
+origin, tactics, or cause, to the legions of Rome, which, at the
+time of the Punic wars, were raised from the very flower of a hardy
+agricultural population, trained in the strictest discipline,
+habituated to victory, and animated by the most resolute
+patriotism.</p>
+<p>And this shows, also, the transcendency of the genius of
+Hannibal, which could form such discordant materials into a compact
+organized force, and inspire them with the spirit of patient
+discipline and loyalty to their chief, so that they were true to
+him in his adverse as well as in his prosperous fortunes; and
+throughout the checkered series of his campaigns no panic rout ever
+disgraced a division under his command, no mutiny, or even attempt
+at mutiny, was ever known in his camp; and finally, after fifteen
+years of Italian warfare, his men followed their old leader to
+Zama, "with no fear and little hope,"[<a href="#note-60">60</a>]
+and there, on that disastrous field, stood firm around him, his Old
+Guard, till Scipio's Numidian allies came up on their flank, when
+at last, surrounded and overpowered, the veteran battalions sealed
+their devotion to their general by their blood!</p>
+<p><a name="note-60"><!-- Note Anchor 60 --></a>[Footnote 60: "We
+advanced to Waterloo as the Greeks did to Thermopylae: all of us
+without fear, and most of us without hope."—<i>Speech of
+General Foy.</i>]</p>
+<p>"But if Hannibal's genius may be likened to the Homeric god,
+who, in his hatred to the Trojans, rises from the deep to rally the
+fainting Greeks and to lead them against the enemy, so the calm
+courage with which Hector met his more than human adversary in his
+country's cause is no unworthy image of the unyielding magnanimity
+displayed by the aristocracy of Rome. As Hannibal utterly eclipses
+Carthage, so, on the contrary, Fabius, Marcellus, Claudius Nero,
+even Scipio himself, are as nothing when compared to the spirit and
+wisdom and power of Rome. The senate, which voted its thanks to its
+political enemy, Varro, after his disastrous defeat, 'because he
+had not despaired of the commonwealth,' and which disdained either
+to solicit or to reprove or to threaten or in any way to notice the
+twelve colonies which had refused their accustomed supplies of men
+for the army, is far more to be honored than the conqueror of Zama.
+This we should the more carefully bear in mind because our tendency
+is to admire individual greatness far more than national; and, as
+no single Roman will bear comparison to Hannibal, we are apt to
+murmur at the event of the contest, and to think that the victory
+was awarded to the least worthy of the combatants. On the contrary,
+never was the wisdom of God's providence more manifest than in the
+issue of the struggle between Rome and Carthage.</p>
+<p>"It was clearly for the good of mankind that Hannibal should be
+conquered; his triumph would have stopped the progress of the
+world; for great men can only act permanently by forming great
+nations; and no one man, even though it were Hannibal himself, can
+in one generation effect such a work. But where the nation has been
+merely enkindled for a while by a great man's spirit, the light
+passes away with him who communicated it; and the nation, when he
+is gone, is like a dead body to which magic power had for a moment
+given unnatural life: when the charm has ceased, the body is cold
+and stiff as before. He who grieves over the battle of Zama should
+carry on his thoughts to a period thirty years later, when Hannibal
+must in the course of nature have been dead, and consider how the
+isolated Phoenician city of Carthage was fitted to receive and to
+consolidate the civilization of Greece, or by its laws and
+institutions to bind together barbarians of every race and language
+into an organized empire, and prepare them for becoming, when that
+empire was dissolved, the free members of the commonwealth of
+Christian Europe."[<a href="#note-61">61</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-61"><!-- Note Anchor 61 --></a>[Footnote 61:
+Arnold.]</p>
+<p>It was in the spring of 207 B.C. that Hasdrubal, after skilfully
+disentangling himself from the Roman forces in Spain, and after a
+march conducted with great judgment and little loss through the
+interior of Gaul and the passes of the Alps, appeared in the
+country that now is the north of Lombardy, at the head of troops
+which he had partly brought out of Spain and partly levied among
+the Gauls and Ligurians on his way. At this time Hannibal, with his
+unconquered and seemingly unconquerable army, had been eight years
+in Italy, executing with strenuous ferocity the vow of hatred to
+Rome which had been sworn by him while yet a child at the bidding
+of his father, Hamilcar, who, as he boasted, had trained up his
+three sons, Hannibal, Hasdrubal, and Mago, like three lion's
+whelps, to prey upon the Romans. But Hannibal's latter campaigns
+had not been signalized by any such great victories as marked the
+first years of his invasion of Italy. The stern spirit of Roman
+resolution, ever highest in disaster and danger, had neither bent
+nor despaired beneath the merciless blows which "the dire African"
+dealt her in rapid succession at Trebia, at Thrasymene, and at
+Cannae. Her population was thinned by repeated slaughter in the
+field; poverty and actual scarcity ground down the survivors,
+through the fearful ravages which Hannibal's cavalry spread through
+their cornfields, their pasture lands, and their vineyards; many of
+her allies went over to the invader's side, and new clouds of
+foreign war threatened her from Macedonia and Gaul. But Rome
+receded not. Rich and poor among her citizens vied with each other
+in devotion to their country. The wealthy placed their stores, and
+all placed their lives, at the State's disposal. And though
+Hannibal could not be driven out of Italy, though every year
+brought its sufferings and sacrifices, Rome felt that her constancy
+had not been exerted in vain. If she was weakened by the continued
+strife, so was Hannibal also; and it was clear that the unaided
+resources of his army were unequal to the task of her destruction.
+The single deerhound could not pull down the quarry which he had so
+furiously assailed. Rome not only stood fiercely at bay, but had
+pressed back and gored her antagonist, that still, however, watched
+her in act to spring. She was weary, and bleeding at every pore;
+and there seemed to be little hope of her escape if the other hound
+of old Hamilcar's race should come up in time to aid his brother in
+the death grapple.</p>
+<p>Hasdrubal had commanded the Carthaginian armies in Spain for
+some time with varying but generally unfavorable fortune. He had
+not the full authority over the Punic forces in that country which
+his brother and his father had previously exercised. The faction at
+Carthage, which was at feud with his family, succeeded in fettering
+and interfering with his power; and other generals were from time
+to time sent into Spain, whose errors and misconduct caused the
+reverses that Hasdrubal met with. This is expressly attested by the
+Greek historian Polybius, who was the intimate friend of the
+younger Africanus, and drew his information respecting the Second
+Punic War from the best possible authorities. Livy gives a long
+narrative of campaigns between the Roman commanders in Spain and
+Hasdrubal, which is so palpably deformed by fictions and
+exaggerations as to be hardly deserving of attention. It is clear
+that in the year B.C. 208, at least, Hasdrubal outmanoeuvred
+Publius Scipio, who held the command of the Roman forces in Spain,
+and whose object was to prevent him from passing the Pyrenees and
+marching upon Italy. Scipio expected that Hasdrubal would attempt
+the nearest route along the coast of the Mediterranean, and he
+therefore carefully fortified and guarded the passes of the eastern
+Pyrenees. But Hasdrubal passed these mountains near their western
+extremity; and then, with a considerable force of Spanish infantry,
+with a small number of African troops, with some elephants and much
+treasure, he marched, not directly toward the coast of the
+Mediterranean, but in a northeastern line toward the centre of
+Gaul. He halted for the winter in the territory of the Arverni, the
+modern Auvergne, and conciliated or purchased the goodwill of the
+Gauls in that region so far that he not only found friendly winter
+quarters among them, but great numbers of them enlisted under him,
+and, on the approach of spring, marched with him to invade
+Italy.</p>
+<p>By thus entering Gaul at the southwest, and avoiding its
+southern maritime districts, Hasdrubal kept the Romans in complete
+ignorance of his precise operations and movements in that country;
+all that they knew was that Hasdrubal had baffled Scipio's attempts
+to detain him in Spain; that he had crossed the Pyrenees with
+soldiers, elephants, and money, and that he was raising fresh
+forces among the Gauls. The spring was sure to bring him into
+Italy, and then would come the real tempest of the war, when from
+the north and from the south the two Carthaginian armies, each
+under a son of the Thunderbolt[<a href="#note-62">62</a>], were to
+gather together around the seven hills of Rome.</p>
+<p><a name="note-62"><!-- Note Anchor 62 --></a>[Footnote 62:
+Hamilcar was surnamed Barca, which means the Thunderbolt. Sultan
+Bajazet had the similar surname of Yilderim.]</p>
+<p>In this emergency the Romans looked among themselves earnestly
+and anxiously for leaders fit to meet the perils of the coming
+campaign.</p>
+<p>The senate recommended the people to elect, as one of their
+consuls, Caius Claudius Nero, a patrician of one of the families of
+the great Claudian house. Nero had served during the preceding
+years of the war both against Hannibal in Italy and against
+Hasdrubal in Spain; but it is remarkable that the histories which
+we possess record no successes as having been achieved by him
+either before or after his great campaign of the Metaurus. It
+proves much for the sagacity of the leading men of the senate that
+they recognized in Nero the energy and spirit which were required
+at this crisis, and it is equally creditable to the patriotism of
+the people that they followed the advice of the senate by electing
+a general who had no showy exploits to recommend him to their
+choice.</p>
+<p>It was a matter of greater difficulty to find a second consul;
+the laws required that one consul should be a plebeian; and the
+plebeian nobility had been fearfully thinned by the events of the
+war. While the senators anxiously deliberated among themselves what
+fit colleague for Nero could be nominated at the coming comitia,
+and sorrowfully recalled the names of Marcellus, Gracchus, and
+other plebeian generals who were no more, one taciturn and moody
+old man sat in sullen apathy among the conscript fathers. This was
+Marcus Livius, who had been consul in the year before the beginning
+of this war, and had then gained a victory over the Illyrians.
+After his consulship he had been impeached before the people on a
+charge of peculation and unfair division of the spoils among his
+soldiers; the verdict was unjustly given against him, and the sense
+of this wrong, and of the indignity thus put upon him, had rankled
+unceasingly in the bosom of Livius, so that for eight years after
+his trial he had lived in seclusion in his country seat, taking no
+part in any affairs of State. Latterly the censors had compelled
+him to come to Rome and resume his place in the senate, where he
+used to sit gloomily apart, giving only a silent vote. At last an
+unjust accusation against one of his near kinsmen made him break
+silence, and he harangued the house in words of weight and sense,
+which drew attention to him and taught the senators that a strong
+spirit dwelt beneath that unimposing exterior.</p>
+<p>Now, while they were debating on what noble of a plebeian house
+was fit to assume the perilous honors of the consulate, some of the
+elder of them looked on Marcus Livius, and remembered that in the
+very last triumph which had been celebrated in the streets of Rome,
+this grim old man had sat in the car of victory, and that he had
+offered the last thanksgiving sacrifice for the success of the
+Roman arms which had bled before Capitoline Jove. There had been no
+triumphs since Hannibal came into Italy. The Illyrian campaign of
+Livius was the last that had been so honored; perhaps it might be
+destined for him now to renew the long-interrupted series. The
+senators resolved that Livius should be put in nomination as consul
+with Nero; the people were willing to elect him: the only
+opposition came from himself. He taunted them with their
+inconsistency in honoring the man whom they had convicted of a base
+crime. "If I am innocent," said he, "why did you place such a stain
+on me? If I am guilty, why am I more fit for a second consulship
+than I was for my first one?" The other senators remonstrated with
+him, urging the example of the great Camillus, who, after an unjust
+condemnation on a similar charge, both served and saved his
+country. At last Livius ceased to object; and Caius Claudius Nero
+and Marcus Livius were chosen consuls of Rome.</p>
+<p>A quarrel had long existed between the two consuls, and the
+senators strove to effect a reconciliation between them before the
+campaign. Here again Livius for a long time obstinately resisted
+the wish of his fellow-senators. He said it was best for the State
+that he and Nero should continue to hate one another. Each would do
+his duty better when he knew that he was watched by an enemy in the
+person of his own colleague. At last the entreaties of the senate
+prevailed, and Livius consented to forego the feud, and to
+cooperate with Nero in preparing for the coming struggle.</p>
+<p>As soon as the winter snows were thawed, Hasdrubal commenced his
+march from Auvergne to the Alps. He experienced none of the
+difficulties which his brother had met with from the mountain
+tribes. Hannibal's army had been the first body of regular troops
+that had ever traversed their regions; and, as wild animals assail
+a traveller, the natives rose against it instinctively, in imagined
+defence of their own habitations, which they supposed to be the
+objects of Carthaginian ambition. But the fame of the war, with
+which Italy had now been convulsed for twelve years, had penetrated
+into the Alpine passes, and the mountaineers now understood that a
+mighty city southward of the Alps was to be attacked by the troops
+whom they saw marching among them. They now not only opposed no
+resistance to the passage of Hasdrubal, but many of them, out of
+love of enterprise and plunder, or allured by the high pay that he
+offered, took service with him; and thus he advanced upon Italy
+with an army that gathered strength at every league. It is said,
+also, that some of the most important engineering works which
+Hannibal had constructed were found by Hasdrubal still in
+existence, and materially favored the speed of his advance. He thus
+emerged into Italy from the Alpine valleys much sooner than had
+been anticipated. Many warriors of the Ligurian tribes joined him;
+and, crossing the River Po, he marched down its southern bank to
+the city of Placentia, which he wished to secure as a base for his
+future operations. Placentia resisted him as bravely as it had
+resisted Hannibal twelve years before, and for some time Hasdrubal
+was occupied with a fruitless siege before its walls.</p>
+<p>Six armies were levied for the defence of Italy when the
+long-dreaded approach of Hasdrubal was announced. Seventy thousand
+Romans served in the fifteen legions of which, with an equal number
+of Italian allies, those armies and the garrisons were composed.
+Upward of thirty thousand more Romans were serving in Sicily,
+Sardinia, and Spain. The whole number of Roman citizens of an age
+fit for military duty scarcely exceeded a hundred and thirty
+thousand. The census taken before the commencement of the war had
+shown a total of two hundred and seventy thousand, which had been
+diminished by more than half during twelve years. These numbers are
+fearfully emphatic of the extremity to which Rome was reduced, and
+of her gigantic efforts in that great agony of her fate. Not merely
+men, but money and military stores, were drained to the utmost, and
+if the armies of that year should be swept off by a repetition of
+the slaughters of Thrasymene and Cannae all felt that Rome would
+cease to exist.</p>
+<p>Even if the campaign were to be marked by no decisive success on
+either side her ruin seemed certain. In South Italy, Hannibal had
+either detached Rome's allies from her or had impoverished them by
+the ravages of his army. If Hasdrubal could have done the same in
+Upper Italy; if Etruria, Umbria, and Northern Latium had either
+revolted or been laid waste, Rome must have sunk beneath sheer
+starvation, for the hostile or desolated territory would have
+yielded no supplies of corn for her population, and money to
+purchase it from abroad there was none. Instant victory was a
+matter of life or death. Three of her six armies were ordered to
+the North, but the first of these was required to overawe the
+disaffected Etruscan. The second army of the North was pushed
+forward, under Porcius, the praetor, to meet and keep in check the
+advanced troops of Hasdrubal; while the third, the grand army of
+the North, which was to be under the immediate command of the
+consul Livius, who had the chief command in all North Italy,
+advanced more slowly in its support. There were similarly three
+armies in the South, under the orders of the other consul, Claudius
+Nero.</p>
+<p>The lot had decided that Livius was to be opposed to Hasdrubal,
+and that Nero should face Hannibal. And "when all was ordered as
+themselves thought best, the two consuls went forth from the city,
+each his several way. The people of Rome were now quite otherwise
+affected than they had been when L. Æmilius Paulus and C.
+Terentius Varro were sent against Hannibal. They did no longer take
+upon them to direct their generals, or bid them despatch and win
+the victory betimes, but rather they stood in fear lest all
+diligence, wisdom, and valor should prove too little; for since few
+years had passed wherein some one of their generals had not been
+slain, and since it was manifest that, if either of these present
+consuls were defeated or put to the worst, the two Carthaginians
+would forthwith join, and make short work with the other, it seemed
+a greater happiness than could be expected that each of them should
+return home victor, and come off with honor from such mighty
+opposition as he was like to find. With extreme difficulty had Rome
+held up her head ever since the battle of Cannae; though it were
+so, that Hannibal alone, with little help from Carthage, had
+continued the war in Italy. But there was now arrived another son
+of Hamilcar, and one that in his present expedition had seemed a
+man of more sufficiency than Hannibal himself; for whereas, in that
+long and dangerous march through barbarous nations, over great
+rivers and mountains that were thought unpassable, Hannibal had
+lost a great part of his army, this Hasdrubal, in the same places,
+had multiplied his numbers, and gathering the people that he found
+in the way, descended from the Alps like a rolling snowball, far
+greater than he came over the Pyrenees at his first setting out of
+Spain. These considerations and the like, of which fear presented
+many unto them, caused the people of Rome to wait upon their
+consuls out of the town, like a pensive train of mourners, thinking
+upon Marcellus and Crispinus, upon whom, in the like sort, they had
+given attendance the last year, but saw neither of them return
+alive from a less dangerous war. Particularly old Q. Fabius gave
+his accustomed advice to M. Livius, that he should abstain from
+giving or taking battle until he well understood the enemy's
+condition. But the consul made him a froward answer, and said that
+he would fight the very first day, for that he thought it long till
+he should either recover his honor by victory, or, by seeing the
+overthrow of his own unjust citizens, satisfy himself with the joy
+of a great though not an honest revenge. But his meaning was better
+than his words."</p>
+<p>Hannibal at this period occupied with his veteran but
+much-reduced forces the extreme south of Italy. It had not been
+expected either by friend or foe that Hasdrubal would effect his
+passage of the Alps so early in the year as actually occurred. And
+even when Hannibal learned that his brother was in Italy, and had
+advanced as far as Placentia, he was obliged to pause for further
+intelligence before he himself commenced active operations, as he
+could not tell whether his brother might not be invited into
+Etruria, to aid the party there that was disaffected to Rome, or
+whether he would march down by the Adriatic Sea. Hannibal led his
+troops out of their winter quarters in Bruttium, and marched
+northward as far as Canusium. Nero had his head-quarters near
+Venusia, with an army which he had increased to forty thousand foot
+and two thousand five hundred horse, by incorporating under his own
+command some of the legions which had been intended to act under
+other generals in the South. There was another Roman army, twenty
+thousand strong, south of Hannibal at Tarentum. The strength of
+that city secured this Roman force from any attack by Hannibal, and
+it was a serious matter to march northward and leave it in his
+rear, free to act against all his depots and allies in the friendly
+part of Italy, which for the two or three last campaigns had served
+him for a base of his operations. Moreover, Nero's army was so
+strong that Hannibal could not concentrate troops enough to assume
+the offensive against it without weakening his garrisons and
+relinquishing, at least for a time, his grasp upon the southern
+provinces. To do this before he was certainly informed of his
+brother's operations would have been a useless sacrifice, as Nero
+could retreat before him upon the other Roman armies near the
+capital, and Hannibal knew by experience that a mere advance of his
+army upon the walls of Rome would have no effect on the fortunes of
+the war. In the hope, probably, of inducing Nero to follow him and
+of gaining an opportunity of outmanoeuvring the Roman consul and
+attacking him on his march, Hannibal moved into Lucania, and then
+back into Apulia; he again marched down into Bruttium, and
+strengthened his army by a levy of recruits in that district. Nero
+followed him, but gave him no chance of assailing him at a
+disadvantage. Some partial encounters seem to have taken place; but
+the consul could not prevent Hannibal's junction with his Bruttian
+levies, nor could Hannibal gain an opportunity of surprising and
+crushing the consul.[<a href="#note-63">63</a>] Hannibal returned
+to his former headquarters at Canusium, and halted there in
+expectation of further tidings of his brother's movements. Nero
+also resumed his former position in observation of the Carthaginian
+army.</p>
+<p><a name="note-63"><!-- Note Anchor 63 --></a>[Footnote 63: The
+annalists whom Livy copied spoke of Nero's gaining repeated
+victories over Hannibal, and killing and taking his men by tens of
+thousands. The falsehood of all this is self-evident. If Nero could
+thus always beat Hannibal, the Romans would not have been in such
+an agony of dread about Hasdrubal as all writers describe. Indeed,
+we have the express testimony of Polybius that the statements which
+we read in Livy of Marcellus, Nero, and others gaining victories
+over Hannibal in Italy must be all fabrications of Roman vanity.
+Polybius states that Hannibal was never defeated before the battle
+of Zama; and in another passage he mentions that after the defeats
+which Hannibal inflicted on the Romans in the early years of the
+war, they no longer dared face his army in a pitched battle on a
+fair field, and yet they resolutely maintained the war. He rightly
+explains this by referring to the superiority of Hannibal's
+cavalry, the arm which gained him all his victories. By keeping
+within fortified lines, or close to the sides of the mountains when
+Hannibal approached them, the Romans rendered his cavalry
+ineffective; and a glance at the geography of Italy will show how
+an army can traverse the greater part of that country without
+venturing far from the high grounds.]</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, Hasdrubal had raised the siege of Placentia, and was
+advancing toward Ariminum on the Adriatic, and driving before him
+the Roman army under Porcius. Nor when the consul Livius had come
+up, and united the second and third armies of the North, could he
+make head against the invaders. The Romans still fell back before
+Hasdrubal beyond Ariminum, beyond the Metaurus, and as far as the
+little town of Sena, to the southeast of that river. Hasdrubal was
+not unmindful of the necessity of acting in concert with his
+brother. He sent messengers to Hannibal to announce his own line of
+march, and to propose that they should unite their armies in South
+Umbria and then wheel round against Rome. Those messengers
+traversed the greater part of Italy in safety, but, when close to
+the object of their mission, were captured by a Roman detachment;
+and Hasdrubal's letter, detailing his whole plan of the campaign,
+was laid, not in his brother's hands, but in those of the commander
+of the Roman armies of the South. Nero saw at once the full
+importance of the crisis. The two sons of Hamilcar were now within
+two hundred miles of each other, and if Rome were to be saved the
+brothers must never meet alive. Nero instantly ordered seven
+thousand picked men, a thousand being cavalry, to hold themselves
+in readiness for a secret expedition against one of Hannibal's
+garrisons, and as soon as night had set in he hurried forward on
+his bold enterprise; but he quickly left the southern road toward
+Lucania, and, wheeling round, pressed northward with the utmost
+rapidity toward Picenum. He had, during the preceding afternoon,
+sent messengers to Rome, who were to lay Hasdrubal's letters before
+the senate. There was a law forbidding a consul to make war or
+march his army beyond the limits of the province assigned to him;
+but in such an emergency, Nero did not wait for the permission of
+the senate to execute his project, but informed them that he was
+already on his march to join Livius against Hasdrubal. He advised
+them to send the two legions which formed the home garrison on to
+Narnia, so as to defend that pass of the Flaminian road against
+Hasdrubal, in case he should march upon Rome before the consular
+armies could attack him. They were to supply the place of these two
+legions at Rome by a levy <i>en masse</i> in the city, and by
+ordering up the reserve legion from Capua. These were his
+communications to the senate. He also sent horsemen forward along
+his line of march, with orders to the local authorities to bring
+stores of provisions and refreshment of every kind to the roadside,
+and to have relays of carriages ready for the conveyance of the
+wearied soldiers. Such were the precautions which he took for
+accelerating his march; and when he had advanced some little
+distance from his camp, he briefly informed his soldiers of the
+real object of their expedition. He told them that never was there
+a design more seemingly audacious and more really safe. He said he
+was leading them to a certain victory, for his colleague had an
+army large enough to balance the enemy already, so that
+<i>their</i> swords would decisively turn the scale. The very rumor
+that a fresh consul and a fresh army had come up, when heard on the
+battle-field—and he would take care that they should not be
+heard of before they were seen and felt—would settle the
+business. They would have all the credit of the victory and of
+having dealt the final decisive blow. He appealed to the
+enthusiastic reception which they already met with on their line of
+march as a proof and an omen of their good fortune. And, indeed,
+their whole path was amid the vows and prayers and praises of their
+countrymen. The entire population of the districts through which
+they passed flocked to the roadside to see and bless the deliverers
+of their country. Food, drink, and refreshments of every kind were
+eagerly pressed on their acceptance. Each peasant thought a favor
+was conferred on him if one of Nero's chosen band would accept
+aught at his hands. The soldiers caught the full spirit of their
+leader. Night and day they marched forward, taking their hurried
+meals in the ranks, and resting by relay in the wagons which the
+zeal of the country people provided, and which followed in the rear
+of the column.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, at Rome, the news of Nero's expedition had caused the
+greatest excitement and alarm. All men felt the full audacity of
+the enterprise, but hesitated what epithet to apply to it. It was
+evident that Nero's conduct would be judged of by the event, that
+most unfair criterion, as the Roman historian truly terms it.
+People reasoned on the perilous state in which Nero had left the
+rest of his army, without a general, and deprived of the core of
+its strength, in the vicinity of the terrible Hannibal. They
+speculated on how long it would take Hannibal to pursue and
+overtake Nero himself, and his expeditionary force. They talked
+over the former disasters of the war, and the fall of both the
+consuls of the last year. All these calamities had come on them
+while they had only one Carthaginian general and army to deal with
+in Italy. Now they had two Punic wars at a time. They had two
+Carthaginian armies, they had almost two Hannibals, in Italy.
+Hasdrubal was sprung from the same father; trained up in the same
+hostility to Rome; equally practised in battle against their
+legions; and, if the comparative speed and success with which he
+had crossed the Alps were a fair test, he was even a better general
+than his brother. With fear for their interpreter of every rumor,
+they exaggerated the strength of their enemy's forces in every
+quarter, and criticised and distrusted their own.</p>
+<p>Fortunately for Rome, while she was thus a prey to terror and
+anxiety, her consul's nerves were stout and strong, and he
+resolutely urged on his march toward Sena, where his colleague
+Livius and the praetor Porcius were encamped, Hasdrubal's army
+being in position about half a mile to their north. Nero had sent
+couriers forward to apprise his colleague of his project and of his
+approach; and by the advice of Livius, Nero so timed his final
+march as to reach the camp at Sena by night. According to a
+previous arrangement, Nero's men were received silently into the
+tents of their comrades, each according to his rank. By these means
+there was no enlargement of the camp that could betray to Hasdrubal
+the accession of force which the Romans had received. This was
+considerable, as Nero's numbers had been increased on the march by
+the volunteers, who offered themselves in crowds, and from whom he
+selected the most promising men, and especially the veterans of
+former campaigns. A council of war was held on the morning after
+his arrival, in which some advised that time should be given for
+Nero's men to refresh themselves after the fatigue of such a march.
+But Nero vehemently opposed all delay. "The officer," said he, "who
+is for giving time to my men here to rest themselves is for giving
+time to Hannibal to attack my men, whom I have left in the camp in
+Apulia. He is for giving time to Hannibal and Hasdrubal to discover
+my march, and to manoeuvre for a junction with each other in
+Cisalpine Gaul at their leisure. We must fight instantly, while
+both the foe here and the foe in the South are ignorant of our
+movements. We must destroy this Hasdrubal, and I must be back in
+Apulia before Hannibal awakes from his torpor." Nero's advice
+prevailed. It was resolved to fight directly; and before the
+consuls and praetor left the tent of Livius, the red ensign, which
+was the signal to prepare for immediate action, was hoisted, and
+the Romans forthwith drew up in battle array outside the camp.</p>
+<p>Hasdrubal had been anxious to bring Livius and Porcius to
+battle, though he had not judged it expedient to attack them in
+their lines. And now, on hearing that the Romans offered battle, he
+also drew up his men and advanced toward them. No spy or deserter
+had informed him of Nero's arrival, nor had he received any direct
+information that he had more than his old enemies to deal with. But
+as he rode forward to reconnoitre the Roman line, he thought that
+their numbers seemed to have increased, and that the armor of some
+of them was unusually dull and stained. He noticed, also, that the
+horses of some of the cavalry appeared to be rough and out of
+condition, as if they had just come from a succession of forced
+marches. So also, though, owing to the precaution of Livius, the
+Roman camp showed no change of size, it had not escaped the quick
+ear of the Carthaginian general that the trumpet which gave the
+signal to the Roman legions sounded that morning once oftener than
+usual, as if directing the troops of some additional superior
+officer. Hasdrubal, from his Spanish campaigns, was well acquainted
+with all the sounds and signals of Roman war, and from all that he
+heard and saw he felt convinced that both the Roman consuls were
+before him. In doubt and difficulty as to what might have taken
+place between the armies of the South, and probably hoping that
+Hannibal also was approaching, Hasdrubal determined to avoid an
+encounter with the combined Roman forces, and to endeavor to
+retreat upon Insubrian Gaul, where he would be in a friendly
+country, and could endeavor to reopen his communication with his
+brother. He therefore led his troops back into their camp; and as
+the Romans did not venture on an assault upon his intrenchments,
+and Hasdrubal did not choose to commence his retreat in their
+sight, the day passed away in inaction. At the first watch of the
+night Hasdrubal led his men silently out of their camp, and moved
+northward toward the Metaurus, in the hope of placing that river
+between himself and the Romans before his retreat was discovered.
+His guides betrayed him; and having purposely led him away from the
+part of the river that was fordable, they made their escape in the
+dark, and left Hasdrubal and his army wandering in confusion along
+the steep bank, and seeking in vain for a spot where the stream
+could be safely crossed. At last they halted; and when day dawned
+on them, Hasdrubal found that great numbers of his men, in their
+fatigue and impatience, had lost all discipline and subordination,
+and that many of his Gallic auxiliaries had got drunk, and were
+lying helpless in their quarters. The Roman cavalry was soon seen
+coming up in pursuit, followed at no great distance by the legions,
+which marched in readiness for an instant engagement. It was
+hopeless for Hasdrubal to think of continuing his retreat before
+them. The prospect of immediate battle might recall the disordered
+part of his troops to a sense of duty, and revive the instinct of
+discipline. He therefore ordered his men to prepare for action
+instantly, and made the best arrangement of them that the nature of
+the ground would permit.</p>
+<p>Heeren has well described the general appearance of a
+Carthaginian army. He says: "It was an assemblage of the most
+opposite races of the human species from the farthest parts of the
+globe. Hordes of half-naked Gauls were ranged next to companies of
+white-clothed Iberians, and savage Ligurians next to the
+far-travelled Nasamones and Lotophagi. Carthaginians and
+Phoenici-Africans formed the centre, while innumerable troops of
+Numidian horsemen, taken from all the tribes of the Desert, swarmed
+about on unsaddled horses, and formed the wings; the van was
+composed of Balearic slingers; and a line of colossal elephants,
+with their Ethiopian guides, formed, as it were, a chain of moving
+fortresses before the whole army."</p>
+<p>Such were the usual materials and arrangements of the hosts that
+fought for Carthage; but the troops under Hasdrubal were not in all
+respects thus constituted or thus stationed. He seems to have been
+especially deficient in cavalry, and he had few African troops,
+though some Carthaginians of high rank were with him. His veteran
+Spanish infantry, armed with helmets and shields, and short
+cut-and-thrust swords, were the best part of his army. These and
+his few Africans he drew up on his right wing, under his own
+personal command. In the centre he placed his Ligurian infantry,
+and on the left wing he placed or retained the Gauls, who were
+armed with long javelins and with huge broadswords and targets. The
+rugged nature of the ground in front and on the flank of this part
+of his line made him hope that the Roman right wing would be unable
+to come to close quarters with these unserviceable barbarians
+before he could make some impression with his Spanish veterans on
+the Roman left. This was the only chance that he had of victory or
+safety, and he seems to have done everything that good generalship
+could do to secure it. He placed his elephants in advance of his
+centre and right wing. He had caused the driver of each of them to
+be provided with a sharp iron spike and a mallet, and had given
+orders that every beast that became unmanageable, and ran back upon
+his own ranks, should be instantly killed by driving the spike into
+the vertebra at the junction of the head and the spine. Hasdrubal's
+elephants were ten in number. We have no trustworthy information as
+to the amount of his infantry, but it is quite clear that he was
+greatly outnumbered by the combined Roman forces.</p>
+<p>The tactics of the Roman legions had not yet acquired that
+perfection which they received from the military genius of
+Marius,[<a href="#note-64">64</a>] and which we read of in the
+first chapter of Gibbon. We possess, in that great work, an account
+of the Roman legions at the end of the commonwealth, and during the
+early ages of the empire, which those alone can adequately admire
+who have attempted a similar description. We have also, in the
+sixth and seventeenth books of Polybius, an elaborate discussion on
+the military system of the Romans in his time, which was not far
+distant from the time of the battle of the Metaurus. But the
+subject is beset with difficulties; and instead of entering into
+minute but inconclusive details, I would refer to Gibbon's first
+chapter as serving for a general description of the Roman army in
+its period of perfection, and remark that the training and armor
+which the whole legion received in the time of Augustus were, two
+centuries earlier, only partially introduced. Two divisions of
+troops, called <i>hastati</i> and <i>principes</i>, formed the bulk
+of each Roman legion in the Second Punic War. Each of these
+divisions was twelve hundred strong. The hastatus and the princeps
+legionary bore a breastplate or coat of mail, brazen greaves, and a
+brazen helmet with a lofty upright crest of scarlet or black
+feathers. He had a large oblong shield; and, as weapons of offence,
+two javelins, one of which was light and slender, but the other was
+a strong and massive weapon, with a shaft about four feet long and
+an iron head of equal length. The sword was carried on the right
+thigh, and was a short cut-and-thrust weapon, like that which was
+used by the Spaniards. Thus armed, the hastati formed the front
+division of the legion, and the principes the second. Each division
+was drawn up about ten deep, a space of three feet being allowed
+between the files as well as the ranks, so as to give each
+legionary ample room for the use of his javelins and of his sword
+and shield. The men in the second rank did not stand immediately
+behind those in the first rank, but the files were alternate, like
+the position of the men on a draught-board. This was termed the
+<i>quincunx</i> order.</p>
+<p><a name="note-64"><!-- Note Anchor 64 --></a>[Footnote 64: Most
+probably during the period of his prolonged consulship, from B.C.
+104 to B.C. 101, while he was training his army against the Cimbri
+and the Teutons.]</p>
+<p>Niebuhr considers that this arrangement enabled the legion to
+keep up a shower of javelins on the enemy for some considerable
+time. He says: "When the first line had hurled its <i>pila</i>, it
+probably stepped back between those who stood behind it, and two
+steps forward restored the front nearly to its first position; a
+movement which, on account of the arrangement of the quincunx,
+could be executed without losing a moment. Thus one line succeeded
+the other in the front till it was time to draw the swords; nay,
+when it was found expedient, the lines which had already been in
+the front might repeat this change, since the stores of pila were
+surely not confined to the two which each soldier took with him
+into battle.</p>
+<p>"The same charge must have taken place in fighting with the
+sword, which, when the same tactics were adopted on both sides, was
+anything but a confused <i>m&ecirc;lée</i>; on the contrary,
+it was a series of single combats." He adds that a military man of
+experience had been consulted by him on the subject and had given
+it as his opinion "that the change of the lines as described above
+was by no means impracticable; but, in the absence of the deafening
+noise of gunpowder, it cannot have had even any difficulty with
+well-trained troops."</p>
+<p>The third division of the legion was six hundred strong and
+acted as a reserve. It was always composed of veteran soldiers, who
+were called the <i>triarii</i>. Their arms were the same as these
+of the principes and hastati, except that each <i>triarian</i>
+carried a spear instead of javelins. The rest of the legion
+consisted of light-armed troops, who acted as skirmishers. The
+cavalry of each legion was at this period about three hundred
+strong. The Italian allies who were attached to the legion seem to
+have been similarly armed and equipped, but their numerical
+proportion of cavalry was much larger.</p>
+<p>Such was the nature of the forces that advanced on the Roman
+side to the battle of the Metaurus. Nero commanded the right wing,
+Livius the left, and the praetor Porcius had the command of the
+centre. "Both Romans and Carthaginians well understood how much
+depended upon the fortune of this day, and how little hope of
+safety there was for the vanquished. Only the Romans herein seemed
+to have had the better in conceit and opinion that they were to
+fight with men desirous to have fled from them; and according to
+this presumption came Livius the consul, with a proud bravery, to
+give charge on the Spaniards and Africans, by whom he was so
+sharply entertained that the victory seemed very doubtful. The
+Africans and Spaniards were stout soldiers, and well acquainted
+with the manner of the Roman fight. The Ligurians also were a hardy
+nation, and not accustomed to give ground, which they needed the
+less, or were able now to do, being placed in the midst. Livius,
+therefore, and Porcius found great opposition; and with great
+slaughter on both sides prevailed little or nothing. Besides other
+difficulties, they were exceedingly troubled by the elephants, that
+brake their first ranks and put them in such disorder as the Roman
+ensigns were driven to fall back; all this while Claudius Nero,
+laboring in vain against a steep hill, was unable to come to blows
+with the Gauls that stood opposite him, but out of danger. This
+made Hasdrubal the more confident, who, seeing his own left wing
+safe, did the more boldly and fiercely make impression on the other
+side upon the left wing of the Romans."[<a href="#note-65">65</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-65"><!-- Note Anchor 65 --></a>[Footnote 65: Sir
+Walter Raleigh: <i>Historie of the World</i>.]</p>
+<p>But at last Nero, who found that Hasdrubal refused his left
+wing, and who could not overcome the difficulties of the ground in
+the quarter assigned to him, decided the battle by another stroke
+of that military genius which had inspired his march. Wheeling a
+brigade of his best men round the rear of the rest of the Roman
+army, Nero fiercely charged the flank of the Spaniards and
+Africans. The charge was as successful as it was sudden. Rolled
+back in disorder upon each other, and overwhelmed by numbers, the
+Spaniards and Ligurians died, fighting gallantly to the last. The
+Gauls, who had taken little or no part in the strife of the day,
+were then surrounded, and butchered almost without resistance.
+Hasdrubal, after having, by the confession of his enemies, done all
+that a general could do, when he saw that the victory was
+irreparably lost, scorning to survive the gallant host which he had
+led, and to gratify, as a captive, Roman cruelty and pride, spurred
+his horse into the midst of a Roman cohort, and sword in hand, met
+the death that was worthy of the son of Hamilcar and the brother of
+Hannibal.</p>
+<p>Success the most complete had crowned Nero's enterprise.
+Returning as rapidly as he had advanced, he was again facing the
+inactive enemies in the South before they even knew of his march.
+But he brought with him a ghastly trophy of what he had done. In
+the true spirit of that savage brutality which deformed the Roman
+national character, Nero ordered Hasdrubal's head to be flung into
+his brother's camp. Ten years had passed since Hannibal had last
+gazed on those features. The sons of Hamilcar had then planned
+their system of warfare against Rome which they had so nearly
+brought to successful accomplishment. Year after year had Hannibal
+been struggling in Italy, in the hope of one day hailing the
+arrival of him whom he had left in Spain, and of seeing his
+brother's eye flash with affection and pride at the junction of
+their irresistible hosts. He now saw that eye glazed in death, and
+in the agony of his heart the great Carthaginian groaned aloud that
+he recognized his country's destiny.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, at the tidings of the great battle, Rome at once rose
+from the thrill of anxiety and terror to the full confidence of
+triumph. Hannibal might retain his hold on Southern Italy for a few
+years longer, but the imperial city and her allies were no longer
+in danger from his arms; and, after Hannibal's downfall, the great
+military republic of the ancient world met in her career of
+conquest no other worthy competitor. Byron has termed Nero's march
+"unequalled," and, in the magnitude of its consequences, it is so.
+Viewed only as a military exploit, it remains unparalleled save by
+Marlborough's bold march from Flanders to the Danube in the
+campaign of Blenheim, and perhaps also by the Archduke Charles'
+lateral march in 1796, by which he overwhelmed the French under
+Jourdan, and then, driving Moreau through the Black Forest and
+across the Rhine, for a while freed Germany from her invaders.</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="RULE4_15"></a>SCIPIO AFRICANUS CRUSHES HANNIBAL AT ZAMA AND SUBJUGATES
+CARTHAGE</h2>
+<p class="center">B.C. 202</p>
+<p class="center">LIVY</p>
+<p class="intros">Sprung from a colony of Tyre, Carthage, founded
+about B.C. 800, rapidly developed, through a wonderful system of
+colonization, into a dominating power, her rule extending through
+Northwestern Africa and Western Europe. In B.C. 509 Carthage made
+her first treaty with Rome. But the rivalry which grew up between
+the two Powers developed into a stubborn contest for the empire of
+the world, culminating in the three Punic wars. The first of these
+lasted from B.C. 264 to 241; the second, from B.C. 218 to 201. In
+the interval between these two wars Rome acquired the northern part
+of Italy, whence she sent victorious armies against the barbarians
+in Gaul. Meanwhile, under Hamilcar Barcar, the Carthaginians had
+effected the conquest of Southern Spain, which they reduced to the
+condition of a dependency.</p>
+<p class="intros">Hamilcar's greater son, Hannibal, was compelled
+by his father to swear eternal enmity to Rome. Having established
+the Carthaginian empire in Spain, at the age of twenty-six he took
+the Spanish city of Saguntum, an ally of Rome, and this was the
+immediate cause of the Second Punic War, which the Romans declared.
+The passage of the Alps by Hannibal is regarded as one of the
+greatest military performances in history. He was welcomed by the
+Gauls as a deliverer, and was soon operating in Northern Italy, his
+appearance there being a complete surprise to the Romans. He won
+victories over them at the rivers Ticinus and Trebia, B.C. 218;
+another in 217 at Lake Trasimenus; a great triumph at Cannae in
+216; took Capua in the same year, and wintered there; in 212
+captured Tarentum; marched against Rome in 211; and in 203 was
+recalled to Africa.</p>
+<p class="intros">In the mean time the Romans had decided to carry
+the war into Africa, although in 215 they had beaten Hannibal, and
+in 211 had retaken Capua. Publius Cornelius Scipio (Scipio
+Africanus Major) in B.C. 210-206 drove the Carthaginians out of
+Spain. In 205 he was made consul, and the next year invaded Africa.
+Landing on the coast, he was met by the forces of the Numidian
+King, who became his allies against Carthage. In 203 he defeated
+Syphax and Hasdrubal. Hannibal now having returned to Carthage, he
+took command of the forces which she opposed to the Roman invaders,
+but in B.C. 202 suffered final overthrow at Zama, in the battle
+that ended the Second Punic War. Livy's account of the closing
+scenes of that war, which here follows, gives the reader a clear
+understanding of the sequence and conclusion of the events
+related.</p>
+<p>Marcus Servilius and Tiberius Claudius, having assembled the
+senate, consulted them respecting the provinces. As both were
+desirous of having Africa, they wished Italy and Africa to be
+disposed of by lots; but, principally in consequence of the
+exertions of Quintus Metellus, Africa was neither assigned to
+anyone nor withheld. The consuls were ordered to make application
+to the tribunes of the people, to the effect that, if they thought
+proper, they should put it to the people to decide whom they wished
+to conduct the war in Africa. All the tribes nominated Publius
+Scipio. Nevertheless, the consuls put the province of Africa to the
+lot, for so the senate had decreed. Africa fell to the lot of
+Tiberius Claudius, who was to cross over into Africa with a fleet
+of fifty ships, all quinqueremes, and have an equal command with
+Scipio. Marcus Servilius obtained Etruria. Caius Servilius was
+continued in command in the same province, in case the senate
+resolved that the consul should remain at the city. Of the
+praetors, Marcus Sextus obtained Gaul, which province, together
+with two legions, Publius Quinctilius Varus was to deliver to him;
+Caius Livius obtained Bruttium, with the two legions which Publius
+Sempronius, the proconsul, had commanded the former year; Cneius
+Tremellius had Sicily, and was to receive the province and two
+legions from Publius Villius Tappulus, a praetor of the former
+year; Villius, as propraetor, was to protect the coast of Sicily
+with twenty men-of-war and a thousand soldiers; and Marcus
+Pomponius was to convey thence to Rome one thousand five hundred
+soldiers, with the remaining twenty ships. The city jurisdiction
+fell to Caius Aurelius Cotta; and the rest of the praetors were
+continued in command of the respective provinces and armies which
+they then had. Not more than sixteen legions were employed this
+year in the defence of the empire. And, that they might have the
+gods favorably disposed toward them in all their undertakings and
+proceedings, it was ordered that the consuls, before they set out
+to the war, should celebrate those games and sacrifice those
+victims of the larger sort which, in the consulate of Marcus
+Claudius Marcellus and Titus Quinctius, Titus Manlius the dictator
+had vowed, provided the commonwealth should continue in the same
+state for the next five years. The games were exhibited in the
+circus during four days, and the victims sacrificed to those
+deities to whom they had been vowed.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, hope and anxiety daily and simultaneously increased;
+nor could the minds of men be brought to any fixed conclusion,
+whether it was a fit subject for rejoicing that Hannibal had now at
+length, after the sixteenth year, departed from Italy and left the
+Romans in the unmolested possession of it or whether they had not
+greater cause to fear from his having transported his army in
+safety into Africa. They said that the scene of action certainly
+was changed, but not the danger. That Quintus Fabius, lately
+deceased, who had foretold how arduous the contest would be, was
+used to predict, not without good reason, that Hannibal would prove
+a more formidable enemy in his own country than he had been in a
+foreign one; and that Scipio would have to encounter, not Syphax, a
+king of undisciplined barbarians whose armies Statorius, a man
+little better than a soldier's drudge, was used to lead, nor his
+father-in-law Hasdrubal, that most fugacious general, nor
+tumultuary armies hastily collected out of a crowd of half-armed
+rustics, but Hannibal, born in a manner in the pavilion of his
+father, that bravest of generals, nurtured and educated in the
+midst of arms, who served as a soldier formerly, when a boy, and
+became a general when he had scarcely attained the age of manhood;
+who, having grown old in victory, had filled Spain, Gaul, and
+Italy, from the Alps to the strait, with monuments of his vast
+achievements; who commanded troops who had served as long as he had
+himself; troops hardened by the endurance of every species of
+suffering, such as it is scarcely credible that men could have
+supported; stained a thousand times with Roman blood, and bearing
+with them the spoils not only of soldiers, but of generals. That
+many would meet the eyes of Scipio in battle who had with their own
+hands slain Roman praetors, generals, and consuls; many decorated
+with crowns in reward for having scaled walls and crossed ramparts;
+many who had traversed the captured camps and cities of the Romans.
+That the magistrates of the Roman people had not then so many
+fasces as Hannibal could have carried before him, having taken them
+from generals whom he had slain. While their minds were harassed by
+these apprehensions, their anxiety and fears were further increased
+from the circumstance that, whereas they had been accustomed to
+carry on war for several years in different parts of Italy, and
+within their view, with languid hopes and without the prospect of
+bringing it to a speedy termination, Scipio and Hannibal had
+stimulated the minds of all, as generals prepared for a final
+contest. Even those persons whose confidence in Scipio and hopes of
+victory were great, were affected with anxiety, increasing in
+proportion as they saw their completion approaching. The state of
+feeling among the Carthaginians was much the same; for when they
+turned their eyes on Hannibal, and the greatness of his
+achievements, they repented having solicited peace; but when again
+they reflected that they had been twice defeated in a pitched
+battle, that Syphax had been made prisoner, that they had been
+driven out of Spain and Italy, and that all this had been effected
+by the valor and conduct of Scipio alone, they regarded him with
+horror, as a general marked out by destiny, and born for their
+destruction.</p>
+<p>Hannibal had by this time arrived at Adrumetum, from which
+place, after employing a few days there in refreshing his soldiers,
+who had suffered from the motion by sea, he proceeded by forced
+marches to Zama, roused by the alarming statements of messengers
+who brought word that all the country around Carthage was filled
+with armed troops. Zama is distant from Carthage a five days'
+journey. Some spies whom he sent out from this place, being
+intercepted by the Roman guard and brought before Scipio, he
+directed that they should be handed over to the military tribunes,
+and after having been desired fearlessly to survey everything, to
+be conducted through the camp wherever they chose; then, asking
+them whether they had examined everything to their satisfaction, he
+assigned them an escort and sent them back to Hannibal.</p>
+<p>Hannibal received none of the circumstances which were reported
+to him with feelings of joy, for they brought word that, as it
+happened, Masinissa had joined the enemy that very day with six
+thousand infantry and four thousand horse; but he was principally
+dispirited by the confidence of his enemy, which, doubtless, was
+not conceived without some ground. Accordingly, though he himself
+was the originator of the war, and by his coming had upset the
+truce which had been entered into, and cut off all hopes of a
+treaty, yet concluding that more favorable terms might be obtained
+if he solicited peace while his strength was unimpaired than when
+vanquished, he sent a message to Scipio requesting permission to
+confer with him.</p>
+<p>Scipio took up his position not far from the city of Naragara,
+in a situation convenient not only for other purposes, but also
+because there was a watering-place within a dart's throw. Hannibal
+took possession of an eminence four miles thence, safe and
+convenient in every respect, except that he had a long way to go
+for water. Here in the intermediate space a place was chosen open
+to view from all sides, that there might be no opportunity for
+treachery.</p>
+<p>Their armed attendants having retired to an equal distance, they
+met, each attended by one interpreter, being the greatest generals
+not only of their own times, but of any to be found in the records
+of the times preceding them, and equal to any of the kings or
+generals of any nation whatever. When they came within sight of
+each other they remained silent for a short time, thunderstruck, as
+it were, with mutual admiration. At length Hannibal thus began:
+"Since fate hath so ordained it that I, who was the first to wage
+war upon the Romans, and who have so often had victory almost
+within my reach, should voluntarily come to sue for peace, I
+rejoice that it is you, above all others, from whom it is my lot to
+solicit it. To you, also, amid the many distinguished events of
+your life, it will not be esteemed one of the least glorious that
+Hannibal, to whom the gods had so often granted victory over the
+Roman generals, should have yielded to you; and that you should
+have put an end to this war, which has been rendered remarkable by
+your calamities before it was by ours.</p>
+<p>"Peace is proposed at a time when you have the advantage. We who
+negotiate it are the persons whom it most concerns to obtain it,
+and we are persons whose arrangements, be they what they will, our
+states will ratify. You have recovered Spain, which had been lost,
+after driving thence four Carthaginian armies. When elected consul,
+though all others wanted courage to defend Italy, you crossed over
+into Africa, where having cut to pieces two armies, having at once
+captured and burnt two camps in the same hour, having made prisoner
+Syphax, a most powerful king, and seized so many towns of his
+dominions and so many of ours, you have dragged me from Italy, the
+possession of which I had firmly held for now sixteen years. While
+your affairs are in a favorable and ours in a dubious state, you
+would derive honor and splendor from granting peace; while to us,
+who solicit it, it would be considered as necessary rather than
+honorable.</p>
+<p>"It is indeed the right of him who grants, and not of him who
+solicits it, to dictate the terms of peace, but perhaps we may not
+be unworthy to impose upon ourselves the fine. We do not refuse
+that all those possessions on account of which the war was begun
+should be yours; Sicily, Sardinia, Spain, with all the islands
+lying in any part of the sea, between Africa and Italy. Let us
+Carthaginians, confined within the shores of Africa, behold you,
+since such is the pleasure of the gods, extending your empire over
+foreign nations both by sea and land. I cannot deny that you have
+reason to suspect the Carthaginian faith, in consequence of their
+insincerity lately in soliciting a peace and while awaiting the
+decision. The sincerity with which a peace will be observed depends
+much, Scipio, on the person by whom it is sought. Your senate, as I
+hear, refused to grant a peace in some measure because the deputies
+were deficient in respectability. It is I, Hannibal, who now
+solicit peace; who would neither ask for it unless I believed it
+expedient, nor will I fail to observe it for the same reason of
+expedience on account of which I have solicited it. And in the same
+manner as I, because the war was commenced by me, brought it to
+pass that no one regretted it till the gods began to regard me with
+displeasure; so will I also exert myself that no one may regret the
+peace procured by my means."</p>
+<p>In answer to these things the Roman general spoke nearly to the
+following effect: "I was aware that it was in consequence of the
+expectation of your arrival that the Carthaginians violated the
+existing faith of the truce and broke off all hope of a peace. Nor,
+indeed, do you conceal the fact, inasmuch as you artfully withdraw
+from the former conditions of peace every concession except what
+relates to those things which have for a long time been in our own
+power. But as it is your object that your countrymen should be
+sensible how great a burden they are relieved from by your means,
+so it is incumbent upon me to endeavor that they may not receive,
+as the reward of their perfidy, the concessions which they formerly
+stipulated, by expunging them now from the conditions of the peace.
+Though you do not deserve to be allowed the same conditions as
+before, you now request even to be benefited by your treachery.</p>
+<p>"Neither did our fathers first make war respecting Sicily, nor
+did we respecting Spain. In the former case the danger which
+threatened our allies the Mamertines, and in the present the
+destruction of Saguntum, girded us with just and pious arms. That
+you were the aggressors, both you yourselves confess and the gods
+are witnesses, who determined the issue of the former war, and who
+are now determining and will determine the issue of the present
+according to right and justice. As to myself, I am not forgetful of
+the instability of human affairs, but consider the influence of
+fortune, and am well aware that all our measures are liable to a
+thousand casualties. But as I should acknowledge that my conduct
+would savor of insolence and oppression if I rejected you on your
+coming in person to solicit peace before I crossed over into
+Africa, you voluntarily retiring from Italy, and after you had
+embarked your troops, so now, when I have dragged you into Africa
+almost by manual force, notwithstanding your resistance and
+evasions, I am not bound to treat you with any respect. Wherefore,
+if in addition to those stipulations on which it was considered
+that a peace would at that time have been agreed upon, and what
+they are you are informed, a compensation is proposed for having
+seized our ships together with their stores during a truce, and for
+the violence offered to our ambassadors, I shall then have matter
+to lay before my council. But if these things also appear
+oppressive, prepare for war, since you could not brook the
+conditions of peace."</p>
+<p>Thus, without effecting an accommodation, when they had returned
+from the conference to their armies, they informed them that words
+had been bandied to no purpose, that the question must be decided
+by arms, and that they must accept that fortune which the gods
+assigned them.</p>
+<p>When they had arrived at their camps, they both issued orders
+that their soldiers should get their arms in readiness and prepare
+their minds for the final contest; in which, if fortune should
+favor them, they would continue victorious, not for a single day,
+but forever. "Before to-morrow night," they said, "they would know
+whether Rome or Carthage should give laws to the world, and that
+neither Africa nor Italy, but the whole world, would be the prize
+of victory. That the dangers which threatened those who had the
+misfortune to be defeated were proportioned to the rewards of the
+victors." For the Romans had not any place of refuge in an unknown
+and foreign land, and immediate destruction seemed to await
+Carthage if the troops which formed her last reliance were
+defeated. To this important contest, the day following, two
+generals, by far the most renowned of any, and belonging to two of
+the most powerful nations in the world, advanced either to crown or
+overthrow on that day the many honors they had previously
+acquired.</p>
+<p>Scipio drew up his troops, posting the hastati in front, the
+principes behind them, and closing his rear line with the triarii.
+He did not draw up his cohorts in close order, but each before
+their respective standards; placing the companies at some distance
+from each other, so as to leave a space through which the elephants
+of the enemy passing might not at all break their ranks. Laelius,
+whom he had employed before as lieutenant-general, but this year as
+quaestor, by special appointment, according to a decree of the
+senate, he posted with the Italian cavalry in the left wing,
+Masinissa and the Numidians in the right. The open spaces between
+the companies of those in the van he filled with velites, which
+then formed the Roman light-armed troops, with an injunction that
+on the charge of the elephants they should either retire behind the
+files, which extended in a right line, or, running to the right and
+left and placing themselves by the side of those in the van, afford
+a passage by which the elephants might rush in between weapons on
+both sides.</p>
+<p>Hannibal, in order to terrify the enemy, drew up his elephants
+in front, and he had eighty of them, being more than he had ever
+had in any battle; behind these his Ligurian and Gallic
+auxiliaries, with Balearians and Moors intermixed. In the second
+line he placed the Carthaginians, Africans, and a legion of
+Macedonians; then, leaving a moderate interval, he formed a reserve
+of Italian troops, consisting principally of Bruttians, more of
+whom had followed him on his departure from Italy by compulsion and
+necessity than by choice. His cavalry also he placed in the wings,
+the Carthaginian occupying the right, the Numidian the left.
+Various were the means of exhortation employed in an army
+consisting of a mixture of so many different kinds of men; men
+differing in language, customs, laws, arms, dress, and appearance,
+and in the motives for serving. To the auxiliaries, the prospect
+both of their present pay and many times more from the spoils was
+held out. The Gauls were stimulated by their peculiar and inherent
+animosity against the Romans. To the Ligurians the hope was held
+out of enjoying the fertile plains of Italy, and quitting their
+rugged mountains, if victorious. The Moors and Numidians were
+terrified with subjection to the government of Masinissa, which he
+would exercise with despotic severity.</p>
+<p>Different grounds of hope and fear were represented to different
+persons. The view of the Carthaginians was directed to the walls of
+their city, their household gods, the sepulchres of their
+ancestors, their children and parents, and their trembling wives;
+they were told that either the destruction of their city and
+slavery or the empire of the world awaited them; that there was
+nothing intermediate which they could hope for or fear.</p>
+<p>While the general was thus busily employed among the
+Carthaginians, and the captains of the respective nations among
+their countrymen, most of them employing interpreters among troops
+intermixed with those of different nations, the trumpets and
+cornets of the Romans sounded; and such a clamor arose that the
+elephants, especially those in the left wing, turned round upon
+their own party, the Moors and Numidians. Masinissa had no
+difficulty in increasing the alarm of the terrified enemy, and
+deprived them of the aid of their cavalry in that wing. A few,
+however, of the beasts which were driven against the enemy, and
+were not turned back through fear, made great havoc among the ranks
+of the velites, though not without receiving many wounds
+themselves; for when the velites, retiring to the companies, had
+made way for the elephants, that they might not be trampled down,
+they discharged their darts at them; exposed as they were to wounds
+on both sides, those in the van also keeping up a continual
+discharge of javelins, until driven out of the Roman line by the
+weapons which fell upon them from all quarters, these elephants
+also put to flight even the cavalry of the Carthaginians posted in
+their right wing. Laelius, when he saw the enemy in disorder,
+struck additional terror into them in their confusion.</p>
+<p>The Carthaginian line was deprived of the cavalry on both sides,
+when the infantry, who were now not a match for the Romans in
+confidence or strength, engaged. In addition to this there was one
+circumstance, trifling in itself, but at the same time producing
+important consequences in the action. On the part of the Romans the
+shout was uniform, and on that account louder and more terrific,
+while the voices of the enemy, consisting as they did of many
+nations of different languages, were dissonant. The Romans used the
+stationary kind of fight, pressing upon the enemy with their own
+weight and that of their arms; but on the other side there was more
+of skirmishing and rapid movement than force. Accordingly, on the
+first charge, the Romans immediately drove back the line of their
+opponents; then pushing them with their elbows and the bosses of
+their shields, and pressing forward into the places from which they
+had pushed them, they advanced a considerable space, as though
+there had been no one to resist them, those who formed the rear
+urging forward those in front when they perceived the line of the
+enemy giving way, which circumstance itself gave great additional
+force in repelling them.</p>
+<p>On the side of the enemy, the second line, consisting of the
+Africans and Carthaginians, were so far from supporting the first
+line when giving ground, that on the contrary they even retired,
+lest their enemy, by slaying those who made a firm resistance,
+should penetrate to themselves also. Accordingly the auxiliaries
+suddenly turned their backs, and facing about upon their own party,
+fled, some of them into the second line, while others slew those
+who did not receive them into their ranks, since before they did
+not support them, and now refused to receive them. And now there
+were, in a manner, two contests going on together, the
+Carthaginians being compelled to fight at once with the enemy and
+with their own party. Not even then, however, did they receive into
+their line the terrified and exasperated troops, but, closing their
+ranks, drove them out of the scene of action to the wings and the
+surrounding plain, lest they should mingle these soldiers,
+terrified with defeat and wounds, with that part of their line
+which was firm and fresh.</p>
+<p>But such a heap of men and arms had filled the space in which
+the auxiliaries a little while ago had stood that it was almost
+more difficult to pass through it than through a close line of
+troops. The spearmen, therefore, who formed the front line,
+pursuing the enemy as each could find a way through the heap of
+arms and men and streams of blood, threw into complete disorder the
+battalions and companies. The standards also of the principes had
+begun to waver when they saw the line before them driven from their
+ground. Scipio, perceiving this, promptly ordered the signal to be
+given for the spearmen to retreat, and having taken his wounded
+into the rear, brought the principes and triarii to the wings in
+order that the line of spearmen in the centre might be more strong
+and secure. Thus a fresh and renewed battle commenced, inasmuch as
+they had penetrated to their real antagonists, men equal to them in
+the nature of their arms, in their experience in war, in the fame
+of their achievements, and the greatness of their hopes and fears.
+But the Romans were superior both in numbers and courage, for they
+had now routed both the cavalry and the elephants, and, having
+already defeated the front line, were fighting against the
+second.</p>
+<p>Lælius and Masinissa, who had pursued the routed cavalry
+through a considerable space, returning very opportunely, charged
+the rear of the enemy's line. This attack of the cavalry at length
+routed them. Many of them, being surrounded, were slain in the
+field; and many, dispersed in flight through the open plain around,
+were slain on all hands, as the cavalry were in possession of every
+part. Of the Carthaginians and their allies, above twenty thousand
+were slain on that day; about an equal number were captured, with a
+hundred and thirty-three military standards and eleven elephants.
+Of the victors as many as two thousand fell.</p>
+<p>Hannibal, slipping off during the confusion, with a few
+horsemen, came to Adrumetum, not quitting the field till he had
+tried every expedient both in the battle and before the engagement;
+having, according to the admission of Scipio and everyone skilled
+in military science, acquired the fame of having marshalled his
+troops on that day with singular judgment. He placed his elephants
+in the front, in order that their desultory attack and
+insupportable violence might prevent the Romans from following
+their standards and preserving their ranks, on which they placed
+their principal dependence. Then he posted his auxiliaries before
+the line of Carthaginians, in order that men who were made up of
+the refuse of all nations, and who were not bound by honor but by
+gain, might not have any retreat open to them in case they fled; at
+the same time that the first ardor and impetuosity might be
+exhausted upon them, and, if they could render no other service,
+that the weapons of the enemy might be blunted in wounding them.
+Next he placed the Carthaginian and African soldiers, on whom he
+placed all his hopes, in order that, being equal to the enemy in
+every other respect, they might have the advantage of them inasmuch
+as, being fresh and unimpaired in strength themselves, they would
+fight with those who were fatigued and wounded. The Italians he
+removed into the rear, separating them also by an intervening
+space, as he knew not with certainty whether they were friends or
+enemies. Hannibal, after performing this as it were his last work
+of valor, fled to Adrumetum, whence, having been summoned to
+Carthage, he returned thither in the sixth and thirtieth year after
+he had left it when a boy, and confessed in the senate house that
+he was defeated, not only in the battle, but in the war, and that
+there was no hope of safety in anything but in obtaining peace.</p>
+<p>Immediately after the battle, Scipio, having taken and plundered
+the enemy's camp, returned to the sea and his ships with an immense
+booty, news having reached him that Publius Lentulus had arrived at
+Utica with fifty men-of-war, and a hundred transports laden with
+every kind of stores. Concluding that he ought to bring before
+Carthage everything which could increase the consternation already
+existing there, after sending Laelius to Rome to report his
+victory, he ordered Cneius Octavius to conduct the legions thither
+by land, and setting out himself from Utica with the fresh fleet of
+Lentulus added to his former one, made for the harbor of Carthage.
+When he had arrived within a short distance he was met by a
+Carthaginian ship decked with fillets and branches of olive. There
+were ten deputies, the leading men in the State, sent at the
+instance of Hannibal to solicit peace, to whom, when they had come
+up to the stern of the general's ship, holding out the badges of
+suppliants, entreating and imploring the protection and compassion
+of Scipio, the only answer given was that they must come to Tunis,
+to which place he would move his camp. After taking a view of the
+site of Carthage, not so much for the sake of acquainting himself
+with it for any present object as to dispirit the enemy, he
+returned to Utica, having recalled Octavius to the same place.</p>
+<p>As they were proceeding thence to Tunis, they received
+intelligence that Vermina, the son of Syphax, with a greater number
+of horse than foot, was coming to the assistance of the
+Carthaginians. A part of his infantry with all the cavalry having
+attacked them on their march on the first day of the Saturnalia,
+routed the Numidians with little opposition, and as every way by
+which they could escape in flight was blocked up, for the cavalry
+surrounded them on all sides, fifteen thousand men were slain,
+twelve hundred were taken alive, with fifteen hundred Numidian
+horses and seventy-two military standards. The prince himself fled
+from the field with a few attendants during the confusion. The camp
+was then pitched near Tunis in the same place as before, and thirty
+ambassadors came to Scipio from Carthage. These behaved in a manner
+even more calculated to excite compassion than the former, in
+proportion as their situation was more pressing; but from the
+recollection of their recent perfidy, they were heard with
+considerably less pity. In the council, though all were impelled by
+just resentment to demolish Carthage, yet, when they reflected upon
+the magnitude of the undertaking and the length of time which would
+be consumed in the siege of so well fortified and strong a city,
+while Scipio himself was uneasy in consequence of the expectation
+of a successor, who would come in for the glory of having
+terminated the war, though it was accomplished already by the
+exertions and danger of another, the minds of all were inclined to
+peace.</p>
+<p>The next day the ambassadors being called in again, and with
+many rebukes of their perfidy, warned that instructed by so many
+disasters they would at length believe in the existence of the gods
+and the obligation of an oath, these conditions of the peace were
+stated to them: "That they should enjoy their liberty and live
+under their own laws; that they should possess such cities and
+territories as they had enjoyed before the war, and with the same
+boundaries, and that the Romans should on that day desist from
+devastation. That they should restore to the Romans all deserters
+and fugitives, giving up all their ships-of-war except ten
+triremes, with such tamed elephants as they had, and that they
+should not tame any more. That they should not carry on war in or
+out of Africa without the permission of the Roman people. That they
+should make restitution to Masinissa, and form a league with him.
+That they should furnish corn, and pay for the auxiliaries until
+the ambassadors had returned from Rome. That they should pay ten
+thousand talents of silver in equal annual installments distributed
+over fifty years. That they should give a hundred hostages,
+according to the pleasure of Scipio, not younger than fourteen nor
+older than thirty. That he would grant them a truce on condition
+that the transports, together with their cargoes, which had been
+seized during the former truce, were restored. Otherwise they would
+have no truce, nor any hope of a peace." When the ambassadors who
+were ordered to bear these conditions home reported them in an
+assembly, and Gisgo had stood forth to dissuade them from the
+terms, and was being listened to by the multitude, who were at once
+indisposed for peace and unfit for war, Hannibal, indignant that
+such language should be held and listened to at such a juncture,
+laid hold of Gisgo with his own hand and dragged him from his
+elevated position.</p>
+<p>This unusual sight in a free State having raised a murmur among
+the people, the soldier, disconcerted at the liberties which the
+citizens took, thus addressed them: "Having left you when nine
+years old, I have returned after a lapse of thirty-six years. I
+flatter myself I am well acquainted with the qualifications of a
+soldier, having been instructed in them from my childhood,
+sometimes by my own situation and sometimes by that of my country.
+The privileges, the laws, and customs of the city and the forum you
+ought to teach me." Having thus apologized for his indiscretion, he
+discoursed largely concerning the peace, showing how inoppressive
+the terms were, and how necessary it was. The greatest difficulty
+was that of the ships which had been seized during the truce
+nothing was to be found except the ships themselves, nor was it
+easy to collect the property, because those who were charged with
+having it were opposed to the peace. It was resolved that the ships
+should be restored and that the men at least should be looked up;
+and as to whatever else was missing, that it should be left to
+Scipio to put a value upon it, and that the Carthaginians should
+make compensation accordingly in money. There are those who say
+that Hannibal went from the field of battle to the sea-coast;
+whence he immediately sailed in a ship, which he had ready for the
+purpose, to king Antiochus; and that when Scipio demanded above
+everything that Hannibal should be given up to him, answer was made
+that Hannibal was not in Africa.</p>
+<p>After the ambassadors returned to Scipio, the quaestors were
+ordered to give in an account, made out from the public registers,
+of the public property which had been in the ships; and the owners
+to make a return of the private property. For the amount of the
+value twenty-five thousand pounds of silver were required to be
+paid down; and a truce for three months was granted to the
+Carthaginians. It was added that during the time of the truce they
+should not send ambassadors anywhere else than to Rome; and that
+whatever ambassadors came to Carthage, they should not dismiss them
+before informing the Roman general who they were and what they
+sought. With the Carthaginian ambassadors, Lucius Veturius Philo,
+Marcus Marcius Ralla, and Lucius Scipio, brother of the general,
+were sent to Rome.</p>
+<p>The Roman, together with the Carthaginian, ambassadors having
+arrived at Rome from Africa, the senate was assembled at the temple
+of Bellona; when Lucius Veturius Philo stated, to the great joy of
+the senate, that a battle had been fought with Hannibal which was
+decisive of the fate of the Carthaginians, and that a period was at
+length put to that calamitous war. He added what formed a small
+accession to their successes, that Vermina, the son of Syphax, had
+been vanquished. He was then ordered to go forth to the public
+assembly and impart the joyful tidings to the people. Then, a
+thanksgiving having been appointed, all the temples in the city
+were thrown open and supplications for three days were decreed.
+Publius Scipio was continued in command in the province of Africa
+with the armies which he then had. The Carthaginian ambassadors
+were called before the senate. On observing their ages and
+dignified appearance, for they were by far the first men of the
+State, all promptly declared their conviction that now they were
+sincere in their desire to effect a peace. Hasdrubal, however,
+surnamed by his countrymen Haedus, who had invariably recommended
+peace and was opposed to the Barcine faction, was regarded with
+greater interest than the rest.</p>
+<p>On these accounts the greater weight was attached to him when
+transferring the blame of the war from the State at large to the
+cupidity of a few. After a speech of varied character, in which he
+sometimes refuted the charges which had been brought, at other
+times admitted some, lest by imprudently denying what was
+manifestly true their forgiveness might be the more difficult; and
+then, even admonishing the conscript fathers to be guided by the
+rules of decorum and moderation in their prosperity, he said that
+if the Carthaginians had listened to himself and Hanno, and had
+been disposed to make a proper use of circumstances, they would
+themselves have dictated terms of peace, instead of begging it as
+they now did. That it rarely happened that good fortune and a sound
+judgment were bestowed upon men at the same time. That the Roman
+people were therefore invincible, because when successful they
+forgot not the maxims of wisdom and prudence; and indeed it would
+have been matter of astonishment did they act otherwise. That those
+persons to whom success was a new and uncommon thing proceeded to a
+pitch of madness in their ungoverned transports in consequence of
+their not being accustomed to it. That to the Roman people the joy
+arising from victory was a matter of common occurrence, and was now
+almost become old-fashioned. That they had extended their empire
+more by sparing the vanquished than by conquering.</p>
+<p>The language employed by the others was of a nature more
+calculated to excite compassion; they represented from what a
+height of power the Carthaginian affairs had fallen. That nothing
+besides the walls of Carthage remained to those who a little time
+ago held almost the whole world in subjection by their arms; that
+shut up within these, they could see nothing anywhere on sea or
+land which owned their authority. That they would retain possession
+of their city itself and their household gods only in case the
+Roman people should refrain from venting their indignation upon
+these, which is all that remains for them to do. When it was
+manifest that the fathers were moved by compassion, it is said that
+one of the senators, violently incensed at the perfidy of the
+Carthaginians, immediately asked with a loud voice by what gods
+they would swear in striking the league, since they had broken
+their faith with those by whom they swore in striking the former
+one? By those same, replied Hasdrubal, who have shown such
+determined hostility to the violators of treaties.</p>
+<p>The minds of all being disposed to peace, Cneius Lentulus, whose
+province the fleet was, protested against the decree of the senate.
+Upon this, Manius Acilius and Quintus Minucius, tribunes of the
+people, put the question to the people whether they willed and
+ordered that the senate should decree that peace should be made
+with the Carthaginians? whom they ordered to grant that peace, and
+whom to conduct the army out of Africa? All the tribes ordered
+respecting the peace according as the question had been put. That
+Publius Scipio should grant the peace, and that he also should
+conduct the army home. Agreeably to this order, the senate decreed
+that Publius Scipio, acting according to the opinion of the ten
+deputies, should make peace with the Carthaginian people on what
+terms he pleased. The Carthaginians then returned thanks to the
+senate, and requested that they might be allowed to enter the city
+and converse with their countrymen who had been made prisoners and
+were in custody of the State; observing that some of them were
+their relations and friends, and men of rank, and some, persons to
+whom they were charged with messages from their relations.</p>
+<p>Having obtained these requests, they again asked permission to
+ransom such of them as they pleased; when they were desired to give
+in their names. Having given in a list of about two hundred, a
+decree of the senate was passed to the effect that the Carthaginian
+ambassadors should be allowed to take away into Africa to Publius
+Cornelius Scipio two hundred of the Carthaginian prisoners,
+selecting whom they pleased; and that they should convey to him a
+message that if the peace were concluded he should restore them to
+the Carthaginians without ransom. The heralds being ordered to go
+into Africa to strike the league, at their own desire the senate
+passed a decree that they should take with them flint stones of
+their own and vervain of their own; that the Roman praetor should
+command them to strike the league, and that they should demand of
+him herbs. The description of herb usually given to the heralds is
+taken from the Capitol. Thus the Carthaginians being allowed to
+depart from Rome, when they had gone into Africa to Scipio
+concluded the peace on the terms before mentioned. They delivered
+up their men-of-war, their elephants, deserters, fugitives, and
+four thousand prisoners, among whom was Quintus Terentius Culleo, a
+senator. The ships he ordered to be taken out into the main and
+burned. Some say there were five hundred of every description of
+those which are worked with oars, and that the sudden sight of
+these when burning occasioned as deep a sensation of grief to the
+Carthaginians as if Carthage had been in flames. The measures
+adopted respecting the deserters were more severe than those
+respecting the fugitives. Those who were of the Latin confederacy
+were decapitated; the Romans were crucified.</p>
+<p>The last peace with the Carthaginians was made forty years
+before this in the consulate of Quintus Lutatius and Aulus Manlius.
+The war commenced twenty-three years afterward in the consulate of
+Publius Cornelius and Tiberius Sempronius. It was concluded in the
+seventeenth year, in the consulate of Cneius Cornelius and Publius
+Aelius Paetus. It is related that Scipio frequently said afterward,
+that first the ambition of Tiberius Claudius, and afterward of
+Cneius Cornelius, were the causes which prevented his terminating
+the war by the destruction of Carthage.</p>
+<p>The Carthaginians finding difficulty in raising the first sum of
+money to be paid, as their finances were exhausted by a protracted
+war, and in consequence great lamentation and grief arising in the
+senate house, it is said that Hannibal was observed laughing, and
+when Hasdrubal Haedus rebuked him for laughing amid the public
+grief, when he himself was the occasion of the tears which were
+shed, he said: "If, as the expression of the countenance is
+discerned by the sight, so the inward feelings of the mind could be
+distinguished, it would clearly appear to you that that laughter
+which you censure came from a heart not elated with joy, but
+frantic with misfortunes. And yet it is not so ill-timed as those
+absurd and inconsistent tears of yours. Then you ought to have wept
+when our arms were taken from us, our ships burned, and we were
+forbidden to engage in foreign wars, for that was the wound by
+which we fell. Nor is it just that you should suppose that the
+measures which the Romans have adopted toward you have been
+dictated by animosity. No great state can remain at rest long
+together. If it has no enemy abroad it finds one at home in the
+same manner as over-robust bodies seem secure from external causes,
+but are encumbered with their own strength. So far, forsooth, we
+are affected with the public calamities as they reach our private
+affairs; nor is there any circumstance attending them which is felt
+more acutely than the loss of money. Accordingly, when the spoils
+were torn down from vanquished Carthage, when you beheld her left
+unarmed and defenceless amid so many armed nations of Africa, none
+heaved a sigh. Now, because a tribute is to be levied from private
+property you lament with one accord, as though at the funeral of
+the State. How much do I dread lest you should soon be made
+sensible that you have shed tears this day for the lightest of your
+misfortunes!"</p>
+<p>Such were the sentiments which Hannibal delivered to the
+Carthaginians. Scipio, having summoned an assembly, presented
+Masinissa, in addition to his paternal dominions, with the town of
+Cirta, and the other cities and territories which had passed from
+the kingdom of Syphax into the possession of the Romans. He ordered
+Cneius Octavius to conduct the fleet to Sicily and deliver it to
+Cneius Cornelius the consul, and directed the Carthaginian
+ambassadors to go to Rome, that the arrangements he had made with
+the advice of the ten deputies might be ratified by the sanction of
+the fathers and the order of the people.</p>
+<p>Peace having been established by sea and land, he embarked his
+troops and crossed over to Lilybæum in Sicily, whence, having
+sent a great part of his soldiers by ships, he himself proceeded
+through Italy, which was rejoicing not less on account of the peace
+than the victory; while not only the inhabitants of the cities
+poured out to show him honor, but crowds of rustics thronged the
+roads. He arrived at Rome and entered the city in a triumph of
+unparalleled splendor. He brought into the treasury one hundred and
+twenty-three thousand pounds of silver. He distributed to each of
+his soldiers four hundred asses out of the spoils. By the death of
+Syphax, which took place but a short time before at Tibur, whither
+he had been removed from Alba, a diminution was occasioned in the
+interest of the pageant rather than in the glory of him who
+triumphed. His death, however, was attended with circumstances
+which produced a strong sensation, for he was buried at the public
+expense. Polybius, an author by no means to be despised, asserts
+that this King was led in the triumph. Quintus Terentius Culleo
+followed Scipio in his triumph with a cap of liberty on his head,
+and during the remainder of his life treated him with the respect
+due to him as the author of his freedom. I have not been able to
+ascertain whether the partiality of the soldiers or the favor of
+the people fixed upon him the surname of Africanus, or whether in
+the same manner as Felix was applied to Sulla, and Magnus to
+Pompey, in the memory of our fathers, it originated in the flattery
+of his friends. He was doubtless the first general who was
+distinguished by a name derived from the nation which he had
+conquered. Afterward, in imitation of his example, some, by no
+means his equals in his victories, affixed splendid inscriptions on
+their statues and gave honorable surnames to their families.</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="RULE4_16"></a>JUDAS MACCABÆUS LIBERATES JUDEA</h2>
+<p class="center">B.C. 165</p>
+<p class="center">JOSEPHUS</p>
+<p class="intros">The noble-minded Judas Maccabaeus was the hero of
+Jewish independence— the deliverer of Judea and Judaism
+during the bloody persecutions of the Syrian king Antiochus
+Epiphanes, in the second century B.C. This King was attempting to
+destroy in Palestine the national religion. For this purpose pagan
+altars were set up among the Jews and pagan sacrifices enjoined
+upon the worshippers of Jehovah. Many Jews fled from their own
+towns and villages into the uninhabited wilderness, in order that
+they might have liberty to worship the God of their fathers; but a
+few conformed to the ordinances of Antiochus. Soon, however, open
+resistance to the decrees of the pagan ruler began to manifest
+itself among the faithful.</p>
+<p class="intros">The first protest in the shape of active
+opposition was made by Mattathias, a priest living at Modin. When
+the servants of Antiochus came to that retired village and
+commanded Mattathias to do sacrifice to the heathen gods, he
+refused; he went so far as to strike down at the altar a Jew who
+was preparing to offer such a sacrifice. Then he escaped to the
+mountains with his five sons and a band of followers. These
+followers grew in numbers and activity, overthrowing pagan altars,
+circumcising heathen children, and putting to the sword both
+apostates and unbelievers. When Mattathias died, in B.C. 166, he
+was succeeded as leader by his son Judas, called Maccabaeus, "the
+Hammer"; as Charles, who defeated the Saracens at Tours, is called
+Martel or hammer.</p>
+<p class="intros">The successes of Judas were uninterrupted, and
+culminated B.C. 165 in the repulse of Lysias, the general of
+Antiochus, at Bethzur, where a large Syrian force gathered in the
+expectation of crushing the patriotic army of Judas. After this
+victory Judas led his followers into Jerusalem and proceeded to
+restore the Temple and the worship of the national religion, and to
+cleanse the Temple from all traces of pagan worship. The great
+altar was rebuilt; new sacred vessels provided; and an eight-days'
+dedication festival begun on the very day when, three years before,
+the altar of Jehovah had been desecrated by a heathen sacrifice.
+This Feast of the Dedication was ever afterward observed in the
+Temple at Jerusalem and is mentioned in the gospels (John x. 22).
+Judas established a dynasty of priest-kings, which lasted until
+supplanted by Herod, with the aid of the Romans, in B.C. 40; and
+gave by his genuinely heroic bearing his name to this whole
+glorious epoch of Jewish history.</p>
+<p>Now at this time there was one whose name was Mattathias, who
+dwelt at Modin, the son of John, the son of Simeon, the son of
+Asamoneus, a priest of the order of Joarib, and a citizen of
+Jerusalem. He had five sons: John, who was called Gaddis, and
+Simon, who was called Matthes, and Judas, who was called
+Maccabæus,[<a href="#note-66">66</a>] and Eleazar, who was
+called Auran, and Jonathan, who was called Apphus. Now this
+Mattathias lamented to his children the sad state of their affairs,
+and the ravage made in the city, and the plundering of the Temple,
+and the calamities the multitude were under; and he told them that
+it was better for them to die for the laws of their country than to
+live so ingloriously as they then did.</p>
+<p><a name="note-66"><!-- Note Anchor 66 --></a>[Footnote 66: That
+this appellation of Maccabee was not first of all given to Judas
+Maccabæaus, nor was derived from any initial letters of the
+Hebrew words on his banner, <i>Mi Kamoka Be Elim, Jehovah</i>?
+("Who is like unto thee among the gods, O Jehovah?"), Exod. xv. II,
+as the modern rabbins vainly pretend, see <i>Authent. Rec.</i>,
+part i., pp. 205, 206. Only we may note, by the way, that the
+original name of these Maccabees and their posterity was
+Asamoneans, which was derived from Asamoneus, the great-grandfather
+of Mattathias, as Josephus here informs us.]</p>
+<p>But when those that were appointed by the King were come to
+Modin that they might compel the Jews to do what they were
+commanded, and to enjoin those that were there to offer sacrifice,
+as the King had commanded, they desired that Mattathias, a person
+of the greatest character among them, both on other accounts and
+particularly on account of such a numerous and so deserving a
+family of children, would begin the sacrifice, because his
+fellow-citizens would follow his example, and because such a
+procedure would make him honored by the King. But Mattathias said
+that he would not do it, and that if all the other nations would
+obey the commands of Antiochus, either out of fear or to please
+him, yet would not he nor his sons leave the religious worship of
+their country; but as soon as he had ended his speech there came
+one of the Jews into the midst of them and sacrificed as Antiochus
+had commanded. At which Mattathias had great indignation, and ran
+upon him violently with his sons, who had swords with them, and
+slew both the man himself that sacrificed and Apelles, the King's
+general who compelled him to sacrifice, with a few of his
+soldiers.</p>
+<p>He also overthrew the idol altar and cried out, "If," said he,
+"anyone be zealous for the laws of his country and for the worship
+of God, let him follow me"; and when he had said this he made haste
+into the desert with his sons, and left all his substance in the
+village. Many others did the same also, and fled with their
+children and wives into the desert and dwelt in caves; but when the
+King's generals heard this, they took all the forces they then had
+in the citadel at Jerusalem, and pursued the Jews into the desert;
+and when they had overtaken them, they in the first place
+endeavored to persuade them to repent, and to choose what was most
+for their advantage and not put them to the necessity of using them
+according to the law of war; but when they would not comply with
+their persuasions, but continued to be of a different mind, they
+fought against them on the Sabbath day, and they burned them as
+they were in the caves, without resistance, and without so much as
+stopping up the entrances of the caves. And they avoided to defend
+themselves on that day because they were not willing to break in
+upon the honor they owed the Sabbath, even in such distresses; for
+our law requires that we rest upon that day.</p>
+<p>There were about a thousand, with their wives and children, who
+were smothered and died in these caves; but many of those that
+escaped joined themselves to Mattathias and appointed him to be
+their ruler, who taught them to fight even on the Sabbath day, and
+told them that unless they would do so they would become their own
+enemies by observing the law [so rigorously] while their
+adversaries would still assault them on this day, and they would
+not then defend themselves; and that nothing could then hinder but
+they must all perish without fighting. This speech persuaded them,
+and this rule continues among us to this day, that if there be a
+necessity we may fight on Sabbath days. So Mattathias got a great
+army about him and overthrew their idol altars and slew those that
+broke the laws, even all that he could get under his power; for
+many of them were dispersed among the nations round about them for
+fear of him. He also commanded that those boys who were not yet
+circumcised should be circumcised now; and he drove those away that
+were appointed to hinder such their circumcision.</p>
+<p>But when he had ruled one year and was fallen into a distemper,
+he called for his sons and set them round about him, and said: "O
+my sons, I am going the way of all the earth; and I recommend to
+you my resolution and beseech you not to be negligent in keeping
+it, but to be mindful of the desires of him who begat you and
+brought you up, and to preserve the customs of your country, and to
+recover your ancient form of government which is in danger of being
+overturned, and not to be carried away with those that either by
+their own inclination or out of necessity betray it, but to become
+such sons as are worthy of me; to be above all force and necessity,
+and so to dispose your souls as to be ready when it shall be
+necessary to die for your laws, as sensible of this, by just
+reasoning, that if God see that you are so disposed he will not
+overlook you, but will have a great value for your virtue, and will
+restore to you again what you have lost and will return to you that
+freedom in which you shall live quietly and enjoy your own
+customs.</p>
+<p>"Your bodies are mortal and subject to fate; but they receive a
+sort of immortality by the remembrance of what actions they have
+done; and I would have you so in love with this immortality that
+you may pursue after glory, and that when you have undergone the
+greatest difficulties you may not scruple for such things to lose
+your lives. I exhort you especially to agree one with another, and
+in what excellency any one of you exceeds another, to yield to him
+so far, and by that means to reap the advantage of everyone's own
+virtues. Do you then esteem Simon as your father because he is a
+man of extraordinary prudence, and be governed by him in what
+counsels he gives you. Take Maccabaeus for the general of your
+army, because of his courage and strength, for he will avenge your
+nation and will bring vengeance on your enemies. Admit among you
+the righteous and religious, and augment their power."</p>
+<p>When Mattathias had thus discoursed to his sons and had prayed
+to God to be their assistant and to recover to the people their
+former constitution, he died a little afterward, and was buried at
+Modin, all the people making great lamentation for him. Whereupon
+his son Judas took upon him the administration of public affairs,
+in the hundred and forty-sixth year; and thus, by the ready
+assistance of his brethren and of others, Judas cast their enemies
+out of the country and put those of their own country to death who
+had transgressed its laws, and purified the land of all the
+pollutions that were in it.</p>
+<p>When Apollonius, the general of the Samaritan forces, heard this
+he took his army and made haste to go against Judas, who met him
+and joined battle with him, and beat him and slew many of his men,
+and among them Apollonius himself, their general, whose sword,
+being that which he happened then to wear, he seized upon and kept
+for himself; but he wounded more than he slew, and took a great
+deal of prey from the enemy's camp, and went his way; but when
+Seron, who was general of the army of Celesyria, heard that many
+had joined themselves to Judas, and that he had about him an army
+sufficient for fighting and for making war, he determined to make
+an expedition against him, as thinking it became him to endeavor to
+punish those that transgressed the King's injunctions. He then got
+together an army as large as he was able, and joined to it the
+renegade and wicked Jews, and came against Judas.</p>
+<p>He then came as far as Bethoron, a village of Judea, and there
+pitched his camp; upon which Judas met him, and when he intended to
+give him battle he saw that his soldiers were backward to fight
+because their number was small and because they wanted food, for
+they were fasting. He encouraged them and said to them that victory
+and conquest of enemies are not derived from the multitude in
+armies, but in the exercise of piety toward God; and that they had
+the plainest instances in their forefathers, who, by their
+righteousness and exerting themselves on behalf of their own laws
+and their own children, had frequently conquered many ten
+thousands, for innocence is the strongest army. By this speech he
+induced his men to contemn the multitude of the enemy, and to fall
+upon Seron; and upon joining battle with him he beat the Syrians;
+and when their general fell among the rest they all ran away with
+speed, as thinking that to be their best way of escaping. So he
+pursued them unto the plain and slew about eight hundred of the
+enemy, but the rest escaped to the region which lay near to the
+sea.</p>
+<p>When king Antiochus heard of these things he was very angry at
+what had happened; so he got together all his own army, with many
+mercenaries whom he had hired from the islands, and took them with
+him, and prepared to break into Judea about the beginning of the
+spring; but when, upon his mustering his soldiers, he perceived
+that his treasures were deficient, and there was a want of money in
+them, for all the taxes were not paid, by reason of the seditions
+there had been among the nations, he having been so magnanimous and
+so liberal that what he had was not sufficient for him, he
+therefore resolved first to go into Persia and collect the taxes of
+that country. Hereupon he left one whose name was Lysias, who was
+in great repute with him, governor of the kingdom, as far as the
+bounds of Egypt and of the Lower Asia and reaching from the river
+Euphrates, and committed to him a certain part of his forces and of
+his elephants and charged him to bring up his son Antiochus with
+all possible care until he came back; and that he should conquer
+Judea and take its inhabitants for slaves and utterly destroy
+Jerusalem, and abolish the whole nation; and when king Antiochus
+had given these things in charge to Lysias, he went into Persia,
+and in the hundred and forty-seventh year he passed over Euphrates
+and went to the superior provinces.</p>
+<p>Upon this Lysias chose Ptolemy the son of Dorymenes, and
+Nicanor, and Gorgias, very potent men among the King's friends, and
+delivered to them forty thousand foot-soldiers and seven thousand
+horsemen, and sent them against Judea, who came as far as the city
+Emmaus and pitched their camp in the plain country. There came also
+to them auxiliaries out of Syria and the country round about, as
+also many of the renegade Jews; and besides these came some
+merchants to buy those that should be carried captives—having
+bonds with them to bind those that should be made
+prisoners—with that silver and gold which they were to pay
+for their price; and when Judas saw their camp and how numerous
+their enemies were, he persuaded his own soldiers to be of good
+courage, and exhorted them to place their hopes of victory in God
+and to make supplication to him, according to the custom of their
+country, clothed in sackcloth, and to show what was their usual
+habit of supplication in the greatest dangers, and thereby to
+prevail with God to grant them the victory over their enemies. So
+he set them in their ancient order of battle used by their
+forefathers, under their captains of thousands, and other officers,
+and dismissed such as were newly married, as well as those that had
+newly gained possessions, that they might not fight in a cowardly
+manner out of an inordinate love of life, in order to enjoy those
+blessings.</p>
+<p>When he had thus disposed his soldiers he encouraged them to
+fight by the following speech, which he made to them: "O my
+fellow-soldiers, no other time remains more opportune than the
+present for courage and contempt of dangers; for if you now fight
+manfully you may recover your liberty, which, as it is a thing of
+itself agreeable to all men, so it proves to be to us much more
+desirable, by its affording us the liberty of worshipping God.
+Since, therefore, you are in such circumstances at present, you
+must either recover that liberty and so regain a happy and blessed
+way of living, which is that according to our laws and the customs
+of our country, or to submit to the most opprobrious sufferings;
+nor will any seed of your nation remain if you be beat in this
+battle. Fight therefore manfully, and suppose that you must die
+though you do not fight; but believe that besides such glorious
+rewards as those of the liberty of your country, of your laws, of
+your religion, you shall then obtain everlasting glory. Prepare
+yourselves, therefore, and put yourselves into such an agreeable
+posture that you may be ready to fight with the enemy as soon as it
+is day to-morrow morning."</p>
+<p>And this was the speech which Judas made to encourage them. But
+when the enemy sent Gorgias with five thousand foot and one
+thousand horse, that he might fall upon Judas by night, and had for
+that purpose certain of the renegade Jews as guides, the son of
+Mattathias perceived it and resolved to fall upon those enemies
+that were in their camp, now their forces were divided. When they
+had therefore supped in good time and had left many fires in their
+camp he marched all night to those enemies that were at Emmaus; so
+that when Gorgias found no enemy in their camp, but suspected that
+they were retired and had hidden themselves among the mountains, he
+resolved to go and seek them wheresoever they were.</p>
+<p>But about break of day Judas appeared to those enemies that were
+at Emmaus, with only three thousand men, and those ill-armed by
+reason of their poverty; and when he saw the enemy very well and
+skilfully fortified in their camp he encouraged the Jews and told
+them that they ought to fight, though it were with their naked
+bodies, for that God had sometimes of old given such men strength,
+and that against such as were more in number, and were armed also,
+out of regard to their great courage. So he commanded the
+trumpeters to sound for the battle, and by thus falling upon the
+enemy when they did not expect it, and thereby astonishing and
+disturbing their minds, he slew many of those that resisted him and
+went on pursuing the rest as far as Gadara and the plains of
+Idumea, and Ashdod, and Jamnia; and of these there fell about three
+thousand. Yet did Judas exhort his soldiers not to be too desirous
+of the spoils, for that still they must have a contest and battle
+with Gorgias and the forces that were with him, but that when they
+had once overcome them then they might securely plunder the camp
+because they were the only enemies remaining, and they expected no
+others.</p>
+<p>And just as he was speaking to his soldiers, Gorigas' men looked
+down into that army which they left in their camp and saw that it
+was overthrown and the camp burned; for the smoke that arose from
+it showed them, even when they were a great way off, what had
+happened. When, therefore, those that were with Gorgias understood
+that things were in this posture, and perceived that those that
+were with Judas were ready to fight them, they also were affrighted
+and put to flight; but then Judas, as though he had already beaten
+Gorgias' soldiers without fighting, returned and seized on the
+spoils. He took a great quantity of gold and silver and purple and
+blue, and then returned home with joy, and singing hymns to God for
+their good success; for this victory greatly contributed to the
+recovery of their liberty.</p>
+<p>Hereupon Lysias was confounded at the defeat of the army which
+he had sent, and the next year he got together sixty thousand
+chosen men. He also took five thousand horsemen and fell upon
+Judea, and he went up to the hill country of Bethsur, a village of
+Judea, and pitched his camp there, where Judas met him with ten
+thousand men; and when he saw the great number of his enemies, he
+prayed to God that he would assist him, and joined battle with the
+first of the enemy that appeared and beat them and slew about five
+thousand of them, and thereby became terrible to the rest of them.
+Nay, indeed, Lysias observing the great spirit of the Jews, how
+they were prepared to die rather than lose their liberty, and being
+afraid of their desperate way of fighting, as if it were real
+strength, he took the rest of the army back with him and returned
+to Antioch.</p>
+<p>When, therefore, the generals of Antiochus' armies had been
+beaten so often, Judas assembled the people together, and told them
+that after these many victories which God had given them, they
+ought to go up to Jerusalem and purify the Temple and offer the
+appointed sacrifices. But as soon as he with the whole multitude
+was come to Jerusalem and found the Temple deserted and its gates
+burned down and plants growing in the Temple of their own accord on
+account of its desertion, he and those that were with him began to
+lament and were quite confounded at the sight of the Temple; so he
+chose out some of his soldiers and gave them orders to fight
+against those guards that were in the citadel until he should have
+purified the Temple. When therefore he had carefully purged it and
+had brought in new vessels, the candlestick, the table [of
+shewbread], and the altar [of incense], which were made of gold, he
+hung up the veils at the gates and added doors to them.</p>
+<p>He also took down the altar [of burnt-offering], and built a new
+one of stones that he gathered together and not of such as were
+hewn with iron tools. So on the five-and-twentieth day of the month
+of Casleu, which the Macedonians call Apelleus, they lighted the
+lamps that were on the candlestick and offered incense upon the
+altar [of incense], and laid the loaves upon the table [of
+shew-bread], and offered burnt-offerings upon the new altar [of
+burnt-offering]. Now it so fell out that these things were done on
+the very same day on which their divine worship had fallen off and
+was reduced to a profane and common use after three years' time;
+for so it was, that the Temple was made desolate by Antiochus, and
+so continued for three years. This desolation happened to the
+Temple in the hundred forty and fifth year, on the twenty-fifth day
+of the month Apelleus, and on the hundred and fifty-third Olympiad;
+but it was dedicated anew, on the same day, the twenty-fifth of the
+month Apelleus, in the hundred and forty-eighth year, and on the
+hundred and fifty-fourth Olympiad. And this desolation came to pass
+according to the prophecy of Daniel, which was given four hundred
+and eight years before, for he declared that the Macedonians would
+dissolve that worship [for some time].</p>
+<p>Now Judas celebrated the festival of the restoration of the
+sacrifices of the Temple for eight days, and omitted no sort of
+pleasures thereon; but he feasted them upon very rich and splendid
+sacrifices, and he honored God and delighted them by hymns and
+psalms. Nay, they were so very glad at the revival of their
+customs, when after a long time of intermission they unexpectedly
+had regained the freedom of their worship, that they made it a law
+for their posterity that they should keep a festival, on account of
+the restoration of their Temple worship, for eight days. And from
+that time to this we celebrate this festival and call it Lights. I
+suppose the reason was, because this liberty beyond our hopes
+appeared to us, and that thence was the name given to that
+festival. Judas also rebuilt the walls round about the city, and
+reared towers of great height against the incursions of enemies,
+and set guards therein. He also fortified the city Bethsura that it
+might serve as a citadel against any distresses that might come
+from our enemies.</p>
+<p>When these things were over, the nations round about the Jews
+were very uneasy at the revival of their power and rose up together
+and destroyed many of them, as gaining advantage over them by
+laying snares for them and making secret conspiracies against them.
+Judas made perpetual expeditions against these men, and endeavored
+to restrain them from those incursions and to prevent the mischiefs
+they did to the Jews. So he fell upon the Idumeans, the posterity
+of Esau, at Acra-battene, and slew a great many of them and took
+their spoils. He also shut up the sons of Bean, that laid wait for
+the Jews; and he sat down about them, and besieged them, and burned
+their towers and destroyed the men [that were in them]. After this
+he went thence in haste against the Ammonites who had a great and a
+numerous army, of which Timotheus was the commander. And when he
+had subdued them he seized on the city of Jazer, and took their
+wives and their children captives and burned the city and then
+returned into Judea. But when the neighboring nations understood
+that he was returned they got together in great numbers in the land
+of Gilead and came against those Jews that were at their borders,
+who then fled to the garrison of Dathema, and sent to Judas to
+inform him that Timotheus was endeavoring to take the place whither
+they were fled. And as these epistles were reading, there came
+other messengers out of Galilee who informed him that the
+inhabitants of Ptolemais, and of Tyre and Sidon, and strangers of
+Galilee, were gotten together.</p>
+<p>Accordingly Judas, upon considering what was fit to be done with
+relation to the necessity both these cases required, gave order
+that Simon his brother should take three thousand chosen men and go
+to the assistance of the Jews in Galilee, while he and another of
+his brothers, Jonathan, made haste into the land of Gilead with
+eight thousand soldiers. And he left Joseph, the son of Zacharias,
+and Azarias, to be over the rest of the forces, and charged them to
+keep Judea very carefully and to fight no battles with any persons
+whomsoever until his return. Accordingly Simon went into Galilee
+and fought the enemy and put them to flight, and pursued them to
+the very gates of Ptolemais, and slew about three thousand of them,
+and took the spoils of those that were slain and those Jews whom
+they had made captives, with their baggage, and then returned
+home.</p>
+<p>Now as for Judas Maccabaeus and his brother Jonathan, they
+passed over the river Jordan, and when they had gone three days'
+journey they lighted upon the Nabateans, who came to meet them
+peaceably and who told them how the affairs of those in the land of
+Galilee stood and how many of them were in distress and driven into
+garrisons and into the cities of Galilee, and exhorted him to make
+haste to go against the foreigners, and to endeavor to save his own
+countrymen out of their hands. To this exhortation Judas hearkened
+and returned into the wilderness, and in the first place fell upon
+the inhabitants of Bosor, and took the city, and beat the
+inhabitants, and destroyed all the males, and all that were able to
+fight, and burned the city. Nor did he stop even when night came
+on, but he journeyed in it to the garrison where the Jews happened
+to be then shut up, and where Timotheus lay round the place with
+his army; and Judas came upon the city in the morning, and when he
+found that the enemy were making an assault upon the walls, and
+that some of them brought ladders on which they might get upon
+those walls, and that others brought engines [to batter them], he
+bid the trumpeter to sound his trumpet, and he encouraged his
+soldiers cheerfully to undergo dangers for the sake of their
+brethren and kindred; he also parted his army into three bodies and
+fell upon the backs of their enemies. But when Timotheus' men
+perceived that it was Maccabaeus that was upon them, of both whose
+courage and good success in war they had formerly had sufficient
+experience, they were put to flight; but Judas followed them with
+his army and slew about eight thousand of them. He then turned
+aside to a city of the foreigners called Malle, and took it, and
+slew all the males and burned the city itself. He then removed from
+thence, and overthrew Casphom and Bosor, and many other cities of
+the land of Gilead.</p>
+<p>But not long after this Timotheus prepared a great army, and
+took many others as auxiliaries, and induced some of the Arabians
+by the promise of rewards to go with him in this expedition, and
+came with his army beyond the brook over against the city Raphon;
+and he encouraged his soldiers, if it came to a battle with the
+Jews, to fight courageously, and to hinder their passing over the
+brook; for he said to them beforehand that "if they come over it we
+shall be beaten." And when Judas heard that Timotheus prepared
+himself to fight he took all his own army and went in haste against
+Timotheus, his enemy; and when he had passed over the brook he fell
+upon his enemies, and some of them met him, whom he slew, and
+others of them he so terrified that he compelled them to throw down
+their arms and fly, and some of them escaped; but some of them fled
+to what was called the temple of Carnaim, and hoped thereby to
+preserve themselves, but Judas took the city and slew them and
+burned the temple, and so used several ways of destroying his
+enemies.</p>
+<p>When he had done this he gathered the Jews together with their
+children and wives and the substance that belonged to them, and was
+going to bring them back into Judea. But as soon as he was come to
+a certain city the name of which was Ephron, that lay upon the
+road—and as it was not possible for him to go any other way,
+so he was not willing to go back again—he then sent to the
+inhabitants, and desired that they would open their gates and
+permit them to go on their way through the city; for they had
+stopped up the gates with stones and cut off their passage through
+it. And when the inhabitants of Ephron would not agree to this
+proposal, he encouraged those that were with him, and encompassed
+the city round and besieged it, and lying round it by day and night
+took the city and slew every male in it and burned it all down, and
+so obtained a way through it; and the multitude of those that were
+slain was so great that they went over the dead bodies. So they
+came over Jordan and arrived at the great plain over against which
+is situate the city Bethshan, which is called by the Greeks
+Scythopolis.[<a href="#note-67">67</a>] And going away hastily from
+thence, they came into Judea, singing psalms and hymns as they
+went, and indulging such tokens of mirth as are usual in triumphs
+upon victory. They also offered thank-offerings both for their good
+success and for the preservation of their army, for not one of the
+Jews was slain in these battles.</p>
+<p><a name="note-67"><!-- Note Anchor 67 --></a>[Footnote 67: The
+reason why Bethshan was called Scythopolis is well known from
+Herodotus, b. i., p. 105, and Syncellus, p. 214, that the
+Scythians, where they overran Asia, in the days of Josiah, seized
+on this city, and kept it as long as they continued in Asia; from
+which time it retained the name of Scythopolis, or the City of the
+Scythians.]</p>
+<p>But as to Joseph, the son of Zacharias, and Azarias, whom Judas
+left generals [of the rest of his forces] at the same time when
+Simon was in Galilee fighting against the people of Ptolemais, and
+Judas himself and his brother Jonathan were in the land of Gilead,
+did these men also affect the glory of being courageous generals in
+war, in order whereto they took the army that was under their
+command and came to Jamnia. There Gorgias, the general of the
+forces of Jamnia, met them, and upon joining battle with him they
+lost two thousand of their army and fled away, and were pursued to
+the very borders of Judea. And this misfortune befell them by their
+disobedience to what injunctions Judas had given them not to fight
+with anyone before his return. For besides the rest of Judas'
+sagacious counsels, one may well wonder at this concerning the
+misfortune that befell the forces commanded by Joseph and Azarias,
+which he understood would happen if they broke any of the
+injunctions he had given them. But Judas and his brethren did not
+leave off fighting with the Idumeans, but pressed upon them on all
+sides, and took from them the city of Hebron, and demolished all
+its fortifications and set all its towers on fire, and burned the
+country of the foreigners and the city Marissa. They came also to
+Ashdod, and took it, and laid it waste, and took away a great deal
+of the spoils and prey that were in it and returned to Judea.</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="RULE4_17"></a>THE GRACCHI AND THEIR REFORMS</h2>
+<p class="center">B.C. 133</p>
+<p class="center">THEODOR MOMMSEN</p>
+<p class="intros">Cornelia, whose father was Scipio Africanus,
+preferred to be called "Mother of the Gracchi" rather than daughter
+of the conqueror of Numantia. Tiberius and Caius Gracchus, her
+sons, were born at a time when the social condition of Rome was
+rank with corruption. The small farmer class were deprived of
+holdings, the soil was being worked by slaves, and its products
+wasted on pleasure and debauchery by the rich; the law courts were
+controlled by the wealthy and powerful, while oppression, bribery,
+and fraud were generally rampant in the city.</p>
+<p class="intros">On December 10, B.C. 133, Tiberius Gracchus
+entered upon the office of tribune, to which he had been elected,
+and pledged himself to the abolition of crying abuses. His first
+movement was in the direction of agrarian legislation. He proposed
+to vest all public lands in the hands of three commissioners
+(triumviri), who were to distribute the public lands, at that time
+largely monopolized by the wealthy, to all citizens in needy
+circumstances. The bill met with bitter opposition from the rich
+landholders, but was eventually passed, and Gracchus rose to the
+summit of popular power. He also brought forward a measure limiting
+the necessary period of military service; a second bill was drawn
+up by him for the reformation of the law courts, and a third
+established a right of appeal from the law courts to the popular
+assembly. These measures were afterward carried by his brother
+Caius. Tiberius Gracchus was killed in a tumult which was raised in
+the Forum by the nobles and their partisans, and three hundred of
+his followers lost their lives in the fray.</p>
+<p class="intros">Caius Gracchus, his brother, returned to Rome
+B.C. 124 from Sardinia, where he had been engaged in subduing the
+mountaineers. For ten years he had kept aloof from public life, but
+was at once elected tribune, in the discharge of which office he
+showed distinguished powers as an orator. He brought forth the
+important measures known as the Sempronian Laws, the provisions of
+which were quite revolutionary in character. The first of these
+laws renewed and extended the agrarian laws of his brother and
+instituted new colonies in Italy and the provinces. By the second
+Sempronian law the State undertook to furnish corn at a low price
+to all Roman citizens.</p>
+<p class="intros">Other measures aimed at diminishing the great
+administrative power of the senate, which had so far monopolized
+all judicial offices. By the law of Gracchus the administration of
+justice was entirely transferred to a body of three hundred persons
+who possessed the equestrian rate of property. The Sempronian law
+for the assignment of consular provinces, which hitherto had been
+left to the senate, made the allotment of two designated provinces
+to be decided by the newly elected consuls themselves. The power of
+the senate was also crippled by the law of Gracchus in which he
+transferred to the tribunes the burden of improving the roads of
+Italy, contracts for which had hitherto been awarded by the censor
+under the approval of the senate. These movements were all in the
+direction of increasing popular and democratic power, and the work
+of the Gracchi tended to the extension of political freedom. In the
+history of politics these social struggles are among the most
+important events illustrative of the gradual dawn of civil liberty
+among a people which had been dominated and oppressed by a selfish
+aristocracy.</p>
+<p>The power of Gracchus rested on the mercantile class and the
+proletariat; primarily on the latter, which in this
+conflict—wherein neither side had any military
+reserve—acted, as it were, the part of an army. It was clear
+that the senate was not powerful enough to wrest either from the
+merchants or from the proletariat their new privileges; any attempt
+to assail the corn laws or the new jury arrangement would have led
+under a somewhat grosser or somewhat more civilized form to a
+street riot, in presence of which the senate was utterly
+defenceless. But it was no less clear that Gracchus himself and
+these merchants and proletarians were only kept together by mutual
+advantage, and that the men of material interests were ready to
+accept their posts, and the populace, strictly so called, its
+bread, quite as well from any other as from Caius Gracchus.</p>
+<p>The institutions of Gracchus stood, for the moment at least,
+immovably firm, with the exception of a single one—his own
+supremacy. The weakness of the latter lay in the fact that in the
+constitution of Gracchus there was no relation of allegiance
+subsisting at all between the chief and the army; and, while the
+new constitution possessed all other elements of vitality, it
+lacked one—the moral tie between ruler and ruled, without
+which every state rests on a pedestal of clay. In the rejection of
+the proposal to admit the Latins to the franchise it had been
+demonstrated with decisive clearness that the multitude in fact
+never voted for Gracchus, but always simply for itself. The
+aristocracy conceived the plan of offering battle to the author of
+the corn largesses and land assignations on his own ground.</p>
+<p>As a matter of course the senate offered to the proletariat not
+merely the same advantages as Gracchus had already assured to it in
+corn and otherwise, but advantages still greater. Commissioned by
+the senate, the tribune of the people, Marcus Livius Drusus,
+proposed to relieve those who received land under the laws of
+Gracchus from the rent imposed on them, and to declare their
+allotments to be free and alienable property; and, further, to
+provide for the proletariat not in transmarine, but in twelve
+Italian, colonies, each of three thousand colonists, for the
+planting of which the people might nominate suitable men; only
+Drusus himself declined—in contrast with the family
+complexion of the Gracchan commission—to take part in this
+honorable duty. Presumably the Latins were named as those who would
+have to bear the costs of the plan, for there does not appear to
+have existed then in Italy other occupied domain land of any extent
+save that which was enjoyed by them.</p>
+<p>We find isolated enactments of Drusus—such as the
+regulation that the punishment of scourging might only be inflicted
+on the Latin soldier by the Latin officer set over him, and not by
+the Roman officer—which were to all appearance intended to
+indemnify the Latins for other losses. The plan was not the most
+refined. The attempt at rivalry was too clear; the endeavor to draw
+the fair bond between the nobles and the proletariat still closer
+by their exercising jointly a tyranny over the Latins was too
+transparent; the inquiry suggested itself too readily.</p>
+<p>In what part of the peninsula, now that the Italian domains had
+been mainly given away already—even granting that the whole
+domains assigned to the Latins were confiscated—was the
+occupied domain land requisite for the formation of twelve new,
+numerous, and compact burgess communities to be discovered? Lastly,
+the declaration of Drusus that he would have nothing to do with the
+execution of his law was so dreadfully prudent as to border on
+sheer folly. But the clumsy snare was quite suited to the stupid
+game which they wished to catch. There was the additional and
+perhaps decisive consideration that Gracchus, on whose personal
+influence everything depended, was just then establishing the
+Carthaginian colony in Africa, and that his lieutenant in the
+capital, Marcus Flaccus, played into the hands of his opponents by
+his vehement and maladroit acts. The "people" accordingly ratified
+the Livian laws as readily as it had before ratified the
+Sempronian. It then as usual repaid its latest by inflicting a
+gentle blow on its earlier benefactor, declining to re&euml;lect
+him when he stood for the third time as a candidate for the
+tribunate for the year B.C. 120. On this occasion, however, there
+are alleged to have been unjust proceedings on the part of the
+tribune presiding at the election, who had been offended by
+Gracchus.</p>
+<p>Thus the foundation of his despotism gave way beneath him. A
+second blow was inflicted on him by the consular elections, which
+not only proved, in a general sense, adverse to the democracy, but
+which placed at the head of the State Lucius Opimius, one of the
+least scrupulous chiefs of the strict aristocratic party and a man
+firmly resolved to get rid of their dangerous antagonist at the
+earliest opportunity. Such an opportunity soon occurred. On the
+10th of December, B.C. 121, Gracchus ceased to be tribune of the
+people. On the 1st of January, B.C. 120, Opimius entered upon his
+office.</p>
+<p>The first attack, as was fair, was directed against the most
+useful and the most unpopular measure of Gracchus, the
+re&euml;stablishment of Carthage, while the transmarine colonies
+had hitherto been only indirectly assailed through the greater
+allurements of the Italian. African hyenas, it was now alleged, dug
+up the newly placed boundary stones of Carthage, and the Roman
+priests when requested certified that such signs and portents ought
+to form an express warning against rebuilding on a site accursed by
+the gods. The senate thereby found itself in its conscience
+compelled to have a law proposed which prohibited the planting of
+the colony of Sunonia. Gracchus, who with the other men nominated
+to establish it was just then selecting the colonists, appeared on
+the day of voting at the Capitol, whither the burgesses were
+convoked, with a view to procure by means of his adherents the
+rejection of the law.</p>
+<p>He wished to shun acts of violence that he might not himself
+supply his opponents with the pretext which they sought, but he had
+not been able to prevent a great portion of his faithful
+partisans—who remembered the catastrophe of Tiberius, and
+were well acquainted with the designs of the aristocracy—from
+appearing in arms, fearing that, amid the immense excitement on
+both sides, quarrels could hardly be avoided. The consul Lucius
+Opimius offered the usual sacrifice in the porch of the Capitoline
+temple, one of the attendants assisting at the ceremony. Quintus
+Antullius, with the holy entrails in his hands, haughtily ordered
+the "bad citizens" to quit the porch, and seemed as though he would
+lay hands on Caius himself; whereupon a zealous Gracchan drew his
+sword and cut the man down. A fearful tumult arose. Gracchus vainly
+sought to address the people and to disclaim the responsibility for
+the sacreligious murder; he only furnished his antagonists with a
+further formal ground of accusation, as, without being aware of it
+in the confusion, he interrupted a tribune in the act of speaking
+to the people—an offence for which an obsolete statute,
+originating at the time of the old dissensions between the orders
+(I. 353), had prescribed the severest penalty. The consul Lucius
+Opimius took his measures to put down by force of arms the
+insurrection for the overthrow of the republican constitution, as
+they were fond of designating the events of this day. He himself
+passed the night in the temple of Castor in the Forum. At early
+dawn the Capitol was filled with Cretan archers, the senate house
+and Forum with the men of the government party (the senators and
+that section of the <i>equites</i> adhering to them), who by order
+of the consul had all appeared in arms, each attended by two armed
+slaves. None of the aristocracy was absent; even the aged and
+venerable Quintus Metellus, well disposed to reform, had appeared
+with shield and sword. An officer of ability and experience
+acquired in the Spanish wars, Decimus Brutus, was intrusted with
+the command of the armed force; the senate assembled in the senate
+house. The bier with the corpse of Antullius was deposited in front
+of it, the senate as if surprised appeared <i>en masse</i> at the
+door in order to view the dead body, and then retired to determine
+what should be done.</p>
+<p>The leaders of the democracy had gone from the Capitol to their
+houses; Marcus Flaccus had spent the night in preparing for the war
+in the streets, while Gracchus apparently disdained to strive with
+destiny. Next morning when they learned of the preparations made by
+their opponents at the Capitol and the Forum, both proceeded to the
+Aventine, the old stronghold of the popular party in the struggles
+between the patricians and the plebeians. Gracchus went thither
+silent and unarmed. Flaccus called the slaves to arms and
+intrenched himself in the temple of Diana, while he at the same
+time sent his younger son Quintus to the enemy's camp in order if
+possible to arrange a compromise. The latter returned with the
+announcement that the aristocracy demanded unconditional surrender.
+At the same time he brought a summons from the senate to Gracchus
+and Flaccus to appear before it and to answer for their violation
+of the majesty of the tribunes.</p>
+<p>Gracchus wished to comply with the summons, but Flaccus
+prevented him from doing so, and repeated the equally weak and
+mistaken attempt to move such antagonists to a compromise. When
+instead of the two cited leaders the young Quintus Flaccus once
+more presented himself alone, the consul treated their refusal to
+appear as the beginning of open insurrection against the
+Government. He ordered the messenger to be arrested and gave the
+signal for attack on the Aventine, while at the same time he caused
+proclamations to be made in the streets that the Government would
+give to whomsoever should bring the head of Gracchus or of Flaccus
+its literal weight in gold; and that they would guarantee complete
+indemnity to everyone who should leave the Aventine before the
+beginning of the conflict. The ranks on the Aventine speedily
+thinned; the valiant nobility in conjunction with the Cretans and
+the slaves stormed the almost undefended mount, and killed all whom
+they found—about two hundred and fifty persons, mostly of
+humble rank. Marcus Flaccus fled with his eldest son to a place of
+concealment, where they were soon afterward hunted out and put to
+death. Gracchus had at the beginning of the conflict retired into
+the temple of Minerva and was there about to pierce himself with
+his sword when his friend Publius Laetorius seized his arm and
+besought him to preserve himself, if possible, for better
+times.</p>
+<p>Gracchus was induced to make an attempt to escape to the other
+bank of the Tiber, but when hastening down the hill he fell and
+sprained his foot. To gain time for him to escape, his two
+attendants turned, and facing his pursuers allowed themselves to be
+cut down. As Marcus Pomponius at the Porta Trigemina under the
+Aventine; Publius Laetorius at the bridge over the
+Tiber—where Horatius Cocles was said to have once withstood,
+singly, the Etruscan army—so Gracchus, attended only by his
+slave Euporus, reached the suburb on the right bank of the
+Tiber.</p>
+<p>There, in the grove of Furrina, afterward were found the two
+dead bodies. It seemed as if the slave had put to death first his
+master, and then himself. The heads of the two fallen leaders were
+handed over to the Government as required. The stipulated price,
+and more, was paid to Lucius Septumuleius, a man of quality, the
+bearer of the head of Gracchus; while the murderers of Flaccus,
+persons of humble rank, were sent away with empty hands. The bodies
+of the dead were thrown into the river, and the houses of the
+leaders were abandoned to the pillage of the multitude. The warfare
+of prosecution against the partisans of Gracchus began on the
+grandest scale; as many as three thousand of them are said to have
+been strangled in prison, among whom was Quintus Flaccus, eighteen
+years of age, who had taken no part in the conflict, and was
+universally lamented on account of his youth and his amiable
+disposition. On the open space beneath the Capitol, where the altar
+consecrated by Camillus after the restoration of internal peace (I.
+382), and other shrines—erected on similar occasions to
+Concord—were situated, the small chapels were pulled down,
+and out of the property of the killed or condemned
+traitors—which was confiscated, even to the portions of their
+wives—a new and splendid temple of Concord, with the basilica
+belonging to it, was erected in accordance with a decree of the
+senate by the consul Lucius Opimius.</p>
+<p>Certainly it was an act in accordance with the spirit of the age
+to remove the memorials of the old and to inaugurate a new Concord
+over the remains of the three grandsons of Zama, all of
+whom—first, Tiberius Gracchus, then Scipio Aemilianus, and
+lastly the youngest and the mightiest, Caius Gracchus—had now
+been engulfed by the revolution. The memory of the Gracchi remained
+officially proscribed; Cornelia was not allowed even to put on
+mourning for the death of her last son; but the passionate
+attachment which very many had felt toward the two noble brothers,
+and especially toward Caius, during their life, was touchingly
+displayed also after their death, in the almost religious
+veneration which the multitude, in spite of all precautions of the
+police, continued to pay to their memory and to the spots where
+they had fallen.</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="GAUL"></a>CAESAR CONQUERS GAUL[<a href="#note-68">68</a>]</h2>
+<p class="center">B.C. 58-50</p>
+<p class="center">NAPOLEON III</p>
+<p class="center"><a name="note-68"><!-- Note Anchor 68 --></a>[Footnote 68:
+From Louis Napoleon's Julius Caesar, by permission of Harper &amp;
+Brothers.]</p>
+<p class="intros">In Caesar's military performances the Gallic war
+plays the most important part, as shown in his <i>Commentaries</i>,
+his sole extant literary work and almost the only authority for
+this part of Roman history.</p>
+<p class="intros">Cisalpine Gaul—that portion lying on the
+southern or Italian side of the Alps—came partly under the
+dominion of Rome as early as B.C. 282, when a Roman colony was
+founded at Sena Gallica. This division of Gaul was wholly conquered
+by B.C. 191; and in B.C. 43, having been made a Roman province, it
+became a part of Italy.</p>
+<p class="intros">Transalpine Gaul—that part lying north and
+northwest of the Alps from Rome—comprised in Caesar's day
+three divisions: Aquitaine to the southwest, Celtic Gaul in the
+middle, and Belgic Gaul to the northwest. The region was inhabited
+by various tribes having neither unity of race nor of customs
+whereby nationality becomes distinguished. Toward the close of the
+second century B.C. the Romans made their first settlements in
+Transalpine Gaul, in the southeastern part. At the time when Caesar
+became proconsul in Gaul, B.C. 58, the province was in a state of
+tranquillity, but Fortune seemed determined that he should have
+great opportunities for the display of his military genius, and,
+when Asia had been subdued by Pompey, "conferred what remained to
+be done in Europe upon Caesar." The attempt of the Helvetii to
+leave their homes in the Alps for new dwelling-places in Gaul
+served him as an occasion for war. As they were crossing the Arar
+(now Saone) he attacked and routed them, later defeated them again,
+and at last drove them back to their own country.</p>
+<p class="intros">The story of the long war, with its various
+campaigns, has become familiar to the world's readers through the
+masterly account of Caesar himself, known to "every schoolboy" who
+advances to the dignity of classical studies. In the end the
+country between the Pyrenees and the Rhine was subjugated, and for
+several centuries it remained a Roman province.</p>
+<p class="intros">At the time when the history is taken up in the
+following narrative by Napoleon III, the great rebellion, B.C. 52,
+had sustained a heavy blow in the surrender of Alesia, and the
+capture of the heroic chief and leader of the insurrection,
+Vercingetorix, whom Caesar exhibited in his triumph at Rome, B.C.
+46, and then caused to be put to death.</p>
+<p class="intros">The distinguished author of the article says he
+wrote "for the purpose of proving that when Providence raises up
+such men as Caesar, Charlemagne, and Napoleon it is to trace out to
+peoples the path they ought to follow, to stamp with the seal of
+their genius a new era, and to accomplish in a few years the work
+of many centuries." The work was prepared [<i>vide Manual of
+Historical Literature</i>: Adams] with the utmost care—a care
+which extended in some instances to special surveys, to insure
+perfect accuracy in the descriptions, etc.</p>
+<p>The capture of Alesia and that of Vercingetorix, in spite of the
+united efforts of all Gaul, naturally gave Caesar hopes of a
+general submission; and he therefore believed that he could leave
+his army during the winter to rest quietly in its quarters from the
+hard labors which had lasted without interruption during the whole
+of the past summer. But the spirit of insurrection was not extinct
+among the Gauls; and convinced by experience that whatever might be
+their number they could not in a body cope with troops inured to
+war, they resolved, by partial insurrections raised on all points
+at once, to divide the attention and the forces of the Romans as
+their only chance of resisting them with advantage.</p>
+<p>Caesar was unwilling to leave them time to realize this new
+plan, but gave the command of his winter quarters to his quaestor,
+Mark Antony; quitted Bibracte on the day before the Calends of
+January (the 25th of December) with an escort of cavalry, joined
+the Thirteenth legion, which was in winter quarters among the
+Bituriges, not far from the frontier of the Aldui, and called to
+him the Eleventh legion, which was the nearest at hand. Having left
+two cohorts of each legion to guard the baggage, he proceeded
+toward the fertile country of the Bituriges, a vast territory,
+where the presence of a single legion was insufficient to put a
+stop to the preparations for insurrection.</p>
+<p>His sudden arrival in the midst of men without distrust, who
+were spread over the open country, produced the result which he
+expected. They were surprised before they could enter into their
+<i>oppidae</i>—for Caesar had strictly forbidden everything
+which might have raised their suspicion; especially the application
+of fire, which usually betrays the sudden presence of an enemy.
+Several thousands of captives were made. Those who succeeded in
+escaping sought in vain a refuge among the neighboring nations.
+Caesar, by forced marches, came up with them everywhere and obliged
+each tribe to think of its own safety before that of others.</p>
+<p>This activity held the populations in their fidelity, and
+through fear engaged the wavering to submit to the conditions of
+peace. Thus the Bituriges, seeing that Caesar offered them an easy
+way to recover his protection, and that the neighboring states had
+suffered no other chastisement than that of having to deliver
+hostages, did not hesitate in submitting.</p>
+<p>The soldiers of the Eleventh and Thirteenth legions had, during
+the winter, supported with rare constancy the fatigues of very
+difficult marches in intolerable cold. To reward them he promised
+to give by way of prize-money two hundred <i>sestertii</i> to each
+soldier and two thousand to each centurion. He then sent them into
+their winter quarters and returned to Bibracte after an absence of
+forty days. While he was there, dispensing justice, the Bituriges
+came to implore his support against the attacks of the Carnutes.
+Although it was only eighteen days since he returned, he marched
+again at the head of two legions—the Sixth and the
+Fourteenth—which had been placed on the Saone to insure the
+supply of provisions.</p>
+<p>On his approach the Carnutes, taught by the fate of others,
+abandoned their miserable huts—which they had erected on the
+site of their burgs and oppida destroyed in the last
+campaign—and fled in every direction.</p>
+<p>Caesar, unwilling to expose his soldiers to the rigor of the
+season, established his camp at Genabum (Gien), and lodged them
+partly in the huts which had remained undestroyed, partly in tents
+under penthouses covered with straw. The cavalry and auxiliary
+infantry were sent in pursuit of the Carnutes, who, hunted down
+everywhere, and without shelter, took refuge in the neighboring
+counties.</p>
+<p>After having dispersed some rebellious meetings and stifled the
+germs of an insurrection, Caesar believed that the summer would
+pass without any serious war. He left therefore at Genabum the two
+legions he had with him, and gave the command of them to C.
+Trebonius.</p>
+<p>Nevertheless, he learned by several intimations from the Remi
+that the Bellovaci and neighboring peoples, with Correus and
+Commius at their head, were collecting troops to make an inroad on
+the territory of the Suessiones, who had been placed—since
+the campaign of 697—under the dependence of the Remi.</p>
+<p>He considered that he regarded his interest as well as his
+dignity in protecting allies who had deserved so well of the
+republic. He again drew the Eleventh legion from its winter
+quarters, sent written orders to C. Fabius, who was encamped in the
+country of the Remi, to bring into that of the Suessiones the two
+legions under his command, and demanded one of his legions from
+Labienus, who was at Besan&ccedil;on. Thus without taking any rest
+himself he shared the fatigues among the legions by turns, as far
+as the position of the winter quarters and the necessities of the
+war permitted.</p>
+<p>When this army was assembled he marched against the Bellovaci,
+established his camp on their territory, and sent cavalry in every
+direction in order to make some prisoners and learn from them the
+designs of the enemy. The cavalry reported that the emigration was
+general, and that the few inhabitants who were to be seen were not
+remaining behind in order to apply themselves to agriculture, but
+to act as spies upon the Romans.</p>
+<p>Caesar by interrogating the prisoners learned that all the
+Bellovaci able to fight had assembled on one spot, and that they
+had been joined by the Ambiani, the Aulerci, the Caletes, the
+Veliocasses, and the Atrebates. Their camp was in a forest on a
+height surrounded by marshes—Mont Saint Marc, in the forest
+of Compiègne; their baggage had been transported to more
+distant woods. The command was divided among several chiefs, but
+the greater part obeyed Correus on account of his well-known hatred
+of the Romans. Commius had a few days before gone to seek succor
+from the numerous Germans who lived in great numbers in the
+neighboring counties—probably those on the banks of the
+Meuse.</p>
+<p>The Bellovaci resolved with one accord to give Caesar battle,
+if, as report said, he was advancing with only three legions; for
+they would not run the risk of having afterward to encounter his
+entire army. If, on the contrary, the Romans were advancing with
+more considerable forces they proposed to keep their positions and
+confine themselves to intercepting, by means of ambuscades, the
+provisions and forage, which were very scarce at that season.</p>
+<p>This plan, confirmed by many reports, seemed to Caesar full of
+prudence and altogether contrary to the usual rashness of the
+barbarians. He took therefore every possible care to dissimulate as
+to the number of his troops. He had with him the Seventh, Eighth,
+and Ninth legions, composed of old soldiers of tried valor, and the
+Eleventh, which, formed of picked young men who had gone through
+eight campaigns, deserved his confidence, although it could not be
+compared with the others with regard to bravery and experience in
+war. In order to deceive the enemy by showing them only three
+legions—the only number they were willing to fight—he
+placed the Seventh, Eighth, and Ninth in one line; while the
+baggage, which was not very considerable, was placed behind under
+the protection of the Eleventh legion, which closed the march. In
+this order, which formed almost a square, he came unawares in sight
+of the Bellovaci. At the unexpected view of the legions, which
+advanced in order of battle and with a firm step, they lost their
+courage and, instead of attacking, as they had engaged to do, they
+confined themselves to drawing themselves up before their camp
+without leaving the height. A valley deeper than it was wide
+separated the two armies.</p>
+<p>On account of this obstacle and the numerical superiority of the
+barbarians, Caesar, though he had wished for battle, abandoned the
+idea of attacking them and placed his camp opposite that of the
+Gauls in a strong position. He caused it to be surrounded with a
+parapet twelve feet high, surmounted by accessory works
+proportioned to the importance of the retrenchment and preceded by
+a double fosse fifteen feet wide, with a square bottom. Towers of
+three stories were constructed from distance to distance and united
+together by covered bridges, the exterior parts of which were
+protected by hurdle-work. In this manner the camp was protected not
+only by a double fosse, but also by a double row of defenders, some
+of whom, placed on the bridges, could from this elevated and
+sheltered position throw their missiles farther and with a better
+aim; while the others, placed on the <i>vallum</i>, nearer to the
+enemy, were protected by the bridges from the missiles which
+showered down upon them. The entrances were defended by means of
+higher towers and were closed with gates.</p>
+<p>These formidable retrenchments had a double aim—to
+increase the confidence of the barbarians by making them believe
+that they were feared, and next to allow the number of the garrison
+to be reduced with safety when they had to go far for provisions.
+For some days there were no serious engagements, but slight
+skirmishes in the marshy plain which extended between the two
+camps. The capture, however, of a few foragers did not fail to
+swell the presumption of the barbarians, which was still more
+increased by the arrival of Commius, although he had brought only
+five hundred German cavalry.</p>
+<p>The enemy remained for several days shut up in its impregnable
+position. Caesar judged that an assault would cost too many lives;
+an investment alone seemed to him opportune, but it would require a
+greater number of troops.</p>
+<p>He wrote thereupon to Trebonius to send him as soon as possible
+the Thirteenth legion, which, under the command of T. Sextius, was
+in winter quarters among the Bituriges, to join it with the Sixth
+and the Fourteenth (which the first of these lieutenants commanded
+at Genabum), and to come himself with these three legions by forced
+marches.</p>
+<p>During this time he employed the numerous cavalry of the Remi,
+the Lingones and the other allies, to protect the foragers and to
+prevent surprises, but this daily service, as is often the case,
+ended by being negligently performed. And one day the Remi,
+pursuing the Bellovaci with too much ardor, fell into an ambuscade.
+In withdrawing they were surrounded by foot-soldiers in the midst
+of whom Vertiscus, their chief, met with his death. True to his
+Gaulish nature, he would not allow his age to exempt him from
+commanding and mounting on horseback, although he was hardly able
+to keep his seat. His death and this feeble advantage raised the
+self-confidence of the barbarians still more, but it rendered the
+Romans more circumspect.</p>
+<p>Nevertheless, in one of the skirmishes which were continually
+taking place within sight of the two camps about the fordable
+places of the marsh, the German infantry—which Caesar had
+sent for from beyond the Rhine in order to mix them with the
+cavalry—joined in a body, boldly crossed the marsh, and,
+meeting with little resistance, continued the pursuit with such
+impetuosity that fear seized not only the enemy who fought, but
+even those who were in reserve. Instead of availing themselves of
+the advantages of the ground, all fled in a cowardly manner. They
+did not stop until they were within their camp, and some even were
+not ashamed to fly beyond it. This defeat caused a general
+discouragement, for the Gauls were as easily daunted by the least
+reverse as they were made arrogant by the smallest success.</p>
+<p>Day after day was passing in this manner when Caesar was
+informed of the arrival of C. Trebonius and his troops, which
+raised the number of his legions to seven. The chiefs of the
+Bellovaci then feared an investment like that of Alesia, and
+resolved to quit their position. They sent away by night the old
+men, the infirm, the unarmed men, and the part of the baggage which
+they had kept with them. Scarcely was this confused multitude in
+motion—embarrassed by its own mass and its numerous
+chariots—when daylight surprised it, and the troops had to be
+drawn up in line before the camp to give the column time to move
+away. Caesar saw no advantage either in giving battle to those who
+were in position, nor, on account of the steepness of the hill, in
+pursuing those who were making their retreat; he resolved,
+nevertheless, to make two legions advance in order to disturb the
+enemy in its retreat. Having observed that the mountain on which
+the Gauls were established was connected with another height (Mont
+Collet), from which it was only separated by a narrow valley, he
+ordered bridges to be thrown across the marsh. The legions crossed
+over them and soon attained the summit of the height, which was
+defended on both sides by abrupt declivities.</p>
+<p>There he collected his troops and advanced in order of battle up
+to the extremity of the plateau, whence the engines placed in
+battery could reach the masses of the enemy with their
+missiles.</p>
+<p>The barbarians, rendered confident by the advantage of their
+position, were ready to accept battle if the Romans dared to attack
+the mountain; besides, they were afraid to withdraw their troops
+successively, as, if divided, they might have been thrown into
+disorder. This attitude led Cæsar to resolve upon leaving
+twenty cohorts under arms, and on tracing a camp on this spot and
+retrenching it. When the works were completed the legions were
+placed before the retrenchments and the cavalry distributed with
+their horses bridled at the outposts. The Bellovaci had recourse to
+a stratagem in order to effect their retreat. They passed from hand
+to hand the fascines and the straw on which, according to the
+Gaulish custom, they were in the habit of sitting, preserving at
+the same time their order of battle; placed them in front of the
+camp, and toward the close of the day, on a preconcerted signal,
+set fire to them. Immediately a vast flame concealed from the
+Romans the Gaulish troops, who fled in haste.</p>
+<p>Although the fire prevented Cæsar from seeing the retreat
+of the enemy he suspected it. He ordered his legions to advance,
+and sent the cavalry in pursuit, but he marched slowly in fear of
+some stratagem, suspecting the barbarians to have formed the design
+of drawing the Romans to disadvantageous ground. Besides, the
+cavalry did not dare to ride through the smoke and flames; and thus
+the Bellovaci were able to pass over a distance of ten miles and
+halt in a place strongly fortified by nature (Mont Ganelon), where
+they pitched their camp. In this position they confined themselves
+to placing cavalry and infantry in frequent ambuscades, thus
+inflicting great damage on the Romans when they went to forage.
+After several encounters of this kind Cæsar learned by a
+prisoner that Correus, chief of the Bellovaci, with six thousand
+picked infantry and one thousand horsemen, was preparing an
+ambuscade in places where the abundance of corn and forage was
+likely to attract the Romans. In consequence of this information he
+sent forward the cavalry, which was always employed to protect the
+foragers, and joined with them some light-armed auxiliaries, while
+he himself, with a greater number of legions, followed them as
+closely as possible.</p>
+<p>The enemy had posted themselves in a plain—that of
+Choisy-au-Bac—of about one thousand paces in length and the
+same in breadth, surrounded on one side by forests, on the other by
+a river which was difficult to pass (the Aisne). The cavalry
+becoming acquainted with the designs of the Gauls and feeling
+themselves supported, advanced resolutely in squadrons toward this
+plain, which was surrounded with ambushes on all sides.</p>
+<p>Correus, seeing them arrive in this manner, believed the
+opportunity favorable for the execution of his plan and began by
+attacking the first squadrons with a few men. The Romans sustained
+the shock without concentrating themselves in a mass on the same
+point, "which," says Hirtius, "usually happens in cavalry
+engagements, and leads always to a dangerous confusion." There, on
+the contrary, the squadrons, remaining separated, fought in
+detached bodies, and when one of them advanced, its flanks were
+protected by the others. Correus then ordered the rest of his
+cavalry to issue from the woods. An obstinate combat began on all
+sides without any decisive result until the enemy's infantry,
+debouching from the forest in close ranks, forced the Roman cavalry
+to fall back. The lightly armed soldiers who preceded the legions
+placed themselves between the squadrons and restored the fortune of
+the combat. After a certain time the troops, animated by the
+approach of the legions and the arrival of Caesar, and ambitious of
+obtaining alone the honor of the victory, redoubled their efforts
+and gained the advantage. The enemy, on the other hand, were
+discouraged and took to flight, but were stopped by the very
+obstacles which they intended to throw in the way of the Romans. A
+small number, nevertheless, escaped through the forest and crossed
+the river. Correus, who remained unshaken under this catastrophe,
+obstinately refused to surrender, and fell pierced with wounds.
+After this success Caesar hoped that if he continued his march the
+enemy in dismay would abandon his camp, which was only eight miles
+from the field of battle. He therefore crossed the Aisne, though
+not without great difficulties.</p>
+<p>The Bellovaci and their allies, informed by the fugitives of the
+death of Correus, of the loss of their cavalry and the flower of
+their infantry, and fearing every moment to see the Romans appear,
+convoked by sound of trumpet a general assembly and decided by
+acclamation to send deputies and hostages to the proconsul. The
+barbarians implored forgiveness, alleging that this last defeat had
+ruined their power, and that the death of Correus, the instigator
+of the war, delivered them from oppression, for, during his life,
+it was not the senate which governed, but an ignorant multitude. To
+their prayers Caesar replied that last year the Bellovaci had
+revolted in concert with the other Gaulish peoples, but that
+<i>they</i> alone had persisted in the revolt. It was very
+convenient to throw their faults upon those who were dead, but how
+could it be believed that with nothing but the help of a weak
+populace a man should have had sufficient influence to raise and
+sustain a war contrary to the will of the chiefs, the decision of
+the senate, and the desire of honest people? However, the evil
+which they had drawn upon themselves was for him a sufficient
+reparation.</p>
+<p>The following night the Bellovaci and their allies submitted,
+with the exception of Commius, who fled to the country from which
+he had but recently drawn support. He had not dared to trust the
+Romans for the following reason: "The year before, in the absence
+of Caesar, T. Labienus, informed that Commius was conspiring and
+preparing an insurrection, thought that without accusing him of bad
+faith," says Hirtius, "he could repress his treason." ("Under
+pretext of an interview he sent C. Volusenus Quadratus, with some
+centurions, to kill him; but when they were in the presence of the
+Gaulish chief the centurion who was to strike him missed his blow
+and only wounded him; swords were drawn on both sides and Commius
+had time to escape.")</p>
+<p>The most warlike tribes had been vanquished and none of them
+dreamed of further revolt. Nevertheless, many inhabitants of the
+newly conquered countries abandoned the towns and the fields in
+order to withdraw themselves from the Roman dominion. Caesar, in
+order to put a stop to this emigration, distributed his army in
+different countries. He ordered the quaestor, Mark Antony, to come
+to him with the Twelfth legion, and sent the lieutenant Fabius with
+twenty-five cohorts into an opposite part of Gaul—to the
+country situated between the Creuse and the Vienne—where it
+was said that several tribes were in arms, and where the
+lieutenant, Caninius Rebilus, who commanded with two legions, did
+not appear to be sufficiently strong. Lastly, he ordered T.
+Labienus to join him in person and to send the Fifteenth legion,
+which he had under his command, into Cisalpine Gaul to protect the
+colonies of Roman citizens there against the sudden inroads of the
+barbarians, who the summer before had attacked the Tergestini (the
+inhabitants of Trieste).</p>
+<p>As for Cæsar, he proceeded with four legions to the
+territory of the Eburones to lay it waste. As he could not secure
+Ambiorix, who was still wandering at large, he thought it advisable
+to destroy everything by fire and sword, persuaded that this chief
+would never dare to return to a country upon which he had brought
+such a terrible calamity. The legions and the auxiliaries were
+charged with the execution of this plan. Then he sent Labienus,
+with two legions, to the country of the Treviri, who, always at war
+with the Germans, were only kept in obedience by the presence of a
+Roman army.</p>
+<p>During this time Caninius Rebilus, who had first been appointed
+to go into the country of the Ruteni, but who had been detained by
+petty insurrections in the region situated between the Creuse and
+the Vienne, learned that numerous hostile bands were assembling in
+the country of the Pictones. He was informed of this by letters
+from Duratius, their king, who, amid the defection of a part of his
+people, had remained invariably faithful to the Romans. He started
+immediately for Lemonum (Poitiers). On the road he learned from
+prisoners that Duratius was shut up there and besieged by several
+thousand men under the orders of Dumnacus, chief of the Andes.</p>
+<p>Rebilus, at the head of two weak legions, did not dare to
+measure his strength with the enemy; he contented himself with
+establishing his camp in a strong position. At the news of his
+approach, Dumnacus raised the siege, and marched to meet the
+legions, but after several days of fruitless attempts to force
+their camp he returned to attack Lemonum.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, the lieutenant, Caius Fabius, occupied in pacifying
+several other tribes, learned from Caninius Rebilus what was going
+on in the country of the Pictones and marched without delay to the
+assistance of Duratius. The news of the march of Fabius deprived
+Dumnacus of all hope of opposing, at the same time, the troops shut
+up in Lemonum and the relieving army. He abandoned the siege again
+in great haste, not thinking himself safe until he had placed the
+Loire between himself and the Romans; but he could only pass that
+river where there was a bridge (at Saumur). Before he had joined
+Rebilus, before he had even obtained a sight of the enemy, Fabius,
+who came from the North, and had lost no time, doubted not, from
+what he heard from the people of the country, that Dumnacus, in his
+fear, had taken the road which led to that bridge. He therefore
+marched thither with his legions, preceded at a short distance by
+his cavalry. The latter surprised the column of Dumnacus on its
+march, dispersed it, and returned to the camp laden with booty.</p>
+<p>During the night of the following day Fabius again sent his
+cavalry forward with orders to delay the march of the enemy so as
+to give time for the arrival of the infantry. The two bodies of
+cavalry were soon engaged, but the enemy, thinking he had to
+contend with only the same troops as the day before, drew up his
+infantry in line so as to support the squadrons, when suddenly the
+Roman legions appeared in order of battle. At this sight the
+barbarians were struck with terror, the long train of baggage
+thrown into confusion, and the infantry dispersed. More than twelve
+thousand men were killed and all the baggage fell into the hands of
+the Romans.</p>
+<p>Only five thousand fugitives escaped from this rout; they were
+received by the Senonan, Drappes, the same who in the first revolt
+of the Gauls had collected a crowd of vagabonds, slaves, exiles,
+and robbers to intercept the convoys of the Romans.</p>
+<p>They took the direction of the Narbonnese with the Cadurcan
+Lucterius who had before attempted a similar invasion.</p>
+<p>Rebilus pursued them with two legions in order to avoid the
+shame of seeing the province suffering any injury from such a
+contemptible rabble. As for Fabius, he led the twenty-five cohorts
+against the Carnutes and the other tribes whose forces had already
+been reduced by the defeat they had suffered from Dumnacus. The
+Carnutes, though often beaten, had never been completely subdued.
+They gave hostages, and the Armoricans followed their example.
+Dumnacus, driven out of his own territory, went to seek a refuge in
+the remotest part of Gaul.</p>
+<p>Drappes and Lucterius, when they learned that they were pursued
+by Rebilus and his two legions, gave up the design of penetrating
+into the province; they halted in the country of the Cadurci and
+threw themselves into the <i>oppidum</i> of Uxellodunum
+(Puy-d'Issolu, near Varac), an exceedingly strong place formerly
+under the dependence of Lucterius, who soon incited the inhabitants
+to revolt.</p>
+<p>Rebilus appeared immediately before the town, which, surrounded
+on all sides by steep rocks, was, even without being defended,
+difficult of access to armed men. Knowing that there was in the
+oppidum so great a quantity of baggage that the besieged could not
+send it away secretly without being detected and overtaken by the
+cavalry, and even by the infantry, he divided his cohorts into
+three bodies and established three camps on the highest points.
+Next he ordered a countervallation to be made. On seeing these
+preparations the besieged remembered the ill-fortune of Alesia, and
+feared a similar fate. Lucterius, who had witnessed the horrors of
+famine during the investment of that town, now took especial care
+of the provisions.</p>
+<p>During this time the garrison of the oppidum attacked the
+redoubts of Rebilus several times, which obliged him to interrupt
+the work of the countervallation, which, indeed, he had not
+sufficient forces to defend.</p>
+<p>Drappes and Lucterius established themselves at a distance of
+ten miles from the oppidum, with the intention of introducing the
+provisions gradually. They shared the duties between them. Drappes
+remained with part of the troops to protect the camp. Lucterius,
+during the night-time, endeavored to introduce beasts of burden
+into the town by a narrow and wooded path. The noise of their march
+gave warning to the sentries. Rebilus, informed of what was going
+on, ordered the cohorts to sally from the neighboring redoubts, and
+at daybreak fell upon the convoy, the escort of which was
+slaughtered. Lucterius, having escaped with a small number of his
+followers, was unable to rejoin Drappes.</p>
+<p>Rebilus soon learned from prisoners that the rest of the troops
+which had left the oppidum were with Drappes at a distance of
+twelve miles, and that by a fortunate chance not one fugitive had
+taken that direction to carry him news of the last combat. The
+Roman general sent in advance all the cavalry and the light German
+infantry; he followed them with one legion, without baggage,
+leaving the other as a guard to the three camps. When he came near
+the enemy he learned, by his scouts, that the
+barbarians—according to their custom of neglecting the
+heights—had placed their camp on the banks of a river
+(probably the Dordogne); that the Germans and the cavalry had
+surprised them, and that they were already fighting. Rebilus then
+advanced rapidly at the head of the legion drawn up in order of
+battle and took possession of the heights.</p>
+<p>As soon as the ensigns appeared, the cavalry redoubled its
+ardor; the cohorts rushed forward from all sides and the Gauls were
+taken or killed. The booty was immense and Drappes fell into the
+hands of the Romans.</p>
+<p>Rebilus, after this successful exploit, which cost him but a few
+wounded, returned under the walls of Uxellodunum. Fearing no longer
+any attack from without, he set resolutely to work to continue his
+circumvallation. The day after, C. Fabius arrived, followed by his
+troops, and shared with him the labors of the siege. While the
+south of Gaul was the scene of serious trouble, Cæsar left
+the quaestor, Mark Antony, with fifteen cohorts in the country of
+the Bellovaci. To deprive the Belgæ of all idea of revolt he
+had proceeded to the neighboring countries with two legions; had
+exacted hostages, and restored confidence by his conciliating
+speeches. When he arrived among the Carnutes—who the year
+before had been the first to revolt—he saw that the
+remembrance of their conduct kept them in great alarm, and he
+resolved to put an end to it by causing his vengeance to fall only
+upon Gutruatus, the instigator of the war.</p>
+<p>This man was brought in and delivered up. Although Cæsar
+was naturally inclined to be indulgent, he could not resist the
+tumultuous entreaties of his soldiers, who made that chief
+responsible for all the dangers they had run and for all the misery
+they had suffered. Gutruatus died under the stripes and was
+afterward beheaded.</p>
+<p>It was in the land of the Carnutes that Cæsar received
+news, by the letters of Rebilus, of the events which had taken
+place at Uxellodunum and of the resistance of the besieged.
+Although a handful of men shut up in a fortress was not very
+formidable, he judged it necessary to punish their obstinacy, for
+fear that the Gauls should entertain the conviction that it was not
+strength, but constancy, which had failed them in resisting the
+Romans; and lest this example might encourage the other states
+which possessed fortresses advantageously situated, to recover
+their independence.</p>
+<p>Moreover, it was known everywhere among the Gauls that
+Cæsar had only one more summer to hold his command, and that
+after that time they would have nothing more to fear. He left
+therefore the lieutenant Quintus Calenus at the head of his two
+legions, with orders to follow him by ordinary marches, and, with
+his cavalry, hastened by long marches toward Uxellodunum.
+Cæsar, arriving unexpectedly before the town, found it
+completely defended at all accessible points. He judged that it
+could not be taken by assault (<i>neque ab oppugnatione recedi
+vidaret ulla conditione posse</i>), and, as it was abundantly
+provided with provisions, conceived the project of depriving the
+inhabitants of water.</p>
+<p>The mountain was surrounded almost on every side by very low
+ground, but on one side there existed a valley through which a
+river (the Tourmente) ran. As it flowed at the foot of two
+precipitous mountains the disposition of the localities did not
+admit of turning it aside and conducting it into lower channels. It
+was difficult for the besieged to come down to it, and the Romans
+rendered the approaches to it still more dangerous. They placed
+posts of archers and slingers, and brought engines which commanded
+all the slopes which gave access to the river. The besieged had
+thenceforth no other means of procuring water but by carrying it
+from an abundant spring which arose at the foot of the wall three
+hundred feet from the channel of the Tourmente. Cæsar
+resolved to drain this spring, and for this purpose he did not
+hesitate to attempt a laborious undertaking. Opposite the point
+where it rose he ordered covered galleries to be pushed forward
+against the mountain, and under protection of these a terrace to be
+raised—labors which were carried on in the midst of continual
+fighting and weariness.</p>
+<p>Although the besieged from their elevated position fought
+without danger and wounded many Romans, yet the latter did not
+yield to discouragement, but continued the work. At the same time
+they made a subterranean gallery, which, running from the covered
+galleries, was intended to lead up to the spring. This work,
+carried on free from all danger, was executed without being
+perceived by the enemy. The terrace attained a height of sixty feet
+and was surmounted by a tower of ten stories, which, without
+equalling the elevation of the wall—a result it was
+impossible to obtain—still commanded the fountain. Its
+approaches, battered by engines from the top of this tower, became
+inaccessible. In consequence of this, many men and animals in the
+place died of thirst. The besieged, terrified at this mortality,
+filled barrels with pitch, grease, and shavings, and rolled them
+flaming upon the Roman works, making at the same time a sally to
+prevent them from extinguishing the fire. Soon it spread to the
+covered galleries and the terrace, which stopped the progress of
+the inflammable materials.</p>
+<p>Notwithstanding the difficult nature of the ground and the
+increasing danger, the Romans still persevered in their struggle.
+The battle took place on a height within sight of the army. Loud
+cries were raised on both sides. Each individual sought to rival
+his fellow in zeal, and the more he was exposed to view the more
+courageously he faced the missiles and the fire.</p>
+<p>Caesar, as he was sustaining great loss, determined to feign an
+assault. In order to create a diversion he ordered some cohorts to
+climb the hill on all sides, uttering loud cries. This movement
+terrified the besieged, who, fearing to be attacked at other
+points, called back to the defence of the wall those who were
+setting fire to the works. Then the Romans were enabled to
+extinguish the flames. The Gauls, although exhausted by thirst and
+reduced to a small number, ceased not to defend themselves
+vigorously. At length the subterranean gallery having reached the
+source of the spring, the supply was turned aside. The besieged,
+beholding the fountain suddenly become dry, believed in their
+despair that it was an intervention of the gods, and, submitting to
+necessity, surrendered.</p>
+<p>Caesar considered that the pacification of Gaul would never be
+completed if as strong a resistance was encountered in other towns.
+He thought it advisable to spread terror by a severe
+example—so much the more so as "the well-known mildness of
+his temper," says Hirtius, "would not allow this necessary rigor to
+be ascribed to cruelty." He ordered that all those who had borne
+arms should have their hands cut off, and sent them away living
+examples of the punishment reserved for rebels.</p>
+<p>Drappes, who had been taken prisoner, starved himself to death;
+Lucterius, who had been arrested by the Arvernan Epasnactus (a
+friend of the Romans), was delivered up to Caesar. While these
+events were taking place on the banks of the Dordogne, Labienus, in
+a cavalry engagement, had gained a decisive advantage over a part
+of the Treviri and Germans; had taken prisoner their chief, and
+thus subjected a people who were always ready to support any
+insurrection against the Romans. The Aeduan Surus fell also into
+his hands. He was a chief distinguished for his courage and birth,
+and the only one of that nation who had not yet laid down his
+arms.</p>
+<p>From that moment Caesar considered Gaul to be completely
+pacified. He resolved, however, to go himself to Aquitaine, which
+he had not yet visited and which Publius Crassus had partly
+conquered. Arriving there at the head of two legions, he obtained
+the complete submission of that country without difficulty. All the
+tribes sent him hostages. He proceeded next to Narbonne with a
+detachment of cavalry and charged his lieutenants to put the army
+into winter quarters. Four legions, under the orders of Mark
+Antony, Caius Trebonius, Publius Vatinius, and Q. Tullius, were
+quartered in Belgium, two among the Aedui and two among the Turones
+on the frontier of the Carnutes, to hold in check all the countries
+bordering on the ocean.</p>
+<p>These two last legions took up their winter quarters on the
+territory of the Lemovices, not far from the Arverni, so that no
+part of Gaul should be without troops. Caesar remained but a short
+time in the province, presiding hastily over the assemblies,
+determining cases of public dispute, and rewarding those who had
+served him well. He had had occasion more than anyone to know their
+sentiments individually, because during the general revolt of Gaul
+the fidelity and succor of the province had aided him in triumphing
+over it. When these affairs were settled he returned to his legions
+in Belgium and took up his winter quarters at Nemetocenna
+(Arras).</p>
+<p>There he was informed of the last attempts of Commius, who,
+continuing a partisan war at the head of a small number of cavalry,
+intercepted the Roman convoys. Mark Antony had charged C. Volusenus
+Quadratus, prefect of the cavalry, to pursue him. He had accepted
+the task eagerly in the hope of succeeding the second time better
+than the first, but Commius, taking advantage of the rash ardor
+with which his enemy had rushed upon him, had wounded him seriously
+and escaped. He was discouraged, however, and had promised Mark
+Antony to retire to any spot which should be appointed him on
+condition that he should never be compelled to appear before a
+Roman. This condition having been accepted, he had given hostages.
+Gaul was hereby subjugated. Death or slavery had carried off its
+principal citizens. Of all the chiefs who had fought for its
+independence only two survived—Commius and Ambiorix.</p>
+<p>Banished far from their country they died in obscurity.</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="RULE4_18"></a>ROMAN INVASION AND CONQUEST OF BRITAIN</h2>
+<p class="center">B.C. 55 - A.D. 79</p>
+<p class="center">OLIVER GOLDSMITH</p>
+<p class="intros">When Julius Caesar received the province of Gaul
+as his government, B.C. 58, it was only a small portion of the
+territory inhabited by the Gauls or Celts, being almost
+conterminous with the mediaeval Provence. It was also at peace, and
+there seemed no excuse for making an extension of Roman territory
+among the three tribes or races between which Northern and Western
+Gaul were divided. But the Helvetii, who occupied that part of the
+Alps known to-day as Switzerland, meditated an emigration into the
+plains of Gaul, and, as their shortest route lay across the Roman
+provinces, they asked leave of Caesar to pass three hundred and
+sixty thousand souls in all, counting women and children, through
+the imperial territory.</p>
+<p class="intros">The Roman commander, after giving them an evasive
+answer, met them in the territory of the Sequani and Aedui and
+defeated them, driving them back to their mountains. He next went
+to the aid of the Aedui, ancient allies of Rome, against the
+Arverni and Sequani, who had invaded the Aeduan territory under a
+German chieftain, Ariovistus. The result was that Ariovistus was
+defeated and driven eastward across the Rhine. He then defeated the
+Belgae, who, in B.C. 57, took up arms against the garrisons which
+he had left in the country of the Sequani (dwellers on the Seine).
+He continued his conquest of the Belgic territory, and subjected
+the three nations who occupied it, finally entering the country of
+the warlike Nervii, whom he only conquered after a stubborn and
+bloody battle. As soon as he had subjugated the whole of Gaul, he
+crossed the Rhine for the purpose of intimidating the Germans and
+teaching them to keep within their own boundaries.</p>
+<p class="intros">He pursued the same policy with regard to the
+Britons, who, according to information received by him, had sent
+aid to the Gauls in their struggle with Rome. His ships were
+brought round from the Loire to that part of the French coast now
+known as Boulogne, and he set out for Britain, where he landed, and
+eventually received the submission of the British chieftains.</p>
+<p>The Britons in their rude and barbarous state seemed to stand in
+need of more polished instructors; and indeed whatever evils may
+attend the conquest of heroes, their success has generally produced
+one good effect in disseminating the arts of refinement and
+humanity. It ever happens when a barbarous nation is conquered by
+another more advanced in the arts of peace, that it gains in
+elegance a recompense for what it loses in liberty.</p>
+<p>The Britons had long remained in this rude but independent
+state, when Cæsar, having overrun Gaul with his victories,
+and willing still further to extend his fame, determined upon the
+conquest of a country that seemed to promise an easy triumph. He
+was allured neither by the riches nor by the renown of the
+inhabitants; but being ambitious rather of splendid than of useful
+conquests, he was willing to carry the Roman arms into a country
+the remote situation of which would add seeming difficulty to the
+enterprise and consequently produce an increase of reputation. His
+pretence was to punish these islanders for having sent succors to
+the Gauls while he waged war against that nation, as well as for
+granting an asylum to such of the enemy as had sought protection
+from his resentment.</p>
+<p>The natives, informed of his intention, were sensible of the
+unequal contest and endeavored to appease him by submission. He
+received their ambassadors with great complacency, and having
+exhorted them to continue steadfast in the same sentiments, in the
+mean time made preparations for the execution of his design. When
+the troops designed for the expedition were embarked he set sail
+for Britain about midnight, and the next morning arrived on the
+coast near Dover, where he saw the rocks and cliffs covered with
+armed men to oppose his landing.</p>
+<p>Finding it impracticable to gain the shore where he first
+intended, from the agitation of the sea and the impending
+mountains, he resolved to choose a landing-place of greater
+security. The place he chose was about eight miles farther on (some
+suppose at Deal), where an inclining shore and a level country
+invited his attempts. The poor, naked, ill-armed Britons we may
+well suppose were but an unequal match for the disciplined Romans
+who had before conquered Gaul and afterward became the conquerors
+of the world. However, they made a brave opposition against the
+veteran army; the conflicts between them were fierce, the losses
+mutual, and the success various.</p>
+<p>The Britons had chosen Cassibelaunus for their
+commander-in-chief; but the petty princes under his command, either
+desiring his station or suspecting his fidelity, threw off their
+allegiance. Some of them fled with their forces into the internal
+parts of the kingdom, others submitted to Caesar; till at length
+Cassibelaunus himself, weakened by so many desertions, resolved
+upon making what terms he was able while yet he had power to keep
+the field. The conditions offered by Caesar and accepted by him
+were that he should send to the Continent double the number of
+hostages at first demanded and that he should acknowledge
+subjection to the Romans.</p>
+<p>The Romans were pleased with the name of this new and remote
+conquest, and the senate decreed a supplication of twenty days in
+consequence of their general's success. Having therefore in this
+manner rather discovered than subdued the southern parts of the
+island, Caesar returned into Gaul with his forces and left the
+Britons to enjoy their customs, religion, and laws. But the
+inhabitants, thus relieved from the terror of his arms, neglected
+the performance of their stipulations, and only two of their states
+sent over hostages according to the treaty. Caesar, it is likely,
+was not much displeased at the omission, as it furnished him with a
+pretext for visiting the island once more and completing a conquest
+which he had only begun.</p>
+<p>Accordingly the ensuing spring he set sail for Britain with
+eight hundred ships,[<a href="#note-69">69</a>] and arriving at the
+place of his descent he landed without opposition. The islanders
+being apprised of his invasion had assembled an army and marched
+down to the sea-side to oppose him, but seeing the number of his
+forces, and the whole sea, as it were, covered with his shipping,
+they were struck with consternation and retired to their places of
+security. The Romans, however, pursued them to their retreats until
+at last common danger induced these poor barbarians to forget their
+former dissensions and to unite their whole strength for the mutual
+defence of their liberty and possessions.</p>
+<p><a name="note-69"><!-- Note Anchor 69 --></a>[Footnote 69: With
+regard to these Roman <i>ships</i>, let not our readers be misled
+by a familiar notion or a pompous name. They were but little more
+than rowboats, as may be easily imagined from the fact that Cicero
+instances for its uncommon magnitude a <i>ship</i> of only
+fifty-six tons! These ancient vessels were occasionally sheathed
+with leather or lead, and had the prow decorated with paint and
+gilding, while the stern was sometimes carved in the figure of a
+shield, elaborately adorned. Upon a staff there erected hung
+ribbons distinctive of the ship and serving at the same time to
+show the direction of the wind. There, too, stood the
+<i>tutela</i>, or chosen patron of the ship, to whom prayers and
+sacrifices were daily offered. The selection of this deity was
+guided by either private or professional reasons, and as merchants
+committed themselves to the protection of Mercury, or lovers to the
+care of Cupid, warriors, it will at once be surmised, made Mars the
+object of their pious supplication.</p>
+<p>At a later period than the epoch to which our present note
+attaches, when Constantius removed from Heliopolis to Rome an
+enormous obelisk, weighing fifteen hundred tons, the vessel on
+board of which it was shipped also carried <i>eleven hundred and
+thirty-eight tons</i> of pulse; but such vast and unmanageable
+masses were regarded as monsters, and owed their existence to the
+absolute urgency of a remarkable purpose, backed by the despotic
+institutions of the times.]</p>
+<p>Cassibelaunus was chosen to conduct the common cause, and for
+some time he harassed the Romans in their march and revived the
+desponding hopes of his countrymen. But no opposition that
+undisciplined strength could make was able to repress the vigor and
+intrepidity of Cæsar. He discomfited the Britons in every
+action; he advanced into the country, passed the Thames in the face
+of the enemy, took and burned the capital city of Cassibelaunus,
+established his ally Mandubratius as sovereign of the Trinobantes;
+and having obliged the inhabitants to make new submissions, he
+again returned with his army into Gaul, having made himself rather
+the nominal than the real possessor of the island.</p>
+<p>Whatever the stipulated tribute might have been, it is more than
+probable, as there was no authority left to exact it, that it was
+but indifferently paid. Upon the accession of Augustus, that
+Emperor had formed a design of visiting Britain, but was diverted
+from it by an unexpected revolt of the Pannonians. Some years after
+he resumed his design; but being met in his way by the British
+ambassadors, who promised the accustomed tribute and made the usual
+submissions, he desisted from his intention. The year following,
+finding them remiss in their supplies and untrue to their former
+professions, he once more prepared for the invasion of the country;
+but a well-timed embassy again averted his indignation, and the
+submissions he received seemed to satisfy his resentment; upon his
+death-bed he appeared sensible of the overgrown extent of the Roman
+Empire and recommended it to his successors never to enlarge their
+territories.</p>
+<p>Tiberius followed the maxims of Augustus and, wisely judging the
+empire already too extensive, made no attempt upon Britain. Some
+Roman soldiers having been wrecked on the British coast the
+inhabitants not only assisted them with the greatest humanity, but
+sent them in safety back to their general. In consequence of these
+friendly dispositions, a constant intercourse of good offices
+subsisted between the two nations; the principal British nobility
+resorted to Rome, and many received their education there.</p>
+<p>From that time the Britons began to improve in all the arts
+which contribute to the advancement of human nature. The first art
+which a savage people is generally taught by politer neighbors is
+that of war. The Britons thenceforward, though not wholly addicted
+to the Roman method of fighting, nevertheless adopted several of
+their improvements, as well in their arms as in their arrangement
+in the field. Their ferocity to strangers, for which they had been
+always remarkable, was mitigated and they began to permit an
+intercourse of commerce even in the internal parts of the country.
+They still, however, continued to live as herdsmen and hunters; a
+manifest proof that the country was yet but thinly inhabited. A
+nation of hunters can never be populous, as their subsistence is
+necessarily diffused over a large tract of country, while the
+husbandman converts every part of nature to human use, and
+flourishes most by the vicinity of those whom he is to support.</p>
+<p>The wild extravagances of Caligula by which he threatened
+Britain with an invasion served rather to expose him to ridicule
+than the island to danger. The Britons therefore for almost a
+century enjoyed their liberty unmolested, till at length the Romans
+in the reign of Claudius began to think seriously of reducing them
+under their dominion. The expedition for this purpose was conducted
+in the beginning by Plautius and other commanders, with that
+success which usually attended the Roman arms.</p>
+<p>Claudius himself, finding affairs sufficiently prepared for his
+reception, made a journey thither and received the submission of
+such states as living by commerce were willing to purchase
+tranquillity at the expense of freedom. It is true that many of the
+inland provinces preferred their native simplicity to imported
+elegance and, rather than bow their necks to the Roman yoke,
+offered their bosoms to the sword. But the southern coast with all
+the adjacent inland country was seized by the conquerors, who
+secured the possession by fortifying camps, building fortresses,
+and planting colonies. The other parts of the country, either
+thought themselves in no danger or continued patient spectators of
+the approaching devastation.</p>
+<p>Caractacus was the first who seemed willing, by a vigorous
+effort, to rescue his country and repel its insulting and rapacious
+conquerors.[<a href="#note-70">70</a>] The venality and corruption
+of the Roman prætors and officers, who were appointed to levy
+the contributions in Britain, served to excite the indignation of
+the natives and give spirit to his attempts. This rude soldier,
+though with inferior forces, continued for about the space of nine
+years to oppose and harass the Romans; so that at length Ostorius
+Scapula was sent over to command their armies. He was more
+successful than his predecessors. He advanced the Roman conquest
+over Britain, pierced the country of the Silures, a warlike nation
+along the banks of the Severn, and at length came up with
+Caractacus, who had taken possession of a very advantageous post
+upon an almost inaccessible mountain, washed by a deep and rapid
+stream.</p>
+<p><a name="note-70"><!-- Note Anchor 70 --></a>[Footnote 70: The
+character of this hero has been powerfully depicted by Beaumont and
+Fletcher, in one of their noblest dramas.]</p>
+<p>The unfortunate British general, when he saw the enemy
+approaching, drew up his army, composed of different tribes, and
+going from rank to rank exhorted them to strike the last blow for
+liberty, safety, and life. To these exhortations his soldiers
+replied with shouts of determined valor. But what could
+undisciplined bravery avail against the attack of an army skilled
+in all the arts of war and inspired by a long train of conquests?
+The Britons were, after an obstinate resistance, totally routed,
+and a few days after Caractacus himself was delivered up to the
+conquerors by Cartismandua, queen of the Brigantes, with whom he
+had taken refuge. The capture of this general was received with
+such joy at Rome that Claudius commanded that he should be brought
+from Britain in order to be exhibited as a spectacle to the Roman
+people. Accordingly, on the day appointed for that purpose, the
+Emperor, ascending his throne, ordered the captives and Caractacus
+among the number to be brought into his presence. The vassals of
+the British King, with the spoils taken in war, were first brought
+forward; these were followed by his family, who, with abject
+lamentations, were seen to implore for mercy.</p>
+<p>Last of all came Caractacus with an undaunted air and a
+dignified aspect. He appeared no way dejected at the amazing
+concourse of spectators that were gathered upon this occasion, but,
+casting his eyes on the splendors that surrounded him, "Alas!"
+cried he, "how is it possible that a people possessed of such
+magnificence at home could envy me an humble cottage in Britain?"
+When brought into the Emperor's presence he is said to have
+addressed him in the following manner: "Had my moderation been
+equal to my birth and fortune, I had arrived in this city not as a
+captive, but as a friend. But my present misfortunes redound as
+much to your honor as to my disgrace; and the obstinacy of my
+opposition serves to increase the splendor of your victory. Had I
+surrendered myself in the beginning of the contest, neither my
+disgrace nor your glory would have attracted the attention of the
+world, and my fate would have been buried in general oblivion. I am
+now at your mercy; but if my life be spared, I shall remain an
+eternal monument of your clemency and moderation." The Emperor was
+affected with the British hero's misfortunes and won by his
+address. He ordered him to be unchained upon the spot, with the
+rest of the captives, and the first use they made of their liberty
+was to go and prostrate themselves before the empress Agrippina,
+who as some suppose had been an intercessor for their freedom.</p>
+<p>Notwithstanding these misfortunes, the Britons were not subdued,
+and this island was regarded by the ambitious Romans as a field in
+which military honor might still be acquired. The Britons made one
+expiring effort to recover their liberty in the time of Nero,
+taking advantage of the absence of Paulinus, the Roman general, who
+was employed in subduing the isle of Anglesey. That small island,
+separated from Britain by a narrow channel, still continued the
+chief seat of the Druidical superstition, and constantly afforded a
+retreat to their defeated forces. It was thought necessary
+therefore to subdue that place, in order to extirpate a religion
+that disdained submission to foreign laws or leaders; and Paulinus,
+the greatest general of his age, undertook the task.</p>
+<p>The Britons endeavored to obstruct his landing on that last
+retreat of their superstitions and liberties, both by the force of
+their arms and the terrors of their religion. The priests and
+islanders were drawn up in order of battle upon the shore, to
+oppose his landing. The women, dressed like Furies, with
+dishevelled hair, and torches in their hands, poured forth the most
+terrible execrations. Such a sight at first confounded the Romans
+and fixed them motionless on the spot; so that they received the
+first assault without opposition. But Paulinus, exhorting his
+troops to despise the menaces of an absurd superstition, impelled
+them to the attack, drove the Britons off the field, burned the
+Druids in the same fires they had prepared for their captive
+enemies, and destroyed all their consecrated groves and altars.</p>
+<p>In the mean time the Britons, taking advantage of his absence,
+resolved, by a general insurrection, to free themselves from that
+state of abject servitude to which they were reduced by the Romans.
+They had many motives to aggravate their resentment—the
+greatness of their taxes, which were levied with unremitting
+severity; the cruel insolence of their conquerors, who reproached
+that very poverty which they had caused, but particularly the
+barbarous treatment of Boadicea, queen of the Iceni, drove them at
+last into open rebellion.</p>
+<p>Prasatagus, king of the Iceni, at his death had bequeathed
+one-half of his dominions to the Romans, and the other to his
+daughters; thus hoping by the sacrifice of a part to secure the
+rest in his family; but it had a different effect; for the Roman
+procurator immediately took possession of the whole, and when
+Boadicea, the widow of the deceased, attempted to remonstrate, he
+ordered her to be scourged like a slave, and violated the chastity
+of her daughters. These outrages were sufficient to produce a
+revolt through the whole island. The Iceni, being the most deeply
+interested in the quarrel, were the first to take arms; all the
+other states soon followed the example, and Boadicea, a woman of
+great beauty and masculine spirit, was appointed to head the common
+forces, which amounted to two hundred and thirty thousand fighting
+men.</p>
+<p>These, exasperated by their wrongs, attacked several of the
+Roman settlements and colonies with success, Paulinus hastened to
+relieve London, which was already a flourishing colony; but found
+on his arrival that it would be requisite, for the general safety,
+to abandon that place to the merciless fury of the enemy. London
+was therefore soon reduced to ashes; such of the inhabitants as
+remained in it were massacred; and the Romans with all other
+strangers to the number of seventy thousand were cruelly put to the
+sword. Flushed with these successes the Britons no longer sought to
+avoid the enemy, but boldly came to the place where Paulinus
+awaited their arrival, posted in a very advantageous manner with a
+body of ten thousand men. The battle was obstinate and bloody.
+Boadicea herself appeared in a chariot with her two daughters and
+harangued her army with masculine firmness; but the irregular and
+undisciplined bravery of her troops was unable to resist the cool
+intrepidity of the Romans. They were routed with great slaughter;
+eighty thousand perished in the field, and an infinite number were
+made prisoners, while Boadicea herself, fearing to fall into the
+hands of the enraged victor, put an end to her life by poison. Nero
+soon after recalled Paulinus from a government where, by suffering
+and inflicting so many severities, he was judged improper to
+compose the angry and alarmed minds of the natives.</p>
+<p>After an interval, Cerealis received the command from Vespasian,
+and by his bravery propagated the terror of the Roman arms. Julius
+Frontinus succeeded Cerealis both in authority and reputation. The
+general who finally established the dominion of the Romans in this
+island was Julius Agricola, who governed it during the reigns of
+Vespasian, Titus, and Domitian, and distinguished himself as well
+by his courage as humanity.</p>
+<p>Agricola, who is considered as one of the greatest characters in
+history, formed a regular plan for subduing and civilizing the
+island, and thus rendering the acquisition useful to the
+conquerors. As the northern part of the country was least
+tractable, he carried his victorious arms thither, and defeated the
+undisciplined enemy in every encounter. He pierced into the
+formerly inaccessible forests and mountains of Caledonia; he drove
+onward all those fierce and intractable spirits who preferred
+famine to slavery, and who, rather than submit, chose to remain in
+perpetual hostility. Nor was it without opposition that he thus
+made his way into a country rude and impervious by nature.</p>
+<p>He was opposed by Galgacus at the head of a numerous army, whom
+he defeated in a decisive action, in which considerable numbers
+were slain. Being thus successful, he did not think proper to
+pursue the enemy into their retreats; but embarking a body of
+troops on board his fleet, he ordered the commander to surround the
+whole coast of Britain, which had not been discovered to be an
+island till the preceding year. This armament, pursuant to his
+orders, steered to the northward, and there subdued the Orkneys;
+then making the tour of the whole island, it arrived in the port of
+Sandwich, without having met with the least disaster.</p>
+<p>During these military enterprises, Agricola was ever attentive
+to the arts of peace. He attempted to humanize the fierceness of
+those who acknowledged his power, by introducing the Roman laws,
+habits, manners, and learning. He taught them to desire and raise
+all the conveniences of life, instructed them in the arts of
+agriculture, and, in order to protect them in their peaceable
+possessions, he drew a rampart, and fixed a train of garrisons
+between them and their northern neighbors, thus cutting off the
+ruder and more barren parts of the island and securing the Roman
+province from the invasion of a fierce and necessitous enemy. In
+this manner the Britons, being almost totally subdued, now began to
+throw off all hopes of recovering their former liberty, and, having
+often experienced the superiority of the Romans, consented to
+submit, and were content with safety. From that time the Romans
+seemed more desirous of securing what they possessed than of making
+new conquests, and were employed rather in repressing than
+punishing their restless northern invaders.</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="RULE4_19"></a>CLEOPATRA'S CONQUEST OF CÆSAR AND ANTONY</h2>
+<p class="center">B.C. 51-30</p>
+<p class="center">JOHN P. MAHAFFY</p>
+<p class="intros">Several Egyptian princesses of the line of the
+Ptolemies bore the name of Cleopatra, but history, romance, and
+tragedy are all illumined with the story of one—Cleopatra the
+daughter of Ptolemy Auletes. Born at Alexandria, B.C. 69, she ruled
+jointly with her brother Ptolemy from 51 to 48. Being then expelled
+by her colleague, she entered upon the performance of her part in
+Roman history when her cause was espoused by Julius Cæsar,
+whom she had captivated by her charms. Her reinstatement by the
+help of Cæsar, as well as all that followed in her relations
+with Roman rulers, was due primarily to personal considerations,
+rather than political or military causes; and among women whose
+lives have vitally influenced the conduct of great historic
+leaders, and thereby affected the course of events, Cleopatra holds
+a place at once the most conspicuous and most unique.</p>
+<p class="intros">Like Cæsar, Mark Antony, at his first
+interview with Cleopatra, succumbed to the fascinations of the
+"Rare Egyptian," and he never after ceased to be her slave. Not
+long after Cæsar's death Antony had married Fulvia, whom he
+deserted for the "enchanting queen." From this point to its
+culmination in overwhelming disaster and the tragic death of this
+celebrated pair of lovers, the romantic drama of Cleopatra's
+conquests becomes even more important in literature than in
+history. This extraordinary voluptuary, whose beauty and witcheries
+have interested mankind for almost twenty centuries, has been the
+subject of some thirty tragedies in various languages; and in
+<i>Antony and Cleopatra</i>—one of his greatest
+plays—Shakespeare, closely following the narratives of
+Plutarch and other classical writers, has invested her with a
+potency of charm unparalleled among literary creations.</p>
+<p class="intros">She matches Antony in qualities of intellect,
+while she dazzles him with her coquettish arts. "A queen, a siren,"
+says Thomas Campbell, "a Shakespeare's Cleopatra alone could have
+entangled Shakespeare's Antony." And Shakespeare alone, as declared
+by Mrs. Jameson, "has dared to exhibit the Egyptian Queen with all
+her greatness and all her littleness, all her paltry arts and
+dissolute passions, yet awakened our pity for fallen grandeur
+without once beguiling us into sympathy with guilt."</p>
+<p class="intros">Yet the plain history of this "Sorceress of the
+Nile," with her "infinite variety," as told by Plutarch and the
+other ancients, and retold, with whatever advantages gained from
+critical research, by the modern masters, makes the same impression
+of moral contrast and inscrutability as that imparted by the
+greatest poet who has dramatized the character of Cleopatra.</p>
+<p>Now at last Egypt, coming into close connection with the world's
+masters, becomes the stage for some of the most striking scenes in
+ancient history. They seem to most readers something new and
+strange—the pageants and passions of the fratricide Cleopatra
+as something unparalleled—and yet she was one of a race in
+which almost every reigning princess for the last two hundred years
+had been swayed by like storms of passion, or had been guilty of
+like daring violations of common humanity. What Arsino&euml;, what
+Cleopatra, from the first to the last, had hesitated to murder a
+brother or a husband, to assume the throne, to raise and command
+armies, to discard or adopt a partner of her throne from caprice in
+policy, or policy in caprice? But hitherto this desperate gambling
+with life had been carried on in Egypt and Syria; the play had been
+with Hellenistic pawns—Egyptian or Syrian princes; the last
+Cleopatra came to play with Roman pieces, easier apparently to move
+than the others, but implying higher stakes, greater glory in the
+victory, greater disaster in the defeat. Therefore is it that this
+last Cleopatra, probably no more than an average specimen of the
+beauty, talent, daring, and cruelty of her ancestors, has taken an
+unique place among them in the imagination of the world, and holds
+her own even now and forever as a familiar name throughout the
+world.</p>
+<p>Ptolemy Auletes, when dying, had taken great care not to
+bequeath his mortgaged kingdom to his Roman creditors. In his will
+he had named as his heirs the elder of his two sons, and his
+daughter, who was the eldest of the family. Nobody thought of
+claiming Egypt for a heritage of the Roman Republic, when the whole
+world was the prize proposed in the civil conflict, for though the
+war of Cæsar and Pompey had not actually broken out, the
+political sky was lowering with blackness, and the coming tempest
+was muttering its thunder through the sultry air. So Cleopatra, now
+about sixteen or seventeen years of age, and her much younger
+brother (about ten) assumed the throne as was traditional, without
+any tumult or controversy,</p>
+<p>The opening discords came from within the royal family. The
+tutors and advisers of the young King, among whom Pothinos, a
+eunuch brought up with him as his playmate, according to the custom
+of the court, was the ablest and most influential, persuaded him to
+assume sole direction of affairs and to depose his elder sister.
+Cleopatra was not able to maintain herself in Alexandria, but went
+to Syria as an exile, where she promptly collected an army, as was
+the wont of these Egyptian princesses, who seem to have resources
+always under their control, and returned—within a few months,
+says Cæsar—by way of Pelusium, to reconquer her lawful
+share in the throne. This happened in the fourth year of their
+so-called joint reign, B.C. 48, at the very time that Pompey and
+Cæsar were engaged in their conflict for a far greater
+kingdom.</p>
+<p>Cæsar expressed his opinion that the quarrel of the
+sovereigns in Egypt concerned the Roman people, and himself as
+consul, the more so as it was in his previous consulate that the
+recognition of and alliance with their father had taken place. So
+he signified his decision that Ptolemy and Cleopatra should dismiss
+their armies, and should discuss their claims before him by
+argument and not by arms. All our authorities, except Dio Cassius,
+state that he sent for Cleopatra that she might personally urge her
+claims; but Dio tells us, with far more detail and I think greater
+probability, "that at first the quarrel with her brother was argued
+for her by friends, till she, learning the amorous character of
+Cæsar, sent him word that her case was being mismanaged by
+her advocates, and she desired to plead it herself, She was then in
+the flower of her age (about twenty) and celebrated for her beauty.
+Moreover, she had the sweetest of voices, and every charm of
+conversation, so that she was likely to ensnare even the most
+obdurate and elderly man. These gifts she regarded as her claims
+upon Cæsar. She prayed therefore for an interview, and
+adorned herself in a garb most becoming, but likely to arouse his
+pity, and so came secretly by night to visit him."</p>
+<p>If she indeed arrived secretly and was carried into the palace
+by one faithful follower as a bale of carpet, it was from fear of
+assassination by the party of Pothinos. She knew that as soon as
+she had reached Cæsar's sentries she was safe; as the event
+proved, she was more than safe, for in the brief interval of peace,
+and perhaps even of apparent jollity, while the royal dispute was
+under discussion, she gained an influence over Cæsar which
+she retained till his death. Cæsar adjudicated the throne
+according to the will of Auletes; he even restored Cyprus to Egypt,
+and proposed to send the younger brother and his sister
+Arsino&euml; to govern it; but he also insisted on a repayment, in
+part at least, of the enormous outstanding debt of Auletes to him
+and his party.</p>
+<p>A few months after Cæsar's departure from Egypt Cleopatra
+gave birth to a son, whom she alleged, without any immediate
+contradiction, to be the dictator's. The Alexandrians called him
+Cæsarion, and she never swerved from asserting for him royal
+privileges. We hear of no other lover, though it is impossible to
+imagine Cleopatra arriving at the age of twenty without providing
+herself with this luxury. She was, however, afraid to let
+Cæsar live far from her influence, and some time before his
+assassination—that is to say, some time between B.C. 48 and
+44—she came with the young King her brother to Rome, where
+she was received in Cæsar's palace beyond the Tiber, causing
+by her residence there considerable scandal among the stricter
+Romans. Cicero confesses that he went to see her, but protests that
+his reasons for doing so were absolutely nonpolitical. Cicero found
+her haughty; he does not say she was beautiful and fascinating. We
+do not hear of any political activity on her part, though Cicero
+evidently suspects it; it is well-nigh impossible that she can have
+preferred her very doubtful position at Rome to her brilliant life
+in the East. She was suspected of urging Cæsar to move
+eastward the capital of his new empire, to desert Rome, and choose
+either Ilium, the imaginary cradle of his race, or Alexandria, as
+his residence. She is likely to have encouraged at all events his
+expedition against the Parthians, which would bring him to Syria,
+whence she hoped to gain new territory for her son. The whole
+situation is eloquently, perhaps too eloquently, described by
+Merivale, for he weaves in many conjectures of his own, as if they
+were ascertained facts.</p>
+<p>The colors of this imitation of a hateful original [the oriental
+despot] were heightened by the demeanor of Cleopatra, who followed
+her lover to Rome at his invitation. She came with the younger
+Ptolemæus, who now shared her throne, and her ostensible
+object was to negotiate a treaty between her kingdom and the
+Commonwealth. While the Egyptian nation was formally admitted to
+the friendship and alliance of Rome, its sovereign was lodged in
+Cæsar's villa on the other side of the Tiber, and the statue
+of the most fascinating of women was erected in the temple of the
+Goddess of Love and Beauty. The connection which subsisted between
+her and the dictator was unblushingly avowed. Public opinion
+demanded no concessions to its delicacy; the feelings of the
+injured Calpurnia had been blunted by repeated outrage, and
+Cleopatra was encouraged to proclaim openly that her child
+Cæsarion was the son of her Roman admirer. A tribune, named
+Helvius Cinna, ventured, it is said, to assert among his friends
+that he was prepared to propose a law, with the dictator's
+sanction, to enable him to marry more wives than one, for the sake
+of progeny, and to disregard in his choice the legitimate
+qualification of Roman descent. The Romans, however, were spared
+this last insult to their prejudices. The queen of Egypt felt
+bitterly the scorn with which she was popularly regarded as the
+representative of an effeminate and licentious people. It is not
+improbable that she employed her fatal influence to withdraw her
+lover from the Roman capital, and urged him to schemes of oriental
+conquest to bring him more completely within her toils. In the mean
+while the haughtiness of her demeanor corresponded with the
+splendid anticipations in which she indulged. She held a court in
+the suburbs of the city, at which the adherents of the dictator's
+policy were not the only attendants. Even his opponents and
+concealed enemies were glad to bask in the sunshine of her
+smiles.</p>
+<p>When Cæsar was assassinated, she was still at Rome, and
+had some wild hopes of having her son recognized by the
+Cæsareans. But failing in this she escaped secretly, and
+sailed to Egypt, not without causing satisfaction to cautious men
+like Cicero that she was gone. The passage in which he seems to
+allude to a rumor that she was about to have another
+child—another misfortune to the State—does not bear
+that interpretation. As he says not a word concerning the young
+king Ptolemy, we may assume that the youth was already dead, and
+that he died at Rome. The common belief was that Cleopatra poisoned
+him as soon as his increasing years made him troublesome to her. In
+her reign four years are assigned to a joint rule with her elder
+brother, four more to that with her younger, so that this latter
+must have died in the same year as Cæsar.</p>
+<p>Cleopatra, watching from Egypt the great civil war which ensued,
+summoned and commanded by the various leaders to send aid in ships
+and money, threatened with plunder and confiscation by those who
+were now exhausting Asia Minor and the islands with monstrous
+exactions, had ample occupation for her talents in steering safely
+among these constant dangers. Appian says she pleaded famine and
+pestilence in her country in declining the demands of Cassius for
+subsidies. The latter was on the point of invading Egypt, at the
+moment denuded of defending forces and <i>wasted with famine</i>,
+when he was summoned to Philippi by Brutus.</p>
+<p>It was not till B.C. 41, after the decisive battle of Philippi,
+that the victorious Antony, turning to subdue the East to the
+Cæsarean cause, held his <i>joyeuse entrée</i> into
+Ephesus, and then proceeded to drain all Asia Minor of money for
+the satisfaction of his greedy legionaries and his own still more
+greedy vices. Reaching Cilicia, he sent an order to the queen of
+Egypt to come before him and explain her conduct during the late
+war, for she was reported to have sent aid to Cassius. The sequel
+may be told in Plutarch's famous narrative:</p>
+<p>"Dellius, who was sent on this message, had no sooner seen her
+face, and remarked her adroitness and subtlety in speech, than he
+felt convinced that Antony would not so much as think of giving any
+molestation to a woman like this. On the contrary, she would be the
+first in favor with him. So he set himself at once to pay his court
+to the Egyptian, and gave her his advice, 'to go,' in the Homeric
+style, to Cilicia, 'in her best attire,' and bade her fear nothing
+from Antony, the gentlest and kindest of soldiers. She had some
+faith in the words of Dellius, but more in her own attractions,
+which, having formerly recommended her to Cæsar and the young
+Cnaeus Pompey, she did not doubt might yet prove more successful
+with Antony. Their acquaintance was with her when a girl, young,
+and ignorant of the world, but she was to meet Antony in the time
+of life when women's beauty is most splendid and their intellects
+are in full maturity. She made great preparation for her journey,
+of money, gifts, and ornaments of value, such as so wealthy a
+kingdom might afford, but she brought with her her surest hopes in
+her own magic arts and charms.</p>
+<p>"She received several letters, both from Antony and from his
+friends, to summon her, but she took no account of these orders;
+and at last, as if in mockery of them, she came sailing up the
+river Cydnus, in a barge with gilded stern and outspread sails of
+purple, while oars of silver beat time to the music of flutes and
+fifes and harps. She herself lay all along, under a canopy of cloth
+of gold, dressed as Venus in a picture, and beautiful young boys,
+like painted cupids, stood on each side to fan her. Her maids were
+dressed like sea nymphs and graces, some steering at the rudder,
+some working at the ropes.[<a href="#note-71">71</a>] The perfumes
+diffused themselves from the vessel to the shore, which was covered
+with multitudes, part following the galley up the river on either
+bank, part running out of the city to see the sight. The
+market-place was quite emptied, and Antony at last was left alone
+sitting upon the tribunal, while the word went through all the
+multitude that Venus was come to feast with Bacchus, for the common
+good of Asia.[<a href="#note-72">72</a>] On her arrival, Antony
+sent to invite her to supper. She thought it fitter he should come
+to her; so, willing to show his good humor and courtesy, he
+complied, and went. He found the preparations to receive him
+magnificent beyond expression, but nothing so admirable as the
+great number of lights, for on a sudden there was let down
+altogether so great a number of branches with lights in them so
+ingeniously disposed, some in squares and some in circles, that the
+whole thing was a spectacle that has seldom been equalled for
+beauty."</p>
+<p><a name="note-71"><!-- Note Anchor 71 --></a>[Footnote 71: There
+was no Egyptian feature in this show, which was purely
+Hellenistic.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-72"><!-- Note Anchor 72 --></a>[Footnote 72: How
+easily such a belief started up in the minds of a crowd in the Asia
+Minor of that day appears from Acts xiv. 11 <i>seq</i>., where the
+crowd at Iconium, on seeing a cripple cured, at once exclaim that
+the gods are come down to them in the likeness of men, and call
+Barnabas Jupiter, and Paul Mercurius, because he was the chief
+speaker, bringing sacrifices to offer to the apostles.]</p>
+<p>"The next day Antony invited her to supper, and was very
+desirous to outdo her as well in magnificence as contrivance; but
+he found he was altogether beaten in both, and was so well
+convinced of it that he was himself the first to jest and mock at
+his poverty of wit and his rustic awkwardness. She, perceiving that
+his raillery was broad and gross and savored more of the soldier
+than the courtier, rejoined in the same taste, and fell into it at
+once, without any sort of reluctance or reserve, for her actual
+beauty, it is said, was not in itself so remarkable that none could
+be compared with her, or that no one could see her without being
+struck by it, but the contact of her presence, if you lived with
+her, was irresistible; the attraction of her person, joining with
+the charm of her conversation and the character that attended all
+she said or did, was something bewitching. It was a pleasure merely
+to hear the sound of her voice, with which, like an instrument of
+many strings, she could pass from one language to another; so that
+there were few of the barbarian nations that she answered by an
+interpreter. To most of them she spoke herself, as to the
+Ethiopians, troglodytes, Hebrews, Arabians, Syrians, Medes,
+Parthians, and many others, whose language she had
+learned;[<a href="#note-73">73</a>] which was all the more
+surprising, because most of the kings her predecessors scarcely
+gave themselves the trouble to acquire the Egyptian tongue, and
+several of them quite abandoned the Macedonian."</p>
+<p><a name="note-73"><!-- Note Anchor 73 --></a>[Footnote 73: We
+have here the usual lies of courtiers.]</p>
+<p>"Antony was so captivated by her that, while Fulvia, his wife,
+maintained his quarrels in Rome against Cæsar by actual force
+of arms, and the Parthian troops, commanded by Labienus—the
+King's generals having made him commander-in-chief—were
+assembled in Mesopotamia, and ready to enter Syria, he could yet
+suffer himself to be carried away by her to Alexandria, there to
+keep holiday, like a boy, in play and diversion, squandering and
+fooling away in enjoyments that most costly, as Antiphon says, of
+all valuables, time. They had a sort of company, to which they gave
+a particular name, calling it that of the 'Inimitable Livers.' The
+members entertained one another daily in turn, with an extravagance
+of expenditure beyond measure or belief. Philotas, a physician of
+Amphissa, who was at that time a student of medicine in Alexandria,
+used to tell my grandfather Lamprias that, having some acquaintance
+with one of the royal cooks, he was invited by him, being a young
+man, to come and see the sumptuous preparations for dinner. So he
+was taken into the kitchen, where he admired the prodigious variety
+of all things, but, particularly seeing eight wild boars roasting
+whole, says he, 'Surely you have a great number of guests.' The
+cook laughed at his simplicity, and told him there were not above
+twelve to dine, but that every dish was to be served up just
+roasted to a turn, and if anything was but one minute ill-timed it
+was spoiled. 'And,' said he, 'maybe Antony will dine just now,
+maybe not this hour, maybe he will call for wine, or begin to talk,
+and will put it off. So that,' he continued, 'it is not one, but
+many dinners, must be had in readiness, as it is impossible to
+guess at his hour.'"</p>
+<p>Plato admits four sorts of flattery, but Cleopatra had a
+thousand. Were Antony serious or disposed to mirth she had any
+moment some new delight or charm to meet his wishes. At every turn
+she was upon him, and let him escape her neither by day nor by
+night. She played at dice with him, drank with him, hunted with
+him, and when he exercised in arms she was there to see. At night
+she would go rambling with him to joke with people at their doors
+and windows, dressed like a servant woman, for Antony also went in
+servant's disguise, and from these expeditions he always came home
+very scurvily answered, and sometimes even beaten severely, though
+most people guessed who it was. However, the Alexandrians in
+general liked it all well enough, and joined good-humoredly and
+kindly in his frolic and play, saying they were much obliged to
+Antony for acting his tragic parts at Rome and keeping his comedy
+for them. It would be trifling without end to be particular in
+relating his follies, but his fishing must not be forgotten. He
+went out one day to angle with Cleopatra, and being so unfortunate
+as to catch nothing in the presence of his mistress, he gave secret
+orders to the fishermen to dive under water and put fishes that had
+been already taken upon his hooks, and these he drew in so fast
+that the Egyptian perceived it. But feigning great admiration, she
+told everybody how dexterous Antony was, and invited them next day
+to come and see him again. So when a number of them had come on
+board the fishing boats, as soon as he had let down his hook, one
+of her servants was beforehand with his divers and fixed upon his
+hook a salted fish from Pontus. Antony, feeling his line taut, drew
+up the prey, and when, as may be imagined, great laughter ensued,
+"Leave," said Cleopatra, "the fishing rod, autocrat, to us poor
+sovereigns of Pharos and Canopus; your game is cities, kingdoms,
+and continents."</p>
+<p>Plutarch does not mention the most tragic and the most
+characteristic proof of Cleopatra's complete conquest of Antony.
+Among his other crimes of obedience he sent by her orders and put
+to death the Princess Arsino&euml;, who, knowing well her danger,
+had taken refuge as a suppliant in the temple of Artemis
+Leucophryne at Miletus.</p>
+<p>It is not our duty to follow the various complications of war
+and diplomacy, accompanied by the marriage with the serious and
+gentle Octavia, whereby the brilliant but dissolute Antony was
+weaned, as it were, from his follies, and persuaded to live a life
+of public activity. Whether the wily Octavian did not foresee the
+result, whether he did not even sacrifice his sister to accumulate
+odium against his dangerous rival, is not for us to determine. But
+when it was arranged (in B.C. 36) that Antony should lead an
+expedition against the Parthians, any man of ordinary sense must
+have known that he would come within the reach of the eastern
+siren, and was sure to be again attracted by her fatal voice. It is
+hard to account for her strange patience during these four years.
+She had borne twins to Antony, probably after the meeting in
+Cilicia. Though she still maintained the claims of her eldest son
+Cæsarion to be the divine Julius' only direct heir, we do not
+hear of her sending requests to Antony to support him, or that any
+agents were working in her interests at Rome. She was too subtle a
+woman to solicit his return to Alexandria. There are mistaken
+insinuations that she thought the chances of Sextus Pompey, with
+his naval supremacy, better than those of Antony, but these stories
+refer to his brother Cnaeus, who visited Egypt before
+Pharsalia.</p>
+<p>It is probably to this pause in her life, as we know it, that we
+may refer her activity in repairing and enlarging the national
+temples. The splendid edifice at Dendera, at present among the most
+perfect of Egyptian temples, bears no older names than those of
+Cleopatra and her son Cæsarion, and their portraits represent
+the latter as a growing lad, his mother as an essentially Egyptian
+figure, conventionally drawn according to the rules which had
+determined the figures of gods and kings for fifteen hundred years.
+Under these circumstances it is idle to speak of this well-known
+relief picture as a portrait of the Queen. It is no more so than
+the granite statues in the Vatican are portraits of Philadelphus
+and Arsino&euml;. The artist had probably never seen the Queen, and
+if he had, it would not have produced the slightest alteration in
+his drawing.</p>
+<p>Plutarch expressly says that it was not in peerless beauty that
+her fascination lay, but in the combination of more than average
+beauty with many other personal attractions. The Egyptian portrait
+is likely to confirm in the spectator's mind the impression derived
+from Shakespeare's play, that Cleopatra was a swarthy Egyptian, in
+strong contrast to the fair Roman ladies, and suggesting a wide
+difference of race. She was no more an Egyptian than she was an
+Indian, but a pure Macedonian, of a race akin to, and perhaps
+fairer than, the Greeks.</p>
+<p>No sooner had Antony reached Syria than the fell influence of
+the Egyptian Queen revived. In the words of Plutarch:</p>
+<p>"But the mischief that thus long had lain still, the passion for
+Cleopatra, which better thoughts had seemed to have lulled and
+charmed into oblivion, upon his approach to Syria, gathered
+strength again, and broke out into a flame. And in fine, like
+Plato's restive and rebellious horse of the human soul, flinging
+off all good and wholesome counsel and breaking fairly loose, he
+sent Fonteius Capito to bring Cleopatra into Syria; to whom at her
+arrival he made no small or trifling present—Phoenicia,
+Coele-Syria, Cyprus, great part of Cilicia, that side of Judea
+which produces balm, that part of Arabia where the Nabathaeans
+extend to the outer sea—profuse gifts which much displeased
+the Romans. For although he had invested several private persons
+with great governments and kingdoms, and bereaved many kings of
+theirs, as Antigonus of Judea, whose head he caused to be struck
+off—the first example of that punishment being inflicted on a
+king—yet nothing stung the Romans like the shame of these
+honors paid to Cleopatra. Their dissatisfaction was augmented also
+by his acknowledging as his own the twin children he had by her,
+giving them the names of Alexander and Cleopatra, and adding, as
+their surnames, the titles of Sun and Moon."</p>
+<p>After much dallying the triumvir really started for the wild
+East, whither it is not our business to follow him. Cleopatra he
+sent home to Egypt, to await his victorious return, and it was on
+this occasion that she came in state to Jerusalem to visit Herod
+the Great—probably the most brilliant scene of the kind which
+had taken place since the queen of Sheba came to learn the wisdom
+of Solomon. But it was a very different wisdom that Herod
+professed, and in which he was verily a high authority, nor was the
+subtle daughter of the Ptolemies a docile pupil, but a practised
+expert in the same arts of cruelty and cunning; wherewith both
+pursued their several courses of ambition and sought to wheedle
+from their Roman masters cities and provinces. The reunion of
+Antony and Cleopatra must have greatly alarmed Herod, whose plans
+were directly thwarted by the freaks of Antony, and he must have
+been preparing at the time to make his case with Octavian, and seek
+from his favor protection against the new caprices of the then lord
+of the East.</p>
+<p>"The scene at Herod's palace must have been inimitable. The
+display of counter-fascinations between these two tigers; their
+voluptuous natures mutually attracted; their hatred giving to each
+that deep interest in the other which so often turns to mutual
+passion while it incites to conquest; the grace and finish of their
+manners, concealing a ruthless ferocity; the splendor of their
+appointments—what more dramatic picture can we imagine in
+history?</p>
+<p>"We hear that she actually attempted to seduce Herod, but
+failed, owing to his deep devotion to his wife Mariamne. The
+prosaic Josephus adds that Herod consulted his council whether he
+should not put her to death for this attempt upon his virtue. He
+was dissuaded by them on the ground that Antony would listen to no
+arguments, not even from the most persuasive of the world's
+princes, and would take awful vengeance when he heard of her death.
+So she was escorted with great gifts and politenesses back to
+Egypt."</p>
+<p>Such, then, was the character of this notorious Queen. But her
+violation of temples, and even of ancient tombs, for the sake of
+treasure must have been a far more public and odious exhibition of
+that want of respect for the sentiment of others which is the
+essence of bad manners.[<a href="#note-74">74</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-74"><!-- Note Anchor 74 --></a>[Footnote 74:
+<i>The Greek World under Roman Sway.</i>]</p>
+<p>As is well known, the first campaign of Antony against Armenians
+and Parthians was a signal failure, and it was only with great
+difficulty that he escaped the fate of Crassus. But Cleopatra was
+ready to meet him in Syria with provisions and clothes for his
+distressed and ragged battalions, and he returned with her to spend
+the winter (B.C. 36-35) at Alexandria. She thus snatched him again
+from his noble wife, Octavia, who had come from Rome to Athens with
+succors even greater than Cleopatra had brought. This at least is
+the word of the historians who write in the interest of the Romans,
+and regard the queen of Egypt with horror and with fear.</p>
+<p>The new campaign of Antony (B.C. 34) was apparently more
+prosperous, but it was only carried far enough to warrant his
+holding a Roman triumph at Alexandria—perhaps the only
+novelty in pomp which the triumvir could exhibit to the Alexandrian
+populace, while it gave the most poignant offence at Rome. It was
+apparently now that he made that formal distribution of provinces
+which Octavian used as his chief <i>casus belli</i>.</p>
+<p>"Nor was the division he made among his sons at Alexandria less
+unpopular. It seemed a theatrical piece of insolence and contempt
+of his country, for, assembling the people in the exercise ground,
+and causing two golden thrones to be placed on a platform of
+silver, the one for him and the other for Cleopatra, and at their
+feet lower thrones for their children, he proclaimed Cleopatra
+queen of Egypt, Cyprus, Libya, and Coele-Syria, and with her
+conjointly Cæsarion, the reputed son of the former
+Cæsar. His own sons by Cleopatra were to have the style of
+'King of Kings'; to Alexander he gave Armenia and Media, with
+Parthia so soon as it should be overcome; to Ptolemy Phoenicia,
+Syria, and Cilicia. Alexander was brought out before the people in
+Median costume, the tiara and upright peak, and Ptolemy in boots
+and mantle and Macedonian cap done about with the diadem; for this
+was the habit of the successors of Alexander, as the other was of
+the Medes and Armenians. And, as soon as they had saluted their
+parents, the one was received by a guard of Macedonians, the other
+by one of Armenians. Cleopatra was then, as at other times when she
+appeared in public, dressed in the habit of the goddess Isis, and
+gave audience to the people under the name of the New Isis.</p>
+<p>"This over, he gave Priene to his players for a habitation, and
+set sail for Athens, where fresh sports and play-acting employed
+him. Cleopatra, jealous of the honors Octavia had received at
+Athens—for Octavia was much beloved by the
+Athenians—courted the favor of the people with all sorts of
+attentions. The Athenians, in requital, having decreed her public
+honors, deputed several of the citizens to wait upon her at her
+house, among whom went Antony as one, he being an Athenian citizen,
+and he it was that made the speech.</p>
+<p>"The speed and extent of Antony's preparations alarmed
+Cæsar, who feared he might be forced to fight the decisive
+battle that summer, for he wanted many necessaries, and the people
+grudged very much to pay the taxes; freemen being called upon to
+pay a fourth part of their incomes, and freed slaves an eighth of
+their property, so that there were loud outcries against him, and
+disturbances throughout all Italy. And this is looked upon as one
+of the greatest of Antony's oversights that he did not then press
+the war, for he allowed time at once for Cæsar to make his
+preparations, and for the commotions to pass over, for while people
+were having their money called for they were mutinous and violent;
+but, having paid it, they held their peace.</p>
+<p>"Titius and Plancus, men of consular dignity and friends to
+Antony, having been ill-used by Cleopatra, whom they had most
+resisted in her design of being present in the war, came over to
+Cæsar, and gave information of the contents of Antony's will,
+with which they were acquainted. It was deposited in the hands of
+the vestal virgins, who refused to deliver it up, and sent
+Cæsar word, if he pleased, he should come and seize it
+himself, which he did. And, reading it over to himself, he noted
+those places that were most for his purpose, and, having summoned
+the senate, read them publicly. Many were scandalized at the
+proceeding, thinking it out of reason and equity to call a man to
+account for what was not to be until after his death. Cæsar
+specially pressed what Antony said in his will about his burial,
+for he had ordered that even if he died in the city of Rome, his
+body, after being carried in state through the Forum, should be
+sent to Cleopatra at Alexandria.</p>
+<p>"Calvisius, a dependent of Cæsar's, urged other charges in
+connection with Cleopatra against Antony: that he had given her the
+library of Pergamus, containing two hundred thousand distinct
+volumes; that at a great banquet, in the presence of many guests,
+he had risen up and rubbed her feet, to fulfil some wager or
+promise; that he had suffered the Ephesians to salute her as their
+queen; that he had frequently at the public audience of kings and
+princes received amorous messages written in tablets made of onyx
+and crystal, and read them openly on the tribunal; that when
+Furnius, a man of great authority and eloquence among the Romans,
+was pleading, Cleopatra happening to pass by in her litter, Antony
+started up and left them in the middle of their cause, to follow at
+her side and attend her home."[<a href="#note-75">75</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-75"><!-- Note Anchor 75 --></a>[Footnote 75:
+Plutarch: <i>Antony</i>.]</p>
+<p>When war was declared, Antony sought to gain the support of the
+East in the conflict. He made alliance with a Median king who
+betrothed his daughter to Cleopatra's infant son Alexander; but he
+made the fatal mistake of allowing Cleopatra to accompany him to
+Samos, where he gathered his army, and even to Actium, where she
+led the way in flying from the fight, and so persuading the
+infatuated Antony to leave his army and join in her disgraceful
+escape.</p>
+<p>Historians have regarded this act of Cleopatra as the mere
+cowardice of a woman who feared to look upon an armed conflict and
+join in the din of battle. But she was surely made of sterner
+stuff. She had probably computed with the utmost care the chances
+of the rivals, and had made up her mind that, in spite of Antony's
+gallantry, his cause was lost.[<a href="#note-76">76</a>] If she
+fought out the battle with her strong contingent of ships, she
+would probably fall into Octavian's hands as a prisoner, and would
+have no choice between suicide or death in the Roman prison, after
+being exhibited to the mob in Octavian's triumph. There was no
+chance whatever that she would have been spared, as was her sister
+Arsino&euml; after Julius Cæsar's triumph, nor would such
+clemency be less hateful than death. But there was still a chance,
+if Antony were killed or taken prisoner, that she might negotiate
+with the victor as queen of Egypt, with her fleet, army, and
+treasures intact, and who could tell what effect her charms, though
+now full ripe, might have upon the conqueror? Two great Romans had
+yielded to her, why not the third, who seemed a smaller man?</p>
+<p><a name="note-76"><!-- Note Anchor 76 --></a>[Footnote 76: Dion
+says that Antony was of the same opinion, and went into the battle
+intending to fly; but this does not agree with his character or
+with the facts.]</p>
+<p>This view implies that she was already false to Antony, and it
+may well be asked how such a charge is compatible with the
+affecting scenes which followed at Alexandria, where her policy
+seemed defeated by her passion, and she felt her old love too
+strong even for her heartless ambition? I will say in answer that
+there is no more frequent anomaly in the psychology of female love
+than a strong passion coexisting with selfish ambition, so that
+each takes the lead in turn; nay, even the consciousness of
+treachery may so intensify the passion as to make a woman embrace
+with keener transports the lover whom she has betrayed than one
+whom she has no thought of surrendering. There are, moreover, in
+these tragedies unexpected accidents, which so affect even the
+hardest nature that calculations are cast aside, and the old
+loyalty resumes a temporary sway. Nor must we fail to insist again
+upon the traditions wherein this last Cleopatra was born and bred.
+She came from a stock whose women played with love and with life as
+if they were mere counters. To hesitate whether such a scion of
+such a house would have delayed to discard Antony and to assume
+another passion is to show small appreciation of the effects of
+heredity and of example. Dion tells us that she arrived in
+Alexandria before the news of her defeat, pretended a victory, and
+took the occasion of committing many murders, in order to get rid
+of secret opponents, and also to gather wealth by confiscation of
+their goods, for both she and Antony, who came along the coast of
+Libya, seem still to have thought of defending the inaccessible
+Egypt, and making terms for themselves and their children with the
+conqueror. But Antony's efforts completely failed; no one would
+rally to his standard. And meanwhile the false Queen had begun to
+send presents to Cæsar and encourage him to treat with her.
+But when he bluntly proposed to her to murder Antony as the price
+of her reconciliation with himself, and when he even declared by
+proxy that he was in love with her, he clearly made a rash move in
+this game of diplomacy, though Dion says he persuaded her of his
+love, and that accordingly she betrayed to him the fortress of
+Pelusium, the key of the country. Dion also differs from Plutarch
+in repeatedly ascribing to Octavian great anxiety to secure the
+treasures which Cleopatra had with her, and which she was likely to
+destroy by fire if driven to despair.</p>
+<p>The historian may well leave to the biographer, nay, to the
+poet, the affecting details of the closing scenes of Cleopatra's
+life. In the fourth and fifth acts of <i>Antony and Cleopatra</i>
+Shakespeare has reproduced every detail of Plutarch's narrative,
+which was drawn from that of her physician Olympos. Her
+fascinations were not dead, for they swayed Dolabella to play false
+to his master so far as to warn her of his intentions, and leave
+her time for her dignified and royal end. But if these Hellenistic
+queens knew how to die, they knew not how to live. Even the
+penultimate scene of the tragedy, when she presents an inventory of
+her treasures to Octavian, and is charged by her steward with
+dishonesty, shows her in uncivilized violence striking the man in
+the face and bursting into indecent fury, such as an Athenian,
+still less a Roman, matron would have been ashamed to exhibit. Nor
+is there any reason to doubt the genuineness of this scene, though
+we must not be weary of cautioning ourselves against the hostile
+witnesses who have reported to us her life. They praise nothing in
+her but her bewitching presence and her majestic death.</p>
+<p>"After her repast Cleopatra sent to Cæsar a letter which
+she had written and sealed, and, putting everybody out of the
+monument but her two women, she shut the doors. Cæsar,
+opening her letter, and finding pathetic prayers and entreaties
+that she might be buried in the same tomb with Antony, soon guessed
+what was doing. At first he was going himself in all haste; but,
+changing his mind, he sent others to see. The thing had been
+quickly done. The messengers came at full speed, and found the
+guards apprehensive of nothing; but on opening the doors they saw
+her stone dead, lying upon a bed of gold, set out in all her royal
+ornaments. Iras, one of her women, lay dying at her feet, and
+Charmion, just ready to fall, scarce able to hold up her head, was
+adjusting her mistress' diadem. And when one that came in said
+angrily, 'Was this well done of your lady, Charmion?' 'Perfectly
+well,' she answered, 'and as became the daughter of so many kings';
+and as she said this she fell down dead by the bedside."</p>
+<p>Even the hostile accounts cannot conceal from us that both in
+physique and in intellect she was a very remarkable figure,
+exceptional in her own, exceptional had she been born in any other,
+age. She is a speaking instance of the falsehood of a prevailing
+belief, that the intermarriage of near relations invariably
+produces a decadence in the human race. The whole dynasty of the
+Ptolemies contradicts this current theory, and exhibits in the last
+of the series the most signal exception. Cleopatra VI was descended
+from many generations of breeding-in, of which four exhibit
+marriages of full brother and sister. And yet she was deficient in
+no quality, physical or intellectual, which goes to make up a
+well-bred and well-developed human being. Her morals were indeed
+those of her ancestors, and as bad as could be, but I am not aware
+that it is degeneration in this direction which is assumed by the
+theory in question, except as a consequence of physical decay.
+Physically, however, Cleopatra was perfect. She was not only
+beautiful, but prolific, and retained her vigor, and apparently her
+beauty, to the time of her death, when she was nearly forty years
+old.</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="RULE4_20"></a>ASSASSINATION OF CÆSAR</h2>
+<p class="center">B.C. 44</p>
+<p class="center">NIEBUHR and PLUTARCH</p>
+<p class="intros">Cæsar's assassination forms the groundwork
+of one of Shakespeare's most notable tragedies. The "itching palm"
+of Cassius, Brutus' rectitude and honesty of purpose, and Mark
+Antony's oration will ever live while the English language endures.
+When the great Cæsar was struck down, the civil war was over
+and he was master of the world. The month of the year B.C. 100 in
+which he was born, Quinctilis, was afterward called in his honor,
+July.</p>
+<p class="intros">Caius Julius Cæsar was one of the greatest
+figures in history, and early took a prominent part in the affairs
+of Rome. He was a rival of Cicero in forensic eloquence and highly
+esteemed as a writer, his <i>Commentaries</i> being universally
+admired. Ransomed from pirates who had captured him on his way to
+study philosophy at Rhodes, he attacked them in turn, took them to
+Pergamus, and crucified them.</p>
+<p class="intros">After various successful engagements Cæsar
+marched against Pharnaces, now established in the kingdom of the
+Bosphorus, gaining at Zela, in Pontus, the decisive victory which
+he announced in the famous despatch, <i>Veni, vidi, vici</i> ("I
+came, I saw, I conquered").</p>
+<p class="intros">His unbounded affability, his liveliness and
+cordiality, his unaffected kindness to his friends had made him
+popular with the high as well as the low. His ambition began to
+show itself. During the wrangles over the election of Afranius as
+consul, Cæsar returned from his brilliant successes in Spain.
+The troops saluted him as imperator and the senate voted a
+thanksgiving in his honor. He was now strong enough to take his
+place as the leader of the popular party. He was elected consul in
+spite of the hostility of the senate.</p>
+<p class="intros">A coalition was formed between Cæsar and
+Pompey. Cæsar's agrarian law added to his popularity with the
+people, and he gained the influence of the <i>equites</i> by relief
+of one-third of the farmed taxes of Asia. He now became proconsul
+of Illyricum and Gaul for five years. This suited his ambition. At
+this time Pompey was the absolute master of Rome. And now arose his
+duel for power with Cæsar. For a time he opposed the latter's
+election as consul, but later yielded.</p>
+<p class="intros">Cæsar had achieved his brilliant success
+beyond the Alps. He had won victories in Gaul and Britain; but in
+the mean time his enemies had been active at Rome. Still believing
+that the senate would permit his quiet election to the consulship,
+he refused to strike any blow at their authority. But the senate
+had determined to humble Cæsar. Both Pompey and Cæsar
+were removed from leadership, but the Consul Marcellus refused to
+execute the decree. Cæsar was directed by the senate to
+disband his army by a fixed day, on pain of being considered a
+public enemy. Pompey sided with the senate. This meant civil war.
+Antony and Cassius fled to the camp of Cæsar, who was
+enthusiastically supported by his soldiers and "crossed the
+Rubicon."</p>
+<p class="intros">Having become master of all Italy in three months
+without a battle, Cæsar re&euml;ntered Rome. Pompey had fled,
+and at the battle of Pharsalia was utterly routed, and took refuge
+in Egypt, where he was murdered a few days before the arrival of
+Cæsar.</p>
+<p class="intros">Upon receipt of the news of Pompey's death
+Cæsar was named dictator for one year. The government was now
+placed without disguise in his hands. He was invested with the
+tribunician power for life. He was also again elected consul and
+named dictator.</p>
+<p class="intros">Cæsar had now become a demi-god, and was
+named dictator for ten years, being awarded a fourfold triumph, and
+a thanksgiving being decreed for forty days. He was also made
+censor. This was in B.C. 46. After defeating the remnant of the
+Pompeians, he returned to Rome in September, B.C. 45, and was named
+imperator, and appointed consul for ten years and dictator for
+life, being hailed as <i>Parens Patriæ</i>.</p>
+<p class="intros">All these triumphs had caused jealousies. It was
+thought that he aspired to become king, and this led to his
+fall.</p>
+<p class="center">NIEBUHR</p>
+<p>It is one of the inestimable advantages of a hereditary
+government commonly called the legitimate, whatever its form may
+be, that it may be formally inactive in regard to the state and the
+population—that it may reserve its interference until it is
+absolutely necessary, and apparently leave things to take their own
+course. If we look around us and observe the various constitutions,
+we shall scarcely perceive the interference of the government; the
+greater part of the time passes away without those who have the
+reins in their hands being obliged to pay any particular attention
+to what they are doing, and a very large amount of individual
+liberty may be enjoyed. But if the government is what we call a
+usurpation, the ruler has not only to take care to maintain his
+power, but in all that he undertakes he has to consider by what
+means and in what ways he can establish his right to govern, and
+his own personal qualifications for it. Men who are in such a
+position are urged on to act by a very sad necessity, from which
+they cannot escape, and such was the position of Cæsar at
+Rome.</p>
+<p>In our European States, men have wide and extensive spheres in
+which they can act and move. The much-decried system of
+centralization has indeed many disadvantages; but it has this
+advantage for the ruler, that he can exert an activity which shows
+its influence far and wide. But what could Cæsar do, in the
+centre of nearly the whole of the known world? He could not hope to
+effect any material improvements either in Italy or in the
+provinces. He had been accustomed from his youth, and more
+especially during the last fifteen years, to an enormous activity,
+and idleness was intolerable to him. At the close of the civil war
+he would have had little or nothing to do unless he had turned his
+attention to some foreign enterprise. He was obliged to venture
+upon something that would occupy his whole soul, for he could not
+rest. His thoughts were therefore again directed to war, and that
+in a quarter where the most brilliant triumphs awaited him, where
+the bones of the legions of Crassus lay unavenged—to a war
+against the Parthians. About this time the Getae also had spread in
+Thrace, and he intended to check their progress likewise. But his
+main problem was to destroy the Parthian empire and to extend the
+Roman dominion as far as India, a plan in which he would certainly
+have been successful; and he himself felt so sure of this that he
+was already thinking of what he should undertake afterward.</p>
+<p>It is by no means incredible that, as we are told, he intended
+on his return to march through the passes of the Caucasus, and
+through ancient Scythia into the country of the Getae, and thence
+through Germany and Gaul into Italy. Besides this expedition, he
+entertained other plans of no less gigantic dimensions. The port of
+Ostia was bad, and in reality little better than a mere roadstead,
+so that great ships could not come up the river. Accordingly it is
+said that Cæsar intended to dig a canal for sea-ships, from
+the Tiber, above or below Rome, through the Pomptine marshes as far
+as Terracina. He further contemplated to cut through the Isthmus of
+Corinth. It is not easy to see in what manner he would have
+accomplished this, considering the state of hydraulic architecture
+in those times. The Roman canals were mere <i>fossæ</i>, and
+canals with sluices, though not unknown to the Romans, were not
+constructed by them.[<a href="#note-77">77</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-77"><!-- Note Anchor 77 --></a>[Footnote 77: The
+first canals with sluices were executed by the Dutch in the
+fifteenth century.]</p>
+<p>The fact of Cæsar forming such enormous plans is not very
+surprising; but we can scarcely comprehend how it was possible for
+him to accomplish so much of what he undertook in the short time of
+five months preceding his death. Following the unfortunate system
+of Sulla, Cæsar founded throughout Italy a number of colonies
+of veterans. The old Sullanian colonists were treated with great
+severity, and many of them and their children were expelled from
+their lands, and were thus punished for the cruelty which they or
+their fathers had committed against the inhabitants of the
+municipia. In like manner colonies were established in Southern
+Gaul, Italy, Africa, and other parts; I may mention in particular
+the colonies founded at Carthage and Corinth. The latter, however,
+was a <i>colonia libertinorum</i>, and never rose to any
+importance. We do not know the details of its foundation, but one
+would imagine that Cæsar would have preferred restoring the
+place as a purely Greek town. This, however, he did not do. Its
+population was and remained a mixed one, and Corinth never rose to
+a state of real prosperity.</p>
+<p>Cæsar made various new arrangements in the State, and
+among others he restored the full franchise, or the <i>jus
+honorum</i>, to the sons of those who had been proscribed in the
+time of Sulla. He had obtained for himself the title of imperator
+and the dictatorship for life and the consulship for ten years.
+Half of the offices of the republic to which persons had before
+been elected by the centuries were in his gift, and for the other
+half he usually recommended candidates; so that the elections were
+merely nominal.</p>
+<p>The tribes seem to have retained their rights of election
+uncurtailed, and the last tribunes must have been elected by the
+people. But although Cæsar did not himself confer the
+consulship, yet the whole republic was reduced to a mere form and
+appearance. Cæsar made various new laws and regulations; for
+example, to lighten the burdens of debtors and the like; but the
+changes he introduced in the form of the constitution were of
+little importance. He increased the number of prætors, which
+Sulla had raised to eight, successively to ten, twelve, fourteen,
+and sixteen, and the number of quaestors was increased to forty.
+Hence the number of persons from whom the senate was to be filled
+up became greater than that of the vacancies, and Cæsar
+accordingly increased the number of senators, though it is
+uncertain what number he fixed upon, and raised a great many of his
+friends to the dignity of senators. In this, as in many other
+cases, he acted very arbitrarily; for he elected into the senate
+whomsoever he pleased, and conferred the franchise in a manner
+equally arbitrary. These things did not fail to create much
+discontent. It is a remarkable fact that, notwithstanding his mode
+of filling up the senate, not even the majority of senators were
+attached to his cause after his death.</p>
+<p>If we consider the changes and regulations which Cæsar
+introduced, it must strike us as a singular circumstance that among
+all his measures there is no trace of any indicating that he
+thought of modifying the constitution for the purpose of putting an
+end to the anarchy, for all his changes are in reality not
+essential or of great importance. Sulla felt the necessity of
+remodelling the constitution, but he did not attain his end; and
+the manner, too, in which he set about it was that of a
+short-sighted man; but he was at least intelligent enough to see
+that the constitution as it then was could not continue to exist.
+In the regulations of Cæsar we see no trace of such a
+conviction; and I think that he despaired of the possibility of
+effecting any real good by constitutional reforms. Hence, among all
+his laws there is not one that had any relation to the
+constitution. The fact of his increasing the number of patrician
+families had no reference to the constitution; so far in fact were
+the patricians from having any advantages over the plebeians that
+the office of the two <i>oediles Cereales</i>, which Cæsar
+instituted, was confined to the plebeians—a regulation which
+was opposed to the very nature of the patriciate.</p>
+<p>His raising persons to the rank of patricians was neither more
+nor less than the modern practice of raising a family to the rank
+of nobility; he picked out an individual and gave him the rank of
+patrician for himself and his descendants, but did not elevate a
+whole gens. The distinction itself was merely a nominal one and
+conferred no privilege upon a person except that of holding certain
+priestly offices, which could be filled by none but patricians, and
+for which their number was scarcely sufficient. If Cæsar had
+died quietly the republic would have been in the same, nay, in a
+much worse, state of dissolution than if he had not existed at all.
+I consider it a proof of the wisdom and good sense of Cæsar
+that he did not, like Sulla, think an improvement in the state of
+public affairs so near at hand or a matter of so little difficulty.
+The cure of the disease lay yet at a very great distance, and the
+first condition on which it could be undertaken was the sovereignty
+of Cæsar, a condition which would have been quite unbearable
+even to many of his followers, who as rebels did not scruple to go
+along with him. But Rome could no longer exist as a republic.</p>
+<p>It is curious to see in Cicero's work, <i>de Republica</i>, the
+consciousness running through it that Rome, as it then stood,
+required the strong hand of a king. Cicero had surely often owned
+this to himself; but he saw no one who would have entered into such
+an idea. The title of king had a great fascination for Cæsar,
+as it had for Cromwell—a surprising phenomenon in a practical
+mind like that of Cæsar. Everyone knows the fact that while
+Cæsar was sitting on the <i>suggestum</i>, during the
+celebration of the <i>Lupercalia</i>, Antony presented to him the
+diadem, to try how the people would take it. Cæsar saw the
+great alarm which the act created and declined the diadem for the
+sake of appearance; but had the people been silent, Cæsar
+would unquestionably have accepted it. His refusal was accompanied
+by loud shouts of acclamation, which for the present rendered all
+further attempts impossible. Antony then had a statue of
+Cæsar adorned with the diadem; but two tribunes of the
+people, L. Caesetius Flavus and Epidius Marullus, took it away: and
+here Cæsar showed the real state of his feelings, for he
+treated the conduct of the tribunes as a personal insult toward
+himself. He had lost his self-possession and his fate carried him
+irresistibly onward. He wished to have the tribunes imprisoned, but
+was prevailed upon to be satisfied with their being stripped of
+their office and sent into exile.</p>
+<p>This created a great sensation at Rome. Cæsar had also
+been guilty of an act of thoughtlessness, or perhaps merely of
+distraction, as might happen very easily to a man in his
+circumstances. When the senate had made its last decrees,
+conferring upon Cæsar unlimited powers, the senators,
+consuls, and prætors, or the whole senate, in festal attire,
+presented the decrees to him, and Cæsar at the moment forgot
+to show his respect for the senators; he did not rise from his
+<i>sella curulis</i>, but received the decrees in an unceremonious
+manner. This want of politeness was never forgiven by the persons
+who had not scrupled to make him their master; for it had been
+expected that he would at least behave politely and be grateful for
+such decrees.[<a href="#note-78">78</a>] Cæsar himself had no
+design in the act, which was merely the consequence of distraction
+or thoughtlessness; but it made the senate his irreconcilable
+enemies. The affair with the tribunes, moreover, had made a deep
+impression upon the people. We must, however, remember that the
+people under such circumstances are most sensible to anything
+affecting their honor, as we have seen at the beginning of the
+French Revolution.</p>
+<p><a name="note-78"><!-- Note Anchor 78 --></a>[Footnote 78: I
+have known an instance of a man of rank and influence who could
+never forgive another man, who was by far his superior in every
+respect, for having forgotten to take off his hat during a
+visit.]</p>
+<p>In the year of Cæsar's death, Brutus and Cassius were
+prætors. Both had been generals under Pompey. Brutus' mother,
+Servilia, was a half-sister of Cato, for after the death of her
+first husband Cato's mother had married Servilius Caepio. She was a
+remarkable woman, but very immoral, and unworthy of her son; not
+even the honor of her own daughter was sacred to her. The family of
+Brutus derived its origin from L. Junius Brutus, and from the time
+of its first appearance among the plebeians it had had few men of
+importance to boast of. During the period subsequent to the passing
+of the Licinian laws we meet with some Junii in the Fasti, but not
+one of them acquired any great reputation. The family had become
+reduced and almost contemptible. One M. Brutus in particular
+disgraced his family by sycophancy in the time of Sulla and was
+afterward killed in Gaul by Pompey. Although no Roman family
+belonged to a more illustrious gens, yet Brutus was not by any
+means one of those men who are raised by fortunate circumstances.
+The education, however, which he received had a great influence
+upon him. His uncle Cato, whose daughter Porcia he
+married—whether in Cato's lifetime or afterward is
+doubtful—had initiated him from his early youth in the Stoic
+philosophy, and had instilled into his mind a veneration for it, as
+though it had been a religion.</p>
+<p>Brutus had qualities which Cato did not possess. The latter had
+something of an ascetic nature, and was, if I may say so, a
+scrupulously pious character; but Brutus had no such scrupulous
+timidity; his mind was more flexible and lovable. Cato spoke well,
+but could not be reckoned among the eloquent men of his time.
+Brutus' great talents had been developed with the utmost care, and
+if he had lived longer and in peace he would have become a
+classical writer of the highest order. He had been known to Cicero
+from his early age, and Cicero felt a fatherly attachment to him;
+he saw in him a young man who he hoped would exert a beneficial
+influence upon the next generation.</p>
+<p>Cæsar too had known and loved him from his childhood; but
+the stories which are related to account for this attachment must
+be rejected as foolish inventions of idle persons; for nothing is
+more natural than that Cæsar should look with great fondness
+upon a young man of such extraordinary and amiable qualities. The
+absence of envy was one of the distinguishing features in the
+character of Cæsar, as it was in that of Cicero. In the
+battle of Pharsalus, Brutus served in the army of Pompey, and after
+the battle he wrote a letter to Cæsar, who had inquired after
+him; and when Cæsar heard of his safety he was delighted, and
+invited him to his camp. Cæsar afterward gave him the
+administration of Cisalpine Gaul, where Brutus distinguished
+himself in a very extraordinary manner by his love of justice.</p>
+<p>Cassius was related to Brutus, and had likewise belonged to the
+Pompeian party, but he was very unlike Brutus; he was much older,
+and a distinguished military officer. After the death of Crassus he
+had maintained himself as quaestor in Syria against the Parthians,
+and he enjoyed a very great reputation in the army, but he was
+after all no better than an ordinary officer of Cæsar. After
+the battle of Pharsalus, Cæsar did not at first know whither
+Pompey was gone. Cassius was at the time stationed with some
+galleys in the Hellespont, notwithstanding which Cæsar with
+his usual boldness took a boat to sail across that strait, and on
+meeting Cassius called upon him to embrace his party. Cassius
+readily complied, and Cæsar forgave him, as he forgave all
+his adversaries: even Marcellus, who had mortally offended him, was
+pardoned at the request of Cicero. Cæsar thus endeavored to
+efface all recollections of the civil war.</p>
+<p>Cæsar had appointed both Brutus and Cassius prætors
+for that year. With the exception of the office of <i>prætor
+urbanus</i>, which was honorable and lucrative, the
+prætorship was a burdensome office and conferred little
+distinction, since the other prætors were only the presidents
+of the courts. Formerly they had been elected by lot, but the
+office was now altogether in the gift of Cæsar. Both Brutus
+and Cassius had wished for the prætura urbana, and, when
+Cæsar gave that office to Brutus, Cassius was not only
+indignant at Cæsar, but began quarrelling with Brutus also.
+While Cassius was in this state of exasperation, a meeting of the
+senate was announced for the 15th of March, on which day, as the
+report went, a proposal was to be made to offer Cæsar the
+crown. This was a welcome opportunity for Cassius, who resolved to
+take vengeance, for he had even before entertained a personal
+hatred of Cæsar, and was now disappointed at not having
+obtained the city prætorship. He first sounded Brutus and,
+finding that he was safe, made direct overtures to him. During the
+night some one wrote on the tribunal and the house of Brutus the
+words, "Remember that thou art Brutus."</p>
+<p>Brutus became reconciled to Cassius, offered his assistance, and
+gained over several other persons to join the conspiracy. All party
+differences seemed to have vanished all at once; two of the
+conspirators were old generals of Cæsar, C. Trebonius and
+Decimus Brutus, both of whom had fought with him in Gaul, and
+against Massilia, and had been raised to high honors by their
+chief. There were among the conspirators persons of all parties.
+Men who had fought against one another at Pharsalus now went
+hand-in-hand and intrusted their lives to one another. No proposals
+were made to Cicero, the reasons usually assigned for which are of
+the most calumniatory kind. It is generally said that the
+conspirators had no confidence in Cicero, an opinion which is
+perfectly contemptible. Cicero would not have betrayed them for any
+consideration, but what they feared were his objections. Brutus had
+as noble a soul as anyone, but he was passionate; Cicero, on the
+other hand, who was at an advanced age, had many sad experiences,
+and his feelings were so exceedingly delicate that he could not
+have consented to take away the life of him to whom he himself owed
+his own, who had always behaved most nobly toward him, and had
+intentionally drawn him before the world as his friend.</p>
+<p>Cæsar's conduct toward those who had fought in the ranks
+of Pompey and afterward returned to him was extremely noble, and he
+regarded the reconciliation of those men as a personal favor
+conferred upon himself. All who knew Cicero must have been
+convinced that he would not have given his consent to the plan of
+the conspirators; and if they ever did give the matter a serious
+thought, they must have owned to themselves that every wise man
+would have dissuaded them from it; for it was in fact the most
+complete absurdity to fancy that the republic could be restored by
+Cæsar's death. Goethe says somewhere that the murder of
+Cæsar was the most senseless act that the Romans ever
+committed; and a truer word was never spoken. The result of it
+could not possibly be any other than that which did follow the
+deed.</p>
+<p>Cæsar was cautioned by Hirtius and Pansa, both wise men of
+noble character, especially the former, who saw that the republic
+must become consolidated and not thrown into fresh convulsions.
+They advised Cæsar to be careful, and to take a bodyguard;
+but he replied that he would rather not live at all than be in
+constant fear of losing his life. Cæsar once expressed to
+some of his friends his conviction that Brutus was capable of
+harboring a murderous design, but he added that as he, Cæsar,
+could not live much longer, Brutus would wait, and not be guilty of
+such a crime. Cæsar's health was at that time weak, and the
+general opinion was that he intended to surrender his power to
+Brutus as the most worthy. While the conspirators were making their
+preparations, Porcia, the wife of Brutus, inferred from the
+excitement and restlessness of her husband that some fearful secret
+was pressing on his mind; but as he did not show her any
+confidence, she seriously wounded herself with a knife and was
+seized with a violent wound-fever. No one knew the cause of her
+illness; and it was not till after many entreaties of her husband
+that at length she revealed it to him, saying that as she had been
+able to conceal the cause of her illness, so she could also keep
+any secret that might be intrusted to her. Her entreaties induced
+Brutus to communicate to her the plan of the conspirators.
+Cæsar was also cautioned by the haruspices, by a dream of his
+wife, and by his own forebodings, which we have no reason for
+doubting. But on the morning of the 15th of March, the day fixed
+upon for assassinating Cæsar, Decimus Brutus treacherously
+enticed him to go with him to the Curia, as it was impossible to
+delay the deed any longer.</p>
+<p>The conspirators were at first seized with fear lest their plan
+should be betrayed; but on Cæsar's entrance into the senate
+house, C. Tillius (not Tullius) Cimber made his way up to him, and
+insulted him with his importunities, and Casca gave the first
+stroke. Cæsar fell covered with twenty-three wounds. He was
+either in his fifty-sixth year or had completed it; I am not quite
+certain on this point, though, if we judge by the time of his first
+consulship, he must have been fifty-six years old. His birthday,
+which is not generally known, was the 11th of Quinctilis, which
+month was afterward called Julius, and his death took place on the
+15th of March, between eleven and twelve o'clock.</p>
+<p class="center">PLUTARCH</p>
+<p>At one time the senate having decreed Cæsar some
+extravagant honors, the consuls and prætors, attended by the
+whole body of patricians, went to inform him of what they had done.
+When they came, he did not rise to receive them, but kept his seat,
+as if they had been persons in a private station, and his answer to
+their address was, "that there was more need to retrench his honors
+than to enlarge them." This haughtiness gave pain not only to the
+senate, but the people, who thought the contempt of that body
+reflected dishonor upon the whole Commonwealth; for all who could
+decently withdraw went off greatly dejected.</p>
+<p>Perceiving the false step he had taken, he retired immediately
+to his own house, and, laying his neck bare, told his friends "he
+was ready for the first hand that would strike." He then bethought
+himself of alleging his distemper as an excuse; and asserted that
+those who are under its influence are apt to find their faculties
+fail them when they speak standing, a trembling and giddiness
+coming upon them, which bereave them of their senses. This,
+however, was not really the case; for it is said he was desirous to
+rise to the senate; but Cornelius Balbus, one of his friends, or
+rather flatterers, held him, and had servility enough to say, "Will
+you not remember that you are Cæsar, and suffer them to pay
+their court to you as their superior?"</p>
+<p>These discontents were greatly increased by the indignity with
+which he treated the tribunes of the people. In the Lupercalia,
+which, according to most writers, is an ancient pastoral feast, and
+which answers in many respects to the <i>Lycaea</i> among the
+Arcadians, young men of noble families, and indeed many of the
+magistrates, run about the streets naked, and, by way of diversion,
+strike all they meet with leathern thongs with the hair upon them.
+Numbers of women of the first quality put themselves in their way,
+and present their hands for stripes—as scholars do to a
+master—being persuaded that the pregnant gain an easy
+delivery by it, and that the barren are enabled to conceive.
+Cæsar wore a triumphal robe that day, and seated himself in a
+golden chair upon the <i>rostra</i>, to see the ceremony.</p>
+<p>Antony ran among the rest, in compliance with the rules of the
+festival, for he was consul. When he came into the Forum, and the
+crowd had made way for him, he approached Cæsar, and offered
+him a diadem wreathed with laurel. Upon this some plaudits were
+heard, but very feeble, because they proceeded only from persons
+placed there on purpose. Cæsar refused it, and then the
+plaudits were loud and general. Antony presented it once more, and
+few applauded his officiousness; but when Cæsar rejected it
+again, the applause again was general. Cæsar, undeceived by
+his second trial, rose up and ordered the diadem to be consecrated
+in the Capitol.</p>
+<p>A few days after, his statues were seen adorned with royal
+diadems; and Flavius and Marullus, two of the tribunes, went and
+tore them off. They also found out the persons who first saluted
+Cæsar king, and committed them to prison. The people followed
+with cheerful acclamations, and called them Brutuses, because
+Brutus was the man who expelled the kings and put the government in
+the hands of the senate and people. Cæsar, highly incensed at
+their behavior, deposed the tribunes, and by way of reprimand to
+them, as well as insult to the people, called them several times
+<i>Brutes</i> and <i>Cumceans</i>.</p>
+<p>Upon this, many applied to Marcus Brutus, who, by the father's
+side, was supposed to be a descendant of that ancient Brutus, and
+whose mother was of the illustrious house of the Servilli. He was
+also nephew and son-in-law to Cato. No man was more inclined than
+he to lift his hand against monarchy, but he was withheld by the
+honors and favors he had received from Cæsar, who had not
+only given him his life after the defeat of Pompey at Pharsalia,
+and pardoned many of his friends at his request, but continued to
+honor him with his confidence. That very year he had procured him
+the most honorable prætorship, and he had named him for the
+consulship four years after, in preference to Cassius, who was his
+competitor; on which occasion Cæsar is reported to have said,
+"Cassius assigns the strongest reasons, but I cannot refuse
+Brutus."</p>
+<p>Some impeached Brutus after the conspiracy was formed; but,
+instead of listening to them, he laid his hand on his body and
+said, "Brutus will wait for this skin"; intimating that though the
+virtue of Brutus rendered him worthy of empire, he would not be
+guilty of any ingratitude or baseness to obtain it. Those, however,
+who were desirous of a change kept their eyes upon him only, or
+principally at least; and as they durst not speak out plain, they
+put billets night after night in the tribunal and seat which he
+used as prætor, mostly in these terms: "Thou sleepest,
+Brutus," or, "Thou art not Brutus."</p>
+<p>Cassius, perceiving his friend's ambition a little stimulated by
+these papers, began to ply him closer than before, and spur him on
+to the great enterprise; for he had a particular enmity against
+Cæsar. Cæsar, too, had some suspicion of him, and he
+even said one day to his friends: "What think you of Cassius? I do
+not like his pale looks." Another time, when Antony and Dolabella
+were accused of some designs against his person and government, he
+said: "I have no apprehensions from those fat and sleek men; I
+rather fear the pale and lean ones," meaning Cassius and
+Brutus.</p>
+<p>It seems, from this instance, that fate is not so secret as it
+is inevitable; for we are told there were strong signs and presages
+of the death of Cæsar. As to the lights in the heavens, the
+strange noises heard in various quarters by night, and the
+appearance of solitary birds in the Forum, perhaps they deserve not
+our notice in so great an event as this. But some attention should
+be given to Strabo the philosopher. According to him there were
+seen in the air men of fire encountering each other; such a flame
+appeared to issue from the hand of a soldier's servant that all the
+spectators thought it must be burned, yet, when it was over, he
+found no harm; and one of the victims which Cæsar offered was
+found without a heart. The latter was certainly a most alarming
+prodigy; for, according to the rules of nature, no creature can
+exist without a heart. What is still more extraordinary, many
+report that a certain soothsayer forewarned him of a great danger
+which threatened him on the ides of March, and that when the day
+was come, as he was going to the senate house, he called to the
+soothsayer, and said, laughing, "The ides of March are come"; to
+which he answered softly, "Yes; but they are not gone."</p>
+<p>The evening before, he supped with Marcus Lepidus, and signed,
+according to custom, a number of letters, as he sat at table. While
+he was so employed, there arose a question, "What kind of death was
+the best?" and Cæsar, answering before them all, cried out,
+"A sudden one." The same night, as he was in bed with his wife, the
+doors and windows of the room flew open at once. Disturbed both
+with the noise and the light, he observed, by moonshine, Calpurnia
+in a deep sleep, uttering broken words and inarticulate groans. She
+dreamed that she was weeping over him, as she held him, murdered,
+in her arms. Others say she dreamed that the pinnacle was fallen,
+which, as Livy tells us, the senate had ordered to be erected upon
+Cæsar's house by way of ornament and distinction; and that it
+was the fall of it which she lamented and wept for. Be that as it
+may, the next morning she conjured Cæsar not to go out that
+day if he could possibly avoid it, but to adjourn the senate; and,
+if he had no regard to her dreams, to have recourse to some other
+species of divination, or to sacrifices, for information as to his
+fate. This gave him some suspicion and alarm; for he had never
+known before, in Calpurnia, anything of the weakness or
+superstition of her sex, though she was now so much affected.</p>
+<p>He therefore offered a number of sacrifices, and, as the
+diviners found no auspicious tokens in any of them, he sent Antony
+to dismiss the senate. In the mean time Decius Brutus, surnamed
+Albinus, came in. He was a person in whom Cæsar placed such
+confidence that he had appointed him his second heir, yet he was
+engaged in the conspiracy with the other Brutus and Cassius. This
+man, fearing that if Cæsar adjourned the senate to another
+day the affair might be discovered, laughed at the diviners, and
+told Cæsar he would be highly to blame if by such a slight he
+gave the senate an occasion of complaint against him. "For they
+were met," he said, "at his summons, and came prepared with one
+voice to honor him with the title of king in the provinces, and to
+grant that he should wear the diadem both by sea and land
+everywhere out of Italy. But if anyone go and tell them, now they
+have taken their places, they must go home again, and return when
+Calpurnia happens to have better dreams, what room will your
+enemies have to launch out against you? Or who will hear your
+friends when they attempt to show that this is not an open
+servitude on the one hand and tyranny on the other? If you are
+absolutely persuaded that this is an unlucky day, it is certainly
+better to go yourself and tell them you have strong reasons for
+putting off business till another time." So saying he took
+Cæsar by the hand and led him out.</p>
+<p>He was not gone far from the door when a slave, who belonged to
+some other person, attempted to get up to speak to him, but finding
+it impossible, by reason of the crowd that was about him, he made
+his way into the house, and putting himself into the hands of
+Calpurnia desired her to keep him safe till Cæsar's return,
+because he had matters of great importance to communicate.</p>
+<p>Artemidorus the Cnidian, who, by teaching the Greek eloquence,
+became acquainted with some of Brutus' friends, and had got
+intelligence of most of the transactions, approached Cæsar
+with a paper explaining what he had to discover. Observing that he
+gave the papers, as fast as he received them, to his officers, he
+got up as close as possible and said: "Cæsar, read this to
+yourself, and quickly, for it contains matters of great consequence
+and of the last concern to you." He took it and attempted several
+times to read it, but was always prevented by one application or
+other. He therefore kept that paper, and that only, in his hand,
+when he entered the house. Some say it was delivered to him by
+another man, Artemidorus being kept from approaching him all the
+way by the crowd.</p>
+<p>These things might, indeed, fall out by chance; but as in the
+place where the senate was that day assembled, and which proved the
+scene of that tragedy, there was a statue of Pompey, and it was an
+edifice which Pompey had consecrated for an ornament to his
+theatre, nothing can be clearer than that some deity conducted the
+whole business and directed the execution of it to that very spot.
+Even Cassius himself, though inclined to the doctrines of Epicurus,
+turned his eye to the statue of Pompey, and secretly invoked his
+aid, before the great attempt. The arduous occasion, it seems,
+overruled his former sentiments, and laid them open to all the
+influence of enthusiasm. Antony, who was a faithful friend to
+Cæsar, and a man of great strength, was held in discourse
+without, by Brutus Albinus, who had contrived a long story to
+detain him.</p>
+<p>When Cæsar entered the house, the senate rose to do him
+honor. Some of Brutus' accomplices came up behind his chair, and
+others before it, pretending to intercede, along with Metillius
+Cimber, for the recall of his brother from exile. They continued
+their instances till he came to his seat. When he was seated he
+gave them a positive denial; and as they continued their
+importunities with an air of compulsion, he grew angry. Cimber,
+then, with both hands, pulled his gown off his neck, which was the
+signal for the attack. Casca gave him the first blow. It was a
+stroke upon the neck with his sword, but the wound was not
+dangerous; for in the beginning of so tremendous an enterprise he
+was probably in some disorder. Cæsar therefore turned upon
+him and laid hold of his sword. At the same time they both cried
+out, the one in Latin, "Villain! Casca! what dost thou mean?" and
+the other in Greek, to his brother, "Brother, help!"</p>
+<p>After such a beginning, those who knew nothing of the conspiracy
+were seized with consternation and horror, insomuch that they durst
+neither fly nor assist, nor even utter a word. All the conspirators
+now drew their swords, and surrounded him in such a manner that,
+whatever way he turned, he saw nothing but steel gleaming in his
+face, and met nothing but wounds. Like some savage beast attacked
+by the hunters, he found every hand lifted against him, for they
+all agreed to have a share in the sacrifice and a taste of his
+blood. Therefore Brutus himself gave him a stroke in the groin.
+Some say he opposed the rest, and continued struggling and crying
+out till he perceived the sword of Brutus; then he drew his robe
+over his face and yielded to his fate. Either by accident or pushed
+thither by the conspirators, he expired on the pedestal of Pompey's
+statue, and dyed it with his blood; so that Pompey seemed to
+preside over the work of vengeance, to tread his enemy under his
+feet, and to enjoy his agonies. Those agonies were great, for he
+received no less than three-and-twenty wounds. And many of the
+conspirators wounded each other as they were aiming their blows at
+him.</p>
+<p>Cæsar thus despatched, Brutus advanced to speak to the
+senate and to assign his reasons for what he had done, but they
+could not bear to hear him; they fled out of the house and filled
+the people with inexpressible horror and dismay. Some shut up their
+houses; others left their shops and counters. All were in motion;
+one was running to see the spectacle; another running back. Antony
+and Lepidus, Cæsar's principal friends, withdrew, and hid
+themselves in other people's houses. Meantime Brutus and his
+confederates, yet warm from the slaughter, marched in a body with
+their bloody swords in their hands, from the senate house to the
+Capitol, not like men that fled, but with an air of gayety and
+confidence, calling the people to liberty, and stopping to talk
+with every man of consequence whom they met. There were some who
+even joined them and mingled with their train, desirous of
+appearing to have had a share in the action and hoping for one in
+the glory. Of this number were Caius Octavius and Lentulus
+Spinther, who afterward paid dear for their vanity, being put to
+death by Antony and young Cæsar; so that they gained not even
+the honor for which they lost their lives, for nobody believed that
+they had any part in the enterprise; and they were punished, not
+for the deed, but for the will.</p>
+<p>Next day Brutus and the rest of the conspirators came down from
+the Capitol and addressed the people, who attended to their
+discourse without expressing either dislike or approbation of what
+was done. But by their silence it appeared that they pitied
+Cæsar, at the same time that they revered Brutus. The senate
+passed a general amnesty; and, to reconcile all parties, they
+decreed Cæsar divine honors and confirmed all the acts of his
+dictatorship; while on Brutus and his friends they bestowed
+governments and such honors as were suitable; so that it was
+generally imagined the Commonwealth was firmly established again,
+and all brought into the best order.</p>
+<p>But when, upon the opening of Cæsar's will, it was found
+that he had left every Roman citizen a considerable legacy, and
+they beheld the body, as it was carried through the Forum, all
+mangled with wounds, the multitude could no longer be kept within
+bounds. They stopped the procession, and, tearing up the benches,
+with the doors and tables, heaped them into a pile, and burned the
+corpse there. Then snatching flaming brands from the pile, some ran
+to burn the houses of the assassins, while others ranged the city
+to find the conspirators themselves and tear them in pieces; but
+they had taken such care to secure themselves that they could not
+meet with one of them.</p>
+<p>One Cinna, a friend of Cæsar's, had a strange dream the
+preceding night. He dreamed—as they tell us—that
+Cæsar invited him to supper, and, upon his refusal to go,
+caught him by the hand and drew him after him, in spite of all the
+resistance he could make. Hearing, however, that the body of
+Cæsar was to be burned in the Forum, he went to assist in
+doing him the last honors, though he had a fever upon him, the
+consequence of his uneasiness about his dream. On his coming up,
+one of the populace asked who that was? and having learned his
+name, told it to his next neighbor. A report immediately spread
+through the whole company that it was one of Cæsar's
+murderers; and, indeed, one of the conspirators was named Cinna.
+The multitude, taking this for the man, fell upon him, and tore him
+to pieces upon the spot. Brutus and Cassius were so terrified at
+this rage of the populace that a few days after they left the city.
+An account of their subsequent actions, sufferings, and death may
+be found in the life of Brutus.</p>
+<p>Cæsar died at the age of fifty-six, and did not survive
+Pompey above four years. His object was sovereign power and
+authority, which he pursued through innumerable dangers, and by
+prodigious efforts he gained it at last. But he reaped no other
+fruit from it than an empty and invidious title. It is true the
+divine Power, which conducted him through life, attended him after
+his death as his avenger, pursued and hunted out the assassins over
+sea and land, and rested not till there was not a man left, either
+of those who dipped their hands in his blood or of those who gave
+their sanction to the deed.</p>
+<p>The most remarkable of natural events relative to this affair
+was that Cassius, after he had lost the battle of Philippi, killed
+himself with the same dagger which he had made use of against
+Cæsar; and the most signal phenomenon in the heavens was that
+of a great comet, which shone very bright for seven nights after
+Cæsar's death, and then disappeared; to which we may add the
+fading of the sun's lustre; for his orb looked pale all that year;
+he rose not with a sparkling radiance, nor had the heat he afforded
+its usual strength. The air, of course, was dark and heavy, for
+want of that vigorous heat which clears and rarefies it; and the
+fruits were so crude and unconcocted that they pined away and
+decayed, through the chilliness of the atmosphere.</p>
+<p>We have a proof still more striking that the assassination of
+Cæsar was displeasing to the gods, in the phantom that
+appeared to Brutus. The story of it is this: Brutus was on the
+point of transporting his army from Abydos to the opposite
+continent; and the night before, he lay in his tent awake,
+according to custom, and in deep thought about what might be the
+event of the war; for it was natural for him to watch a great part
+of the night, and no general ever required so little sleep. With
+all his senses about him, he heard a noise at the door of his tent,
+and looking toward the light, which was now burned very low, he saw
+a terrible appearance in the human form, but of prodigious stature
+and the most hideous aspect. At first he was struck with
+astonishment; but when he saw it neither did nor spoke anything to
+him, but stood in silence by his bed, he asked it who it was? The
+spectre answered: "I am thy evil genius, Brutus; thou shalt see me
+at Philippi." Brutus answered boldly, "I'll meet thee there"; and
+the spectre immediately vanished.</p>
+<p>Some time after, he engaged Antony and Octavius Cæsar at
+Philippi, and the first day was victorious, carrying all before
+him, where he fought in person, and even pillaging Cæsar's
+camp. The night before he was to fight the second battle the same
+spectre appeared to him again, but spoke not a word. Brutus,
+however, understood that his last hour was near, and courted danger
+with all the violence of despair. Yet he did not fall in the
+action; but seeing all was lost, he retired to the top of a rock,
+where he presented his naked sword to his breast, and a friend, as
+they tell us, assisting the thrust, he died upon the spot.</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="RULE4_21"></a>ROME BECOMES A MONARCHY; DEATH OF ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA</h2>
+<p class="center">B.C. 44-30</p>
+<p class="center">HENRY GEORGE LIDDELL</p>
+<p class="intros">After the death of Cæsar, Rome was in
+confusion; consternation seized the people, and the "liberators"
+failed to rally them to their own support. In possession of
+Cæsar's treasure, Antony, the surviving consul, bided his
+time. His oration at Cæsar's funeral stirred the populace
+against the "liberators," and made him for the moment master of
+Rome; but his self-seeking soon turned the people against him. The
+young Octavius, Cæsar's heir, had become popular with the
+army. He returned to Rome and claimed his inheritance, demanded
+from Antony Cæsar's moneys, but in vain, and assumed the
+title of Cæsar. The rivalry between the two leaders rapidly
+approached a crisis. The partisans of Antony and Octavius began to
+clash, and civil war followed. Defeated, Antony retreated across
+the Alps. Octavius was elected consul, and began negotiations with
+Antony and Lepidus, which resulted in the three new masters
+constituting themselves a triumvirate—the Second
+Triumvirate—to settle the affairs of the Commonwealth. They
+divided the powers of government, and a partition of territory was
+made between them. Their next business was to put out of the way,
+by proscription, the enemies of this new order of things. Three
+hundred senators, including Cicero, were massacred, as well as two
+thousand knights.</p>
+<p class="intros">When the terrified senate had legalized the
+self-assumed authority of the triumvirs, they turned their
+attention to Brutus and Cassius in the East, whither they had gone
+after the assassination of Cæsar and established and
+maintained themselves in power. At the battle of Philippi in
+Macedonia (B.C. 42) Antony and Octavius defeated Brutus and
+Cassius, both of whom died by their own hands. The Roman world was
+now in the hands of the triumvirs. Antony ruled in the East,
+Octavius in the West, and Lepidus in Africa, B.C. 42-36. In the
+latter year Lepidus was deposed by Octavius after a short conflict.
+And only a year after Philippi a war between Octavius and Antony
+was threatened because of a revolt in Italy, raised by Antony's
+brother Lucius and Fulvia, wife of Antony; but it was prevented by
+a treaty of peace, sealed by the marriage of Antony to Octavia,
+sister of Octavius. This peace lasted for ten years, during which
+time, however, there was constant friction between them.</p>
+<p class="intros">At Tarsus, in B.C. 41, Antony received a visit
+from Cleopatra, to whose charms he had yielded years before. This
+was the turning-point in his career; he went with her to
+Alexandria. By his oppression of the people of the East, and his
+dalliance with Cleopatra, he made himself the object of hatred and
+contempt. His army met with a series of defeats. In the mean time
+Octavius was constantly strengthening himself. The rivalry between
+them finally reached the point where both prepared for war. The
+great sea fight near Actium, September 2d, B.C. 31, resulted in the
+destruction of Antony's fleet after he had followed Cleopatra in
+her flight. A year later occurred the death of both. This important
+battle established Octavius as the sole ruler of the Roman
+possessions, and historians regard it as marking the end of the
+republic and the beginning of the empire.</p>
+<p>While the conspirators were at their bloody work [of slaying
+Cæsar], the mass of the senators rushed in confused terror to
+the doors; and when Brutus turned to address his peers in defence
+of the deed, the hall was well-nigh empty. Cicero, who had been
+present, answered not, though he was called by name; Antony had
+hurried away to exchange his consular robes for the garb of a
+slave. Disappointed of obtaining the sanction of the senate, the
+conspirators sallied out into the Forum to win the ear of the
+people. But here, too, they were disappointed. Not knowing what
+massacre might be in store, every man had fled to his own house;
+and in vain the conspirators paraded the Forum, holding up their
+blood-stained weapons and proclaiming themselves the liberators of
+Rome. Disappointment was not their only feeling: they were not
+without fear. They knew that Lepidus, being on the eve of departure
+for his province of Narbonnese Gaul, had a legion encamped on the
+island of the Tiber: and if he were to unite with Antony against
+them, Cæsar would quickly be avenged. In all haste,
+therefore, they retired to the Capitol. Meanwhile three of
+Cæsar's slaves placed their master's body upon a stretcher
+and carried it to his house on the south side of the Forum, with
+one arm dangling from the unsupported corner. In this condition the
+widowed Calpurnia received the lifeless clay of him who had lately
+been sovereign of the world.</p>
+<p>Lepidus moved his troops to the Campus Martius. But Antony had
+no thoughts of using force; for in that case probably Lepidus would
+have become master of Rome. During the night he took possession of
+the treasure which Cæsar had collected to defray the expenses
+of his Parthian campaign, and persuaded Calpurnia to put into his
+hands all the dictator's papers. Possessed of these securities, he
+barricaded his house on the Carinae, and determined to watch the
+course of events.</p>
+<p>In the evening Cicero, with other senators, visited the
+self-styled liberators in the Capitol. They had not communicated
+their plot to the orator, through fear (they said) of his
+irresolute counsels; but now that the deed was done, he extolled it
+as a godlike act. Next morning, Dolabella, Cicero's son-in-law,
+whom Cæsar had promised should be his successor in the
+consulship, assumed the consular fasces and joined the liberators;
+while Cinna, son of the old Marian leader and therefore
+brother-in-law to Cæsar, threw aside his praetorian robes,
+declaring he would no longer wear the tyrant's livery. Dec. Brutus,
+a good soldier, had taken a band of gladiators into pay, to serve
+as a bodyguard of the liberators. Thus strengthened, they ventured
+again to descend into the Forum. Brutus mounted the tribune, and
+addressed the people in a dispassionate speech, which produced
+little effect. But when Cinna assailed the memory of the dictator,
+the crowd broke out into menacing cries, and the liberators again
+retired to the Capitol.</p>
+<p>That same night they entered into negotiations with Antony, and
+the result appeared next morning, the second after the murder. The
+senate, summoned to meet, obeyed the call in large numbers. Antony
+and Dolabella attended in their consular robes, and Cinna resumed
+his praetorian garb. It was soon apparent that a reconciliation had
+been effected: for Antony moved that a general amnesty should be
+granted, and Cicero seconded the motion in an animated speech. It
+was carried; and Antony next moved that all the acts of the
+dictator should be recognized as law. He had his own purposes here;
+but the liberators also saw in the motion an advantage to
+themselves; for they were actually in possession of some of the
+chief magistracies, and had received appointments to some of the
+richest provinces of the empire. This proposal, therefore, was
+favorably received; but it was adjourned to the next day, together
+with the important question of Cæsar's funeral.</p>
+<p>On the next day Cæsar's acts were formally confirmed, and
+among them his will was declared valid, though its provisions were
+yet unknown. After this, it was difficult to reject the proposal
+that the dictator should have a public burial. Old senators
+remembered the riots that attended the funeral of Clodius and shook
+their heads. Cassius opposed it. But Brutus, with imprudent
+magnanimity, decided in favor of allowing it. To seal the
+reconciliation, Lepidus entertained Brutus at dinner and Cassius
+was feasted by Mark Antony.</p>
+<p>The will was immediately made public. Cleopatra was still in
+Rome, and entertained hopes that the boy Cæsarion would be
+declared the dictator's heir; for though he had been married
+thrice, there was no one of his lineage surviving. But Cæsar
+was too much a Roman, and knew the Romans too well, to be guilty of
+this folly. Young C. Octavius, his sister's son, was declared his
+heir. Legacies were left to all his supposed friends, among whom
+were several of those who had assassinated him. His noble gardens
+beyond the Tiber were devised to the use of the public, and every
+Roman citizen was to receive a donation of three hundred
+sesterces—between ten and fifteen dollars. The effect of this
+recital was electric. Devotion to the memory of the dictator and
+hatred for his murderers at once filled every breast.</p>
+<p>Two or three days after this followed the funeral. The body was
+to be burned, and the ashes deposited in the Campus Martius, near
+the tomb of his daughter Julia. But it was first brought into the
+Forum upon a bier inlaid with ivory and covered with rich
+tapestries, which was carried by men high in rank and office. There
+Antony, as consul, rose to pronounce the funeral oration. He ran
+through the chief acts of Cæsar's life, recited his will, and
+then spoke of the death which had rewarded him. To make this more
+vividly present to the excitable Italians he displayed a waxen
+image marked with the three-and-twenty wounds, and produced the
+very robe which he had worn, all rent and blood-stained.
+Soul-stirring dirges added to the solemn horror of the scene. But
+to us the memorable speech which Shakespeare puts into Antony's
+mouth will give the liveliest notion of the art used and the
+impression produced. That impression was instantaneous. The senator
+friends of the liberators who had attended the ceremony looked on
+in moody silence. Soon the menacing gestures of the crowd made them
+look to their safety. They fled; and the multitude insisted on
+burning the body, as they had burned the body of Clodius, in the
+sacred precincts of the Forum. Some of the veterans who attended
+the funeral set fire to the bier; benches and firewood heaped round
+it soon made a sufficient pile.</p>
+<p>From the blazing pyre the crowd rushed, eager for vengeance, to
+the houses of the conspirators. But all had fled betimes. One poor
+wretch fell a victim to the fury of the mob—Helvius Cinna, a
+poet who had devoted his art to the service of the dictator. He was
+mistaken for L. Cornelius Cinna the prætor, and was torn to
+pieces before the mistake could be explained.[<a href="#note-79">79</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-79"><!-- Note Anchor 79 --></a>[Footnote 79: This
+story is, however, rendered somewhat doubtful by the manner in
+which Cinna is mentioned in Vergil's ninth <i>Eclogue</i>, which
+was certainly written in or after the year B.C. 40.]</p>
+<p>Antony was now the real master of Rome. The treasure which he
+had seized gave him the means of purchasing good will, and of
+securing the attachment of the veterans stationed in various parts
+of Italy. He did not, however, proceed in the course which, from
+the tone of his funeral harangue, might have been expected. He
+renewed friendly intercourse with Brutus and Cassius, who were
+encouraged to visit Rome once at least, if not oftener, after that
+day; and Dec. Brutus, with his gladiators, was suffered to remain
+in the city. Antony went still further. He gratified the senate by
+passing a law to abolish the dictatorship forever. He then left
+Rome to win the favor of the Italian communities and try the temper
+of the veterans.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile another actor appeared upon the scene. This was young
+Octavius. He had been but six months in the camp at Apollonia; but
+in that short time he had formed a close friendship with M.
+Vipsanius Agrippa, a young man of his own age, who possessed great
+abilities for active life, but could not boast of any distinguished
+ancestry. As soon as the news of his uncle's assassination reached
+the camp, his friend Agrippa recommended him to appeal to the
+troops and march upon Rome. But the youth, with a wariness above
+his years, resisted these bold counsels. Landing near Brundusium
+almost alone, he there first heard that Cæsar's will had been
+published and that he was declared Cæsar's heir. He at once
+accepted the dangerous honor. As he travelled slowly toward the
+city he stayed some days at Puteoli with his mother, Atia, who was
+now married to L. Philippus. Both mother and stepfather attempted
+to dissuade him from the perilous business of claiming his
+inheritance. At the same place he had an interview with Cicero, who
+had quitted Rome in despair after the funeral, and left the orator
+under the impression that he might be won to what was deemed the
+patriotic party.</p>
+<p>He arrived at Rome about the beginning of May, and demanded from
+Antony, who had now returned from his Italian tour, an account of
+the moneys of which the consul had taken possession, in order that
+he might discharge the obligations laid upon him by his uncle's
+will. But Antony had already spent great part of the money in
+bribing Dolabella and other influential persons; nor was he willing
+to give up any portion of his spoil. Octavius therefore sold what
+remained of his uncle's property, raised money on his own credit,
+and paid all legacies with great exactness. This act earned him
+much popularity. Antony began to fear this boy of eighteen, whom he
+had hitherto despised, and the senate learned to look on him as a
+person to be conciliated.</p>
+<p>Still Antony remained in possession of all actual power. Cicero,
+not remarkable for political firmness, in this crisis displayed a
+vigor worthy of his earlier days. He had at one moment made up his
+mind to retire from public life and end his days at Athens in
+learned leisure. In the course of this summer he continued to
+employ himself on some of his most elaborate treatises. His works
+on the <i>Nature of the Gods</i> and on <i>Divination</i>, his
+<i>Offices</i>, his <i>Dialogue on Old Age</i>, and several other
+essays belong to this period and mark the restless activity of his
+mind. But though he twice set sail from Italy, he was driven back
+to port at Velia, where he found Brutus and Cassius. Here he
+received letters from Au. Hirtius and other friends of Cæsar,
+which gave him hopes that, in the name of Octavius, they might
+successfully oppose Antony and restore constitutional government.
+He determined to return, and announced his purpose to Brutus and
+Cassius, who commended him and took leave of him. They went their
+way to the east to raise armies against Antony; he repaired to Rome
+to fight the battles of his party in the senate house.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Antony had been running riot. In possession of
+Cæsar's papers, with no one to check him, he produced ready
+warrant for every measure which he wished to carry, and pleaded the
+vote of the senate which confirmed all the acts of Cæsar.
+When he could not produce a genuine paper, he interpolated or
+forged what was needful.</p>
+<p>On the day after Cicero's return (September 1st) there was a
+meeting of the senate. But the orator did not attend, and Antony
+threatened to send men to drag him from his house. Next day Cicero
+was in his place, but now Antony was absent. The orator arose and
+addressed the senate in what is called his <i>First Philippic</i>.
+This was a measured attack upon the government and policy of
+Antony, but personalities were carefully eschewed: the tone of the
+whole speech, indeed, is such as might be delivered by a leader of
+opposition in parliament at the present day. But Antony, enraged at
+his boldness, summoned a meeting for the 19th of September, which
+Cicero did not think it prudent to attend. He then attacked the
+absent orator in the strongest language of personal abuse and
+menace. Cicero sat down and composed his famous <i>Second
+Philippic</i>, which is written as if it were delivered on the same
+day, in reply to Antony's invective. At present, however, he
+contented himself with sending a copy of it to Atticus, enjoining
+secrecy.</p>
+<p>Matters quickly drew to a head between Antony and Octavius. The
+latter had succeeded in securing a thousand men of his uncle's
+veterans who had settled in Campania; and by great exertions in the
+different towns of Italy had levied a considerable force. Meantime
+four of the Epirote legions had just landed at Brundusium, and
+Antony hastened to attach them to his cause. But the largess which
+he offered them was only a hundred <i>denaries</i> a man, and the
+soldiers laughed in his face. Antony, enraged at their conduct,
+seized the ringleaders and decimated them. But this severity only
+served to change their open insolence into sullen anger, and
+emissaries from Octavius were ready to draw them over to the side
+of their young master. They had so far obeyed Antony as to march
+northward to Ariminum, while he repaired to Rome. But as he entered
+the senate house he heard that two of the four legions had deserted
+to his rival, and in great alarm he hastened to the camp just in
+time to keep the remainder of the troops under his standard by
+distributing to every man five hundred denaries.</p>
+<p>The persons to hold the consulship for the next year had been
+designated by Cæsar. They were both old officers of the
+Gallic army, C. Vibius Pansa and Au. Hirtius, the reputed author of
+the Eighth Book of the <i>History of the Gallic War</i>. Cicero was
+ready to believe that they had become patriots, because, disgusted
+with the arrogance of Antony, they had declared for Octavius and
+the senate. Antony began to fear that all parties might combine to
+crush him. He determined, therefore, no longer to remain inactive;
+and about the end of November, having now collected all his troops
+at Ariminum, he marched along the Æmilian road to drive Dec.
+Brutus out of Cisalpine Gaul. Decimus was obliged to throw himself
+into Mutina (Modena), and Antony blockaded the place. As soon as
+his back was turned, Cicero published the famous <i>Second
+Philippic</i>, in which he lashed the consul with the most
+unsparing hand, going through the history of his past life,
+exaggerating the debaucheries, which were common to Antony with
+great part of the Roman youth, and painting in the strongest colors
+the profligate use he had made of Cæsar's papers. Its effect
+was great, and Cicero followed up the blow by the following twelve
+<i>Philippics</i>, which were speeches delivered in the senate
+house and Forum, at intervals from December (44) to April in the
+next year.</p>
+<p>Cicero was anxious to break with Antony at once, by declaring
+him a public enemy. But the latter was still regarded by many
+senators as the head of the Cæsarean party, and it was
+resolved to treat with him. But the demands of Antony were so
+extravagant that negotiations were at once broken off, and nothing
+remained but to try the fortune of arms. The consuls proceeded to
+levy troops; but so exhausted was the treasury that now for the
+first time since the triumph of Æmilius Paullus it was found
+necessary to levy a property tax on the citizens of Rome.</p>
+<p>Octavius and the consuls assembled their forces at Alba. On the
+first day of the new year (43) Hirtius marched for Mutina, with
+Octavius under his command. The other consul, Pansa, remained at
+Rome to raise new levies; but by the end of March he also marched
+to form a junction with Hirtius. Both parties pretended to be
+acting in Cæsar's name.</p>
+<p>Antony left his brother Lucius in the trenches before Mutina,
+and took the field against Hirtius and Octavius. For three months
+the opponents lay watching each other. But when Antony learned that
+Pansa was coming up, he made a rapid movement southward with two of
+his veteran legions and attacked him. A sharp conflict followed, in
+which Pansa's troops were defeated, and the consul himself was
+carried, mortally wounded, off the field. But Hirtius was on the
+alert, and assaulted Antony's wearied troops on their way back to
+their camp, with some advantage. This was on the 15th of April, and
+on the 27th Hirtius drew Antony from his intrenchments before
+Mutina. A fierce battle followed, which ended in the troops of
+Antony being driven back into their lines. Hirtius followed close
+upon the flying enemy; the camp was carried by storm, and a
+complete victory would have been won had not Hirtius himself
+fallen. Upon this disaster Octavius drew off the troops. The news
+of the first battle had been reported at Rome as a victory, and
+gave rise to extravagant rejoicings. The second battle was really a
+victory, but all rejoicing was damped by the news that one consul
+was dead and the other dying. No such fatal mischance had happened
+since the Second Punic War, when Marcellus and Crispinus fell in
+one day.</p>
+<p>After his defeat Antony felt it impossible to maintain the siege
+of Mutina. With Dec. Brutus in the town behind him, and the
+victorious legions of Octavius before him, his position was
+critical. He therefore prepared to retreat, and effected this
+purpose like a good soldier. His destination was the province of
+Narbonnese Gaul, where Lepidus had assumed the government and had
+promised him support. But the senate also had hopes in the same
+quarter. L. Munatius Plancus commanded in Northern Gaul, and C.
+Asinius Pollio in Southern Spain. Sext. Pompeius had made good his
+ground in the latter country, and had almost expelled Pollio from
+Bætica. Plancus and Pollio, both friends and favorites of
+Cæsar, had as yet declared neither for Antony nor Octavius.
+If they would declare for the senate, Lepidus, a feeble and fickle
+man, might desert Antony; or if Octavius would join with Dec.
+Brutus, and pursue him, Antony might not be able to escape from
+Italy at all. But these political combinations failed. Plancus and
+Pollio stood aloof, waiting for the course of events. Dec. Brutus
+was not strong enough to pursue Antony by himself, and Octavius was
+unwilling, perhaps unable, to unite the veterans of Cæsar
+with troops commanded by one of Cæsar's murderers. And so it
+happened that Antony effected his retreat across the Alps, but not
+without extreme hardships, which he bore in common with the meanest
+soldier. It was at such times that his good qualities always showed
+themselves, and his gallant endurance of misery endeared him to
+every man under his command. On his arrival in Narbonnese Gaul he
+met Lepidus at Forum Julii (Frejus), and here the two commanders
+agreed on a plan of operations.</p>
+<p>The conduct of Octavius gave rise to grave suspicions. It was
+even said that the consuls had been killed by his agents. Cicero,
+who had hitherto maintained his cause, was silent. He had delivered
+his <i>Fourteenth</i> and last <i>Philippic</i> on the news of the
+first victory gained by Hirtius. But now he talked in private of
+"removing" the boy of whom he had hoped to make a tool. Octavius,
+however, had taken his part, and was not to be removed. Secretly he
+entered into negotiations with Antony. After some vain efforts on
+the part of the senate to thwart him, he appeared in the Campus
+Martius with his legions. Cicero and most of the senators
+disappeared, and the fickle populace greeted the young heir of
+Cæsar with applause. Though he was not yet twenty he demanded
+the consulship, having been previously relieved from the provisions
+of the <i>Lex Annalis</i> by a decree of the senate, and he was
+elected to the first office in the State, with his cousin, Q.
+Pedius.[<a href="#note-80">80</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-80"><!-- Note Anchor 80 --></a>[Footnote 80:
+Pedius was son of Cæsar's second sister, Julia minor, and
+therefore first cousin (once removed) to Octavius.]</p>
+<p>A curiate law passed, by which Octavius was adopted into the
+patrician gens of the Julii, and was put into legal possession of
+the name which he had already assumed—C. Julius Cæsar
+Octavianus. We shall henceforth call him Octavian.</p>
+<p>The change in his policy was soon indicated by a law in which he
+formally separated himself from the senate. Pedius brought it
+forward. By its provisions all Cæsar's murderers were
+summoned to take their trial. Of course none of them appeared and
+they were condemned by default. By the end of September Octavian
+was again in Cisalpine Gaul and in close negotiation with Antony
+and Lepidus. The fruits of his conduct soon appeared. Plancus and
+Pollio declared against Cæsar's murderers. Dec. Brutus,
+deserted by his soldiery, attempted to escape into Macedonia
+through Illyricum; but he was overtaken near Aquileia and slain by
+order of Antony.</p>
+<p>Italy and Gaul being now clear of the senatorial party, Lepidus,
+as mediator, arranged a meeting between Octavian and Antony, upon
+an island in a small river near Bononia (Bologna). Here the three
+potentates agreed that they should assume a joint and coordinate
+authority, under the name of "Triumvirs for settling the affairs of
+the Commonwealth." Antony was to have the two Gauls, except the
+Narbonnese district, which, with Spain, was assigned to Lepidus;
+Octavian received Sicily, Sardinia, and Africa. Italy was for the
+present to be left to the consuls of the year, and for the ensuing
+year Lepidus, with Plancus, received promise of this high office.
+In return, Lepidus gave up his military force, while Octavian and
+Antony, each at the head of ten legions, prepared to conquer the
+Eastern part of the empire, which could not yet be divided like the
+Western provinces, because it was in possession of Brutus and
+Cassius.</p>
+<p>But before they began war, the triumvirs agreed to follow the
+example set by Sylla—to extirpate their opponents by a
+proscription, and to raise money by confiscation. They framed a
+list of all men's names whose death could be regarded as
+advantageous to any of the three, and on this list each in turn
+pricked a name. Antony had made many personal enemies by his
+proceedings at Rome, and was at no loss for victims. Octavian had
+few direct enemies; but the boy-despot discerned with precocious
+sagacity those who were likely to impede his ambitious projects,
+and chose his victims with little hesitation. Lepidus would not be
+left behind in the bloody work. The author of the <i>Philippics</i>
+was one of Antony's first victims; Octavian gave him up, and took
+as an equivalent for his late friend the life of L. Cæsar,
+uncle of Antony. Lepidus surrendered his brother Paullus for some
+similar favor. So the work went on. Not fewer than three hundred
+senators and two thousand knights were on the list. Q. Pedius, an
+honest and upright man, died in his consulship, overcome by
+vexation and shame at being implicated in these transactions.</p>
+<p>As soon as their secret business was ended, the triumvirs
+determined to enter Rome publicly. Hitherto they had not published
+more than seventeen names of the proscribed. They made their
+entrance severally on three successive days, each attended by a
+legion. A law was immediately brought in to invest them formally
+with the supreme authority, which they had assumed. This was
+followed by the promulgation of successive lists, each larger than
+its predecessor.</p>
+<p>Among the victims, far the most conspicuous was Cicero. With his
+brother Quintus, the old orator had retired to his Tusculan villa
+after the battle of Mutina; and now they endeavored to escape in
+the hope of joining Brutus in Macedonia; for the orator's only son
+was serving as a tribune in the liberator's army. After many
+changes of domicile they reached Astura, a little island near
+Antium, where they found themselves short of money, and Quintus
+ventured to Rome to procure the necessary supply. Here he was
+recognized and seized, together with his son. Each desired to die
+first, and the mournful claim to precedence was settled by the
+soldiers killing both at the same moment.</p>
+<p>Meantime Cicero had put to sea. But even in this extremity he
+could not make up his mind to leave Italy, and put to land at
+Circeii. After further hesitation he again embarked, and again
+sought the Italian shore near Formiae. For the night he stayed at
+his villa near that place, and next morning would not move,
+exclaiming: "Let me die in my own country—that country which
+I have so often saved." But his faithful slaves forced him into a
+litter and carried him again toward the coast. Scarcely were they
+gone when a band of Antony's bloodhounds reached his villa, and
+were put upon the track of their victim by a young man who owed
+everything to the Ciceros. The old orator from his litter saw the
+pursuers coming up. His own followers were strong enough to have
+made resistance, but he desired them to set the litter down. Then,
+raising himself on his elbow, he calmly waited for the ruffians and
+offered his neck to the sword. He was soon despatched. The chief of
+the band, by Antony's express orders, hewed off the head and hands
+and carried them to Rome. Fulvia, the widow of Clodius and now the
+wife of Antony, drove her hairpin through the tongue which had
+denounced the iniquities of both her husbands. The head which had
+given birth to the <i>Second Philippic</i>, and the hands which had
+written it, were nailed to the Rostra, the home of their eloquence.
+The sight and the associations raised feelings of horror and pity
+in every heart. Cicero died in his sixty-fourth year.</p>
+<p>Brutus and Cassius left Italy in the autumn of B.C. 44 and
+repaired to the provinces which had been allotted to them, though
+by Antony's influence the senate had transferred Macedonia from
+Brutus to his own brother Caius, and Syria from Cassius to
+Dolabella. C. Antonius was already in possession of parts of
+Macedonia; but Brutus succeeded in dislodging him. Meanwhile
+Cassius, already well known in Syria for his successful conduct of
+the Parthian War, had established himself in that province before
+he heard of the approach of Dolabella. This worthless man left
+Italy about the same time as Brutus and Cassius, and at the head of
+several legions marched without opposition through Macedonia into
+Asia Minor. Here C. Trebonius had already arrived. But he was
+unable to cope with Dolabella; and the latter surprised him and
+took him prisoner at Smyrna. He was put to death with unseemly
+contumely in Dolabella's presence. This was in February, 43; and
+thus two of Cæsar's murderers, in less than a year's time,
+felt the blow of retributive justice. When the news of this piece
+of butchery reached Rome, Cicero, believing that Octavian was a
+puppet in his hands, was ruling Rome by the eloquence of his
+<i>Philippics</i>. On his motion Dolabella was declared a public
+enemy.[<a href="#note-81">81</a>] Cassius lost no time in marching
+his legions into Asia, to execute the behest of the senate, though
+he had been dispossessed of his province by the senate itself.
+Dolabella threw himself into Laodicea, where he sought a voluntary
+death.</p>
+<p><a name="note-81"><!-- Note Anchor 81 --></a>[Footnote 81: He
+had divorced Tullia, the orator's daughter, before he left
+Italy.]</p>
+<p>By the end of B.C. 43, therefore, the whole of the East was in
+the hands of Brutus and Cassius. But instead of making preparations
+for war with Antony, the two commanders spent the early part of the
+year 42 in plundering the miserable cities of Asia Minor. Brutus
+demanded men and money of the Lycians; and, when they refused, he
+laid siege to Xanthus, their principal city. The Xanthians made the
+same brave resistance which they had offered five hundred years
+before to the Persian invaders. They burned their city and put
+themselves to death rather than submit. Brutus wept over their fate
+and abstained from further exactions. But Cassius showed less
+moderation; from the Rhodians alone, though they were allies of
+Rome, he demanded all their precious metals. After this campaign of
+plunder, the two chiefs met at Sardis and renewed the altercations
+which Cicero had deplored in Italy. It is probable that war might
+have broken out between them had not the preparations of the
+triumvirs waked them from their dream of security. It was as he was
+passing over into Europe that Brutus, who continued his studious
+habits amid all disquietudes, and limited his time of sleep to a
+period too small for the requirements of health, was dispirited by
+the vision which Shakespeare, after Plutarch, has made famous. It
+was no doubt the result of a diseased frame, though it was
+universally held to be a divine visitation. As he sat in his tent
+in the dead of night, he thought a huge and shadowy form stood by
+him; and when he calmly asked, "What and whence art thou?" it
+answered, or seemed to answer: "I am thine evil genius, Brutus: we
+shall meet again at Philippi."</p>
+<p>Meantime Antony's lieutenants had crossed the Ionian Sea and
+penetrated without opposition into Thrace. The republican leaders
+found them at Philippi. The army of Brutus and Cassius amounted to
+at least eighty thousand infantry, supported by twenty thousand
+horse; but they were ill-supplied with experienced officers. For M.
+Valerius Messalla, a young man of twenty-eight, held the chief
+command after Brutus and Cassius; and Horace, who was but
+three-and-twenty, the son of a freedman, and a youth of feeble
+constitution, was appointed a legionary tribune. The forces opposed
+to them would have been at once overpowered had not Antony himself
+opportunely arrived with the second corps of the triumviral army.
+Octavian was detained by illness at Dyrrhachium, but he ordered
+himself to be carried on a litter to join his legions. The army of
+the triumvirs was now superior to the enemy; but their cavalry,
+counting only thirteen thousand, was considerably weaker than the
+force opposed to it. The republicans were strongly posted upon two
+hills, with intrenchments between: the camp of Cassius upon the
+left next the sea, that of Brutus inland on the right. The
+triumviral army lay upon the open plain before them, in a position
+rendered unhealthy by marshes; Antony, on the right, was opposed to
+Cassius; Octavian, on the left, fronted Brutus. But they were
+ill-supplied with provisions and anxious for a decisive battle. The
+republicans, however, kept to their intrenchments, and the other
+party began to suffer severely from famine.</p>
+<p>Determined to bring on an action, Antony began works for the
+purpose of cutting off Cassius from the sea. Cassius had always
+opposed a general action, but Brutus insisted on putting an end to
+the suspense, and his colleague yielded. The day of the attack was
+probably in October. Brutus attacked Octavian's army, while Cassius
+assaulted the working parties of Antony. Cassius' assault was
+beaten back with loss, but he succeeded in regaining his camp in
+safety. Meanwhile, Messalla, who commanded the right wing of
+Brutus' army, had defeated the host of Octavian, who was still too
+ill to appear on the field, and the republican soldiers penetrated
+into the triumvirs' camp. Presently his litter was brought in
+stained with blood, and the corpse of a young man found near it was
+supposed to be Octavian's. But Brutus, not receiving any tidings of
+the movements of Cassius, became so anxious for his fate that he
+sent off a party of horse to make inquiries, and neglected to
+support the successful assaults of Messalla.</p>
+<p>Cassius, on his part, discouraged at his ill-success, was unable
+to ascertain the progress of Brutus. When he saw the party of horse
+he hastily concluded that they belonged to the enemy, and retired
+into his tent with his freedman Pindarus. What passed there we know
+not for certain. Cassius was found dead, with the head severed from
+the body. Pindarus was never seen again. It was generally believed
+that Pindarus slew his master in obedience to orders; but many
+thought that he had dealt a felon blow. The intelligence of
+Cassius' death was a heavy blow to Brutus. He forgot his own
+success, and pronounced the elegy of Cassius in the well-known
+words, "There lies the last of the Romans." The praise was
+ill-deserved. Except in his conduct of the war against the
+Parthians, Cassius had never played a worthy part.</p>
+<p>After the first battle of Philippi it would have still been
+politic in Brutus to abstain from battle. The triumviral armies
+were in great distress, and every day increased their losses.
+Reinforcements coming to their aid by sea were intercepted—a
+proof of the neglect of the republican leaders in not sooner
+bringing their fleet into action. Nor did Brutus ever hear of this
+success. He was ill-fitted for the life of the camp, and after the
+death of Cassius he only kept his men together by largesse and
+promises of plunder. Twenty days after the first battle he led them
+out again. Both armies faced one another. There was little
+manoeuvring. The second battle was decided by numbers and force,
+not by skill; and it was decided in favor of the triumvirs. Brutus
+retired with four legions to a strong position in the rear, while
+the rest of his broken army sought refuge in the camp. Octavian
+remained to watch them, while Antony pursued the republican chief.
+Next day Brutus endeavored to rouse his men to another effort; but
+they sullenly refused to fight; and Brutus withdrew with a few
+friends into a neighboring wood. Here he took them aside one by
+one, and prayed each to do him the last service that a Roman could
+render to his friend. All refused with horror; till at nightfall a
+trusty Greek freedman named Strato held the sword, and his master
+threw himself upon it. Most of his friends followed the sad
+example. The body of Brutus was sent by Antony to his mother. His
+wife Portia, the daughter of Cato, refused all comfort; and being
+too closely watched to be able to slay herself by ordinary means,
+she suffocated herself by thrusting burning charcoal into her
+mouth. Massalla, with a number of other fugitives, sought safety in
+the island of Thasos, and soon after made submission to Antony.</p>
+<p>The name of Brutus has, by Plutarch's beautiful narrative,
+sublimed by Shakespeare, become a byword for self-devoted
+patriotism. This exalted opinion is now generally confessed to be
+unjust. Brutus was not a patriot, unless devotion to the party of
+the senate be patriotism. Toward the provincials he was a true
+Roman, harsh and oppressive. He was free from the sensuality and
+profligacy of his age, but for public life he was unfit. His habits
+were those of a student. His application was great, his memory
+remarkable. But he possessed little power of turning his
+acquirements to account; and to the last he was rather a learned
+man than a man improved by learning. In comparison with Cassius, he
+was humane and generous; but in all respects his character is
+contrasted for the worse with that of the great man from whom he
+accepted favors and then became his murderer.</p>
+<p>The battle of Philippi was in reality the closing scene of the
+republican drama. But the rivalship of the triumvirs prolonged for
+several years the divided state of the Roman world; and it was not
+till after the crowning victory of Actium that the imperial
+government was established in its unity. We shall, therefore, here
+add a rapid narrative of the events which led to that
+consummation.</p>
+<p>The hopeless state of the republican or rather the senatorial
+party was such that almost all hastened to make submission to the
+conquerors: those whose sturdy spirit still disdained submission
+resorted to Sext. Pompeius in Sicily. Octavian, still suffering
+from ill-health, was anxious to return to Italy; but before he
+parted from Antony, they agreed to a second distribution of the
+provinces of the empire. Antony was to have the Eastern world;
+Octavian the Western provinces. To Lepidus, who was not consulted
+in this second division, Africa alone was left. Sext. Pompeius
+remained in possession of Sicily.</p>
+<p>Antony at once proceeded to make a tour through Western Asia, in
+order to exact money from its unfortunate people. About midsummer
+(B.C. 41) he arrived at Tarsus, and here he received a visit which
+determined the future course of his life and influenced Roman
+history for the next ten years.</p>
+<p>Antony had visited Alexandria fourteen years before, and had
+been smitten by the charms of Cleopatra, then a girl of fifteen.
+She became Cæsar's paramour, and from the time of the
+dictator's death Antony had never seen her. She now came to meet
+him in Cilicia. The galley which carried her up the Cydnus was of
+more than oriental gorgeousness: the sails of purple; oars of
+silver, moving to the sound of music; the raised poop burnished
+with gold. There she lay upon a splendid couch, shaded by a
+spangled canopy; her attire was that of Venus; around her flitted
+attendant cupids and graces. At the news of her approach to Tarsus,
+the triumvir found his tribunal deserted by the people. She invited
+him to her ship, and he complied. From that moment he was her
+slave. He accompanied her to Alexandria, exchanged the Roman garb
+for the Graeco-Egyptian costume of the court, and lent his power to
+the Queen to execute all her caprices.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Octavian was not without his difficulties. He was so
+ill at Brundusium that his death was reported at Rome. The
+veterans, eager for their promised rewards, were on the eve of
+mutiny. In a short time Octavian was sufficiently recovered to show
+himself. But he could find no other means of satisfying the greedy
+soldiery than by a confiscation of lands more sweeping than that
+which followed the proscription of Sylla. The towns of Cisalpine
+Gaul were accused of favoring Dec. Brutus, and saw nearly all their
+lands handed over to new possessors. The young poet, Vergil, lost
+his little patrimony, but was reinstated at the instance of Pollio
+and Maecenas, and showed his gratitude in his <i>First Eclogue</i>.
+Other parts of Italy also suffered: Apulia, for example, as we
+learn from Horace's friend Ofellus, who became the tenant of the
+estate which had formerly been his own.</p>
+<p>But these violent measures deferred rather than obviated the
+difficulty. The expulsion of so many persons threw thousands loose
+upon society, ripe for any crime. Many of the veterans were ready
+to join any new leader who promised them booty. Such a leader was
+at hand.</p>
+<p>Fulvia, wife of Antony, was a woman of fierce passions and
+ambitious spirit. She had not been invited to follow her husband to
+the East. She saw that in his absence imperial power would fall
+into the hands of Octavian. Lucius, brother of Mark Antony, was
+consul for the year, and at her instigation he raised his standard
+at Præneste. But L. Antonius knew not how to use his
+strength; and young Agrippa, to whom Octavian intrusted the
+command, obliged Antonius and Fulvia to retire northward and shut
+themselves up in Perusia. Their store of provisions was so small
+that it sufficed only for the soldiery. Early in the next year
+Perusia surrendered, on condition that the lives of the leaders
+should be spared. The town was sacked; the conduct of L. Antonius
+alienated all Italy from his brother.</p>
+<p>While his wife, his brother, and his friends were quitting Italy
+in confusion, the arms of Antony suffered a still heavier blow in
+the Eastern provinces, which were under his special government.
+After the battle of Philippi, Q. Labienus, son of Cæsar's old
+lieutenant Titus, sought refuge at the court of Orodes, king of
+Parthia. Encouraged by the proffered aid of a Roman officer,
+Pacorus (the King's son) led a formidable army into Syria. Antony's
+lieutenant was entirely routed; and while Pacorus with one army
+poured into Palestine and Phoenicia, Q. Labienus with another broke
+into Cilicia. Here he found no opposition; and, overrunning all
+Asia Minor even to the Ionian Sea, he assumed the name of
+Parthicus, as if he had been a Roman conqueror of the people whom
+he served.</p>
+<p>These complicated disasters roused Antony from his lethargy. He
+sailed to Tyre, intending to take the field against the Parthians;
+but the season was too far advanced, and he therefore crossed the
+Ægean to Athens, where he found Fulvia and his brother,
+accompanied by Pollio, Plancus, and others, all discontented with
+Octavian's government. Octavian was absent in Gaul, and their
+representation of the state of Italy encouraged him to make another
+attempt. Late in the year (41) Antony formed a league with Sext.
+Pompeius; and while that chief blockaded Thurii and Consentia,
+Antony assailed Brundusium. Agrippa was preparing to meet this new
+combination; and a fresh civil war was imminent. But the soldiery
+was weary of war: both armies compelled their leaders to make
+pacific overtures, and the new year was ushered in by a general
+peace, which was rendered easier by the death of Fulvia. Antony and
+Octavian renewed their professions of amity, and entered Rome
+together in joint ovation to celebrate the restoration of peace.
+They now made a third division of the provinces, by which Scodra
+(Scutari) in Illyricum was fixed as the boundary of the West and
+East; Lepidus was still left in possession of Africa. It was
+further agreed that Octavian was to drive Sext. Pompeius, lately
+the ally of Antony, out of Sicily; while Antony renewed his pledges
+to recover the standards of Crassus from the Parthians. The new
+compact was sealed by the marriage of Antony with Octavia, his
+colleague's sister, a virtuous and beautiful lady, worthy of a
+better consort. These auspicious events were celebrated by the
+lofty verse of Vergil's <i>Fourth Eclogue</i>.</p>
+<p>Sext. Pompeius had reason to complain. By the peace of
+Brundusium he was abandoned by his late friend to Octavian. He was
+not a man to brook ungenerous treatment. Of late years his
+possession of Sicily had given him command of the Roman corn
+market. During the winter which followed the peace of Brundusium
+(B.C. 40-39), Sextus blockaded Italy so closely that Rome was
+threatened with a positive dearth. Riots arose; the triumvirs were
+pelted with stones in the Forum, and they deemed it prudent to
+temporize by inviting Pompey to enter their league. He met them at
+Misenum, and the two chiefs went on board his ship to settle the
+terms of alliance. It is said that one of his chief officers, a
+Greek named Menas or Menodorus, suggested to him the expediency of
+putting to sea with the great prize, and then making his own terms.
+Sextus rejected the advice with the characteristic words, "You
+should have done it without asking me." It was agreed that Sicily,
+Sardinia, and Corsica should be given up to his absolute rule, and
+that Achaia should be added to his portion; so that the Roman world
+was now partitioned among four: Octavian, Antony, Lepidus, and
+Sext. Pompeius. On their return the triumvirs were received with
+vociferous applause.</p>
+<p>Before winter, Antony sailed for Athens in company with Octavia,
+who for the time seems to have banished Cleopatra from his
+thoughts. But he disgusted all true Romans by assuming the
+attributes of Grecian gods and indulging in Grecian orgies.</p>
+<p>He found the state of things in the East greatly changed since
+his departure. He had commissioned P. Ventidius Bassus, an officer
+who had followed Fulvia from Italy, to hold the Parthians in check
+till his return. Ventidius was son of a Picenian nobleman of
+Asculum, who had been brought to Rome as a captive in the Social
+War. In his youth he had been a contractor to supply mules for the
+use of the Roman commissariat. But in the civil wars which
+followed, men of military talent easily rose to command; and such
+was the lot of Ventidius. While Antony was absent in Italy, he
+drove Q. Labienus into the defiles of Taurus, and here that
+adventurer was defeated and slain. The conqueror then marched
+rapidly into Syria, and forced Pacorus also to withdraw to the
+eastern bank of the Euphrates.</p>
+<p>In the following year (38) he repelled a fresh invasion of the
+Parthians, and defeated them in three battles. In the last of these
+engagements Pacorus himself was slain on the fifteenth anniversary
+of the death of Crassus. Antony found Ventidius laying siege to
+Samosata, and displaced him, only to abandon the siege and return
+to Athens. Ventidius repaired to Rome, where he was honored with a
+well-deserved triumph. He had left it as a mule jobber; he returned
+with the laurel round his brows. He was the first, and almost the
+last, Roman general who could claim such a distinction for victory
+over the Parthians.</p>
+<p>The alliance with Sext. Pompeius was not intended to last, and
+it did not last. Antony refused to put him in possession of Achaia,
+and to avenge himself for this breach of faith Pompeius again began
+to intercept the Italian corn fleets. Fresh discontent appeared at
+Rome, and Octavian equipped a second fleet to sail against the
+naval chief; but after two battles of doubtful result, the fleet
+was destroyed by a storm, and Sextus was again left in undisputed
+mastery of the sea. Octavian, however, was never daunted by
+reverses, and he gave his favorite Agrippa full powers to conduct
+the war against Pompeius. This able commander set about his work
+with that resolution that marked a man determined not to fail. As a
+harbor for his fleet, he executed a plan of the great Cæsar;
+namely, to make a good and secure harbor on the coast of Latium,
+which then, as now, offered no shelter to ships. For this purpose
+he cut a passage through the narrow necks of land which separated
+Lake Lucrinus from the sea, and Lake Avernus from Lake Lucrinus,
+and faced the outer barrier with stone. This was the famous Julian
+Port. In the whole of the two years B.C. 38 and 37 Agrippa was
+occupied in this work and in preparing a sufficient force of ships.
+Every dockyard in Italy was called into requisition. A large body
+of slaves was set free that they might be trained to serve as
+rowers.</p>
+<p>On the 1st of July, B.C. 36, the fleet put to sea. Octavian
+himself, with one division, purposed to attack the northern coast
+of Sicily, while a second squadron was assembled at Tarentum for
+the purpose of assailing the eastern side. Lepidus, with a third
+fleet from Africa, was to assault Lilybaeum. But the winds were
+again adverse; and, though Lepidus effected a landing on the
+southern coast, Octavian's two fleets were driven back to Italy
+with great damage. But the injured ships were refitted, and Agrippa
+was sent westward toward Panormus, while Octavian himself kept
+guard near Messana. Off Mylae, a place famous for having witnessed
+the first naval victory of the Romans, Agrippa encountered the
+fleet of Sext. Pompeius; but Sextus, with the larger portion of his
+ships, gave Agrippa the slip, and sailing eastward fell suddenly
+upon Octavian's squadron off Tauromenium. A desperate conflict
+followed, which ended in the complete triumph of Sextus, and
+Octavian escaped to Italy with a few ships only. But Agrippa was
+soon upon the traces of the enemy. On the 3d of September Sextus
+was obliged once more to accept battle near the Straits of Messana,
+and suffered an irretrievable defeat. His troops on land were
+attacked and dispersed by an army which had been landed on the
+eastern coast by the indefatigable Octavian; and Sextus sailed off
+to Lesbos, where he had found refuge as a boy during the campaign
+of Pharsalia, to seek protection from the jealousy of Antony.</p>
+<p>Lepidus had assisted in the campaign; but after the departure of
+Sextus he openly declared himself independent of his brother
+triumvirs. Octavian, with prompt and prudent boldness, entered the
+camp of Lepidus in person with a few attendants. The soldiers
+deserted in crowds, and in a few hours Lepidus was fain to sue for
+pardon, where he had hoped to rule. He was treated with
+contemptuous indifference, Africa was taken from him; but he was
+allowed to live and die at Rome in quiet enjoyment of the chief
+pontificate.</p>
+<p>It was fortunate for Octavian that during this campaign Antony
+was on friendly terms with him. In B.C. 37 the ruler of the East
+again visited Italy, and a meeting between the two chiefs was
+arranged at Tarentum. The five years for which the triumvirs were
+originally appointed were now fast expiring; and it was settled
+that their authority should be renewed by the subservient senate
+and people for a second period of the same duration. They parted
+good friends; and Octavian undertook his campaign against Sext.
+Pompeius without fear from Antony. This was proved by the fate of
+the fugitive. From Lesbos Sextus passed over to Asia, where he was
+taken prisoner by Antony's lieutenants and put to death.</p>
+<p>Hitherto Octavia had retained her influence over Antony. But
+presently, after his last interview with her brother, the fickle
+triumvir abruptly quitted a wife who was too good for him, and
+returned to the fascinating presence of the Egyptian Queen, whom he
+had not seen for three years. From this time forth he made no
+attempt to break the silken chain of her enchantments. During the
+next summer, indeed, he attempted a new Parthian campaign. But his
+advance was made with reckless indifference to the safety of his
+troops. Provisions failed; disease broke out; and after great
+suffering he was forced to seek safety by a precipitate retreat
+into the Armenian mountains. In the next year he contented himself
+with a campaign in Armenia, to punish the King of that country for
+alleged treachery in the last campaign. The King fell into his
+hands; and with this trophy Antony returned to Alexandria, where
+the Romans were disgusted to see the streets of a Graeco-Egyptian
+town honored by a mimicry of a Roman triumph.</p>
+<p>For the next three years he surrendered himself absolutely to
+the will of the enchantress. To this period belong those tales of
+luxurious indulgence which are known to every reader. The brave
+soldier, who in the perils of war could shake off all luxurious
+habits and could rival the commonest man in the cheerfulness with
+which he underwent every hardship, was seen no more. He sunk into
+an indolent voluptuary, pleased by childish amusements. At one time
+he would lounge in a boat at a fishing party, and laugh when he
+drew up pieces of salt fish which by the Queen's order had been
+attached to his hook by divers. At another time she wagered that
+she would consume ten million sesterces at one meal, and won her
+wager by dissolving in vinegar a pearl of unknown value. While
+Cleopatra bore the character of the goddess Isis, her lover
+appeared as Osiris. Her head was placed conjointly with his own on
+the coins which he issued as a Roman magistrate. He disposed of the
+kingdoms and principalities of the East by his sole word. By his
+influence Herod, son of Antipater, the Idumæan minister of
+Hyrcanus, the late sovereign of Judea, was made king to the
+exclusion of the rightful heir. Polemo, his own son by Cleopatra,
+was invested with the sceptre of Armenia. Encouraged by the
+absolute submission of her lover, Cleopatra fixed her eye upon the
+Capitol, and dreamed of winning by means of Antony that imperial
+crown which she had vainly sought from Cæsar.</p>
+<p>While Antony was engaged in voluptuous dalliance, Octavian was
+resolutely pursuing the work of consolidating his power in the
+West. His patience, his industry, his attention to business, his
+affability, were winning golden opinions and rapidly obliterating
+all memory of the bloody work by which he had risen to power. He
+had won little glory in war; but so long as the corn fleets arrived
+daily from Sicily and Africa, the populace cared little whether the
+victory had been won by Octavian or by his generals. In Agrippa he
+possessed a consummate captain, in Maecenas a wise and temperate
+minister. It is much to his credit that he never showed any
+jealousy of the men to whom he owed so much. He flattered the
+people with the hope that he would, when Antony had fulfilled his
+mission of recovering the standards of Crassus, engage him to join
+in putting an end to their sovereign power and restoring
+constitutional liberty.</p>
+<p>In point of fidelity to his marriage vows Octavian was little
+better than Antony. He renounced his marriage with Clodia, the
+daughter of Fulvia, when her mother attempted to raise Italy
+against him. He divorced Scribonia, when it no longer suited him to
+court the favor of her kinsman. To replace this second wife, he
+forcibly took away Livia from her husband, T. Claudius Nero, though
+she was at that time pregnant of her second son. But in this and
+other less pardonable immoralities there was nothing to shock the
+feelings of Romans.</p>
+<p>But Octavian never suffered pleasure to divert him from
+business. If he could not be a successful general, he resolved at
+least to show that he could be a hardy soldier. While Antony in his
+Egyptian palace was neglecting the Parthian War, his rival led his
+legions in more than one dangerous campaign against the barbarous
+Dalmatians and Pannonians, who had been for some time infesting the
+province of Illyricum. In the year B.C. 33 he announced that the
+limits of the empire had been extended northward to the banks of
+the Save.</p>
+<p>Octavian now began to feel that any appearance of friendship
+with Antony was a source of weakness rather than of strength at
+Rome. Misunderstandings had already broken out. Antony complained
+that Octavian had given him no share in the provinces wrested from
+Sext. Pompeius and Lepidus. Octavian retorted by accusing his
+colleague of appropriating Egypt and Armenia, and of increasing
+Cleopatra's power at the expense of the Roman Empire. Popular
+indignation rose to its height when Plancus and Titius, who had
+been admitted to Antony's confidence, passed over to Octavian, and
+disclosed the contents of their master's will. In that document
+Antony ordered that his body should be buried at Alexandria, in the
+mausoleum of Cleopatra. Men began to fancy that Cleopatra had
+already planted her throne upon the Capitol. These suspicions were
+sedulously encouraged by Octavian.</p>
+<p>Before the close of B.C. 32, Octavian, by the authority of the
+senate, declared war nominally against Cleopatra. Antony, roused
+from his sleep by reports from Rome, passed over to Athens, issuing
+orders everywhere to levy men and collect ships for the impending
+struggle. At Athens he received news of the declaration of war, and
+replied by divorcing Octavia. His fleet was ordered to assemble at
+Corcyra; and his legions in the early spring prepared to pour into
+Epirus. He established his head-quarters at Patræ on the
+Corinthian Gulf.</p>
+<p>But Antony, though his fleet was superior to that of Octavian,
+allowed Agrippa to sweep the Ionian Sea, and to take possession of
+Methone, in Messenia, as a station for a flying squadron to
+intercept Antony's communications with the East, nay, even to
+occupy Corcyra, which had been destined for his own place of
+rendezvous. Antony's fleet now anchored in the waters of the
+Ambracian Gulf, while his legions encamped on a spot of land which
+forms the northern horn of that spacious inlet. But the place
+chosen for the camp was unhealthy; and in the heats of early summer
+his army suffered greatly from disease. Agrippa lay close at hand
+watching his opportunity. In the course of the spring Octavian
+joined him in person.</p>
+<p>Early in the season Antony had repaired from Patræ to his
+army, so as to be ready either to cross over into Italy or to meet
+the enemy if they attempted to land in Epirus. At first he showed
+something of his old military spirit, and the soldiers, who always
+loved his military frankness, warmed into enthusiasm; but his chief
+officers, won by Octavian or disgusted by the influence of
+Cleopatra, deserted him in such numbers that he knew not whom to
+trust, and gave up all thoughts of maintaining the contest with
+energy. Urged by Cleopatra, he resolved to carry off his fleet and
+abandon the army. All preparations were made in secret, and the
+great fleet put to sea on the 28th of August. For the four
+following days there was a strong gale from the south. Neither
+could Antony escape nor could Octavian put to sea against him from
+Corcyra. On the 2d of September, however, the wind fell, and
+Octavian's light vessels, by using their oars, easily came up with
+the unwieldy galleys of the eastern fleet. A battle was now
+inevitable.</p>
+<p>Antony's ships were like impregnable fortresses to the assault
+of the slight vessels of Octavian; and, though they lay nearly
+motionless in the calm sea, little impression was made upon them.
+But about noon a breeze sprung up from the west; and Cleopatra,
+followed by sixty Egyptian ships, made sail in a southerly
+direction. Antony immediately sprang from his ship-of-war into a
+light galley and followed. Deserted by their commander, the
+captains of Antony's ships continued to resist desperately; nor was
+it till the greater part of them were set on fire that the contest
+was decided. Before evening closed, the whole fleet was destroyed;
+most of the men and all the treasure on board perished. A few days
+after, when the shameful flight of Antony was made known to his
+army, all his legions went over to the conqueror.</p>
+<p>It was not for eleven months after the battle of Actium that
+Octavian entered the open gates of Alexandria. He had been employed
+in the interval in founding the city of Nicopolis to celebrate his
+victory on the northern horn of the Ambracian Gulf, in rewarding
+his soldiers, and settling the affairs of the provinces of the
+East. In the winter he returned to Italy, and it was midsummer,
+B.C. 30, before he arrived in Egypt.</p>
+<p>When Antony and Cleopatra arrived off Alexandria they put a bold
+face upon the matter. Some time passed before the real state of the
+case was known; but it soon became plain that Egypt was at the
+mercy of the conqueror. The Queen formed all kinds of wild designs.
+One was to transport the ships that she had saved across the
+Isthmus of Suez and seek refuge in some distant land where the name
+of Rome was yet unknown. Some ships were actually drawn across, but
+they were destroyed by the Arabs, and the plan was abandoned. She
+now flattered herself that her powers of fascination, proved so
+potent over Cæsar and Antony, might subdue Octavian. Secret
+messages passed between the conqueror and the Queen; nor were
+Octavian's answers such as to banish hope.</p>
+<p>Antony, full of repentance and despair, shut himself up in
+Pharos, and there remained in gloomy isolation.</p>
+<p>In July, B.C. 30, Octavian appeared before Pelusium. The place
+was surrendered without a blow. Yet, at the approach of the
+conqueror, Antony put himself at the head of a division of cavalry
+and gained some advantage. But on his return to Alexandria he found
+that Cleopatra had given up all her ships; and no more opposition
+was offered. On the 1st of August (Sextilis, as it was then called)
+Octavian entered the open gates of Alexandria. Both Antony and
+Cleopatra sought to win him. Antony's messengers the conqueror
+refused to see; but he still used fair words to Cleopatra. The
+Queen had shut herself up in a sort of mausoleum built to receive
+her body after death, which was not approachable by any door; and
+it was given out that she was really dead. All the tenderness of
+old times revived in Antony's heart. He stabbed himself, and in a
+dying state ordered himself to be laid by the side of Cleopatra.
+The Queen, touched by pity, ordered her expiring lover to be drawn
+up by cords into her retreat, and bathed his temples with her
+tears.</p>
+<p>After he had breathed his last, she consented to see Octavian.
+Her penetration soon told her that she had nothing to hope from
+him. She saw that his fair words were only intended to prevent her
+from desperate acts and reserve her for the degradation of his
+triumph. This impression was confirmed when all instruments by
+which death could be inflicted were found to have been removed from
+her apartments. But she was not to be so baffled. She pretended all
+submission; but when the ministers of Octavian came to carry her
+away, they found her lying dead upon her couch, attended by her
+faithful waiting-women, Iras and Charmion. The manner of her death
+was never ascertained; popular belief ascribed it to the bite of an
+asp which had been conveyed to her in a basket of fruit.</p>
+<p>Thus died Antony and Cleopatra. Antony was by nature a genial,
+open-hearted Roman, a good soldier, quick, resolute, and vigorous,
+but reckless and self-indulgent, devoid alike of prudence and of
+principle. The corruptions of the age, the seductions of power, and
+the evil influence of Cleopatra paralyzed a nature capable of
+better things. We know him chiefly through the exaggerated assaults
+of Cicero in his <i>Philippic</i>, and the narratives of writers
+devoted to Octavian. But after all deductions for partial
+representation, enough remains to show that Antony had all the
+faults of Cæsar, with little of his redeeming greatness.</p>
+<p>Cleopatra was an extraordinary person. At her death she was but
+thirty-eight years of age. Her power rested not so much on actual
+beauty as on her fascinating manners and her extreme readiness of
+wit. In her follies there was a certain magnificence which excites
+even a dull imagination. We may estimate the real power of her
+mental qualities by observing the impression her character made
+upon the Roman poets of the time. No meditated praises could have
+borne such testimony to her greatness as the lofty strain in which
+Horace celebrates her fall and congratulates the Roman world on its
+escape from the ruin which she was threatening to the Capitol.</p>
+<p>Octavian dated the years of his imperial monarchy from the day
+of the battle of Actium. But it was not till two years after (the
+summer of B.C. 29) that he established himself in Rome as ruler of
+the Roman world. Then he celebrated three magnificent triumphs,
+after the example of his uncle the great dictator, for his
+victories in Dalmatia, at Actium, and in Egypt. At the same time
+the temple of Janus was closed—notwithstanding that border
+wars still continued in Gaul and Spain—for the first time
+since the year B.C. 235. All men drew breath more freely, and all
+except the soldiery looked forward to a time of tranquillity.
+Liberty and independence were forgotten words. After the terrible
+disorders of the last century, the general cry was for quiet at any
+price. Octavian was a person admirably fitted to fulfil these
+aspirations. His uncle Julius was too fond of active exertion to
+play such a part well. Octavian never shone in war, while his
+vigilant and patient mind was well fitted for the discharge of
+business. He avoided shocking popular feeling by assuming any title
+savoring of royalty; but he enjoyed by universal consent an
+authority more than regal.</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="RULE4_22"></a>GERMANS UNDER ARMINIUS REVOLT AGAINST ROME</h2>
+<p class="center">A.D. 9</p>
+<p class="center">SIR EDWARD SHEPHERD CREASY</p>
+<p class="intros">The German race was beginning to make itself felt
+to a greater extent than hitherto in its efforts for freedom from
+the Roman rule. Research shows that from the earliest days there
+were two distinct peoples under this designation of
+<i>German</i>—the northern or Scandinavian, and the southern,
+being more truly the German. Both consisted of numerous tribes, the
+Romans giving separate names to each: from this arose the generic
+titles of <i>Franks, Bavarians, Alamanni</i>, and the rest.</p>
+<p class="intros">They were great fighters and, as a natural
+sequence, mighty hunters. When warfare did not occupy their
+attention, hunting, feasting, and drinking took its place. Tacitus
+writes: "To drink continuously, night and day, was no shame for
+them." Their chief beverage was barley beer, though, in the South,
+wine was used to some extent.</p>
+<p class="intros">Rome had garrisons throughout the whole land, and
+the fortunes of the Germans were at a low ebb. Freedom seemed
+stifled forever when Arminius led his forces against the Roman
+hosts in the forest of Teutoburgium. Rightly does Creasy rate this
+important battle so highly, for it meant the final uplifting of the
+Teuton, and with him the English-speaking races of a later
+time.</p>
+<p>To a truly illustrious Frenchman, whose reverses as a minister
+can never obscure his achievements in the world of letters, we are
+indebted for the most profound and most eloquent estimate that we
+possess of the importance of the Germanic element in European
+civilization, and of the extent to which the human race is indebted
+to those brave warriors who long were the unconquered antagonists,
+and finally became the conquerors, of imperial Rome.</p>
+<p>Twenty-three eventful years have passed away since M.
+Guizot[<a href="#note-82">82</a>] delivered from the chair of
+modern history, at Paris, his course of lectures on the history of
+civilization in Europe. During those years the spirit of earnest
+inquiry into the germs and primary developments of existing
+institutions has become more and more active and universal, and the
+merited celebrity of M. Guizot's work has proportionally increased.
+Its admirable analysis of the complex political and social
+organizations of which the modern civilized world is made up must
+have led thousands to trace with keener interest the great crises
+of times past, by which the characteristics of the present were
+determined. The narrative of one of these great crises, of the
+epoch A.D. 9, when Germany took up arms for her independence
+against Roman invasion, has for us this special
+attraction—that it forms part of our own national history.
+Had Arminius been supine or unsuccessful, our Germanic ancestors
+would have been enslaved or exterminated in their original seats
+along the Eider and the Elbe. This island would never have borne
+the name of England, and "we, this great English nation, whose race
+and language are now overrunning the earth, from one end of it to
+the other," would have been utterly cut off from existence.</p>
+<p><a name="note-82"><!-- Note Anchor 82 --></a>[Footnote 82:
+Guizot was minister of foreign affairs, and later (1848) prime
+minister, under Louis Philippe.]</p>
+<p>Arnold may, indeed, go too far in holding that we are wholly
+unconnected in race with the Romans and Britons who inhabited this
+country before the coming over of the Saxons; that, "nationally
+speaking, the history of Cæsar's invasion has no more to do
+with us than the natural history of the animals which then
+inhabited our forests." There seems ample evidence to prove that
+the Romanized Celts whom our Teutonic forefathers found here
+influenced materially the character of our nation. But the main
+stream of our people was, and is, Germanic. Our language alone
+decisively proves this. Arminius is far more truly one of our
+national heroes than Caractacus; and it was our own primeval
+fatherland that the brave German rescued when he slaughtered the
+Roman legions, eighteen centuries ago, in the marshy glens between
+the Lippe and the Ems.</p>
+<p>Dark and disheartening, even to heroic spirits, must have seemed
+the prospects of Germany when Arminius planned the general rising
+of his countrymen against Rome. Half the land was occupied by Roman
+garrisons; and, what was worse, many of the Germans seemed
+patiently acquiescent in their state of bondage. The braver
+portion, whose patriotism could be relied on, was ill-armed and
+undisciplined, while the enemy's troops consisted of veterans in
+the highest state of equipment and training, familiarized with
+victory and commanded by officers of proved skill and valor. The
+resources of Rome seemed boundless; her tenacity of purpose was
+believed to be invincible. There was no hope of foreign sympathy or
+aid; for "the self-governing powers that had filled the Old World
+had bent one after another before the rising power of Rome, and had
+vanished. The earth seemed left void of independent nations."</p>
+<p>The German chieftain knew well the gigantic power of the
+oppressor. Arminius was no rude savage, fighting out of mere animal
+instinct or in ignorance of the might of his adversary. He was
+familiar with the Roman language and civilization; he had served in
+the Roman armies; he had been admitted to the Roman citizenship,
+and raised to the rank of the equestrian order. It was part of the
+subtle policy of Rome to confer rank and privileges on the youth of
+the leading families in the nations which she wished to enslave.
+Among other young German chieftains, Arminius and his brother, who
+were the heads of the noblest house in the tribe of the Cherusci,
+had been selected as fit objects for the exercise of this insidious
+system. Roman refinements and dignities succeeded in
+denationalizing the brother, who assumed the Roman name of Flavius,
+and adhered to Rome throughout all her wars against his country.
+Arminius remained unbought by honors or wealth, uncorrupted by
+refinement or luxury. He aspired to and obtained from Roman enmity
+a higher title than ever could have been given him by Roman favor.
+It is in the page of Rome's greatest historian that his name has
+come down to us with the proud addition of "<i>Liberator hand dubie
+Germaniae</i>."</p>
+<p>Often must the young chieftain, while meditating the exploit
+which has thus immortalized him, have anxiously revolved in his
+mind the fate of the many great men who had been crushed in the
+attempt which he was about to renew—the attempt to stay the
+chariot wheels of triumphant Rome. Could he hope to succeed where
+Hannibal and Mithradates had perished? What had been the doom of
+Viriathus? and what warning against vain valor was written on the
+desolate site where Numantia once had flourished? Nor was a caution
+wanting in scenes nearer home and more recent times. The Gauls had
+fruitlessly struggled for eight years against Cæsar; and the
+gallant Vercingetorix, who in the last year of the war had roused
+all his countrymen to insurrection, who had cut off Roman
+detachments, and brought Cæsar himself to the extreme of
+peril at Alesia—he, too, had finally succumbed, had been led
+captive in Cæsar's triumph, and had then been butchered in
+cold blood in a Roman dungeon.</p>
+<p>It was true that Rome was no longer the great military republic
+which for so many ages had shattered the kingdoms of the world. Her
+system of government was changed, and, after a century of
+revolution and civil war, she had placed herself under the
+despotism of a single ruler. But the discipline of her troops was
+yet unimpaired and her warlike spirit seemed unabated. The first
+year of the empire had been signalized by conquests as valuable as
+any gained by the republic in a corresponding period. It is a great
+fallacy—though apparently sanctioned by great
+authorities—to suppose that the foreign policy pursued by
+Augustus was pacific; he certainly recommended such a policy to his
+successors (<i>incertum metu an per invidiam</i>: Tac.,
+<i>Ann</i>., i. 11), but he himself, until Arminius broke his
+spirit, had followed a very different course. Besides his Spanish
+wars, his generals, in a series of generally aggressive campaigns,
+had extended the Roman frontier from the Alps to the Danube, and
+had reduced into subjection the large and important countries that
+now form the territories of all Austria south of that river, and of
+East Switzerland, Lower Wuertemberg, Bavaria, the Valtelline, and
+the Tyrol.</p>
+<p>While the progress of the Roman arms thus pressed the Germans
+from the south, still more formidable inroads had been made by the
+imperial legions on the west. Roman armies, moving from the
+province of Gaul, established a chain of fortresses along the right
+as well as the left bank of the Rhine, and, in a series of
+victorious campaigns, advanced their eagles as far as the Elbe,
+which now seemed added to the list of vassal rivers, to the Nile,
+the Rhine, the Rhone, the Danube, the Tagus, the Seine, and many
+more, that acknowledged the supremacy of the Tiber. Roman fleets
+also, sailing from the harbors of Gaul along the German coasts and
+up the estuaries, co&ouml;perated with the land forces of the
+empire, and seemed to display, even more decisively than her
+armies, her overwhelming superiority over the rude Germanic tribes.
+Throughout the territory thus invaded the Romans had with their
+usual military skill established fortified posts; and a powerful
+army of occupation was kept on foot, ready to move instantly on any
+spot where a popular outbreak might be attempted.</p>
+<p>Vast, however, and admirably organized as the fabric of Roman
+power appeared on the frontiers and in the provinces, there was
+rottenness at the core. In Rome's unceasing hostilities with
+foreign foes, and still more in her long series of desolating civil
+wars, the free middle classes of Italy had almost wholly
+disappeared. Above the position which they had occupied, an
+oligarchy of wealth had reared itself; beneath that position a
+degraded mass of poverty and misery was fermenting. Slaves; the
+chance sweepings of every conquered country; shoals of Africans,
+Sardinians, Asiatics, Illyrians, and others made up the bulk of the
+population of the Italian peninsula.</p>
+<p>The foulest profligacy of manners was general in all ranks. In
+universal weariness of revolution and civil war, and in
+consciousness of being too debased for self-government, the nation
+had submitted itself to the absolute authority of Augustus.
+Adulation was now the chief function of the senate; and the gifts
+of genius and accomplishments of art were devoted to the
+elaboration of eloquently false panegyrics upon the prince and his
+favorite courtiers. With bitter indignation must the German
+chieftain have beheld all this and contrasted with it the rough
+worth of his own countrymen: their bravery, their fidelity to their
+word, their manly independence of spirit, their love of their
+national free institutions, and their loathing of every pollution
+and meanness. Above all, he must have thought of the domestic
+virtues that hallowed a German home; of the respect there shown to
+the female character, and of the pure affection by which that
+respect was repaid. His soul must have burned within him at the
+contemplation of such a race yielding to these debased
+Italians.</p>
+<p>Still, to persuade the Germans to combine, in spite of the
+frequent feuds among themselves, in one sudden outbreak against
+Rome; to keep the scheme concealed from the Romans until the hour
+for action arrived; and then, without possessing a single walled
+town, without military stores, without training, to teach his
+insurgent countrymen to defeat veteran armies and storm
+fortifications, seemed so perilous an enterprise that probably
+Arminius would have receded from it had not a stronger feeling even
+than patriotism urged him on. Among the Germans of high rank who
+had most readily submitted to the invaders and become zealous
+partisans of Roman authority was a chieftain named Segestes. His
+daughter, Thusnelda, was preeminent among the noble maidens of
+Germany. Arminius had sought her hand in marriage; but Segestes,
+who probably discerned the young chief's disaffection to Rome,
+forbade his suit, and strove to preclude all communication between
+him and his daughter. Thusnelda, however, sympathized far more with
+the heroic spirit of her lover than with the timeserving policy of
+her father. An elopement baffled the precautions of Segestes, who,
+disappointed in his hope of preventing the marriage, accused
+Arminius before the Roman governor of having carried off his
+daughter and of planning treason against Rome. Thus assailed, and
+dreading to see his bride torn from him by the officials of the
+foreign oppressor, Arminius delayed no longer, but bent all his
+energies to organize and execute a general insurrection of the
+great mass of his countrymen, who hitherto had submitted in sullen
+hatred to the Roman dominion.</p>
+<p>A change of governors had recently taken place, which, while it
+materially favored the ultimate success of the insurgents, served,
+by the immediate aggravation of the Roman oppressions which it
+produced, to make the native population more universally eager to
+take arms. Tiberius, who was afterward emperor, had recently been
+recalled from the command in Germany and sent into Pannonia to put
+down a dangerous revolt which had broken out against the Romans in
+that province. The German patriots were thus delivered from the
+stern supervision of one of the most suspicious of mankind, and
+were also relieved from having to contend against the high military
+talents of a veteran commander, who thoroughly understood their
+national character, and also the nature of the country, which he
+himself had principally subdued.</p>
+<p>In the room of Tiberius, Augustus sent into Germany Quintilius
+Varus, who had lately returned from the proconsulate of Syria.
+Varus was a true representative of the higher classes of the
+Romans, among whom a general taste for literature, a keen
+susceptibility to all intellectual gratifications, a minute
+acquaintance with the principles and practice of their own national
+jurisprudence, a careful training in the schools of the
+rhetoricians, and a fondness for either partaking in or watching
+the intellectual strife of forensic oratory had become generally
+diffused, without, however, having humanized the old Roman spirit
+of cruel indifference to human feelings and human sufferings, and
+without acting as the least checks on unprincipled avarice and
+ambition or on habitual and gross profligacy. Accustomed to govern
+the depraved and debased natives of Syria—a country where
+courage in man and virtue in woman had for centuries been
+unknown—Varus thought that he might gratify his licentious
+and rapacious passions with equal impunity among the high-minded
+sons and pure-spirited daughters of Germany. When the general of an
+army sets the example of outrages of this description, he is soon
+faithfully imitated by his officers, and surpassed by his still
+more brutal soldiery. The Romans now habitually indulged in those
+violations of the sanctity of the domestic shrine, and those
+insults upon honor and modesty, by which far less gallant spirits
+than those of our Teutonic ancestors have often been maddened into
+insurrection.</p>
+<p>Arminius found among the other German chiefs many who
+sympathized with him in his indignation at their country's
+abasement, and many whom private wrongs had stung yet more deeply.
+There was little difficulty in collecting bold leaders for an
+attack on the oppressors, and little fear of the population not
+rising readily at those leaders' call. But to declare open war
+against Rome and to encounter Varus' army in a pitched battle would
+have been merely rushing upon certain destruction. Varus had three
+legions under him, a force which, after allowing for detachments,
+cannot be estimated at less than fourteen thousand Roman infantry.
+He had also eight or nine hundred Roman cavalry, and at least an
+equal number of horse and foot sent from the allied states, or
+raised among those provincials who had not received the Roman
+franchise.</p>
+<p>It was not merely the number, but the quality of this force that
+made them formidable; and, however contemptible Varus might be as a
+general, Arminius well knew how admirably the Roman armies were
+organized and officered, and how perfectly the legionaries
+understood every manoeuvre and every duty which the varying
+emergencies of a stricken field might require. Stratagem was,
+therefore, indispensable; and it was necessary to blind Varus to
+their schemes until a favorable opportunity should arrive for
+striking a decisive blow.</p>
+<p>For this purpose, the German confederates frequented the
+head-quarters of Varus, which seem to have been near the centre of
+the modern country of Westphalia, where the Roman general conducted
+himself with all the arrogant security of the governor of a
+perfectly submissive province. There Varus gratified at once his
+vanity, his rhetorical tastes, and his avarice, by holding courts,
+to which he summoned the Germans for the settlement of all their
+disputes, while a bar of Roman advocates attended to argue the
+cases before the tribunal of Varus, who did not omit the
+opportunity of exacting court fees and accepting bribes. Varus
+trusted implicitly to the respect which the Germans pretended to
+pay to his abilities as a judge, and to the interest which they
+affected to take in the forensic eloquence of their conquerors.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile a succession of heavy rains rendered the country more
+difficult for the operations of regular troops, and Arminius,
+seeing that the infatuation of Varus was complete, secretly
+directed the tribes near the Weser and the Ems to take up arms in
+open revolt against the Romans. This was represented to Varus as an
+occasion which required his prompt attendance at the spot; but he
+was kept in studied ignorance of its being part of a concerted
+national rising; and he still looked on Arminius as his submissive
+vassal, whose aid he might rely on in facilitating the march of his
+troops against the rebels and in extinguishing the local
+disturbance. He therefore set his army in motion, and marched
+eastward in a line parallel to the course of the Lippe. For some
+distance his route lay along a level plain; but on arriving at the
+tract between the curve of the upper part of that stream and the
+sources of the Ems, the country assumes a very different character;
+and here, in the territory of the modern little principality of
+Lippe, it was that Arminius had fixed the scene of his
+enterprise.</p>
+<p>A wooded and hilly region intervenes between the heads of the
+two rivers, and forms the water-shed of their streams. This region
+still retains the name (Teutobergenwald = <i>Teutobergiensis
+saltus</i>) which it bore in the days of Arminius. The nature of
+the ground has probably also remained unaltered. The eastern part
+of it, round Detmold, the modern capital of the principality of
+Lippe, is described by a modern German scholar, Dr. Plate, as being
+a "table-land intersected by numerous deep and narrow valleys,
+which in some places form small plains, surrounded by steep
+mountains and rocks, and only accessible by narrow defiles. All the
+valleys are traversed by rapid streams, shallow in the dry season,
+but subject to sudden swellings in autumn and winter. The vast
+forests which cover the summits and slopes of the hills consist
+chiefly of oak; there is little underwood, and both men and horse
+would move with ease in the forests if the ground were not broken
+by gulleys or rendered impracticable by fallen trees." This is the
+district to which Varus is supposed to have marched; and Dr. Plate
+adds that "the names of several localities on and near that spot
+seem to indicate that a great battle had once been fought there. We
+find the names '<i>das Winnefeld</i>' (the field of victory),
+'<i>die Knochenbahn</i>' (the bone-lane), '<i>die Knochenleke</i>'
+(the bone-brook), '<i>der Mordkessel</i>' (the kettle of
+slaughter), and others."</p>
+<p>Contrary to the usual strict principles of Roman discipline,
+Varus had suffered his army to be accompanied and impeded by an
+immense train of baggage wagons and by a rabble of camp followers,
+as if his troops had been merely changing their quarters in a
+friendly country. When the long array quitted the firm, level
+ground and began to wind its way among the woods, the marshes, and
+the ravines, the difficulties of the march, even without the
+intervention of an armed foe, became fearfully apparent. In many
+places the soil, sodden with rain, was impracticable for cavalry
+and even for infantry, until trees had been felled and a rude
+causeway formed through the morass.</p>
+<p>The duties of the engineer were familiar to all who served in
+the Roman armies. But the crowd and confusion of the columns
+embarrassed the working parties of the soldiery, and in the midst
+of their toil and disorder the word was suddenly passed through
+their ranks that the rear-guard was attacked by the barbarians.
+Varus resolved on pressing forward; but a heavy discharge of
+missiles from the woods on either flank taught him how serious was
+the peril, and he saw his best men falling round him without the
+opportunity of retaliation; for his light-armed auxiliaries, who
+were principally of Germanic race, now rapidly deserted, and it was
+impossible to deploy the legionaries on such broken ground for a
+charge against the enemy.</p>
+<p>Choosing one of the most open and firm spots which they could
+force their way to, the Romans halted for the night; and, faithful
+to their national discipline and tactics, formed their camp amid
+the harassing attacks of the rapidly thronging foes with the
+elaborate toil and systematic skill the traces of which are
+impressed permanently on the soil of so many European countries,
+attesting the presence in the olden time of the imperial
+eagles.</p>
+<p>On the morrow the Romans renewed their march, the veteran
+officers who served under Varus now probably directing the
+operations and hoping to find the Germans drawn up to meet them, in
+which case they relied on their own superior discipline and tactics
+for such a victory as should reassure the supremacy of Rome. But
+Arminius was far too sage a commander to lead on his followers,
+with their unwieldy broadswords and inefficient defensive armor,
+against the Roman legionaries, fully armed with helmet, cuirass,
+greaves, and shield, who were skilled to commence the conflict with
+a murderous volley of heavy javelins hurled upon the foe when a few
+yards distant, and then, with their short cut-and-thrust swords, to
+hew their way through all opposition, preserving the utmost
+steadiness and coolness, and obeying each word of command in the
+midst of strife and slaughter with the same precision and alertness
+as if upon parade. Arminius suffered the Romans to march out from
+their camp, to form first in line for action and then in column for
+marching, without the show of opposition.</p>
+<p>For some distance Varus was allowed to move on, only harassed by
+slight skirmishes, but struggling with difficulty through the
+broken ground, the toil and distress of his men being aggravated by
+heavy torrents of rain, which burst upon the devoted legions, as if
+the angry gods of Germany were pouring out the vials of their wrath
+upon the invaders. After some little time their van approached a
+ridge of high wooded ground, which is one of the offshoots of the
+great Hercynian forest, and is situated between the modern villages
+of Driburg and Bielefeld. Arminius had caused barricades of hewn
+trees to be formed here, so as to add to the natural difficulties
+of the passage. Fatigue and discouragement now began to betray
+themselves in the Roman ranks. Their line became less steady;
+baggage wagons were abandoned from the impossibility of forcing
+them along; and, as this happened, many soldiers left their ranks
+and crowded round the wagons to secure the most valuable portions
+of their property; each was busy about his own affairs, and
+purposely slow in hearing the word of command from his
+officers.</p>
+<p>Arminius now gave the signal for a general attack. The fierce
+shouts of the Germans pealed through the gloom of the forests, and
+in thronging multitudes they assailed the flanks of the invaders,
+pouring in clouds of darts on the encumbered legionaries as they
+struggled up the glens or floundered in the morasses, and watching
+every opportunity of charging through the intervals of the
+disjointed column, and so cutting off the communication between its
+several brigades. Arminius, with a chosen band of personal
+retainers round him, cheered on his countrymen by voice and
+example. He and his men aimed their weapons particularly at the
+horses of the Roman cavalry. The wounded animals, slipping about in
+the mire and their own blood, threw their riders and plunged among
+the ranks of the legions, disordering all round them. Varus now
+ordered the troops to be countermarched, in the hope of reaching
+the nearest Roman garrison on the Lippe.</p>
+<p>But retreat now was as impracticable as advance; and the falling
+back of the Romans only augmented the courage of their assailants
+and caused fiercer and more frequent charges on the flanks of the
+disheartened army. The Roman officer who commanded the cavalry,
+Numonius Vala, rode off with his squadrons in the vain hope of
+escaping by thus abandoning his comrades. Unable to keep together
+or force their way across the woods and swamps, the horsemen were
+overpowered in detail and slaughtered to the last man. The Roman
+infantry still held together and resisted, but more through the
+instinct of discipline and bravery than from any hope of success or
+escape.</p>
+<p>Varus, after being severely wounded in a charge of the Germans
+against his part of the column, committed suicide to avoid falling
+into the hands of those whom he had exasperated by his oppressions.
+One of the lieutenants-general of the army fell fighting; the other
+surrendered to the enemy. But mercy to a fallen foe had never been
+a Roman virtue, and those among her legions who now laid down their
+arms in hope of quarter, drank deep of the cup of suffering, which
+Rome had held to the lips of many a brave but unfortunate enemy.
+The infuriated Germans slaughtered their oppressors with deliberate
+ferocity, and those prisoners who were not hewn to pieces on the
+spot were only preserved to perish by a more cruel death in cold
+blood.</p>
+<p>The bulk of the Roman army fought steadily and stubbornly,
+frequently repelling the masses of assailants, but gradually losing
+the compactness of their array and becoming weaker and weaker
+beneath the incessant shower of darts and the reiterated assaults
+of the vigorous and unencumbered Germans. At last, in a series of
+desperate attacks, the column was pierced through and through, two
+of the eagles captured, and the Roman host, which on the morning
+before had marched forth in such pride and might—now broken
+up into confused fragments—either fell fighting beneath the
+overpowering numbers of the enemy or perished in the swamps and
+woods in unavailing efforts at flight. Few, very few, ever saw
+again the left bank of the Rhine. One body of brave veterans,
+arraying themselves in a ring on a little mound, beat off every
+charge of the Germans, and prolonged their honorable resistance to
+the close of that dreadful day. The traces of a feeble attempt at
+forming a ditch and mound attested in after-years the spot where
+the last of the Romans passed their night of suffering and despair.
+But on the morrow this remnant also, worn out with hunger, wounds,
+and toil, was charged by the victorious Germans, and either
+massacred on the spot or offered up in fearful rites on the altars
+of the deities of the old mythology of the North.</p>
+<p>A gorge in the mountain ridge, through which runs the modern
+road between Paderborn and Pyrmont, leads from the spot where the
+heat of the battle raged to the Extersteine—a cluster of bold
+and grotesque rocks of sandstone—near which is a small sheet
+of water, overshadowed by a grove of aged trees. According to local
+tradition, this was one of the sacred groves of the ancient
+Germans, and it was here that the Roman captives were slain in
+sacrifice by the victorious warriors of Arminius.</p>
+<p>Never was victory more decisive; never was the liberation of an
+oppressed people more instantaneous and complete. Throughout
+Germany the Roman garrisons were assailed and cut off; and within a
+few weeks after Varus had fallen, the German soil was freed from
+the foot of an invader.</p>
+<p>At Rome the tidings of the battle were received with an agony of
+terror, the reports of which we would deem exaggerated did they not
+come from Roman historians themselves. They not only tell
+emphatically how great was the awe which the Romans felt of the
+prowess of the Germans if their various tribes could be brought to
+unite for a common purpose,[<a href="#note-83">83</a>] but they
+also reveal how weakened and debased the population of Italy had
+become. Dion Cassius says: "Then Augustus, when he heard the
+calamity of Varus, rent his garment, and was in great affliction
+for the troops he had lost, and for terror respecting the Germans
+and the Gauls. And his chief alarm was that he expected them to
+push on against Italy and Rome; and there remained no Roman youth
+fit for military duty that were worth speaking of, and the allied
+populations, that were at all serviceable, had been wasted away.
+Yet he prepared for the emergency as well as his means allowed; and
+when none of the citizens of military age were willing to enlist,
+he made them cast lots, and punished, by confiscation of goods and
+disfranchisement, every fifth man among those under thirty-five and
+every tenth man of those above that age. At last, when he found
+that not even thus could he make many come forward, he put some of
+them to death. So he made a conscription of discharged veterans and
+of emancipated slaves, and, collecting as large a force as he
+could, sent it, under Tiberius, with all speed into Germany."</p>
+<p><a name="note-83"><!-- Note Anchor 83 --></a>[Footnote 83: It is
+clear that the Romans followed the policy of fomenting dissensions
+and wars of the Germans among themselves.]</p>
+<p>Dion mentions also a number of terrific portents that were
+believed to have occurred at the time, and the narration of which
+is not immaterial, as it shows the state of the public mind when
+such things were so believed in and so interpreted. The summits of
+the Alps were said to have fallen, and three columns of fire to
+have blazed up from them. In the Campus Martius, the temple of the
+war-god, from whom the founder of Rome had sprung, was struck by a
+thunderbolt. The nightly heavens glowed several times as if on
+fire. Many comets blazed forth together; and fiery meteors, shaped
+like spears, had shot from the northern quarter of the sky down
+into the Roman camps. It was said, too, that a statue of Victory,
+which had stood at a place on the frontier, pointing the way toward
+Germany, had of its own accord turned round, and now pointed to
+Italy. These and other prodigies were believed by the multitude to
+accompany the slaughter of Varus' legions and to manifest the anger
+of the gods against Rome.</p>
+<p>Augustus himself was not free from superstition; but on this
+occasion no supernatural terrors were needed to increase the alarm
+and grief that he felt, and which made him, even months after the
+news of the battle had arrived, often beat his head against the
+wall and exclaim, "Quintilius Varus, give me back my legions." We
+learn this from his biographer Suetonius; and, indeed, every
+ancient writer who alludes to the overthrow of Varus attests the
+importance of the blow against the Roman power, and the bitterness
+with which it was felt.</p>
+<p>The Germans did not pursue their victory beyond their own
+territory; but that victory secured at once and forever the
+independence of the Teutonic race. Rome sent, indeed, her legions
+again into Germany, to parade a temporary superiority, but all
+hopes of permanent conquests were abandoned by Augustus and his
+successors.</p>
+<p>The blow which Arminius had struck never was forgotten. Roman
+fear disguised itself under the specious title of moderation, and
+the Rhine became the acknowledged boundary of the two nations until
+the fifth century of our era, when the Germans became the
+assailants, and carved with their conquering swords the provinces
+of imperial Rome into the kingdoms of modern Europe.</p>
+<p class="center">ARMINIUS</p>
+<p>I have said above that the great Cheruscan is more truly one of
+our national heroes than Caractacus is. It may be added that an
+Englishman is entitled to claim a closer degree of relationship
+with Arminius than can be claimed by any German of modern Germany.
+The proof of this depends on the proof of four facts: First, that
+the Cheruscans were Old Saxons, or Saxons of the interior of
+Germany; secondly, that the Anglo-Saxons, or Saxons of the coast of
+Germany, were more closely akin than other German tribes were to
+the Cheruscan Saxons; thirdly, that the Old Saxons were almost
+exterminated by Charlemagne; fourthly, that the Anglo-Saxons are
+our immediate ancestors. The last of these may be assumed as an
+axiom in English history. The proofs of the other three are partly
+philological and partly historical. It may be, however, here
+remarked that the present Saxons of Germany are of the <i>High</i>
+Germanic division of the German race, whereas both the Anglo-Saxon
+and Old Saxon were of the <i>Low</i> Germanic.</p>
+<p>Being thus the nearest heirs of the glory of Arminius, we may
+fairly devote more attention to his career than, in such a work as
+the present, could be allowed to any individual leader; and it is
+interesting to trace how far his fame survived during the Middle
+Ages, both among the Germans of the Continent and among
+ourselves.</p>
+<p>It seems probable that the jealousy with which Maroboduus, the
+king of the Suevi and Marcomanni, regarded Arminius, and which
+ultimately broke out into open hostilities between those German
+tribes and the Cherusci, prevented Arminius from leading the
+confederate Germans to attack Italy after his first victory.
+Perhaps he may have had the rare moderation of being content with
+the liberation of his country, without seeking to retaliate on her
+former oppressors. When Tiberius marched into Germany in the year
+10, Arminius was too cautious to attack him on ground favorable to
+the legions, and Tiberius was too skilful to entangle his troops in
+the difficult parts of the country. His march and countermarch were
+as unresisted as they were unproductive. A few years later, when a
+dangerous revolt of the Roman legions near the frontier caused
+their generals to find them active employment by leading them into
+the interior of Germany, we find Arminius again active in his
+country's defence. The old quarrel between him and his
+father-in-law, Segestes, had broken out afresh.</p>
+<p>Segestes now called in the aid of the Roman general, Germanicus,
+to whom he surrendered himself; and by his contrivance, his
+daughter, Thusnelda, the wife of Arminius, also came into the hands
+of the Romans, she being far advanced in pregnancy. She showed, as
+Tacitus relates, more of the spirit of her husband than of her
+father, a spirit that could not be subdued into tears or
+supplications. She was sent to Ravenna, and there gave birth to a
+son, whose life we know, from an allusion in Tacitus, to have been
+eventful and unhappy; but the part of the great historian's work
+which narrated his fate has perished, and we only know from another
+quarter that the son of Arminius was, at the age of four years, led
+captive in a triumphal pageant along the streets of Rome.</p>
+<p>The high spirit of Arminius was goaded almost into frenzy by
+these bereavements. The fate of his wife, thus torn from him, and
+of his babe doomed to bondage even before its birth, inflamed the
+eloquent invectives with which he roused his countrymen against the
+home-traitors, and against their invaders, who thus made war upon
+women and children. Germanicus had marched his army to the place
+where Varus had perished, and had there paid funeral honors to the
+ghastly relics of his predecessor's legions that he found heaped
+around him.[<a href="#note-84">84</a>] Arminius lured him to
+advance a little farther into the country, and then assailed him,
+and fought a battle, which, by the Roman accounts, was a drawn
+one.</p>
+<p><a name="note-84"><!-- Note Anchor 84 --></a>[Footnote 84: In
+the Museum of Rhenish Antiquities at Bonn there is a Roman
+sepulchral monument the inscription on which records that it was
+erected to the memory of M. Coelius, who fell "<i>Bella
+Variano</i>."]</p>
+<p>The effect of it was to make Germanicus resolve on retreating to
+the Rhine. He himself, with part of his troops, embarked in some
+vessels on the Ems, and returned by that river, and then by sea;
+but part of his forces were intrusted to a Roman general named
+Caecina, to lead them back by land to the Rhine. Arminius followed
+this division on its march, and fought several battles with it, in
+which he inflicted heavy loss on the Romans, captured the greater
+part of their baggage, and would have destroyed them completely had
+not his skilful system of operations been finally thwarted by the
+haste of Inguiomerus, a confederate German chief, who insisted on
+assaulting the Romans in their camp, instead of waiting till they
+were entangled in the difficulties of the country, and assailing
+their columns on the march.</p>
+<p>In the following year the Romans were inactive, but in the year
+afterward Germanicus led a fresh invasion. He placed his army on
+shipboard and sailed to the mouth of the Ems, where he disembarked
+and marched to the Weser, there encamping, probably in the
+neighborhood of Minden. Arminius had collected his army on the
+other side of the river; and a scene occurred, which is powerfully
+told by Tacitus, and which is the subject of a beautiful poem by
+Praed. It has been already mentioned that the brother of Arminius,
+like himself, had been trained up while young to serve in the Roman
+armies; but, unlike Arminius, he not only refused to quit the Roman
+service for that of his country, but fought against his country
+with the legions of Germanicus. He had assumed the Roman name of
+Flavius, and had gained considerable distinction in the Roman
+service, in which he had lost an eye from a wound in battle. When
+the Roman outposts approached the river Weser, Arminius called out
+to them from the opposite bank and expressed a wish to see his
+brother. Flavius stepped forward, and Arminius ordered his own
+followers to retire, and requested that the archers should be
+removed from the Roman bank of the river. This was done; and the
+brothers, who apparently had not seen each other for some years,
+began a conversation from the opposite sides of the stream, in
+which Arminius questioned his brother respecting the loss of his
+eye, and what battle it had been lost in, and what reward he had
+received for his wound. Flavius told him how the eye was lost, and
+mentioned the increased pay that he had on account of its loss, and
+showed the collar and other military decorations that had been
+given him. Arminius mocked at these as badges of slavery; and then
+each began to try to win the other over—Flavius boasting the
+power of Rome and her generosity to the submissive; Arminius
+appealing to him in the name of their country's gods, of the mother
+that had borne them, and by the holy names of fatherland and
+freedom, not to prefer being the betrayer to being the champion of
+his country. They soon proceeded to mutual taunts and menaces, and
+Flavius called aloud for his horse and his arms, that he might dash
+across the river and attack his brother; nor would he have been
+checked from doing so had not the Roman general Stertinius run up
+to him and forcibly detained him. Arminius stood on the other bank,
+threatening the renegade, and defying him to battle.</p>
+<p>I shall not be thought to need apology for quoting here the
+stanzas in which Praed has described this scene—a scene among
+the most affecting, as well as the most striking, that history
+supplies. It makes us reflect on the desolate position of Arminius,
+with his wife and child captives in the enemy's hands, and with his
+brother a renegade in arms against him. The great liberator of our
+German race was there, with every source of human happiness denied
+him except the consciousness of doing his duty to his country.</p>
+<p class="poetry">"Back, back! he fears not foaming flood<br/>
+ Who fears not steel-clad line:<br/>
+No warrior thou of German blood,<br/>
+ No brother thou of mine.<br/>
+Go, earn Rome's chain to load thy neck,<br/>
+ Her gems to deck thy hilt;<br/>
+And blazon honor's hapless wreck<br/>
+ With all the gauds of guilt.<br/>
+<br/>
+"But wouldst thou have <i>me</i> share the prey?<br/>
+ By all that I have done,<br/>
+The Varian bones that day by day<br/>
+ Lie whitening in the sun,<br/>
+The legion's trampled panoply,<br/>
+ The eagle's shatter'd wing—<br/>
+I would not be for earth or sky<br/>
+ So scorn'd and mean a thing.<br/>
+<br/>
+"Ho, call me here the wizard, boy,<br/>
+ Of dark and subtle skill,<br/>
+To agonize but not destroy,<br/>
+ To torture, not to kill.<br/>
+When swords are out and shriek and shout<br/>
+ Leave little room for prayer,<br/>
+No fetter on man's arm or heart<br/>
+ Hangs half so heavy there.<br/>
+<br/>
+"I curse him by the gifts the land<br/>
+ Hath won from him and Rome,<br/>
+The riving axe, the wasting brand,<br/>
+ Rent forest, blazing home.<br/>
+I curse him by our country's gods,<br/>
+ The terrible, the dark,<br/>
+The breakers of the Roman rods,<br/>
+ The smiters of the bark.<br/>
+<br/>
+"Oh, misery that such a ban<br/>
+ On such a brow should be!<br/>
+Why comes he not in battle's van<br/>
+ His country's chief to be?<br/>
+To stand a comrade by my side,<br/>
+ The sharer of my fame,<br/>
+And worthy of a brother's pride<br/>
+ And of a brother's name?<br/>
+<br/>
+"But it is past! where heroes press<br/>
+ And cowards bend the knee,<br/>
+Arminius is not brotherless,<br/>
+ His brethren are the free.<br/>
+They come around: one hour, and light<br/>
+ Will fade from turf and tide,<br/>
+Then onward, onward to the fight,<br/>
+ With darkness for our guide.<br/>
+<br/>
+"To-night, to-night, when we shall meet<br/>
+ In combat face to face,<br/>
+Then only would Arminius greet<br/>
+ The renegade's embrace.<br/>
+The canker of Rome's guilt shall be<br/>
+ Upon his dying name;<br/>
+And as he lived in slavery,<br/>
+ So shall he fall in shame."</p>
+<p>On the day after the Romans had reached the Weser, Germanicus
+led his army across that river, and a partial encounter took place,
+in which Arminius was successful. But on the succeeding day a
+general action was fought, in which Arminius was severely wounded
+and the German infantry routed with heavy loss. The horsemen of the
+two armies encountered without either party gaining the advantage.
+But the Roman army remained master of the ground and claimed a
+complete victory. Germanicus erected a trophy in the field, with a
+vaunting inscription that the nations between the Rhine and the
+Elbe had been thoroughly conquered by his army. But that army
+speedily made a final retreat to the left bank of the Rhine; nor
+was the effect of their campaign more durable than their trophy.
+The sarcasm with which Tacitus speaks of certain other triumphs of
+Roman generals over Germans may apply to the pageant which
+Germanicus celebrated on his return to Rome from his command of the
+Roman army of the Rhine. The Germans were "<i>triumphati potius
+quam victi</i>."</p>
+<p>After the Romans had abandoned their attempts on Germany, we
+find Arminius engaged in hostilities with Maroboduus, king of the
+Suevi and Marcomanni, who was endeavoring to bring the other German
+tribes into a state of dependency on him. Arminius was at the head
+of the Germans who took up arms against this home invader of their
+liberties. After some minor engagements a pitched battle was fought
+between the two confederacies (A.D. 19) in which the loss on each
+side was equal, but Maroboduus confessed the ascendency of his
+antagonist by avoiding a renewal of the engagement and by imploring
+the intervention of the Romans in his defence. The younger Drusus
+then commanded the Roman legions in the province of Illyricum, and
+by his mediation a peace was concluded between Arminius and
+Maroboduus, by the terms of which it is evident that the latter
+must have renounced his ambitious schemes against the freedom of
+the other German tribes.</p>
+<p>Arminius did not long survive this second war of independence,
+which he successfully waged for his country. He was assassinated in
+the thirty-seventh year of his age by some of his own kinsmen, who
+conspired against him. Tacitus says that this happened while he was
+engaged in a civil war, which had been caused by his attempts to
+make himself king over his countrymen. It is far more probable, as
+one of the best biographers[<a href="#note-85">85</a>] has
+observed, that Tacitus misunderstood an attempt of Arminius to
+extend his influence as elective war chieftain of the Cherusci and
+other tribes, for an attempt to obtain the royal dignity.</p>
+<p><a name="note-85"><!-- Note Anchor 85 --></a>[Footnote 85: Dr.
+Plate, in <i>Biographical Dictionary</i>.]</p>
+<p>When we remember that his father-in-law and his brother were
+renegades, we can well understand that a party among his kinsmen
+may have been bitterly hostile to him, and have opposed his
+authority with the tribe by open violence, and, when that seemed
+ineffectual, by secret assassination.</p>
+<p>Arminius left a name which the historians of the nation against
+which he combated so long and so gloriously have delighted to
+honor. It is from the most indisputable source, from the lips of
+enemies, that we know his exploits.[<a href="#note-86">86</a>] His
+countrymen made history, but did not write it. But his memory lived
+among them in the days of their bards, who recorded</p>
+<p class="poetry">"The deeds he did, the fields he won,<br/>
+The freedom he restored."</p>
+<p>Tacitus, writing years after the death of Arminius, says of him,
+"<i>Canitur adhuc barbaras apud gentes</i>." As time passed on, the
+gratitude of ancient Germany to her great deliverer grew into
+adoration, and divine honors were paid for centuries to Arminius by
+every tribe of the Low Germanic division of the Teutonic races. The
+<i>Irmin-sul</i>, or the column of Herman, near Eresburgh (the
+modern Stadtberg), was the chosen object of worship to the
+descendants of the Cherusci (the Old Saxons), and in defence of
+which they fought most desperately against Charlemagne and his
+Christianized Franks. "Irmin, in the cloudy Olympus of Teutonic
+belief, appears as a king and a warrior; and the pillar, the
+'Irmin-sul,' bearing the statue, and considered as the symbol of
+the deity, was the Palladium of the Saxon nation until the temple
+of Eresburgh was destroyed by Charlemagne, and the column itself
+transferred to the monastery of Corbey, where perhaps a portion of
+the rude rock idol yet remains, covered by the ornaments of the
+Gothic era."[<a href="#note-87">87</a>] Traces of the worship of
+Arminius are to be found among our Anglo-Saxon ancestors after
+their settlement in this island. One of the four great highways was
+held to be under the protection of the deity, and was called the
+"Irmin street." The name <i>Arminius</i> is, of course, the mere
+Latinized form of <i>Herman</i>, the name by which the hero and the
+deity were known by every man of Low German blood on either side of
+the German Sea. It means, etymologically, the <i>War-man</i>, the
+<i>man of hosts</i>. No other explanation of the worship of the
+Irmin-sul, and of the name of the Irmin street, is so satisfactory
+as that which connects them with the deified Arminius. We know for
+certain of the existence of other columns of an analogous
+character. Thus there was the <i>Roland-seule</i> in North Germany;
+there was a <i>Thor-seule</i> in Sweden, and (what is more
+important) there was an <i>Athelstan-seule</i> in Saxon
+England.[<a href="#note-88">88</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-86"><!-- Note Anchor 86 --></a>[Footnote 86:
+Tacitus: <i>Annales</i>.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-87"><!-- Note Anchor 87 --></a>[Footnote 87:
+Palgrave: <i>English Commonwealth</i>.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-88"><!-- Note Anchor 88 --></a>[Footnote 88:
+Lappenburg: <i>Anglo-Saxons</i>.]</p>
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="RULE4_23"></a>CHRONOLOGY OF UNIVERSAL HISTORY</h2>
+<p class="center">EMBRACING THE PERIOD COVERED IN THIS VOLUME B.C. 450-A.D.
+12</p>
+<p class="center">JOHN RUDD, LL.D.</p>
+<p>Events treated at length are here indicated in large type; the
+numerals following give volume and page.</p>
+<p>Separate chronologies of the various nations, and of the careers
+of famous persons, will be found in the INDEX VOLUME, with volume
+and page references showing where the several events are fully
+treated.</p>
+<p>"Est" means date uncertain.</p>
+<p class="center">B.C.</p>
+<p>450. The decemvirate instituted at Rome; the Twelve Tables of
+law framed. See <a href="#RULE4_2">"INSTITUTION AND FALL OF THE
+DECEMVIRATE IN ROME," ii, 1</a>.</p>
+<p>Alcibiades born.[Est]</p>
+<p>448. First Sacred War between the Phocians and Delphians for the
+possession of the temple at Delphi.</p>
+<p>The decemvirate abolished at Rome. See <a href="#RULE4_2">"INSTITUTION AND FALL OF THE DECEMVIRATE IN ROME," ii,
+1</a>.</p>
+<p>Athens is now the principal seat of Greek philosophy,
+literature, and art.</p>
+<p>447. The Boeotians defeat the Athenians at Coronea; the conflict
+was brought about by Athens breaking the truce arranged between the
+Greek states to endure for five years, in order to combine against
+Persia. The result was the loss to Athens of Boeotia, Phocis, and
+Locris.</p>
+<p>445.[Est] Nehemiah begins the rebuilding of the walls of
+Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>Peace of Callias between the Greeks and Persians.</p>
+<p>Birth of Xenophon, general and historian.</p>
+<p>444. Ascendency of Pericles at Athens.[Est] See <a href="#RULE4_3">"PERICLES RULES IN ATHENS," ii, 12</a>.</p>
+<p>The military tribunes instituted at Rome. The consulship was in
+no sense abolished; until the passage of the Licinian Rogations
+(when it reappeared as a permanent annual magistracy) it alternated
+irregularly with the military tribunes. See <a href="#RULE4_2">"INSTITUTION AND FALL OF THE DECEMVIRATE IN ROME," ii,
+1</a>.</p>
+<p>Thucydides exiled Athens.</p>
+<p>443. An Athenian colony planted at Thurium, near Sybarius; it is
+accompanied by Herodotus and Lysias.</p>
+<p>442. Pericles, guided by Phidias the sculptor, adorns Athens;
+the Parthenon, Propylæa, and Odeum built.</p>
+<p>440. Samos resists the Athenian sway; is besieged by Pericles
+and Sophocles; Melissus defends the city, but surrenders after a
+siege of nine months.</p>
+<p>Comedies prohibited performance at Athens.</p>
+<p>439. Great famine in Rome; Sp. Mælius distributes corn to
+the citizens, for which he is accused of wishing to be king, and is
+assassinated by Servilius Ahala.</p>
+<p>438. Spartacus becomes king of Bosporus.</p>
+<p>Ahala impeached and exiled Rome.</p>
+<p>437. The prohibition of comedy repealed at Athens.</p>
+<p>Syracuse, the predominant state in Sicily, reaches the height of
+its prosperity. See <a href="#RULE4_5">"DEFEAT OF THE ATHENIANS AT
+SYRACUSE," ii, 48</a>.</p>
+<p>436. Commencement of the dispute between Corinth and Corcyra
+regarding the city of Epidamnus, in which Athens supported the
+latter; this led to the Peloponnesian War.</p>
+<p>435. Naval victory over the Corinthians by the Corcyræans,
+near Actium.</p>
+<p>432. Ambassadors from Corcyra implore the aid of Athens, which
+series a fleet to defend the island against the Corinthian attack.
+Corinth incites Potidæa to revolt from Athens.</p>
+<p>431. Beginning of the Peloponnesian War. Sparta declares on the
+side of Corinth and makes war on Athens. The real cause of the
+war—which was to be so disastrous to Greece—was that
+Sparta and its allies were jealous of the great power Athens had
+attained. Sparta was an oligarchy and a friend of the nobles
+everywhere; Athens was a democracy and the friend of the common
+people; so that the war was to some extent a struggle between these
+classes all over Greece.</p>
+<p>430. <a href="#RULE4_4">"GREAT PLAGUE AT ATHENS." See ii,
+34</a>. The physician Hippocrates distinguishes himself by
+extraordinary cures of the sick.</p>
+<p>Second invasion of Attica by the Spartans.</p>
+<p>429. Death of Pericles, during the plague, at Athens.</p>
+<p>Potidæa reduced by the Athenians.</p>
+<p>Birth of Plato.</p>
+<p>428. Attica invaded the third time.</p>
+<p>Lesbos revolts from the Athenian confederacy; on this the
+Athenians besiege Mitylene.</p>
+<p>427. Mitylene reduced; Athens becomes master of Lesbos.
+Platæa, the ally of Athens, after being besieged, surrenders
+to the Peloponnesians and is destroyed.</p>
+<p>Attica again invaded.</p>
+<p>425. Agis begins the fifth invasion of Attica; he retires on
+learning that the Athenians under Cleon had taken Pylos and
+Sapachteria.</p>
+<p>Mount Æetna in eruption.</p>
+<p>On the death of Artaxerxes I, his son, Xerxes II, succeeds him
+as ruler of Persia; he reigns only forty-five days, being slain by
+his brother Sogdianus, who usurps the throne.</p>
+<p>424. The island of Cythera taken by the Athenians. Brasidas, the
+Spartan general, captures Amphipolis, defeating Thucydides.</p>
+<p>Ochus (Darius Nothus) rids himself of Sogdianus and succeeds him
+on the Persian throne.</p>
+<p>423. The Athenians banish Thucydides for having suffered
+Amphipolis to be taken.</p>
+<p>422. The Athenians send Cleon to recover Amphipolis; he is
+defeated by Brasidas; both fall in the battle.</p>
+<p>421. Peace of Nicias between Sparta and Athens. End of the first
+period of the Peloponnesian War.</p>
+<p>420. Alcibiades negotiates an alliance between Athens and Argos.
+Amphipolis retained by the Spartans.</p>
+<p>419. An Athenian expedition is led into the Peloponnesus by
+Alcibiades.</p>
+<p>418. Victory of the Spartans at Mantinea.</p>
+<p>The league between Athens and Argos dissolved.</p>
+<p>416. The island of Melos, which had remained neutral, is
+conquered by the Athenians; its inhabitants are treated with
+extreme cruelty.</p>
+<p>415. The Athenians send an expedition against Syracuse under
+Nicias, Lamachus, and Alcibiades; the latter is recalled to answer
+an accusation of having broken some statues of Mercury in Athens;
+he takes refuge in Sparta. Andocides, the orator, implicated in the
+same charge, is imprisoned and exiled.</p>
+<p>414. Syracuse is invested by the Athenians under Nicias; being
+hard pressed, Syracuse appeals to the other Greek states; Cylippus,
+the Spartan commander, comes with a fleet to the aid of the city.
+See <a href="#RULE4_5">"DEFEAT OF THE ATHENIANS AT SYRACUSE," ii,
+48</a>.</p>
+<p>The Romans capture Bolae, an Æquian town; the division of
+the booty causes a mutiny among the soldiers, who slay the quaestor
+and the military tribune, M. Postumius.</p>
+<p>413. On Alcibiades' advice the Spartans fortify a position at
+Decelea, in Attica.</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_5">"DEFEAT OF THE ATHENIANS AT SYRACUSE." See
+ii, 48</a>.</p>
+<p>412. Alcibiades visits the Persian satrap Tissaphernes, with
+whose aid he negotiates an alliance between Persia and Sparta.</p>
+<p>411. Owing to the machinations of Alcibiades a revolt is
+organized in Athens, by the aid of the clubs of the nobles and rich
+men; its object being to overthrow the democracy and establish an
+oligarchy. The rising is successful and the "Reign of the Four
+Hundred" ensues; it lasts four months; its framer, Antipho, is put
+to death. Alcibiades is recalled.</p>
+<p>410. The Spartans are defeated by Alcibiades in a naval
+encounter at Cyzicus. Sparta makes overtures for peace.</p>
+<p>409. The Carthaginians invade Sicily; they reduce Silenus and
+Himera.</p>
+<p>408. Alcibiades takes Selymbria and Byzantium.</p>
+<p>Psammeticus is king of Egypt.</p>
+<p>Roman plebs first admitted to the quaestorship.</p>
+<p>407. Lysander, the Spartan admiral, defeats the Athenian fleet
+at Notium; in consequence of this defeat, Alcibiades, who had been
+received with great honor, is banished, and ten generals are
+nominated to succeed him.</p>
+<p>406. The Athenians vanquish the Spartan fleet under
+Callicratidas, at Arginusae. The Athenian generals are executed at
+Athens for not saving the shattered vessels and the bodies of the
+slain.</p>
+<p>Dionysius the Elder becomes ruler of Syracuse.</p>
+<p>Anxur and other towns captured by the Romans, who now first give
+their soldiers a regular pay.</p>
+<p>405. The Spartan under Lysander, who had been restored to
+command, annihilate the Athenian navy at Aegospotami.</p>
+<p>Artaxerxes II succeeds Darius II on the Persian throne.</p>
+<p>Successful revolt of the Egyptians against the Persians; the
+independence of Egypt secured.</p>
+<p>404. Athens taken by Lysander and dismantled; thirty tyrants
+appointed by him. Lysias and other orators banished. End of the
+Peloponnesian War.</p>
+<p>403. Democracy is restored in Athens by Thrasybulus; he
+publishes an act of amnesty. The Ionian alphabet adopted at
+Athens.</p>
+<p>401. Cyrus rebels against his brother Artaxerxes, of Persia; he
+is defeated and slain at the battle of Cunaxa.</p>
+<p>400. The Ten Thousand Greek auxiliaries of Cyrus effect their
+retreat to the sea. See <a href="#RULE4_6">"RETREAT OF THE TEN
+THOUSAND GREEKS," ii, 68</a>.</p>
+<p>399. Sparta and Persia engage in war.</p>
+<p><a href="#RULE4_7">"CONDEMNATION AND DEATH OF SOCRATES." See ii,
+87</a>.</p>
+<p>396. Agesilaus, the Spartan general, begins his victorious
+campaigns against the Persians.</p>
+<p>The Romans, headed by Camillus, capture Veii, after a ten years'
+siege.</p>
+<p>395. Corinth, Thebes, Argos, and Athens combine against Sparta;
+the Spartans are defeated at Haliartus; Lysander is slain.</p>
+<p>Tissaphernes' Persian army is defeated by Agesilaus, near
+Sardis.</p>
+<p>394. The Athenian admiral Conon, in charge of the Persian fleet,
+crushingly defeats that of the Spartans, under Pisander, off
+Cnidus.</p>
+<p>Agesilaus is recalled from Asia; commanding the Spartans, he
+gains a victory over the confederate Greeks at Coronea.</p>
+<p>393. Conon undertakes the rebuilding of the walls in Athens and
+restores the fortifications.</p>
+<p>392. Conon excites the jealousy of the Persians; he retires into
+Cyprus, where he dies.</p>
+<p>391. Camillus banished from Rome, charged with misappropriating
+the booty secured at Veii, but really on account of his patrician
+haughtiness; he dies at Ardea, whither he had withdrawn.</p>
+<p>389. Aeschines born; he was accounted in Athens second only to
+Demosthenes as an orator.</p>
+<p>388[<a href="#note-89">89</a>] (387). Brennus, commanding the
+Gauls, burns Rome. See <a href="#RULE4_8">"BRENNUS BURNS ROME," ii,
+110</a>.</p>
+<p><a name="note-89"><!-- Note Anchor 89 --></a>[Footnote 89: By
+the old chronological reckoning this event occurred B.C. 390.]</p>
+<p>387. Through the mediation of Persia, Sparta compels the Greek
+states to accept the peace of Antalcidas, which leaves the Ionian
+cities and Cyprus at his mercy; this enables Sparta to maintain her
+supremacy in Greece.</p>
+<p>385.[Est] Birth of Demosthenes, the famous Greek orator and
+general.</p>
+<p>384. Aristotle born.</p>
+<p>383. War of Syracuse with Carthage.</p>
+<p>Thebes is betrayed to Sparta, during her war against
+Olynthus.</p>
+<p>379. The Olynthians are forced to submission by the Spartans.
+Pelopidas and his associates drive the Spartans from Thebes.</p>
+<p>378. Athens declares in favor of Thebes against Sparta.</p>
+<p>376. Cleombrotus leads the Spartans into Boeotia; the Spartan
+fleet, under Pollis, is overwhelmed off Maxos, by Chabrias.</p>
+<p>371. Congress of Sparta, Thebes being excluded from the treaty
+of peace; Pelopidas and Epaminondas gain the great victory of
+Leuctra, in which Cleombrotus, King of Sparta, is slain. Thebes
+becomes the dominant power in Greece.</p>
+<p>The Arcadian union formed. One of the first effects of the
+battle of Leuctra was to emancipate the Arcadians, and a plan was
+formed to raise them in the political affairs of Greece.</p>
+<p>370. Epaminondas, the Theban general, heads his first expedition
+into the Peloponnesus; he threatens Sparta, which Agesilaus
+saves.</p>
+<p>369. The Thebans advance into Laconia; they restore the
+independence of the Messenians. Epaminondas and Pelopidas are
+condemned for having retained their command beyond the term allowed
+by the laws of Thebes; they are pardoned and reappointed.</p>
+<p>The Arcadians found Megalopolis, which they make the capital of
+the Arcadian confederacy.</p>
+<p>368. The Thebans again enter the Peloponnesus, but retreat
+before the arrival of succor sent by Dionysius to the
+Lacedaemonians. Pelopidas, treacherously made prisoner by Alexander
+of Pherae, is rescued by Epaminondas. A congress, under the
+mediation of Persia, is held at Delphi; it fails, because the
+Thebans will not abandon the Messenians.</p>
+<p>The Carthaginians at war with Dionysius; but, after losing
+Selinus and other towns, they make peace.</p>
+<p>Camillus, more than eighty years old, appointed dictator at
+Rome; he persuades the patricians to assent to the demands of the
+plebs, and builds the temple of Concord.</p>
+<p>A celestial globe brought into Greece from Egypt.</p>
+<p>367. The Licinian Rogations, Rome; three bills introduced by
+Licinius, decreeing: 1. That interest on loans be deducted from the
+principal; 2. Limiting the public land held by any individual to
+500 jugera (320 acres); 3. Ordering that one of the two consuls
+should be a plebeian. Institution of the praetorship.</p>
+<p>364. Pelopidas attacks Alexander of Pherae; during the battle of
+Cymoscephale his soldiers are alarmed at an eclipse of the sun, and
+he is slain.</p>
+<p>362. The Spartans and allies defeated at Mantinea by
+Epaminondas; he is slain.</p>
+<p>361 (359). Artaxerxes II of Persia succeeded by Artaxerxes III
+(Ochus).</p>
+<p>359. Philip ascends the throne of Macedon; he concludes peace
+with the Athenians.</p>
+<p>358.[Est] Athens involves herself in the Social War with Cos,
+Rhodes, Chios, and Byzantium.</p>
+<p>Amphipolis captured by Philip of Macedon; he loses his right eye
+by an arrow from Astor.</p>
+<p>357. Outbreak of the Ten Years' Sacred War, caused by the
+Crissians levying grievous taxes on those who went to consult the
+oracle of Delphi.</p>
+<p>356. Burning of the temple of Diana at Ephesus; this building
+was accounted one of the Seven Wonders of the World.</p>
+<p>Birth of Alexander the Great.</p>
+<p>Dion frees Syracuse from Dionysius the Younger; he is expelled
+from Sicily.</p>
+<p>355. The Social War ends in Greece. Athens recognizes the
+independence of the confederated states.</p>
+<p>353. Final conquest of Egypt by the Persians.</p>
+<p>352. Philip of Macedon interferes in the Greek Sacred War;
+Demosthenes delivers his First Philippic encouraging the Greeks to
+resist the Macedonians; Philip's attempt to seize Thermopylae is
+defeated.</p>
+<p>Two thousand colonists are sent from Athens to Samos.</p>
+<p>347. Philip of Macedon captures and destroys Olynthus.</p>
+<p>346. Phocis occupied by Philip of Macedon; this ends the Sacred
+War.</p>
+<p>Dionysius the Younger again assumes power in Syracuse.</p>
+<p>343 (340). Timoleon effects the deliverance of Syracuse from
+Dionysius the Younger.</p>
+<p>Rome engages in the First Samnite War.</p>
+<p>341 (338). End of the First Samnite War.</p>
+<p>Invasion of China by Meha the Hun. See <a href="#RULE4_9">"TARTAR INVASION OF CHINA BY MEHA," ii,
+126</a>.[Est]</p>
+<p>340. Adoption of the Publilian laws in Rome, which further
+restricted the power of the patricians.</p>
+<p>The Romans make war upon the Latins; the latter are subjugated.
+Manlius, one of the Roman consuls, condemns his son to death for a
+breach of discipline.</p>
+<p>338. Athens and Thebes form an alliance to resist Philip of
+Macedon, who had passed Thermopylae and seized Elatea. The allied
+forces are overwhelmed at Chaeronea, and Philip establishes the
+Macedonian dominion in Greece.</p>
+<p>Artaxerxes III is succeeded by Arses in Persia.</p>
+<p>337. Philip of Macedon declares himself commander of the Greeks
+against the Persians; he repudiates his wife Olympias; their son
+Alexander attends his mother into Epirus.</p>
+<p>336. Assassination of Philip of Macedon, by Pausanias at Aegae,
+while preparing to invade Persia; he is succeeded by his son,
+Alexander the Great.</p>
+<p>Arses is succeeded by Darius III (Codomannus) in Persia.</p>
+<p>335. Thebes, revolting against the Macedonian authority, is
+subdued and destroyed by Alexander, who, however, spares the house
+of Pindar the poet.</p>
+<p>Rome concludes a peace with Gaul.</p>
+<p>334. Alexander enters upon the conquest of Persia; he is
+victorious over Darius at the Granicus.</p>
+<p>333. Lycia and Syria reduced by Alexander; Damascus captured by
+Parmenio, Alexander's general, and the siege of Tyre begun.</p>
+<p>Darius is defeated at Issus; his family are among Alexander's
+captives.</p>
+<p>332. <a href="#RULE4_10">"ALEXANDER REDUCES TYRE: LATER FOUNDS
+ALEXANDRIA." See ii, 133</a>. He takes Gaza and occupies Egypt.</p>
+<p>The Lucanians and Bruttians defeat and slay Alexander of Epirus,
+his ambitious designs in Italy having been betrayed.</p>
+<p>331. <a href="#RULE4_11">"THE BATTLE OF ARBELA,"</a> in which
+Alexander the Great conquers Darius and overthrows the Persian
+empire. See ii, 141.</p>
+<p>330. The Spartans, under Agis III, revolt against the
+Macedonians; Antipater defeats the Spartans and their allies at
+Megalopolis; Agis is slain.</p>
+<p>Darius is seized and laden with chains by Bessus, a Bactrian
+satrap who soon after slays him.</p>
+<p>Alexander captures Bessus and delivers him to Oxathres, the
+brother of Darius, by whom he is executed.</p>
+<p>Alexander pursues his conquests in Parthia, Media, Bactria, and
+on the shores of the Caspian.</p>
+<p>329. The Oxus and Jaxartes are crossed by Alexander; he drives
+back the Scythians; he founds new cities in the countries adjacent,
+and winters in Bactria.</p>
+<p>The consuls at Rome are granted a triumph and the surname of
+"Privernas," for the conquest of Privernum.</p>
+<p>328. Sogdiana, Central Asia, occupies Alexander during this, his
+seventh campaign, and he winters there at Nautaca.</p>
+<p>327. Marriage of Alexander to Roxana, daughter of Oxyartes, a
+Bactrian ruler.</p>
+<p>326. Alexander invades India and defeats Porus; his soldiers
+refuse to proceed farther.</p>
+<p>Rome begins the Second Samnite War.</p>
+<p>325-4. Alexander marches from the Indus to Persepolis; his fleet
+is sailed to the Euphrates by Nearchus.</p>
+<p>Harpalus flees from Babylon with immense treasures, which he
+conveys to Athens.</p>
+<p>323. Death of Alexander the Great at Babylon. His principal
+generals endeavored to obtain, each for himself, a portion of his
+empire. Ptolemy first secures Egypt and establishes his dynasty
+firmly there. Philip Aridaeus, half-brother of Alexander, succeeds
+him on the throne of Macedon, with Perdiccas as regent. Demosthenes
+returns to Athens and rouses the Greek states to recover their
+freedom; under Leosthenes they overpower Antipater, who takes
+refuge in Lamia, whence this is called the Lamian War.</p>
+<p>The Samnites sue for peace, but reject the terms on which it is
+offered by the Romans.</p>
+<p>322. The body of Alexander is entombed at Alexandria.</p>
+<p>The confederate Greeks are defeated by Antipater at Crannon; end
+of the Lamian War.</p>
+<p>Demosthenes, who was accused by the Macedonians of being privy
+to the looting of the treasury by Harpalus, after the battle of
+Crannon fled to Calauria; he was captured by the Macedonian troops
+and thereupon poisoned himself.</p>
+<p>321. Beginning of the wars between Alexander's successors;
+Perdiccas and Eumenes oppose themselves to Antipater, Craterus,
+Antigonus, and Ptolemy.</p>
+<p>Perdiccas assails Ptolemy in Egypt; Perdiccas is slain in a
+mutiny. In Asia Minor, Eumenes triumphs over Craterus, who is
+killed.</p>
+<p>Victory of the Samnites over the Romans at the Caudine Forks.
+These were two narrow gorges, united by a range of mountains on
+each side. The Romans went through the first pass, but found the
+second blocked up; on returning they found the first similarly
+obstructed. Being thus hemmed in they passed under the yoke.</p>
+<p>320. Eumenes, defeated by Antigonus, shuts himself up in the
+castle of Nora, where he sustains a year's siege.</p>
+<p>319. Polysperchon is appointed by Antipater to succeed him as
+regent for Philip Arrhidaeus and Alexander Aegus, half-brother and
+son of Alexander the Great, on his, Antipater's, death.</p>
+<p>Polysperchon's elevation to power is followed by a league
+against him, formed by Antipater's son Cassander, Antigonus, and
+Ptolemy. Eumenes lends his support to Polysperchon, after escaping
+from Nora.</p>
+<p>318. The Romans and Samnites make a truce.</p>
+<p>Polysperchon prevailed over by Cassander in the struggle for
+power in Greece and Macedonia. Athens he places under the rule of
+Phalereus.</p>
+<p>317. Phocion, an Athenian general who wisely advised in vain for
+peace with Antipater, became regarded as a traitor; he fled to
+Phocis, entered into the intrigues of Cassander, who delivered him
+up to the Athenians, who condemned him to drink hemlock. Olympias,
+mother of Alexander the Great, aided by Polysperchon and the
+Epirotes, seizes Macedonia.</p>
+<p>Olympias is put to death by Cassander. Eumenes, being betrayed
+to Antigonus, is put to death; Antigonus holds the supreme power in
+Asia.</p>
+<p>315. The rebuilding of Thebes undertaken by Cassander.</p>
+<p>314. Commencement of the struggle against Antigonus waged by
+Cassander, Ptolemy, Seleucus, and Lysimachus.</p>
+<p>313. Tyre surrenders to Antigonus. Ptolemy engages with him and
+conquers Cyprus.</p>
+<p>The Romans take Fregellae and other towns from the Samnites.</p>
+<p>312. Seleucus Nicator establishes the realm of the Seleucidae,
+the army of Antigonus, under his son Demetrius Poliorcetes, being
+defeated by Ptolemy and Seleucus. Babylon is made the capital.</p>
+<p>Ptolemy conquers Judea; he transplants many Jews to Alexandria
+and Cyrene, where their industry is encouraged and their religion
+protected.</p>
+<p>At Rome Appius Claudius, the blind, constructs the Via Appia,
+the first aqueduct, and a canal through the Pontine marshes.</p>
+<p>Zeno institutes the sect of Stoics at Athens.</p>
+<p>311. A temporary peace among the competitors for power in Asia.
+Greece is declared to be free, and Ptolemy resigns Phoenicia to
+Antigonus.</p>
+<p>Roxana, the widow of Alexander the Great, and her young son
+Alexander Aegas, are put to death by Cassander.</p>
+<p>The Roman consul Bubulcus penetrates into Samnium, where he is
+surrounded, and cuts his way through with great courage.</p>
+<p>310. Agathocles, the Syracusan ruler, defeated by the
+Carthaginians at Himera, passes over to Africa and carries the war
+into their own country.</p>
+<p>The Etruscans take up arms in favor of the Samnites.</p>
+<p>Civil war in the little kingdom of Bosporus; Satyrus II, king
+for a few months, falls in battle.</p>
+<p>An eclipse of the sun, August 15th.</p>
+<p>309. Hercules, a natural son of Alexander, proclaimed king of
+Macedon; he is murdered by Cassander.</p>
+<p>The Romans are victorious over the Samnites and the
+Etruscans.</p>
+<p>308. The Romans, under Fabius, compel the Etruscans to make
+peace; Fabius then turns against the Samnites, whom he defeats.</p>
+<p>307. Demetrius Poliorcetes, son of Antigonus, arrives with a
+fleet at Athens, expels Demetrius Phalereus, and restores the
+democracy, the Athenians throw down Phalereus' statues and condemn
+him to death.</p>
+<p>306. Ptolemy's fleet is destroyed by Demetrius Poliorcetes at
+Salamis; but Antigonus fails in his attempt on Egypt. Antigonus
+assumes the title of king of Asia; Ptolemy Lagi, Lysimachus, and
+Seleucus, the rulers of Egypt, Thrace, and that part of Alexander's
+empire east of the Euphrates, likewise assume the royal title.
+Cassander of Macedon is hailed king by his subjects.</p>
+<p>305. War between Seleucus and India, under Sandrocottus, ends in
+a treaty of amity.</p>
+<p>Flavius reconciles all orders of the Roman state and erects a
+temple of Concord.</p>
+<p>Demetrius Poliorcetes besieges Rome.</p>
+<p>304. The Romans triumphantly end the Second Samnite War.</p>
+<p>302. The priesthood at Rome is opened to the plebs.</p>
+<p>300.[<a href="#note-90">90</a>] Battle of Ipsus. Seleucus and
+Lysimachus overwhelm the army of Antigonus and his son, Demetrius
+Poliorcetes; Antigonus is slain. His dominions are divided among
+the victors. Lysimachus takes a large portion of Asia Minor;
+Seleucus appropriates Upper Syria, Capuadocia, and other
+territory.</p>
+<p><a name="note-90"><!-- Note Anchor 90 --></a>[Footnote 90: The
+date is usually given as 301.]</p>
+<p>Seleucus Nicator builds Antioch, which he makes the capital of
+his kingdom of Syria.</p>
+<p>299. Rome engages in the Third Samnite War, which becomes one of
+extermination, but the Samnites bravely resist in their mountain
+holds.</p>
+<p>295. Pyrrhus, King of Epirus, espouses Antigone of the house of
+Ptolemy; he returns to his dominions, out of which he had been
+driven by the Molossi.</p>
+<p>The Samnites, Etruscans, Umbrians, and Gauls unite against Rome.
+Q. Fabius Rullianus and P. Decimo Mus defeat the Samnites and Gauls
+at Sentinum.</p>
+<p>Demetrius Poliorcetes retakes Athens; Lysimachus and Ptolemy
+deprive him of all he possesses.</p>
+<p>294. The Macedonian throne is seized by Demetrius Poliorcetes;
+by violence or treachery the sons of Cassander are slain.</p>
+<p>293. Many towns of the Samnites are so utterly destroyed by the
+Romans that their sites are unknown; a portion of the spoil is cast
+into a brazen colossus, and placed in front of the Roman
+Capitol.</p>
+<p>The Roman census is 272,308 citizens.</p>
+<p>The first sun-dial at Rome is placed on the temple of
+Quirinus.</p>
+<p>290. The end of the Third Samnite War, which results in the
+submission of the Samnites to Rome.</p>
+<p>287. Birth of Archimedes, celebrated mathematician.[Est]</p>
+<p>Lysimachus and Pyrrhus, King of Epirus, wrest Macedonia from
+Demetrius Poliorcetes; immediately after, Lysimachus expels
+Pyrrhus.</p>
+<p>286. The Hortensian law, passed by Q. Hortensino, affirmed the
+legislative power granted the plebeians B.C. 446 and 336.</p>
+<p>285. Completion of the Septuagint, a Greek version of the
+Scriptures, called "the Alexandrian."</p>
+<p>The length of the solar year first accurately determined by
+Dionysius, in the astronomical canon.</p>
+<p>283. Death of Ptolemy Lagi (Ptolemy Soter); Ptolemy Philadelphus
+(jointly on the throne with his father since 295) succeeds him as
+King of Egypt. He further encourages the immigration of the Jews,
+who flourish exceedingly.</p>
+<p>282. The Tarentines attack a Roman fleet and insult the
+ambassadors, who demand satisfaction. Rome prepares for war; the
+Tarentines engage Pyrrhus to assist them.</p>
+<p>281. Lysimachus, at war with Seleucus Nicator, is defeated and
+slain in Phrygia.</p>
+<p>The Roman consul Aemilius invades the territory of Tarentum.</p>
+<p>280. Pyrrhus, King of Epirus, invades Italy; he makes the cause
+of Tarentum his own and wars on Rome. Laevinus, the Roman consul,
+is defeated. See <a href="#RULE4_12">"FIRST BATTLE BETWEEN GREEKS
+AND ROMANS," ii, 166</a>.</p>
+<p>Revival of the Achaean League. The Achaei originally inhabited
+the neighborhood of Argos; when driven thence by the Heraclidae,
+they retired among the Ionians, expelled the natives, and seized
+their thirteen cities, forming the Achaean League.</p>
+<p>279. Pyrrhus, who had tried to mediate between Tarentum and
+Rome, meeting with non-success, advances on Rome. He fails to make
+any impression and returns to Tarentum; the Romans follow him, and
+he gains an unimportant victory over them at Asculum. See <a href="#RULE4_12">"FIRST BATTLE BETWEEN GREEKS AND ROMANS," ii,
+166</a>.</p>
+<p>Irruption of Gauls into Macedonia; King Ptolemy Ceraunus offers
+battle to them, in which he is killed.[<a href="#note-91">91</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-91"><!-- Note Anchor 91 --></a>[Footnote 91: The
+date usually given is B.C. 280.]</p>
+<p>278. The Gauls under Brennus invade Greece; they are cut to
+pieces near Delphi.</p>
+<p>Alliance formed between Rome and Carthage.</p>
+<p>Pyrrhus wars against Carthage in Sicily.</p>
+<p>277. A body of Gauls enter Northern Phrygia, of which they take
+possession.</p>
+<p>Pyrrhus expels the Carthaginians from most of their possessions
+in Sicily.</p>
+<p>276. Other Grecian cities join the Achaean League.</p>
+<p>275. Pyrrhus, on the arrival of Carthaginian reenforcements,
+returns to Italy; he is totally defeated by M. Curius Dentatus (at
+Beneventum), who exhibits in his triumphs the first elephants ever
+seen in Rome.</p>
+<p>273. Ptolemy Philadelphus, of Egypt, sends an embassy to
+congratulate the Romans on their victory and to ask an alliance
+with them.</p>
+<p>272. Pyrrhus attempts the siege of Sparta; he is repulsed. In an
+attack on Argos, Pyrrhus is slain.</p>
+<p>Tarentum surrenders to the Romans.</p>
+<p>Lucania and Brittium also submit to Rome.</p>
+<p>269. The first silver coinage at Rome.</p>
+<p>266. The Romans capture and destroy Volsinii; Rome controls all
+Italy.</p>
+<p>264. War between Rome and Carthage. See <a href="#RULE4_13">"THE
+PUNIC WARS," ii, 179</a>.</p>
+<p>Gladiators first introduced into Rome.</p>
+<p>263. Antigonus Gonatus, King of Macedon, captures Athens.</p>
+<p>The Romans compel Hiero, King of Syracuse, to withdraw from the
+support of Carthage. See <a href="#RULE4_13">"THE PUNIC WARS," ii,
+179</a>.</p>
+<p>Philetaerus at his death appoints his nephew, Eumenes, King of
+Pergamus; the competition for books between him and Ptolemy
+Philadelphus causes the latter to prohibit the export of papyrus
+from Egypt; this leads to the invention of parchment at Pergamus,
+whence it takes its name.</p>
+<p>Hiero makes peace with the Romans; he becomes their most trusted
+ally.</p>
+<p>260. Ships-of-war first built by the Romans; the naval power of
+Rome inaugurated by the decisive victory of Duilius over the
+Carthaginians at Mylae. See <a href="#RULE4_13">"THE PUNIC WARS,"
+ii, 179</a>.</p>
+<p>259. The Romans invade Corsica; they carry off much rich spoil
+from thence and Sardinia, but make no permanent conquests. The
+island of Melita (Malta) is captured by the Romans.</p>
+<p>258. Atilius, the Roman consul, surrounded by the Carthaginians
+in Sicily, escapes with difficulty.</p>
+<p>257. A drawn battle between the fleets of Rome and Carthage off
+Tyndaris causes the Romans to prepare larger ships, in order to
+strike a decisive blow.</p>
+<p>256. Total defeat of the Carthaginian fleet near Ecnomus; the
+victorious Roman consuls land in Africa. The Carthaginians hire
+troops from Greece and give the command to Xanthippus. See <a href="#RULE4_13">"THE PUNIC WARS," ii, 179</a>.</p>
+<p>255. Regelus and his Roman legions are vanquished by Xanthippus;
+Regelus is taken captive. The Romans fit out a large fleet, which
+gains another victory and brings off the remains of the army from
+Africa. Many of the ships are wrecked.</p>
+<p>254. Another fleet consisting of 220 ships is equipped in three
+months by the Romans; Panormus (Palermo) is captured. See <a href="#RULE4_13">"THE PUNIC WARS," ii, 179</a>.</p>
+<p>253. The Romans again land in Africa and ravage many
+Carthaginian coast cities; on their return most of their ships are
+wrecked; the Romans resolve to abstain from naval warfare.</p>
+<p>252. Birth of Philopoemen, called the "Last of the Greeks."</p>
+<p>251. Aratus restores the freedom of Sicyon; joins the Achaean
+League, which becomes a powerful body.</p>
+<p>250. Arsaceo founds the kingdom of Parthia.</p>
+<p>The Romans begin the siege of Lilybaeum; the Carthaginians
+successfully defend it till the close of the war. Metellus, the
+Roman proconsul, commanding in Sicily, gains a great victory over
+Hasdrubal near Panoramus; over one hundred elephants form part of
+his triumphal procession.</p>
+<p>249. Naval victory of the Carthaginians over the Romans at
+Drepanum.</p>
+<p>Regelus is sent to Rome to propose an exchange of prisoners; on
+his return the Carthaginians put him to death with the utmost
+cruelty.</p>
+<p>The war between Syria and Egypt, which had been ruinous to the
+former, is ended by a treaty between Antiochus II and Ptolemy
+Philadelphus. One of the conditions was that Antiochus repudiate
+Laodice and marry Berenice, Ptolemy's daughter.</p>
+<p>248. Parthia becomes an independent kingdom.</p>
+<p>247. Birth of Hannibal, the famous Carthaginian general.</p>
+<p>Ptolemy Euergetes succeeds his father Ptolemy Philadelphus on
+the throne of Egypt.</p>
+<p>243. Corinth, delivered by Aratus from the yoke of Macedon,
+joins the Achaean League; other states follow the example.</p>
+<p>241. Agis IV, of Sparta, assists the Achaeans in their war
+against the Aetolians.</p>
+<p>Rome, having again assembled a great fleet, under Lutatius
+Catalus, vanquishes the Carthaginians in a naval encounter off the
+Aegates. End of the First Punic War; Sicily is relinquished by
+Carthage to Rome.</p>
+<p>240. The Carthaginian mercenaries in Africa revolt; Hamilcar
+Barca crushes it out.</p>
+<p>237. Carthage is compelled to cede Sardinia to Rome.</p>
+<p>236-221. Celomenes III of Sparta institutes great political
+reforms and engages in a struggle with the Achaean League.</p>
+<p>236-220. Hamilcar Barca and Hasdrubal, his son-in-law, conquer a
+great part of Spain.</p>
+<p>235. Rome, at peace with all the world, closes the temple of
+Janus, for the first time since Numa, according to legend, the
+second king of Rome.</p>
+<p>234. Birth of Cato the Elder.</p>
+<p>Scipio Africanus born.</p>
+<p>230. Ambassadors sent by Rome to protest against the piracies of
+the Illyrians are murdered by the order of Queen Teuta.</p>
+<p>229. A successful war is waged by the Romans against the Greek
+kingdom of Illyria; the Roman power is extended across the
+Adriatic.</p>
+<p>On the death of Hamilcar, his son-in-law, Hasdrubal, takes his
+place in Spain; he founds Carthago Nova (Carthagena).</p>
+<p>227. Sparta makes war with the Achaean League.</p>
+<p>225-222. Cisalpine Gaul is conquered by the Romans.</p>
+<p>221. Cleomenes III is crushed by Antigonus Doson, ruler of
+Macedon, at Sellasia; the Spartan power is utterly destroyed.</p>
+<p>220. Social war; the war made by the Aetolian League on the
+Achaean League.</p>
+<p>219. Hannibal lays siege to Saguntum, which he destroys; this is
+the real commencement of the Second Punic War. See <a href="#RULE4_13">"THE PUNIC WARS," ii, 179</a>.</p>
+<p>Philip V, of Macedon, is victorious in his campaigns against the
+Aetolian League.</p>
+<p>218. Hannibal crosses the Alps into Italy; he defeats the Romans
+on the Ticinus and Trebia. See <a href="#RULE4_13">"THE PUNIC
+WARS," ii, 179</a>.</p>
+<p>217. Philip V continues his victorious way against the Aetolian
+League.</p>
+<p>Hannibal defeats the Romans at the Trasimene Lake.</p>
+<p>Antiochus the Great cedes Coele-Syria and Palestine to
+Egypt.</p>
+<p>216. Crushing defeat of the Romans by Hannibal at Cannae. See
+<a href="#RULE4_13">"THE PUNIC WARS," ii, 179</a>.</p>
+<p>214. Rome has her first encounter with Macedon; Philip V allies
+himself with Hannibal and begins the war.</p>
+<p>Marcellus is sent into Sicily and besieges Syracuse, which had
+declared against Rome.</p>
+<p>213. Aratus, strategus of the Achaean League, is poisoned by
+Philip V of Macedon; this alienates from him many Greek states.</p>
+<p>Hwangti crushes out literature in China.</p>
+<p>212. After a two-years' siege the Romans under Marcellus take
+Syracuse.</p>
+<p>The two Scipios defeated and killed in Spain. See <a href="#RULE4_13">"THE PUNIC WARS," ii, 179</a>.</p>
+<p>211. Hannibal before the gates of Rome. See <a href="#RULE4_13">"THE PUNIC WARS," ii, 179</a>.</p>
+<p>The Aetolian League with its allies assists Rome against
+Macedon.</p>
+<p>210. Aegina taken by the Romans; the inhabitants reduced to
+slavery.</p>
+<p>Agrigentum, being conquered by Caevinus, places all Sicily again
+under Roman subjection.</p>
+<p>Scipio, victorious in Spain, takes Carthago Nova. See <a href="#RULE4_13">"THE PUNIC WARS," ii, 179</a>.</p>
+<p>208. Suspension of his operations against Scipio—the
+future Scipio Africanus—in Spain by Hasdrubal, son of
+Hamilcar, who sets out to relieve his brother Hannibal in
+Italy.</p>
+<p>207. Hasdrubal is defeated and slain on the Metaurus. See
+<a href="#RULE4_14">"BATTLE OF THE METAURUS," ii, 195</a>.</p>
+<p>A signal victory is achieved by Philopoemen, general of the
+Achaean League, with Macedon, over the Spartans at Matinea.</p>
+<p>206. Birth of Polybius, Greek historian.</p>
+<p>The Carthaginian power in Spain completely destroyed by
+Scipio.</p>
+<p>205. End of the first Romo-Macedonian war.</p>
+<p>204. Scipio carries the war into Africa; he defeats the
+Carthaginians and the Numidians.</p>
+<p>203. Hannibal, recalled from Italy, arrives at Carthage.</p>
+<p>202. The Carthaginian power is completely broken, ending the
+Second Punic War. See <a href="#RULE4_15">"SCIPIO AFRICANUS CRUSHES
+HANNIBAL AT ZAMA AND SUBJUGATES CARTHAGE," ii, 224</a>.</p>
+<p>201. A war is begun by Rome for the resubjugation of the Boii
+and Insubres of Cisalpine Gaul, who had attained freedom owing to
+the Carthaginian invasion.</p>
+<p>The Jews become subject to the Seleucid monarchy.</p>
+<p>200. Declaration of war by Rome against Macedon; the second
+Macedonian war.</p>
+<p>198. Antiochus the Great, of Syria, conquers Palestine and
+Coele-Syria from Egypt, defeating Scopas and the Aetolian
+allies.</p>
+<p>197. Decisive Roman victory over the Macedonians at
+Cynoscephale; Philip V of Macedon makes a humiliating peace.</p>
+<p>196. The Roman general Flaminius proclaims the freedom of the
+Greeks.</p>
+<p>195.[Est] Birth of Terrence, Roman comic poet.</p>
+<p>Ptolemy V, Epiphanes, King of Egypt. See i, 1, "The Rosetta
+Stone."</p>
+<p>192. In concert with the Aetolians, Antiochus the Great takes up
+arms against Rome.</p>
+<p>191. Antiochus is defeated by the Romans under Acilius Glabrio,
+at Thermopylae, in Greece. The resubjugation of Cisalpine Gaul is
+completed by Rome.</p>
+<p>All the Peloponnesus is included in the Achaean League, which
+attains its apogee.</p>
+<p>190. Scipio Asiaticus takes command of the Romans in Greece,
+with his brother Africanus as lieutenant; Antiochus is vanquished
+at Magnesia and he is compelled to release his hold on the greater
+part of Asia Minor. Most of the conquered territory is annexed to
+Pergamus. Scipio Asiaticus takes his surname for the courage and
+ability he showed.</p>
+<p>189. Fall of the Aetolian League.</p>
+<p>185. Birth of Scipio Africanus the Younger.</p>
+<p>179. Death of Philip V of Macedon. His son Perseus negotiates
+secretly with other states against Rome. The Celtiberians and
+Lusitanians lay down their arms.</p>
+<p>177. Rome suppresses a revolt in Sardinia. A colony settled at
+Lucca. The Achaeans contract an alliance with Rome.</p>
+<p>Thessaly relapses under the Macedonian influence.</p>
+<p>176. The consul Scipio dies, and C. Valerius Laevinus takes his
+place for the rest of the year. His colleague Petilius is slain in
+battle against the Ligurians. The Orchian and other sumptuary laws
+fail to repress the luxury of the Romans.</p>
+<p>175. Disgraceful struggles for the high-priesthood of Jerusalem;
+Antiochus sells it to Jason, the brother of Onias, who is
+deposed.</p>
+<p>174. Masinissa, after many encroachments, seizes the
+Carthaginian provinces of Tyssa, with fifty cities; Roman
+ambassadors sent to settle the dispute. Others deputed to ascertain
+the intentions of Perseus.</p>
+<p>Mithridates VI of the Arsacidae begins his reign and prepares
+the elevation of Parthia to great power.</p>
+<p>173. The Roman ambassadors return, Perseus having refused to
+receive them.</p>
+<p>Death of Cleopatra, who, in the name of her young son, had been
+regent of Egypt.</p>
+<p>172. The Ligurians are subdued and Northern Italy filled with
+Roman colonies. Eumenes honorably received at Rome; on his way back
+he is attacked by assassins near Delphi.</p>
+<p>Menelaus, another brother, supplants Jason in the
+high-priesthood of Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>171. Commencement of the Third Macedonian War; King Perseus
+begins his struggle with Rome.</p>
+<p>Antiochus invades Egypt and takes Memphis.</p>
+<p>170. Hostilius, who takes the command in Macedon, makes no
+progress; the Roman fleet ravages the sea-coast.</p>
+<p>Perseus negotiates with Antiochus, Prusias, and many Greek
+states to form a coalition against Rome; even Eumenes begins to
+treat with him.</p>
+<p>Ptolemy Physcon is associated with his brother as joint King of
+Egypt.</p>
+<p>169. The manoeuvres of Marcius Philippus drive Perseus from his
+strong position in Tempe.</p>
+<p>Antiochus lays siege to Alexandria; the Egyptians apply to Rome
+for aid.</p>
+<p>168. Battle of Pydna; complete defeat of Perseus, King of
+Macedon, by the Romans, under L. Aenilius Paulas. Macedon becomes a
+Roman province.</p>
+<p>Antiochus, awed by the Roman ambassador Popillius and the fate
+of Perseus, evacuates Egypt. In his retreat he plunders Jerusalem
+and despoils the Temple, in which he sets up the statue of Jupiter
+Olympias.</p>
+<p>167. Deportation of a thousand Achaeans to Rome; among them is
+Polybius, the historian, who there finds patrons and friends. The
+first library opened in Rome, consisting of books plundered from
+Macedon.</p>
+<p>Arms are taken up by the Asmoneans against Antiochus, King of
+Syria.</p>
+<p>165. Judas Maccabaeus enters Jerusalem; he purifies the Temple.
+See <a href="#RULE4_16">"JUDAS MACCABEUS LIBERATES JUDEA," ii,
+245</a>.</p>
+<p>160. Defeat and death of Judas Maccabaeus in battle.</p>
+<p>158. Roman citizens are almost entirely relieved of direct
+taxation by the revenues from Macedon and other conquests.</p>
+<p>149. Commencement of the Third Punic War between Rome and
+Carthage. See <a href="#RULE4_13">"THE PUNIC WARS," ii,
+179</a>.</p>
+<p>First Roman law against bribery at elections.</p>
+<p>147.[Est] Viriathus, the Lusitanian leader, has his first great
+victory over the Romans.</p>
+<p>146. Scipio Africanus the Younger completely destroys
+Carthage.</p>
+<p>Mummius, commanding in Greece, defeats the Archaeans at
+Leucopetra; he captures and destroys Corinth. The treasures of
+Grecian art conveyed to Rome. Greece becomes a Roman province.</p>
+<p>Demetrius Nicator slays Alexander Bala in battle and becomes
+king of Syria.</p>
+<p>141. Simon Maccabaeus captures the citadel of Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>Silanus, accused by the Macedonians of corrupt practices, is
+condemned by his father, Torquatus, and takes his own life.</p>
+<p>140. The Jews proclaim Simon Maccabaeus hereditary prince; with
+this dignity is united the office of high-priest.</p>
+<p>[Est]Viriathus, the Lusitanian leader against the Romans in
+Spain, is assassinated by order of the consul Caepio.</p>
+<p>135. Simon Maccabaeus is assassinated; John Hyrcanus, his son,
+succeeds him as ruler at Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>134-133. Antiochus Tidetes, King of Syria, besieges Jerusalem;
+he is repulsed.</p>
+<p>134-132. Servile War in Sicily, caused by the inhuman treatment
+of the slaves by their owners; two great battles were fought before
+the rising was suppressed.</p>
+<p>133. Tiberius Gracchus attempts his great political and agrarian
+reforms in Rome. See <a href="#RULE4_17">"THE GRACCHI AND THEIR
+REFORMS," ii, 259</a>.</p>
+<p>Scipio Africanus the Younger reduces Numantia.</p>
+<p>Attalus III of Pergamus bequeaths his kingdom, which embraces a
+great part of Asia Minor, to the Romans.</p>
+<p>125-121. The southeastern portion of Transalpine Gaul conquered
+by the Romans.</p>
+<p>123-122. Caius Gracchus commences his agrarian reforms in Rome.
+See <a href="#RULE4_17">"THE GRACCHI AND THEIR REFORMS," ii,
+259</a>.</p>
+<p>118. Rome extends her dominion beyond the Rhone; the colony of
+Narbo Martius (Narbonne) founded.</p>
+<p>113. Hordes of the Cimbri and Teutons threaten the Rome dominion
+by an invasion of Illyrium.</p>
+<p>112. Jugurtha, King of Numidia, kills Adherbal, who has been
+restored to the throne of Numidia after being driven thence by
+Jugurtha.</p>
+<p>111. The consul Calpurnius proceeds with a Roman army into
+Numidia; bribed by Jugurtha, he makes a peace and withdraws his
+forces.</p>
+<p>109. Jugurtha is opposed in Numidia by the Roman army headed by
+Metellus.</p>
+<p>John Hyrcanus, the Jewish Prince and high-priest, defeats
+Ptolemy Lathyrus and captures Samaria.[Est]</p>
+<p>The Cimbri request an allotment of land from the Romans, whereon
+to settle; it is refused; they ravage the country, but are checked
+in Thrace by Nimicus Rufus.</p>
+<p>108. Metellus, as proconsul, continues the war in Numidia.</p>
+<p>The Cimbri defeat the consul Scaurus in Gaul.</p>
+<p>Mithridates of Pontus secretly prepares to regain by force the
+province of Phrygia, which the Romans took from him during his
+minority.</p>
+<p>107. Marius vigorously carries on the war against Jugurtha;
+Marius is consul, Sylla his quaestor.</p>
+<p>Cassius, Roman consul, is defeated and slain by the Cimbri in
+Gaul.</p>
+<p>106. Birth of Cicero. Birth of Pompey the Great.</p>
+<p>Jugurtha is betrayed by Bocchus, King of Mauretania, into the
+hands of the Romans, which ends the Jugurthine War.</p>
+<p>105. The Cimbri and Teutones defeat the consul Manilius and
+proconsul Caepio, near the Rhone, with great loss.</p>
+<p>Aristobulus, son of John Hyrcanus, succeeds his father and
+assumes the title of king of Judea.</p>
+<p>104. Alexander Jannaeus succeeds his brother Aristobulus in
+Judea.</p>
+<p>102. Marius overwhelmingly defeats the Teutones, while they were
+retreating from Spain, at Aquae Sextiae (Aix).</p>
+<p>Another revolt of the slaves in Sicily (Second Servile War).</p>
+<p>101. Marius utterly crushes the Cimbri on the Raudian Fields,
+after they had previously defeated the proconsul Lutatius
+Catulus.</p>
+<p>100. The Second Servile War continues.</p>
+<p>Birth of Julius Cæsar.</p>
+<p>99. M. Aquilius finally crushes out the slave uprising in
+Sicily.</p>
+<p>94. Mithridates makes his son king of Cappadocia.</p>
+<p>93. Cappadocians appeal to the Romans, who give them
+Ariobarzanes for their king. Mithridates seizes Galatia.</p>
+<p>92. Sulla is sent by the Romans into Cappadocia to observe
+Mithridates' proceedings; ambassadors from Parthia meet him
+there.</p>
+<p>91. M. Livius Drussus, people's tribune, advocates giving the
+rights of citizenship to the Roman allies; he is assassinated.</p>
+<p>90. Social or Marsic War, a conflict of the Italian states
+against Rome, begins, the cause being the refusal of the franchise
+by Rome. Cæsar, the consul, is unfortunate against the
+Samnites, and Rutilius is defeated and slain by the Marsi. Marius
+retrieves these disasters. Citizenship granted to the states which
+remain faithful to Rome.</p>
+<p>The Roman senate promises aid to Cappadocia against
+Mithridates.</p>
+<p>89. The consul Pompeius (father of Pompey the Great) gains
+decided victories over the Picentines; his colleague, Cato, defeats
+the Marsi, but is killed in the battle; Sulla takes the command,
+and is so successful that he is elected consul for the ensuing
+year. Cicero is a cadet in the army of Pompeius.</p>
+<p>Cleopatra is put to death by her son Alexander, who is expelled
+from Egypt, and Ptolemy Soter restored.</p>
+<p>88. End of the Social War. Most of the refractory states
+admitted to Roman citizenship.</p>
+<p>Mithridates, King of Pontus, occupies Phrygia; he asks all Asia
+Minor to join him; a general massacre of the Romans occurs.</p>
+<p>Quarrel between Sulla and Marius which causes war between them
+for the control of the Roman army. The first Roman civil war.</p>
+<p>87. Sulla proceeds to Greece to conduct the war against
+Mithridates; Sulla besieges Athens.</p>
+<p>The consul Cinna, deposed by the senate, calls Marius from
+Africa, raises an Italian army, and reinstates himself in office;
+bloody proscriptions by Marius and Cinna follow.</p>
+<p>86. Death of Marius, in the beginning of his seventh consulate;
+Flaccus, appointed in his place, is assassinated on his march to
+the east, by C. Fimbria, who assumes command of the Roman army.</p>
+<p>Sulla captures the revolted city of Athens and defeats the army
+of Mithridates under Archelaus.</p>
+<p>A sedition of the Jews is quelled with merciless severity by
+Alexander Jannaeus.</p>
+<p>85. The Romans are successful against Mithridates in Asia.</p>
+<p>84. End of the First Mithridatic War; Mithridates, finding
+himself between two victorious Roman armies, agrees to peace and
+relinquishes all his acquisitions.</p>
+<p>83. Sulla makes war against the Marian party in Italy.</p>
+<p>The Roman senate refuses to send Mithridates a formal
+ratification of the treaty. He retains a part of Cappadocia. The
+Second Mithridatic War begins.</p>
+<p>82. Sulla becomes dictator at Rome, after crushing the Marian
+party; he inflicts a bloody vengeance on his enemies.</p>
+<p>End of the Second Mithridatic War.</p>
+<p>81. Pompey, having been successful in Africa, is granted a
+triumph in Rome.</p>
+<p>80. Sertorius, the Marian leader, sets up an independent state
+in Spain.</p>
+<p>Cæsar serves as a cadet at the siege of Mitylene; he
+receives a civic crown for saving the life of a citizen.</p>
+<p>79. Sulla resigns the dictatorship, but remains master of
+Rome.</p>
+<p>Alexander Jannaeus, King of Judea, is succeeded on his death by
+his widow Alexandra.</p>
+<p>78. Death of Sulla.</p>
+<p>76. Pompey is sent into Spain to oppose Sertorius.</p>
+<p>74. Mithridates renews hostilities; he enters into an abortive
+alliance with Sertorius. Third Mithridatic War. Lucullus commands
+the Roman forces.</p>
+<p>73. Lucullus routs the army of Mithridates.</p>
+<p>Rising of the gladiators; Spartacus collects, on Mount Vesuvius,
+a numerous army of slaves and gladiators; they overcome the forces
+sent against them and ravage Southern Italy. The Third Servile
+War.</p>
+<p>72. Sertorius is assassinated in Spain; the Spaniards submit to
+Pompey.</p>
+<p>King Mithridates is driven from his dominions by Lucullus; the
+King takes refuge in Armenia.</p>
+<p>71. Crassus defeats and slays Spartacus; the gladiators are
+crushed.</p>
+<p>70. Death of Alexandra, widow of Jannaeus; she nominates her
+son, Hyrcanus, as her successor; but his brother, Aristobulus,
+usurps the throne of Judea.</p>
+<p>Pompey and Crassus, previously at variance, are reconciled
+during their joint consulship.</p>
+<p>Cicero's six orations (the first only being actually delivered)
+against Verres, who, when governor of Sicily, had plundered the
+island of property, art treasures, etc.</p>
+<p>Birth of Vergil.</p>
+<p>69. Lucullus crosses the Euphrates, captures Tigranocerta, and
+defeats Tigranes, who had succored Mithridates in Armenia.</p>
+<p>68. Lucullus defeats Tigranes and takes Nisibis.</p>
+<p>67. A mutiny in the Roman army caused by the appointment of
+Glabrio to succeed Lucullus.</p>
+<p>Pompey crushes the pirates of Cilicia and makes it a Roman
+province.</p>
+<p>Julius Cæsar is quaestor in Spain.</p>
+<p>Metellus completes the conquest of Crete for the Romans.</p>
+<p>Mithridates makes a successful advance.</p>
+<p>66. Pompey, after a conference with Lucullus, completely crushes
+Mithridates and drives him over the Cimmerian Bosporus.</p>
+<p>65. End of the Third Mithridatic War.</p>
+<p>Antiochus XIII is deposed by Pompey; this puts an end to the
+kingdom of the Seleucidas (Syria).</p>
+<p>Hyrcanus takes up arms against his brother Aristobulus in
+Judea.</p>
+<p>64. Pompey takes possession of Syria; he is recalled thence to
+oppose Mithridates, who, returned to his states, prepares for
+further resistance.</p>
+<p>63. Having intervened between the brothers John Hyrcanus II and
+Aristobulus II, and decided in favor of Hyrcanus, Pompey lays siege
+to Jerusalem, where Aristobulus reigns, captures it, and makes
+Judea a Roman province.</p>
+<p>Mithridates, betrayed by his son, poisons himself.</p>
+<p>Cicero frustrates the conspiracy of Catiline, having for its
+object the cancellation of debts, the proscription of the wealthy,
+and the distribution among the conspirators of all the offices of
+honor and emolument.</p>
+<p>62. Catiline is defeated and slain, after having collected an
+army in Etruria.</p>
+<p>Discord arises between Cæsar, now prætor, and Cato,
+tribune of the people.</p>
+<p>60. First Triumvirate in Rome, formed of Pompey, Crassus, and
+Cæsar, equally dividing the power.</p>
+<p>59. Consulship of Cæsar at Rome; he carries his agrarian
+law and ingratiates himself with the people; he is given the
+command in Gaul and Illyrium for five years.</p>
+<p>58. Cæsar begins his campaigns in Gaul. See <a href="#GAUL">"CÆSAR CONQUERS GAUL," ii, 267</a>.</p>
+<p>Cicero exiled from Rome; he had saved the Republic at the time
+of the Catiline conspiracy, but had broken the constitution, which
+forbade capital punishment without the sentence of the assembly of
+the people.</p>
+<p>57. The Belgae conquered by Cæsar.</p>
+<p>Cicero recalled to Rome.</p>
+<p>56. Roman conquest of Aquitaine.</p>
+<p>55. Cato is imprisoned for opposing the vote giving the
+triumvirs five more years in their respective provinces: Pompey in
+Spain; Cæsar in Gaul; Crassus in Syria. The triumvirs meet at
+Lucca.</p>
+<p>Caesar's first expedition into Britain. See <a href="#RULE4_18">"ROMAN INVASION AND CONQUEST OF BRITAIN," ii,
+285</a>.</p>
+<p>54. First campaign of Crassus; he plunders the Temple of
+Jerusalem and proceeds against the Parthians.</p>
+<p>Mithridates of Parthia is murdered by his brother Orodes.</p>
+<p>Cæsar's second invasion of Britain. See <a href="#RULE4_18">"ROMAN INVASION AND CONQUEST OF BRITAIN," ii,
+285</a>.</p>
+<p>53. Crassus defeated and slain in the war against the Parthians
+at Carrhae.</p>
+<p>52. Vercingetorix, at the head of various Gallic tribes, makes a
+formidable effort to drive Cæsar out of Gaul; he is
+unsuccessful, and Cæsar, besieging him in his stronghold
+Alesia, forces him to surrender.</p>
+<p>51. Peace between Rome and Parthia. Cæsar completes his
+conquest of Gaul.</p>
+<p>Cleopatra, on the death of her father, Ptolemy Auletes, becomes
+queen of Egypt. See <a href="#RULE4_19">"CLEOPATRA'S CONQUEST OF
+CÆSAR AND ANTONY," ii, 295</a>.</p>
+<p>50. Cæsar returns to Italy; jealousy between him and
+Pompey arouses the people of Rome.</p>
+<p>49. War breaks out between Cæsar and Pompey; the second
+civil war in Rome.</p>
+<p>48. Pompey is defeated by Cæsar at Pharsalia; Pompey flees
+to Egypt, where he is assassinated.</p>
+<p>47. The Roman senate appoints Cæsar dictator, M. Antony as
+his master of the horse. Cæsar subdues Egypt.</p>
+<p>46. Cæsar overwhelms the Pompeians in Africa at the battle
+of Thapsus; Juba, King of Numidia, on the defeat, takes his own
+life.[<a href="#note-92">92</a>]</p>
+<p><a name="note-92"><!-- Note Anchor 92 --></a>[Footnote 92: Other
+authorities say he fell in battle.]</p>
+<p>Death of Cato.</p>
+<p>The calendar is reformed by Cæsar.</p>
+<p>45. Cæsar conquers the sons of Pompey at Munda, Spain. He
+is appointed dictator for life.</p>
+<p>44. Brutus, Cassius, and other conspirators murder Cæsar
+in Rome. See <a href="#RULE4_20">"ASSASSINATION OF CÆSAR,"
+ii, 313</a>.</p>
+<p>Conflict for power between Antony and Octavius; Cicero's oration
+secures Octavius' success in Rome.</p>
+<p>Antony resorts to arms to regain his lost ascendency. See
+<a href="#RULE4_21">"ROME BECOMES A MONARCHY," ii, 333</a>.</p>
+<p>43. Second Triumvirate at Rome, formed by Octavius, Antony, and
+Lepidus.</p>
+<p>Murder of Cicero. Birth of Ovid.</p>
+<p>42. Brutus and Cassius are defeated at the two battles of
+Philippi. See <a href="#RULE4_21">"ROME BECOMES A MONARCHY," ii,
+333</a>.</p>
+<p>41. Octavius and Antony's party war in Italy.</p>
+<p>Fulvia, the wife of Antony, and the consul Lucius, his brother,
+oppose Octavius, who drives them from Rome. See <a href="#RULE4_21">"ROME BECOMES A MONARCHY," ii, 333</a>.</p>
+<p>40. Herod I, in his absence at Rome, is proclaimed by Antony and
+Octavius king of Judea.</p>
+<p>Antony accompanies Cleopatra to Egypt. See <a href="#RULE4_21">"ROME BECOMES A MONARCHY," ii, 333</a>.</p>
+<p>39. Herod lands in Syria to take the throne of Judea.</p>
+<p>38. Pompey is defeated in a naval engagement and loses all his
+fleet.</p>
+<p>37. Herod conquers Jerusalem; the Asmonean house ends.</p>
+<p>36. Lepidus, aspiring to greater power, is deserted by his
+soldiers and ejected from the triumvirate.</p>
+<p>31. War of Antony and Octavius; Octavius is victorious at
+Actium: he becomes master of the Roman dominions. Flight of Antony
+with Cleopatra to Egypt. See <a href="#RULE4_21">"ROME BECOMES A
+MONARCHY," ii, 333</a>.</p>
+<p>30. Death of Antony and Cleopatra. See <a href="#RULE4_21">"ROME
+BECOMES A MONARCHY," ii, 333</a>.</p>
+<p>Egypt becomes a Roman province.</p>
+<p>27. Octavius has a triumph at Rome and receives the title of
+Augustus.</p>
+<p>The temple of Janus is closed.</p>
+<p>24. Aelius Gallus, governor of Egypt, fails in an expedition
+into Arabia.</p>
+<p>19. Final subjugation of the Cantabri by Agrippa; the whole
+Spanish peninsula subject to Rome.</p>
+<p>15. The Rhaetians and Vindelicians subdued by Drassus and
+Tiberius, at the head of the Roman troops.</p>
+<p>12. Victorious advance of Drusus in Germany.</p>
+<p>9. Pannonia completely subdued by Tiberius.</p>
+<p>Last German campaign and death of Drusus.</p>
+<p>4. Death of Herod the Great, King of Judea.</p>
+<p>Probable date of the birth of Jesus.</p>
+<p class="center">A.D.</p>
+<p>1. Beginning of the Christian era.</p>
+<p>4. Emperor Tiberius' campaign in Germany.</p>
+<p>6. Archelaus, the Herodian ethnarch, is deposed; Judea becomes a
+district of the Roman prefecture of Syria.</p>
+<p>9. Arminius annihilates the army of Varus in Teutoburg Forest.
+See <a href="#RULE4_22">"GERMANS UNDER ARMINIUS REVOLT AGAINST
+ROME," ii, 362</a>.</p>
+<p>12. Tiberius leaves Germanicus to prosecute the war, and returns
+to Rome.</p>
+<p class="center">END OF VOLUME II</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 10114 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>