14.
Caesar, after taking many of their towns, perceiving
that so much labor was spent in vain and that the flight of the enemy could not
be prevented on the capture of their towns, and that injury could not be done
them, he determined to wait for his fleet. As soon as it came up and was first
seen by the enemy, about 220 of their ships, fully equipped and appointed with
every kind of [naval] implement, sailed forth from the harbor, and drew up
opposite to ours; nor did it appear clear to Brutus,
who commanded the fleet, or to the tribunes of the soldiers and the centurions,
to whom the several ships were assigned, what to do, or what system of tactics
to adopt; for they knew that damage could not be done by their beaks; and that,
although turrets were built [on their decks], yet the height of the stems of the
barbarian ships exceeded these; so that weapons could not be cast up from [our]
lower position with sufficient effect, and those cast by the Gauls fell the more forcibly upon us. One thing provided by our men
was of great service, [viz.] sharp hooks inserted into and fastened upon poles,
of a form not unlike the hooks used in attacking town walls. When the ropes
which fastened the sail-yards to the masts were caught by them and pulled, and
our vessel vigorously impelled with the oars, they [the ropes] were severed; and
when they were cut away, the yards necessarily fell down; so that as all the
hope of the Gallic vessels depended on their sails and rigging,
upon these being cut away, the entire management of the ships was taken from
them at the same time. The rest of the contest depended on courage; in which our
men decidedly had the advantage; and the more so, because the whole action was
carried on in the sight of Caesar and the entire army;
so that no act, a little more valiant than ordinary, could pass unobserved, for
all the hills and higher grounds, from which there was a near prospect of the
sea were occupied by our army.
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