29.
Vercingetorix having convened an assembly on the following day,
consoled and encouraged his soldiers in the following words: "That they should
not be too much depressed in spirit, nor alarmed at their loss; that the Romans did not conquer by valor nor in the field, but
by a kind of art and skill in assault, with which they themselves were
unacquainted; that whoever expected every event in the war to be favorable,
erred; that it never was his opinion that Avaricum should be defended, of the truth of which statement he had
themselves as witnesses, but that it was owing to the imprudence of the
Bituriges, and the too ready compliance of the rest, that this
loss was sustained; that, however, he would soon compensate it by superior
advantages; for that he would, by his exertions, bring over those states which
severed themselves from the rest of the Gauls, and
would create a general unanimity throughout the whole of Gaul, the union of
which not even the whole earth could withstand, and that he had it already
almost effected; that in the mean time it was reasonable that he should prevail
on them, for the sake of the general safety, to begin to fortify their camp, in
order that they might the more easily sustain the sudden attacks of the enemy."
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