40.
Caesar felt great anxiety on this intelligence, because
he had always especially indulged the state of the Aedui, and,
without any hesitation, draws out from the camp four light-armed legions and all
the cavalry: nor had he time, at such a crisis, to contract the camp, because
the affair seemed to depend upon dispatch. He leaves Caius Fabius,
his lieutenant, with two legions to guard the camp. When he ordered the brothers
of Litavicus to be arrested, he discovers that they had fled a
short time before to the camp of the enemy. He encouraged his soldiers "not to
be disheartened by the labor of the journey on such a necessary occasion," and,
after advancing twenty-five miles, all being most eager, he came in sight of the
army of the Aedui, and, by sending on his cavalry, retards and
impedes their march; he then issues strict orders to all his soldiers to kill no
one. He commands Eporedirix and Viridomarus, who they
thought were killed, to move among the cavalry and address their friends. When
they were recognized and the treachery of Litavicus discovered, the
Aedui began to extend their hands to intimate submission, and,
laying down their arms, to deprecate death. Litavicus, with his
clansmen, who after the custom of the Gauls consider
it a crime to desert their patrons, even in extreme misfortune, flees forth to
Gergovia .
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