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8.
Caesar at first determined to decline a battle, as well
on account of the great number of the enemy as their distinguished reputation
for valor: daily, however, in cavalry actions, he strove to ascertain by
frequent trials, what the enemy could effect by their prowess and what our men
would dare. When he perceived that our men were not inferior, as the place
before the camp was naturally convenient and suitable for marshaling an army
(since the hill where the camp was pitched, rising gradually from the plain,
extended forward in breadth as far as the space which the marshaled army could
occupy, and had steep declines of its side in either direction, and gently
sloping in front gradually sank to the plain); on either side of that hill he
drew a cross trench of about four hundred paces, and at the extremities of that
trench built forts, and placed there his military engines, lest, after he had
marshaled his army, the enemy, since they were so powerful in point of number,
should be able to surround his men in the flank, while fighting. After doing
this, and leaving in the camp the two legions which he had last raised, that, if
there should be any occasion, they might be brought as a reserve, he formed the
other six legions in order of battle before the camp. The enemy, likewise, had
drawn up their forces which they had brought out of the camp.
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