1.
Lucius Domitius and Appius Claudius being consuls
[54 B.C.], Caesar, when
departing from his winter quarters into Italy, as he had been
accustomed to do yearly, commands the lieutenants whom he appointed over the
legions to take care that during the winter as many ships as possible should be
built, and the old repaired. He plans the size and shape of them. For dispatch
of lading, and for drawing them on shore, he makes them a little lower than
those which we have been accustomed to use in our sea; and that so much the
more, because he knew that, on account of the frequent changes of the tide, less
swells occurred there; for the purpose of transporting burdens and a great
number of horses, [he makes them] a little broader than those which we use in
other seas. All these he orders to be constructed for lightness and expedition,
to which object their lowness contributes greatly. He orders those things which
are necessary for equipping ships to be brought thither from Spain. He himself, on the assizes of Hither Gaul being
concluded, proceeds into Illyricum , because he
heard that the part of the province nearest them was being laid waste by the
incursions of the Pirustae. When he had arrived there, he levies
soldiers upon the states, and orders them to assemble at an appointed place.
Which circumstance having been reported [to them], the Pirustae
send embassadors to him to inform him that no part of those proceedings was done
by public deliberation, and assert that they were ready to make compensation by
all means for the injuries [inflicted]. Caesar,
accepting their defense, demands hostages, and orders them to be brought to him
on a specified day, and assures them that unless they did so he would visit
their state with war. These being brought to him on the day which he had
ordered, he appoints arbitrators between the states, who should estimate the
damages and determine the reparation. 2.
These things being finished, and the assizes being concluded, he returns into
Hither Gaul, and proceeds thence to the army. When he had arrived there,
having made a survey of the winter quarter, he finds that, by the extraordinary
ardor of the soldiers, amid the utmost scarcity of all materials, about six
hundred ships of that kind which we have described above and twenty-eight ships
of war, had been built, and were not far from that state, that they might be
launched in a few days. Having commended the soldiers and those who had presided
over the work, he informs them what he wishes to be done, and orders all the
ships to assemble at port Itius, from which port he had learned
that the passage into Britain was
shortest, [being only] about thirty miles from the continent. He left what
seemed a sufficient number of soldiers for that design; he himself proceeds into
the territories of the Treviri with four legions without baggage, and 800 horse, because
they neither came to the general diets [of Gaul], nor obeyed his
commands, and were moreover, said to be tampering with the Germans beyond the Rhine . 3.
This state is by far the most powerful of all Gaul in cavalry,
and has great forces of infantry, and as we have remarked above, borders on the
Rhine . In that state, two persons, Indutiomarus and
Cingetorix, were then contending with each other for the
supreme power; one of whom, as soon as the arrival of Caesar and his legions was known, came to him; assures him that he
and all his party would continue in their allegiance, and not revolt from the
alliance of the Roman people, and informs him of the
things which were going on among the Treviri . But Indutiomarus began to collect cavalry and
infantry, and make preparations for war, having concealed those who by reason of
their age could not be under arms, in the forest Arduenna, which is
of immense size, [and] extends from the Rhine across the country of
the Treviri to the frontiers of the Remi.
But after that, some of the chief persons of the state, both influenced by their
friendship for Cingetorix, and alarmed at the arrival of our army,
came to Caesar and began to solicit him privately about
their own interests, since they could not provide for the safety of the state;
Indutiomarus, dreading lest he should be abandoned by all,
sends embassadors to Caesar, to declare that he
absented himself from his countrymen, and refrained from coming to him on this
account, that he might the more easily keep the state in its allegiance, lest on
the departure of all the nobility the commonalty should, in their indiscretion,
revolt. And thus the whole state was at his control; and that he, if Caesar would permit, would come to the camp to him, and
would commit his own fortunes and those of the state to his good faith.
4.
Caesar, though he discerned from what motive these
things were said, and what circumstances deterred him from his meditated plan,
still, in order that he might not be compelled to waste the summer among the
Treviri , while all things were prepared for the war with Britain, ordered
Indutiomarus to come to him with 200 hostages. When they were
brought, [and] among them his son and near relations, whom he had demanded by
name, he consoled Indutiomarus, and enjoined him to continue in his
allegiance; yet, nevertheless, summoning to him the chief men of the Treviri , he reconciled them individually to
Cingetorix: this he both thought should be done by him in justice
to the merits of the latter, and also judged that it was of great importance
that the influence of one whose singular attachment toward him he had fully
seen, should prevail as much as possible among his people.
Indutiomarus was very much offended at this act, [seeing that]
his influence was diminished among his countrymen; and he, who already before
had borne a hostile mind toward us, was much more violently inflamed against us
through resentment at this. 5.
These matters being settled, Caesar went to port
Itius with the legions. There he discovers that forty ships,
which had been built in the country of the Meldi , having been driven back by a storm, had been unable to
maintain their course, and had returned to the same port from which they had set
out; he finds the rest ready for sailing, and furnished with every thing. In the
same place, the cavalry of the whole of Gaul, in number 4,000,
assembles, and [also] the chief persons of all the states; he had determined to
leave in Gaul a very few of them, whose
fidelity toward him he had clearly discerned, and take the rest with him as
hostages; because he feared a commotion in Gaul when he should be absent.
6.
There was together with the others, Dumnorix, the
Aeduan, of whom we have made previous mention. Him, in
particular, he had resolved to have with him, because he had discovered him to
be fond of change, fond of power, possessing great resolution, and great
influence among the Gauls. To this was added, that
Dumnorix had before said in an assembly of
Aeduans, that the sovereignty of the state had been made over to
him by Caesar; which speech the Aedui bore
with impatience and yet dared not send embassadors to Caesar for the purpose of either rejecting or deprecating [that
appointment]. That fact Caesar had learned from his own
personal friends. He at first strove to obtain by every entreaty that he should
be left in Gaul; partly, because, being
unaccustomed to sailing, he feared the sea; partly because he said he was
prevented by divine admonitions. After he saw that this request was firmly
refused him, all hope of success being lost, he began to tamper with the chief
persons of the Gauls, to call them apart singly and
exhort them to remain on the continent; to agitate them with the fear that it
was not without reason that Gaul should be stripped of all
her nobility; that it was Caesar's design, to bring
over to Britain and put
to death all those whom he feared to slay in the sight of Gaul, to pledge his honor to the rest, to ask for their oath that
they would by common deliberation execute what they should perceive to be
necessary for Gaul. These things were reported
to Caesar by several persons. 7.
Having learned this fact, Caesar, because he had
conferred so much honor upon the Aeduan state, determined that
Dumnorix should be restrained and deterred by whatever means he
could; and that, because he perceived his insane designs to be proceeding
further and further, care should be taken lest he might be able to injure him
and the commonwealth. Therefore, having stayed about twenty-five days in that
place, because the north wind, which usually blows a great part of every season,
prevented the voyage, he exerted himself to keep Dumnorix in his
allegiance [and] nevertheless learn all his measures: having at length met with
favorable weather, he orders the foot soldiers and the horse to embark in the
ships. But, while the minds of all were occupied, Dumnorix began to
take his departure from the camp homeward with the cavalry of the
Aedui, Caesar being ignorant of it.
Caesar, on this matter being reported to him,
ceasing from his expedition and deferring all other affairs, sends a great part
of the cavalry to pursue him, and commands that he be brought back; he orders
that if he use violence and do not submit, that he be slain; considering that
Dumnorix would do nothing as a rational man while he himself
was absent, since he had disregarded his command even when present. He, however,
when recalled, began to resist and defend himself with his hand, and implore the
support of his people, often exclaiming that "he was free and the subject of a
free state." They surround and kill the man as they had been commanded; but the
Aeduan horsemen all return to Caesar.
8.
When these things were done [and] Labienus, left on the
continent with three legions and 2,000 horse, to defend the harbors and provide
corn, and discover what was going on in Gaul, and take measures
according to the occasion and according to the circumstance; he himself, with
five legions and a number of horse, equal to that which he was leaving on the
continent, set sail at sun-set, and [though for a time] borne forward by a
gentle south-west wind, he did not maintain his course, in consequence of the
wind dying away about midnight, and being carried on too far by the tide, when
the sun rose, espied Britain passed
on his left. Then, again, following the change of tide, he urged on with the
oars that he might make that part of the island in which he had discovered the
preceding summer, that there was the best landing-place, and in this affair the
spirit of our soldiers was very much to be extolled; for they with the
transports and heavy ships, the labor of rowing not being [for a moment]
discontinued, equaled the speed of the ships of war. All the ships reached Britain nearly
at mid-day; nor was there seen a [single] enemy in that place, but, as Caesar afterward found from some prisoners, though large
bodies of troops had assembled there, yet being alarmed by the great number of
our ships, more than eight hundred of which, including the ships of the
preceding year, and those private vessels which each had built for his own
convenience, had appeared at one time, they had quitted the coast and concealed
themselves among the higher points. 9.
Caesar, having disembarked his army and chosen a
convenient place for the camp, when he discovered from the prisoners in what
part the forces of the enemy had lodged themselves, having left ten cohorts and
300 horse at the sea, to be a guard to the ships, hastens to the enemy, at the
third watch, fearing the less for the ships, for this reason because he was
leaving them fastened at anchor upon an even and open shore; and he placed Q. Atrius over the guard of the ships. He himself, having
advanced by night about twelve miles, espied the forces of the enemy. They,
advancing to the river with their cavalry and chariots from the higher ground,
began to annoy our men and give battle. Being repulsed by our cavalry, they
concealed themselves in woods, as they had secured a place admirably fortified
by nature and by art, which, as it seemed, they had before prepared on account
of a civil war; for all entrances to it were shut up by a great number of felled
trees. They themselves rushed out of the woods to fight here and there, and
prevented our men from entering their fortifications. But the soldiers of the
seventh legion, having formed a testudo and thrown up a rampart against the
fortification, took the place and drove them out of the woods, receiving only a
few wounds. But Caesar forbade his men to pursue them
in their flight any great distance; both because he was ignorant of the nature
of the ground, and because, as a great part of the day was spent, he wished time
to be left for the fortification of the camp. 10.
The next day, early in the morning, he sent both foot-soldiers and horse in three
divisions on an expedition to pursue those who had fled. These having advanced a
little way, when already the rear [of the enemy] was in sight, some horse came
to Caesar from Quintus Atrius, to report
that the preceding night, a very great storm having arisen, almost all the ships
were dashed to pieces and cast upon the shore, because neither the anchors and
cables could resist, nor could the sailors and pilots sustain the violence of
the storm; and thus great damage was received by that collision of the ships.
11.
These things being known [to him], Caesar orders the
legions and cavalry to be recalled and to cease from their march; he himself
returns to the ships: he sees clearly before him almost the same things which he
had heard of from the messengers and by letter, so that, about forty ships being
lost, the remainder seemed capable of being repaired with much labor. Therefore
he selects workmen from the legions, and orders others to be sent for from the
continent; he writes to Labienus to build as many ships
as he could with those legions which were with him. He himself, though the
matter was one of great difficulty and labor, yet thought it to be most
expedient for all the ships to be brought up on shore and joined with the camp
by one fortification. In these matters he employed about ten days, the labor of
the soldiers being unremitting even during the hours of night. The ships having
been brought up on shore and the camp strongly fortified, he left the same
forces as he did before as a guard for the ships; he sets out in person for the
same place that he had returned from. When he had come thither, greater forces
of the Britons had already assembled at that place, the chief
command and management of the war having been intrusted to
Cassivellaunus, whose territories a river, which is called the
Thames,
separates, from the maritime states at about eighty miles from the sea. At an
earlier period perpetual wars had taken place between him and the other states;
but, greatly alarmed by our arrival, the Britons had placed him
over the whole war and the conduct of it. 12.
The interior portion of Britain is
inhabited by those of whom they say that it is handed down by tradition that
they were born in the island itself: the maritime portion by those who had
passed over from the country of the Belgae for the purpose of
plunder and making war; almost all of whom are called by the names of those
states from which being sprung they went thither, and having waged war,
continued there and began to cultivate the lands. The number of the people is
countless, and their buildings exceedingly numerous, for the most part very like
those of the Gauls: the number of cattle is great.
They use either brass or iron rings, determined at a certain weight, as their
money. Tin is produced in the midland regions; in the maritime, iron; but the
quantity of it is small: they employ brass, which is imported. There, as in
Gaul, is timber of every description, except beech and fir. They do
not regard it lawful to eat the hare, and the cock, and the goose; they,
however, breed them for amusement and pleasure. The climate is more temperate
than in Gaul, the colds being less
severe. 13.
The island is triangular in its form, and one of its sides is opposite to Gaul. One angle of this side, which is in Kent
, whither almost all ships from Gaul are directed, [looks] to
the east; the lower looks to the south. This side extends about 500 miles.
Another side lies toward Spain and the west, on which
part is Ireland , less, as
is reckoned, than Britain, by one
half: but the passage [from it] into Britain is of
equal distance with that from Gaul. In the middle of this
voyage, is an island, which is called Mona:
many smaller islands besides are supposed to lie [there], of which islands some
have written that at the time of the winter solstice it is night there for
thirty consecutive days. We, in our inquiries about that matter, ascertained
nothing, except that, by accurate measurements with water, we perceived the
nights to be shorter there than on the continent. The length of this side, as
their account states, is 700 miles. The third side is toward the north, to which
portion of the island no land is opposite; but an angle of that side looks
principally toward Germany . This side is
considered to be 800 miles in length. Thus the whole island is [about] 2,000
miles in circumference. 14.
The most civilized of all these nations are they who inhabit Kent
, which is entirely a maritime district, nor do they differ much from the
Gallic customs. Most of the inland inhabitants do not sow corn,
but live on milk and flesh, and are clad with skins. All the
Britains, indeed, dye themselves with wood, which occasions a
bluish color, and thereby have a more terrible appearance in fight. They wear
their hair long, and have every part of their body shaved except their head and
upper lip. Ten and even twelve have wives common to them, and particularly
brothers among brothers, and parents among their children; but if there be any
issue by these wives, they are reputed to be the children of those by whom
respectively each was first espoused when a virgin. 15.
The horse and charioteers of the enemy contended vigorously in a skirmish with
our cavalry on the march; yet so that our men were conquerors in all parts, and
drove them to their woods and hills; but, having slain a great many, they
pursued too eagerly, and lost some of their men. But the enemy, after some time
had elapsed, when our men were off their guard, and occupied in the
fortification of the camp, rushed out of the woods, and making an attack upon
those who were placed on duty before the camp, fought in a determined manner;
and two cohorts being sent by Caesar to their relief,
and these severally the first of two legions, when these had taken up their
position at a very small distance from each other, as our men were disconcerted
by the unusual mode of battle, the enemy broke through the middle of them most
courageously, and retreated thence in safety. That day, Q.
Laberius Durus, a tribune of the soldiers, was slain. The enemy,
since more cohorts were sent against them, were repulsed. 16.
In the whole of this method of fighting since the engagement took place under the
eyes of all and before the camp, it was perceived that our men, on account of
the weight of their arms, inasmuch as they could neither pursue [the enemy when]
retreating, nor dare quit their standards, were little suited to this kind of
enemy; that the horse also fought with great danger, because they [the
Britons] generally retreated even designedly, and, when they
had drawn off our men a short distance from the legions, leaped from their
chariots and fought on foot in unequal [and to them advantageous] battle. But
the system of cavalry engagement is wont to produce equal danger, and indeed the
same, both to those who retreat and to those who pursue. To this was added, that
they never fought in close order, but in small parties and at great distances,
and had detachments placed [in different parts], and then the one relieved the
other, and the vigorous and fresh succeeded the wearied. 17.
The following day the enemy halted on the hills, a distance from our camp, and
presented themselves in small parties, and began to challenge our horse to
battle with less spirit than the day before. But at noon, when Caesar had sent three legions, and all the cavalry, with C. Trebonius, the lieutenant, for the purpose of
foraging, they flew upon the foragers suddenly from all quarters, so that they
did not keep off [even] from the standards and the legions. Our men making an
attack on them vigorously, repulsed them; nor did they cease to pursue them
until the horse, relying on relief, as they saw the legions behind them, drove
the enemy precipitately before them, and slaying a great number of them, did not
give them the opportunity either of rallying, or halting, or leaping from their
chariots. Immediately after this retreat, the auxiliaries who had assembled from
all sides, departed; nor after that time did the enemy ever engage with us in
very large numbers. 18.
Caesar, discovering their design, leads his army into
the territories of Cassivellaunus to the river Thames; which
river can be forded in one place only and that with difficulty. When he had
arrived there, he perceives that numerous forces of the enemy were marshaled on
the other bank of the river; the bank also was defended by sharp stakes fixed in
front, and stakes of the same kind fixed under the water were covered by the
river. These things being discovered from [some] prisoners and deserters, Caesar, sending forward the cavalry, ordered the legions
to follow them immediately. But the soldiers advanced with such speed and such
ardor, though they stood above the water by their heads only, that the enemy
could not sustain the attack of the legions and of the horse, and quitted the
banks, and committed themselves to flight. 19.
Cassivellaunus, as we have stated above, all hope [rising out] of
battle being laid aside, the greater part of his forces being dismissed, and
about 4,000 charioteers only being left, used to observe our marches and retire
a little from the road, and conceal himself in intricate and woody places, and
in those neighborhoods in which he had discovered we were about to march, he
used to drive the cattle and the inhabitants from the fields into the woods;
and, when our cavalry, for the sake of plundering and ravaging the more freely,
scattered themselves among the fields, he used to send out charioteers from the
woods by all the well-known roads and paths, and to the great danger of our
horse, engage with them; and this source of fear hindered them from straggling
very extensively. The result was, that Caesar did not
allow excursions to be made to a great distance from the main body of the
legions, and ordered that damage should be done to the enemy in ravaging their
lands, and kindling fires only so far as the legionary soldiers could, by their
own exertion and marching, accomplish it. 20.
In the mean time, the Trinobantes, almost the most powerful state of
those parts, from which the young man, Mandubratius embracing the
protection of Caesar had come to the continent of Gaul to [meet] him (whose father, Imanuentius, had
possessed the sovereignty in that state, and had been killed by
Cassivellaunus; he himself had escaped death by flight), send
embassadors to Caesar, and promise that they will
surrender themselves to him and perform his commands; they entreat him to
protect Mandubratius from the violence of
Cassivellaunus, and send to their state some one to preside
over it, and possess the government. Caesar demands
forty hostages from them, and corn for his army, and sends
Mandubratius to them. They speedily performed the things
demanded, and sent hostages to the number appointed, and the corn. 21.
The Trinobantes being protected and secured from any violence of the
soldiers, the Cenimagni, the Segontiaci, the
Ancalites, the Bibroci, and the
Cassi, sending embassies, surrendered themselves to Caesar. From them he learns that the capital town of
Cassivellaunus was not far from that place, and was defended by
woods and morasses, and a very large number of men and of cattle had been
collected in it. (Now the Britons, when they have fortified the
intricate woods, in which they are wont to assemble for the purpose of avoiding
the incursion of an enemy, with an intrenchment and a rampart, call them a
town.) Thither he proceeds with his legions: he finds the place
admirably fortified by nature and art; he, however, undertakes to attack it in
two directions. The enemy, having remained only a short time, did not sustain
the attack of our soldiers, and hurried away on the other side of the town. A
great amount of cattle was found there, and many of the enemy were taken and
slain in their flight. 22.
While these things are going forward in those places, Cassivellaunus
sends messengers into Kent
, which, we have observed above, is on the sea, over which districts four
several kings reigned, Cingetorix, Carvilius,
Taximagulus and Segonax, and commands them to
collect all their forces, and unexpectedly assail and storm the naval camp. When
they had come to the camp, our men, after making a sally, slaying many of their
men, and also capturing a distinguished leader named Lugotorix,
brought back their own men in safety. Cassivellaunus, when this
battle was reported to him as so many losses had been sustained, and his
territories laid waste, being alarmed most of all by the desertion of the
states, sends embassadors to Caesar [to treat] about a
surrender through the mediation of Commius the
Atrebatian. Caesar, since he had
determined to pass the winter on the continent, on account of the sudden revolts
of Gaul, and as much of the summer did not remain, and he perceived
that even that could be easily protracted, demands hostages, and prescribes what
tribute Britain should
pay each year to the Roman people; he forbids and
commands Cassivellaunus that he wage not war against
Mandubratius or the Trinobantes. 23.
When he had received the hostages, he leads back the army to the sea, and finds
the ships repaired. After launching these, because he had a large number of
prisoners, and some of the ships had been lost in the storm, he determines to
convey back his army at two embarkations. And it so happened, that out of so
large a number of ships, in so many voyages, neither in this nor in the previous
year was any ship missing which conveyed soldiers; but very few out of those
which were sent back to him from the continent empty, as the soldiers of the
former convoy had been disembarked, and out of those (sixty in number) which
Labienus had taken care to have built, reached
their destination; almost all the rest were driven back, and when Caesar had waited for them for some time in vain, lest he
should be debarred from a voyage by the season of the year, inasmuch as the
equinox was at hand, he of necessity stowed his soldiers the more closely, and,
a very great calm coming on, after he had weighed anchor at the beginning of the
second watch, he reached land at break of day and brought in all the ships in
safety. 24.
The ships having been drawn up and a general assembly of the Gauls held at Samarobriva, because the
corn that year had not prospered in Gaul by reason of the droughts,
he was compelled to station his army in its winter-quarters differently from the
former years, and to distribute the legions among several states: one of them he
gave to C. Fabius, his lieutenant, to be marched into
the territories of the Morini; a second to Q.
Cicero, into those of the Nervii; a third to L. Roscius, into those of the Essui; a
fourth he ordered to winter with T. Labienus among the
Remi in the confines of the Treviri ; he stationed three in Belgium ; over these he
appointed M. Crassus, his questor, and L. Munatius Plancus and C.
Trebonius, his lieutenants. One legion which he had raised last on
the other side of the Po, and five cohorts, he sent among the
Eburones, the greatest portion of whom lie between the Meuse and the Rhine , [and] who were under
the government of Ambiorix and Cativolcus. He ordered
Q. Titurius Sabinus and L.
Aurunculeius Cotta, his lieutenants, to take command of these
soldiers. The legions being distributed in this manner, he thought he could most
easily remedy the scarcity of corn and yet the winter-quarters of all these
legions (except that which he had given to L. Roscius,
to be led into the most peaceful and tranquil neighborhood) were comprehended
within [about] 100 miles. He himself in the mean while, until he had stationed
the legions and knew that the several winter-quarters were fortified, determined
to stay in Gaul. 25.
There was among the Carnutes a man named Tasgetius,
born of very high rank, whose ancestors had held the sovereignty in his state.
To him Caesar had restored the position of his
ancestors, in consideration of his prowess and attachment toward him, because in
all his wars he had availed himself of his valuable services. His personal
enemies had killed him when in the third year of his reign, many even of his own
state being openly promoters [of that act] This event is related to Caesar. He fearing, because several were involved in the
act, that the state might revolt at their instigation, orders Lucius
Plancus, with a legion, to proceed quickly from Belgium to the Carnutes, and winter there, and arrest
and send to him the persons by whose instrumentality he should discover that
Tasgetius was slain. In the mean time, he was apprised by all
the lieutenants and questors to whom he had assigned the legions, that they had
arrived in winter-quarters, and that the place for the quarters was fortified.
26.
About fifteen days after they had come into winter-quarters, the beginning of a
sudden insurrection and revolt arose from Ambiorix and
Cativolcus, who, though they had met with Sabinus and Cotta at the borders of their
kingdom, and had conveyed corn into our winter-quarters, induced by the messages
of Indutiomarus, one of the Treviri , excited their people, and after having suddenly assailed
the soldiers engaged in procuring wood, came with a large body to attack the
camp. When our men had speedily taken up arms and had ascended the rampart, and
sending out some Spanish horse on one side, had proved conquerors
in a cavalry action, the enemy, despairing of success, drew off their troops
from the assault. Then they shouted, according to their custom, that some of our
men should go forward to a conference, [alleging] that they had some things
which they desired to say respecting the common interest, by which they trusted
their disputes could be removed. 27.
C. Arpineius, a Roman knight,
the intimate friend of Q. Titurius, and with him, Q. Junius, a certain person from Spain, who already
on previous occasions, had been accustomed to go to Ambiorix, at
Caesar's mission, is sent to them for the purpose
of a conference: before them Ambiorix spoke to this effect: "That
he confessed, that for Caesar's kindness toward him, he
was very much indebted to him, inasmuch as by his aid he had been freed from a
tribute which he had been accustomed to pay to the Aduatuci, his
neighbors; and because his own son and the son of his brother had been sent back
to him, whom, when sent in the number of hostages, the Aduatuci had
detained among them in slavery and in chains; and that he had not done that
which he had done in regard to the attacking of the camp, either by his own
judgment or desire, but by the compulsion of his state; and that his government
was of that nature, that the people had as much authority over him as he over
the people. To the state moreover the occasion of the war was this-that it could
not withstand the sudden combination of the Gauls;
that he could easily prove this from his own weakness, since he was not so
little versed in affairs as to presume that with his forces he could conquer the
Roman people; but that it was the common
resolution of Gaul; that that day was
appointed for the storming of all Caesar's
winter-quarters, in order that no legion should be able to come to the relief of
another legion, that Gauls could not easily deny
Gauls, especially when a measure seemed entered
into for recovering their common freedom. Since he had performed his duty to
them on the score of patriotism [he said], he has now regard to gratitude for
the kindness of Caesar; that he warned, that he prayed
Titurius by the claims of hospitality, to consult
for his and his soldiers' safely; that a large force of the Germans had been hired and had passed the Rhine ; that it
would arrive in two days: that it was for them to consider whether they thought
fit, before the nearest people perceived it, to lead off their soldiers when
drawn out of winter-quarters, either to Cicero or to
Labienus; one of whom was about fifty miles distant
from them, the other rather more; that this he promised and confirmed by oath,
that he would give them a safe passage through his territories; and when he did
that, he was both consulting for his own state, because it would be relieved
from the winter-quarters, and also making a requital to Caesar for his obligations." 28.
Arpineius and Junius relate to
the lieutenants what they had heard. They, greatly alarmed by the unexpected
affair, though those things were spoken by an enemy, still thought they were not
to be disregarded; and they were especially influenced by this consideration,
that it was scarcely credible that the obscure and humble state of the
Eburones had dared to make war upon the Roman people of their own accord. Accordingly, they refer the matter
to a council, and a great controversy arises among them. L.
Aurunculeius, and several tribunes of the soldiers and the centurions
of the first rank, were of opinion "that nothing should be done hastily, and
that they should not depart from the camp without Caesar's orders;" they declared, "that any forces of the Germans, however great, might be encountered by
fortified winter-quarters; that this fact was a proof [of it]; that they had
sustained the first assault of the Germans most
valiantly, inflicting many wounds upon them; that they were not distressed for
corn; that in the mean time relief would come both from the nearest
winter-quarters and from Caesar; lastly, they put the
query, "what could be more undetermined, more undignified, than to adopt
measures respecting the most important affairs on the authority of an enemy?"
29.
In opposition to those things, Titurius exclaimed, "That
they would do this too late, when greater forces of the enemy, after a junction
with the Germans, should have assembled; or when some
disaster had been received in the neighboring winter-quarters; that the
opportunity for deliberating was short; that he believed that Caesar had set forth into Italy, as the
Carnutes would not otherwise have taken the measure of slaying
Tasgetius, nor would the Eburones, if he had been
present, have come to the camp with so great defiance of us; that he did not
regard the enemy, but the fact, as the authority; that the Rhine
was near; that the death of Ariovistus and our previous
victories were subjects of great indignation to the Germans; that Gaul was inflamed, that after
having received so many defeats she was reduced under the sway of the Roman people, her pristine glory in military matters
being extinguished." Lastly, "who would persuade himself of this, that
Ambiorix had resorted to a design of that nature without sure
grounds? That his own opinion was safe on either side; if there be nothing very
formidable, they would go without danger to the nearest legion; if all Gaul conspired with the Germans, their
only safety lay in dispatch. What issue would the advice of Cotta and of those who differed from him, have? from which, if
immediate danger was not to be dreaded, yet certainly famine, by a protracted
siege, was." 30.
This discussion having been held on the two sides, when opposition was offered
strenuously by Cotta and the principal officers,
"Prevail," said Sabinus, "if so you wish it;" and he
said it with a louder voice, that a great portion of the soldiers might hear
him; "nor am I the person among you," he said, "who is most powerfully alarmed
by the danger of death; these will be aware of it, and then, if any thing
disastrous shall have occurred, they will demand a reckoning at your hands;
these, who, if it were permitted by you, united three days hence with the
nearest winter-quarters, may encounter the common condition of war with the
rest, and not, as if forced away and separated far from the rest, perish either
by the sword or by famine." 31.
They rise from the council, detain both, and entreat, that "they do not bring the
matter into the greatest jeopardy by their dissension and obstinacy; the affair
was an easy one, if only they all thought and approved of the same thing,
whether they remain or depart; on the other hand, they saw no security in
dissension." The matter is prolonged by debate till midnight. At last Cotta, being overruled, yields his assent; the opinion of
Sabinus prevails. It is proclaimed that they will
march at day-break; the remainder of the night is spent without sleep, since
every soldier was inspecting his property, [to see] what he could carry with
him, and what, out of the appurtenances of the winter-quarters, he would be
compelled to leave; every reason is suggested to show why they could not stay
without danger, and how that danger would be increased by the fatigue of the
soldiers and their want of sleep. At break of day they quit the camp, in a very
extended line and with a very large amount of baggage, in such a manner as men
who were convinced that the advice was given by Ambiorix, not as an
enemy, but as most friendly [toward them]. 32.
But the enemy, after they had made the discovery of their intended departure by
the noise during the night and their not retiring to rest, having placed an
ambuscade in two divisions in the woods, in a suitable and concealed place, two
miles from the camp, waited for the arrival of the Romans: and when the greater part of the line of march had descended
into a considerable valley, they suddenly presented themselves on either side of
that valley, and began both to harass the rear and hinder the van from
ascending, and to give battle in a place exceedingly disadvantageous to our men.
33.
Then at length Titurius, as one who had provided nothing
beforehand, was confused, ran to and fro, and set about arranging his troops;
these very things, however, he did timidly and in such a manner that all
resources seemed to fail him: which generally happens to those who are compelled
to take council in the action itself. But Cotta, who
had reflected that these things might occur on the march, and on that account
had not been an adviser of the departure, was wanting to the common safety in no
respect; both in addressing and encouraging the soldiers, he performed the
duties of a general, and in the battle those of a soldier. And since they [Titurius and Cotta] could less
easily perform every thing by themselves, and provide what was to be done in
each place, by reason of the length of the line of march, they ordered [the
officers] to give the command that they should leave the baggage and form
themselves into an orb, which measure, though in a contingency of that nature it
was not to be condemned, still turned out unfortunately; for it both diminished
the hope of our soldiers and rendered the enemy more eager for the fight,
because it appeared that this was not done without the greatest fear and
despair. Besides that happened, which would necessarily be the case, that the
soldiers for the most part quitted their ensigns and hurried to seek and carry
off from the baggage whatever each thought valuable, and all parts were filled
with uproar and lamentation. 34.
But judgment was not wanting to the barbarians; for their leaders ordered [the
officers] to proclaim through the ranks "that no man should quit his place; that
the booty was theirs, and for them was reserved whatever the Romans should leave; therefore let them consider that all things
depended on their victory. Our men were equal to them in fighting, both in
courage and in number, and though they were deserted by their leader and by
fortune, yet they still placed all hope of safety in their valor, and as often
as any cohort sallied forth on that side, a great number of the enemy usually
fell. Ambiorix, when he observed this, orders the command to be
issued that they throw their weapons from a distance and do not approach too
near, and in whatever direction the Romans should
make an attack, there give way (from the lightness of their appointments and
from their daily practice no damage could be done them); [but] pursue them when
betaking themselves to their standards again. 35.
Which command having been most carefully obeyed, when any cohort had quitted the
circle and made a charge, the enemy fled very precipitately. In the mean time,
that part of the Roman army, of necessity, was left
unprotected, and the weapons received on their open flank. Again, when they had
begun to return to that place from which they had advanced, they were surrounded
both by those who had retreated and by those who stood next them; but if, on the
other hand, they wish to keep their place, neither was an opportunity left for
valor, nor could they, being crowded together, escape the weapons cast by so
large a body of men. Yet, though assailed by so many disadvantages, [and] having
received many wounds, they withstood the enemy, and, a great portion of the day
being spent, though they fought from day-break till the eighth hour, they did
nothing which was unworthy of them. At length, each thigh of T. Balventius, who the year before had been chief centurion, a brave
man and one of great authority, is pierced with a javelin; Q.
Lucanius, of the same rank, fighting most valiantly, is slain while
he assists his son when surrounded by the enemy; L.
Cotta, the lieutenant, when encouraging all the cohorts and
companies, is wounded full in the mouth by a sling. 36.
Much troubled by these events, Q. Titurius, when he had
perceived Ambiorix in the distance encouraging his men, sends to
him his interpreter, Cn. Pompey, to beg that he would spare him and
his soldiers. He, when addressed, replied, "If he wishes to confer with him, it
was permitted; that he hoped what pertained to the safety of the soldiers could
be obtained from the people; that to him however certainly no injury would be
done, and that he pledged his faith to that effect." He consults with Cotta, who had been wounded, whether it would appear
right to retire from battle, and confer with Ambiorix; [saying]
that he hoped to be able to succeed respecting his own and the soldiers' safety.
Cotta says he will not go to an armed enemy, and in
that perseveres. 37.
Sabinus orders those tribunes of the soldiers whom he
had at the time around him, and the centurions of the first ranks, to follow
him, and when he had approached near to Ambiorix, being ordered to
throw down his arms, he obeys the order and commands his men to do the same. In
the mean time, while they treat upon the terms, and a longer debate than
necessary is designedly entered into by Ambiorix, being surrounded
by degrees, he is slain. Then they, according to their custom, shout out
"Victory," and raise their war-cry, and, making an attack on our men, break
their ranks. There L. Cotta, while fighting, is slain,
together with the greater part of the soldiers; the rest betake themselves to
the camp, from which they had marched forth, and one of them, L. Petrosidius, the standard bearer, when he was overpowered by the
great number of the enemy, threw the eagle within the intrenchments and is
himself slain while fighting with the greatest courage before the camp. They
with difficulty sustain the attack till night; despairing of safety, they all to
a man destroy themselves in the night. A few escaping from the battle, made
their way to Labienus at winter-quarters, after
wandering at random through the woods, and inform him of these events 38.
Elated by this victory, Ambiorix marches immediately
with his cavalry to the Aduatuci, who bordered on his kingdom; he
halts neither day nor night, and orders the infantry to follow him closely.
Having related the exploit and roused the Aduatuci, the next day he
arrived among the Nervii, and entreats "that they should not throw
away the opportunity of liberating themselves forever and of punishing the Romans for those wrongs which they had received from
them;" [he tells them] "that two lieutenants have been slain, and that a large
portion of the army has perished; that it was not a matter of difficulty for the
legion which was wintering with Cicero to be cut off,
when suddenly assaulted; he declares himself ready to cooperate in that design.
He easily gains over the Nervii by this speech. 39.
Accordingly, messengers having been forthwith dispatched to the
Centrones, the Grudii, the Levaci,
the Pleumoxii, and the Geiduni, all of whom are under
their government, they assemble as large bodies as they can, and rush
unexpectedly to the winter-quarters of Cicero, the
report of the death of Titurius not having as yet been
conveyed to him. That also occurred to him, which was the consequence of a
necessary work-that some soldiers who had gone off into the woods for the
purpose of procuring timber and therewith constructing fortifications, were
intercepted by the sudden arrival of [the enemy's] horse. These having been
entrapped, the Eburones, the Nervii, and the
Aduatici and all their allies and dependents, begin to attack
the legion: our men quickly run together to arms and mount the rampart; they
sustained the attack that day with great difficulty, since the enemy placed all
their hope in dispatch, and felt assured that, if they obtained this victory,
they would be conquerors forever. 40.
Letters are immediately sent to Caesar by Cicero, great rewards being offered [to the messengers]
if they carried them through. All these passes having been beset, those who were
sent are intercepted. During the night as many as 120 towers are raised with
incredible dispatch out of the timber which they had collected for the purpose
of fortification: the things which seemed necessary to the work are completed.
The following day the enemy, having collected far greater forces, attack the
camp [and] fill up the ditch. Resistance is made by our men in the same manner
as the day before; this same thing is done afterward during the remaining days.
The work is carried on incessantly in the night: not even to the sick, or
wounded, is opportunity given for rest: whatever things are required for
resisting the assault of the next day are provided during the night: many stakes
burned at the end, and a large number of mural pikes are procured: towers are
built up, battlements and parapets are formed of interwoven hurdles. Cicero himself, though he was in very weak health, did
not leave himself the night-time for repose, so that he was forced to spare
himself by the spontaneous movement and entreaties of the soldiers. 41.
Then these leaders and chiefs of the Nervii, who had any intimacy
and grounds of friendship with Cicero, say they desire
to confer with him. When permission was granted, they recount the same things
which Ambiorix had related to Titurius,
namely, "that all Gaul was in arms, that the Germans had passed the Rhine , that the
winter-quarters of Caesar and of the others were
attacked." They report in addition also, about the death of Sabinus. They point to Ambiorix for the purpose of
obtaining credence; "they are mistaken," say they, "if they hoped for any relief
from those who distrust their own affairs; that they bear such feelings toward
Cicero and the Roman
people that they deny them nothing but winter-quarters, and are unwilling that
the practice should become constant; that through their [the
Nervii's] means it is possible for them [the Romans]
to depart from their winter-quarters safely and to proceed without fear into
whatever parts they desire." To these Cicero made only
one reply: "that it is not the custom of the Roman
people to accept any condition from an armed enemy: if they are willing to lay
down their arms, they may employ him as their advocate and send embassadors to
Caesar: that he believed, from his
[Caesar's] justice, they would obtain the things which they
might request." 42.
Disappointed in this hope, the Nervii surround the winter-quarters
with a rampart eleven feet high, and a ditch thirteen feet in depth. These
military works they had learned from our men in the intercourse of former years,
and, having taken some of our army prisoners, were instructed by them: but, as
they had no supply of iron tools which are requisite for this service, they were
forced to cut the turf with their swords, and to empty out the earth with their
hands and cloaks, from which circumstance, the vast number of the men could be
inferred; for in less than three hours they completed a fortification of ten
miles in circumference; and during the rest of the days they began to prepare
and construct towers of the height of the ramparts, and grappling irons, and
mantelets, which the same prisoners had taught them. 43.
On the seventh day of the attack, a very high wind having sprung up, they began
to discharge by their slings hot balls made of burned or hardened clay, and
heated javelins, upon the huts, which, after the Gallic custom,
were thatched with straw. These quickly took fire, and by the violence of the
wind, scattered their flames in every part of the camp. The enemy following up
their success with a very loud shout, as if victory were already obtained and
secured, began to advance their towers and mantelets, and climb the rampart with
ladders. But so great was the courage of our soldiers, and such their presence
of mind, that though they were scorched on all sides, and harassed by a vast
number of weapons, and were aware that their baggage and their possessions were
burning, not only did no one quit the rampart for the purpose of withdrawing
from the scene, but scarcely did any one even then look behind; and they all
fought most vigorously and most valiantly. This day was by far the most
calamitous to our men; it had this result, however, that on that day the largest
number of the enemy was wounded and slain, since they had crowded beneath the
very rampart, and the hindmost did not afford the foremost a retreat. The flame
having abated a little, and a tower having been brought up in a particular place
and touching the rampart, the centurions of the third cohort retired from the
place in which they were standing, and drew off all their men: they began to
call on the enemy by gestures and by words, to enter if they wished; but none of
them dared to advance. Then stones having been cast from every quarter, the
enemy were dislodged, and their tower set on fire. 44.
In that legion there were two very brave men, centurions, who were now
approaching the first ranks, T. Pulfio, and L. Varenus. These used to have continual disputes between
them which of them should be preferred, and every year used to contend for
promotion with the utmost animosity. When the fight was going on most vigorously
before the fortifications, Pulfio, one of them, says,
"Why do you hesitate, Varenus? or what [better]
opportunity of signalizing your valor do you seek? This very day shall decide
our disputes." When he had uttered these words, he proceeds beyond the
fortifications, and rushes on that part of the enemy which appeared the
thickest. Nor does Varenus remain within the rampart,
but respecting the high opinion of all, follows close after. Then, when an
inconsiderable space intervened, Pulfio throws his
javelin at the enemy, and pierces one of the multitude who was running up, and
while the latter was wounded and slain, the enemy cover him with their shields,
and all throw their weapons at the other and afford him no opportunity of
retreating. The shield of Pulfio is pierced and a
javelin is fastened in his belt. This circumstance turns aside his scabbard and
obstructs his right hand when attempting to draw his sword: the enemy crowd
around him when [thus] embarrassed. His rival runs up to him and succors him in
this emergency. Immediately the whole host turn from Pulfio to him, supposing the other to be pierced through by the
javelin. Varenus rushes on briskly with his sword and
carries on the combat hand to hand, and having slain one man, for a short time
drove back the rest: while he urges on too eagerly, slipping into a hollow, he
fell. To him, in his turn, when surrounded, Pulfio
brings relief; and both having slain a great number, retreat into the
fortifications amid the highest applause. Fortune so dealt with both in this
rivalry and conflict, that the one competitor was a succor and a safeguard to
the other, nor could it be determined which of the two appeared worthy of being
preferred to the other. 45.
In proportion as the attack became daily more formidable and violent, and
particularly, because, as a great number of the soldiers were exhausted with
wounds, the matter had come to a small number of defenders, more frequent
letters and messages were sent to Caesar; a part of
which messengers were taken and tortured to death in the sight of our soldiers.
There was within our camp a certain Nervian, by name
Vertico, born in a distinguished position, who in the beginning
of the blockade had deserted to Cicero, and had
exhibited his fidelity to him. He persuades his slave, by the hope of freedom,
and by great rewards, to convey a letter to Caesar.
This he carries out bound about his javelin; and mixing among the Gauls without any suspicion by being a Gaul, he reaches Caesar. From him they
received information of the imminent danger of Cicero
and the legion. 46.
Caesar having received the letter about the eleventh
hour of the day, immediately sends a messenger to the Bellovaci, to
M. Crassus, questor there, whose winter-quarters
were twenty-five miles distant from him. He orders the legion to set forward in
the middle of the night, and come to him with dispatch. Crassus sets out with the messenger. He sends another to C. Fabius, the lieutenant, ordering him to lead forth his
legion into the territories of the Atrebates, to which he knew his
march must be made. He writes to Labienus to come with
his legion to the frontiers of the Nervii, if he could do so to the
advantage of the commonwealth: he does not consider that the remaining portion
of the army, because it was somewhat further distant, should be waited for; but
assembles about 400 horse from the nearest winter-quarters. 47.
Having been apprised of the arrival of Crassus by the
scouts at about the third hour, he advances twenty miles that day. He appoints
Crassus over Samarobriva and assigns
him a legion, because he was leaving there the baggage of the army, the hostages
of the states, the public documents, and all the corn, which he had conveyed
thither for passing the winter. Fabius, without
delaying a moment, meets him on the march with his legion, as he had been
commanded. Labienus, having learned the death of Sabinus and the destruction of the cohorts, as all the
forces of the Treviri had come against him, beginning to fear lest, if he made a
departure from his winter-quarters, resembling a flight, he should not be able
to support the attack of the enemy, particularly since he knew them to be elated
by their recent victory, sends back a letter to Caesar,
informing him with what great hazard he would lead out his legion from
winter-quarters; he relates at large the affairs which had taken place among the
Eburones; he informs him that all the infantry and cavalry of
the Treviri had encamped at a distance of only three miles from his own
camp. 48.
Caesar, approving of his motives, although he was
disappointed in his expectation of three legions, and reduced to two, yet placed
his only hopes of the common safety in dispatch. He goes into the territories of
the Nervii by long marches. There he learns from some prisoners
what things are going on in the camp of Cicero, and in
how great jeopardy the affair is. Then with great rewards he induces a certain
man of the Gallic horse to convey a letter to Cicero. This he sends written in Greek
characters, lest the letter being intercepted, our measures should be discovered
by the enemy. He directs him, if he should be unable to enter, to throw his
spear with the letter fastened to the thong, inside the fortifications of the
camp. He writes in the letter, that he having set out with his legions, will
quickly be there: he entreats him to maintain his ancient valor. The Gaul apprehending danger, throws his spear as he has been directed.
Is by chance stuck in a tower, and, not being observed by our men for two days,
was seen by a certain soldier on the third day: when taken down, it was carried
to Cicero. He, after perusing it, reads it out in an
assembly of the soldiers, and fills all with the greatest joy. Then the smoke of
the fires was seen in the distance, a circumstance which banished all doubt of
the arrival of the legions. 49.
The Gauls, having discovered the matter through their scouts,
abandon the blockade, and march toward Caesar with all
their forces; these were about 60,000 armed men. Cicero, an opportunity being now afforded, again begs of that
Vertico, the Gaul, whom we mentioned above,
to convey back a letter to Caesar; he advises him to
perform his journey warily; he writes in the letter that the enemy had departed
and had turned their entire force against him. When this letter was brought to
him about the middle of the night, Caesar apprises his
soldiers of its contents, and inspires them with courage for fighting: the
following day, at the dawn, he moves his camp, and, having proceeded four miles,
he espies the forces of the enemy on the other side of a considerable valley and
rivulet. It was an affair of great danger to fight with such large forces in a
disadvantageous situation. For the present, therefore, inasmuch as he knew that
Cicero was released from the blockade, and thought
that he might, on that account, relax his speed, he halted there and fortifies a
camp in the most favorable position he can. And this, though it was small in
itself, [there being] scarcely 7,000 men, and these too without baggage, still
by the narrowness of the passages, he contracts as much as he can, with this
object, that he may come into the greatest contempt with the enemy. In the mean
while scouts having been sent in all directions, he examines by what most
convenient path he might cross the valley. 50.
That day, slight skirmishes of cavalry having taken place near the river, both
armies kept in their own positions: the Gauls,
because they were awaiting larger forces which had not then arrived; Caesar, [to see] if perchance by pretense of fear he
could allure the enemy toward his position, so that he might engage in battle,
in front of his camp, on this side of the valley; if he could not accomplish
this, that, having inquired about the passes, he might cross the valley and the
river with the less hazard. At daybreak the cavalry of the enemy approaches to
the camp and joins battle with our horse. Caesar orders
the horse to give way purposely, and retreat to the camp: at the same time he
orders the camp to be fortified with a higher rampart in all directions, the
gates to be barricaded, and in executing these things as much confusion to be
shown as possible, and to perform them under the pretense of fear. 51.
Induced by all these things, the enemy lead over their forces and draw up their
line in a disadvantageous position; and as our men also had been led down from
the ramparts, they approach nearer, and throw their weapons into the
fortification from all sides, and sending heralds round, order it to be
proclaimed that, if "any, either Gaul or Roman, was willing to go over to them before the third hour, it was
permitted; after that time there would not be permission;" and so much did they
disregard our men, that the gates having been blocked up with single rows of
turf as a mere appearance, because they did not seem able to burst in that way,
some began to pull down the rampart with their hands, others to fill up the
trenches. Then Caesar, making a sally from all the
gates, and sending out the cavalry, soon puts the enemy to flight, so that no
one at all stood his ground with the intention of fighting; and he slew a great
number of them, and deprived all of their arms. 52.
Caesar, fearing to pursue them very far, because woods
and morasses intervened, and also [because] he saw that they suffered no small
loss in abandoning their position, reaches Cicero the
same day with all his forces safe. He witnesses with surprise the towers,
mantelets, and [other] fortifications belonging to the enemy: the legion having
been drawn out, he finds that even every tenth soldier had not escaped without
wounds. From all these things he judges with what danger and with what great
courage matters had been conducted; he commends Cicero
according to his desert, and likewise the legion; he addresses individually the
centurions and the tribunes of the soldiers, whose valor he had discovered to
have been signal. He receives information of the death of Sabinus and Cotta from the prisoners. An
assembly being held the following day, he states the occurrence; he consoles and
encourages the soldiers; he suggests, that the disaster, which had been
occasioned by the misconduct and rashness of his lieutenant, should be borne
with a patient mind, because by the favor of the immortal gods and their own
valor, neither was lasting joy left to the enemy, nor very lasting grief to
them. 53.
In the mean while the report respecting the victory of Caesar is conveyed to Labienus through the
country of the Remi with incredible speed, so that,
though he was about sixty miles distant from the winter-quarter of Cicero, and Caesar had arrived
there after the ninth hour, before midnight a shout arose at the gates of the
camp, by which shout an indication of the victory and a congratulation on the
part of the Remi were given to Labienus. This report having been carried to the Treviri , Indutiomarus, who had resolved to attack the
camp of Labienus the following day, flies by night and
leads back all his forces into the country of the Treviri . Caesar sends back Fabius with his legion to his winter-quarters; he himself
determines to winter with three legions near Samarobriva in three
different quarters, and, because such great commotions had arisen in Gaul, he resolved to remain during the whole winter with the army
himself. For the disaster respecting the death of Sabinus having been circulated among them, almost all the states of
Gaul were deliberating about war, sending messengers and embassies
into all quarters, inquiring what further measure they should take, and holding
councils by night in secluded places. Nor did any period of the whole winter
pass over without fresh anxiety to Caesar, or, without
his receiving some intelligence respecting the meetings and commotions of the
Gauls. Among these, he is informed by L. Roscius, the lieutenant whom he had placed over the
thirteenth legion, that large forces of those states of the Gauls, which are called the Armoricae, had assembled
for the purpose of attacking him and were not more than eight miles distant; but
intelligence respecting the victory of Caesar being
carried [to them], had retreated in such a manner that their departure appeared
like a flight. 54.
But Caesar, having summoned to him the principal persons
of each state, in one case by alarming them, since he declared that he knew what
was going on, and in another case by encouraging them, retained a great part of
Gaul in its allegiance. The Senones , however, which is a state eminently powerful and one of
great influence among the Gauls, attempting by
general design to slay Cavarinus, whom Caesar had created king among them (whose brother,
Moritasgus, had held the sovereignty at the period of the
arrival of Caesar in Gaul, and whose
ancestors had also previously held it), when he discovered their plot and fled,
pursued him even to the frontiers [of the state], and drove him from his kingdom
and his home; and, after having sent embassadors to Caesar for the purpose of concluding a peace, when he ordered all
their senate to come to him, did not obey that command. So far did it operate
among those barbarian people, that there were found some to be the first to wage
war; and so great a change of inclinations did it produce in all, that, except
the Aedui and the Remi, whom Caesar had always held in especial honor, the one people
for their long standing and uniform fidelity toward the Roman people, the other for their late service in the
Gallic war, there was scarcely a state which was not suspected
by us. And I do not know whether that ought much to be wondered at, as well for
several other reasons, as particularly because they who ranked above all nations
for prowess in war, most keenly regretted that they had lost so much of that
reputation as to submit to commands from the Roman
people. 55.
But the Triviri and Indutiomarus let no part of the
entire winter pass without sending embassadors across the Rhine
, importuning the states, promising money, and asserting that, as a large
portion of our army had been cut off, a much smaller portion remained. However,
none of the German States could be induced to cross the Rhine
, since "they had twice essayed it," they said, "in the war with
Ariovistus and in the passage of the Tenchtheri
there; that fortune was not to be tempted any more." Indutiomarus
disappointed in this expectation, nevertheless began to raise troops, and
discipline them, and procure horses from the neighboring people, and allure to
him by great rewards the outlaws and convicts throughout Gaul. And such
great influence had he already acquired for himself in Gaul by these
means, that embassies were flocking to him in all directions, and seeking,
publicly and privately, his favor and friendship. 56.
When he perceived that they were coming to him voluntarily; that on the one side
the Senones and the Carnutes were stimulated by their
consciousness of guilt, on the other side the Nervii and the
Aduatuci were preparing war against the Romans, and that forces of volunteers would not be wanting to him if
he began to advance from his own territories, he proclaims an armed council
(this according to the custom of the Gauls in the
commencement of war) at which, by a common law, all the youth were wont to
assemble in arms, whoever of them comes last is killed in the sight of the whole
assembly after being racked with every torture. In that council he declares
Cingetorix, the leader of the other faction, his own son-in-law
(whom we have above mentioned, as having embraced the protection of Caesar, and never having deserted him) an enemy and
confiscates his property. When these things were finished, he asserts in the
council that he, invited by the Senones and the Carnutes, and several other states of
Gaul, was about to march thither through the territories of the
Remi, devastate their lands, and attack the camp
of Labienus: before he does that, he informs them of
what he desires to be done. 57.
Labienus, since he was confining himself within a camp
strongly fortified by the nature of the ground and by art, had no apprehensions
as to his own and the legion's danger, but was devising that he might throw away
no opportunity of conducting the war successfully. Accordingly, the speech of
Indutiomarus, which he had delivered in the council, having
been made known [to him] by Cingetorix and his allies, he sends
messengers to the neighboring states and summons horse from all quarters: he
appoints to them a fixed day for assembling. In the mean time,
Indutiomarus, with all his cavalry, nearly every day used to
parade close to his [Labienus'] camp; at one time, that he might
inform himself of the situation of the camp; at another time, for the purpose of
conferring with or of intimidating him. Labienus
confined his men within the fortifications, and promoted the enemy's belief of
his fear by whatever methods he could. 58.
Since Indutiomarus was daily advancing up to the camp with greater
defiance, all the cavalry of the neighboring states which he [Labienus] had taken care to have sent for, having been admitted in
one night, he confined all his men within the camp by guards with such great
strictness, that that fact could by no means be reported or carried to the Treviri . In the mean while, Indutiomarus, according to
his daily practice, advances up to the camp and spends a great part of the day
there: his horse cast their weapons, and with very insulting language call out
our men to battle. No reply being given by our men, the enemy, when they thought
proper, depart toward evening in a disorderly and scattered manner, Labienus unexpectedly sends out all the cavalry by two
gates; he gives this command and prohibition, that, when the enemy should be
terrified and put to flight (which he foresaw would happen, as it did), they
should all make for Indutiomarus, and no one wound any man before
he should have seen him slain, because he was unwilling that he should escape,
in consequence of gaining time by the delay [occasioned by the pursuit] of the
rest. He offers great rewards for those who should kill him: he sends up the
cohorts as a relief to the horse. The issue justifies the policy of the man, and
since all aimed at one, Indutiomarus is slain, having been
overtaken at the very ford of the river, and his head is carried to the camp,
the horse, when returning, pursue and slay all whom they can. This affair having
been known, all the forces of the Eburones and the
Nervii which had assembled, depart; and for a short time after
this action, Caesar was less harassed in the government
of Gaul.
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