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24.
At the same time our horsemen, and light-armed infantry, who had been with those,
who, as I have related, were routed by the first assault of the enemy, as they
were betaking themselves into the camp, met the enemy face to face, and again
sought flight into another quarter; and the camp-followers who from the
Decuman Gate, and from the highest ridge of the hill had seen
our men pass the river as victors, when, after going out for the purposes of
plundering, they looked back and saw the enemy parading in our camp, committed
themselves precipitately to flight; at the same time there arose the cry and
shout of those who came with the baggage-train: and they (affrighted), were
carried some one way, some another. By all these circumstances the cavalry of
the
Treviri
were much alarmed, (whose reputation for courage is extraordinary among
the Gauls, and who had come to Caesar, being sent by their state as auxiliaries), and, when they
saw our camp filled with a large number of the enemy, the legions hard pressed
and almost held surrounded, the camp-retainers, horsemen, slingers, and
Numidians fleeing on all sides divided and scattered, they,
despairing of our affairs, hastened home, and related to their state that the
Romans were routed and conquered, [and] that the
enemy were in possession of their camp and baggage-train.
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