1.
Gaul being tranquil, Caesar, as he had
determined, sets out for Italy to hold the
provincial assizes. There he receives intelligence of the death of
Clodius; and, being informed of the decree of the senate, [to
the effect] that all the youth of Italy should take the
military oath, he determined to hold a levy throughout the entire province.
Report of these events is rapidly borne into Transalpine Gaul. The
Gauls themselves add to the report, and invent what the case
seemed to require, [namely] that Caesar was detained by
commotions in the city, and could not, amid so violent dissensions, come to his
army. Animated by this opportunity, they who already, previously to this
occurrence, were indignant that they were reduced beneath the dominion of Rome
, begin to organize their plans for war more openly and daringly. The
leading men of Gaul, having convened councils
among themselves in the woods, and retired places, complain of the death of
Acco: they point out that this fate may fall in turn on
themselves: they bewail the unhappy fate of Gaul; and by every sort of
promises and rewards, they earnestly solicit some to begin the war, and assert
the freedom of Gaul at the hazard of their
lives. They say that special care should be paid to this, that Caesar should be cut off from his army before their secret plans
should be divulged. That this was easy, because neither would the legions, in
the absence of their general, dare to leave their winter quarters, nor could the
general reach his army without a guard: finally, that it was better to be slain
in battle, than not to recover their ancient glory in war, and that freedom
which they had received from their forefathers.
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