28.
The enemy being alarmed by the suddenness of the attack, were dislodged from the
wall and towers, and drew up, in form of a wedge, in the market place and the
open streets, with this intention that, if an attack should be made on any side,
they should fight with their line drawn up to receive it. When they saw no one
descending to the level ground, and the enemy extending themselves along the
entire wall in every direction, fearing lest every hope of flight should be cut
off, they cast away their arms, and sought, without stopping, the most remote
parts of the town. A part was then slain by the infantry when they were crowding
upon one another in the narrow passage of the gates; and a part having got
without the gates, were cut to pieces by the cavalry: nor was there one who was
anxious for the plunder. Thus, being excited by the massacre at Genabum and the fatigue of the siege, they spared neither those
worn out with years, women, or children. Finally, out of all that number, which
amounted to about forty thousand, scarcely eight hundred, who fled from the town
when they heard the first alarm, reached Vercingetorix in safety:
and he, the night being now far spent, received them in silence after their
flight (fearing that any sedition should arise in the camp from their entrance
in a body and the compassion of the soldiers), so that, having arranged his
friends and the chiefs of the states at a distance on the road, he took
precautions that they should be separated and conducted to their fellow
countrymen, to whatever part of the camp had been assigned to each state from
the beginning.
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