31.
When that assembly was dismissed, the same chiefs of states, who had before been
to Caesar, returned, and asked that they might be
allowed to treat with him privately (in secret) concerning the safety of
themselves and of all. That request having been obtained, they all threw
themselves in tears at Caesar's feet, [saying] that
they no less begged and earnestly desired that what they might say should not be
disclosed, than that they might obtain those things which they wished for;
inasmuch as they saw, that, if a disclosure was made, they should be put to the
greatest tortures. For these Divitiacus the Aeduan
spoke and told him: "That there were two parties in the whole of Gaul: that the Aedui stood at the head of one of these,
the Arverni of the other. After these had been violently struggling
with one another for the superiority for many years, it came to pass that the
Germans were called in for hire by the
Arverni and the Sequani. That about 15,000 of them
[i.e. of the Germans] had at first crossed the
Rhine
: but after that these wild and savage men had become enamored of the
lands and the refinement and the abundance of the Gauls, more were brought over, that there were now as many as
120,000 of them in Gaul: that with these the
Aedui and their dependents had repeatedly struggled in
arms-that they had been routed, and had sustained a great calamity-had lost all
their nobility, all their senate, all their cavalry. And that broken by such
engagements and calamities, although they had formerly been very powerful in
Gaul, both from their own valor and from the Roman people's hospitality and friendship, they were now compelled
to give the chief nobles of their state, as hostages to the
Sequani, and to bind their state by an oath, that they would
neither demand hostages in return, nor supplicate aid from the Roman people, nor refuse to be forever under their sway
and empire. That he was the only one out of all the state of the
Aedui, who could not be prevailed upon to take the oath or to
give his children as hostages. On that account he had fled from his state and
had gone to the senate at
Rome
to beseech aid, as he alone was bound neither by oath nor hostages. But
a worse thing had befallen the victorious Sequani than the
vanquished Aedui, for Ariovistus the king of the Germans, had settled in their territories, and had
seized upon a third of their land, which was the best in the whole of Gaul, and was now ordering them to depart from another third part,
because a few months previously 24,000 men of the Harudes had come
to him, for whom room and settlements must be provided. The consequence would
be, that in a few years they would all be driven from the territories of Gaul, and all the Germans would cross the
Rhine
; for neither must the land of Gaul be compared with the land
of the Germans, nor must the habit of living of the
latter be put on a level with that of the former. Moreover, [as for]
Ariovistus, no sooner did he defeat the forces of the Gauls in a battle which took place at Magetobria, than [he began] to lord it haughtily and
cruelly, to demand as hostages the children of all the principal nobles, and
wreak on them every kind of cruelty, if every thing was not done at his nod or
pleasure; that he was a savage, passionate, and reckless man, and that his
commands could no longer be borne. Unless there was some aid in Caesar and the Roman people,
the Gauls must all do the same thing that the Helvetii have done, [viz.] emigrate from their country,
and seek another dwelling place, other settlements remote from the Germans, and try whatever fortune may fall to their
lot. If these things were to be disclosed to Ariovistus,
[Divitiacus adds] that he doubts not that he would inflict the
most severe punishment on all the hostages who are in his possession, [and says]
that Caesar could, either by his own influence and by
that of his army, or by his late victory, or by name of the Roman people, intimidate him, so as to prevent a greater number of
Germans being brought over the
Rhine
, and could protect all Gaul from the outrages of
Ariovistus.
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