39.
While he is tarrying a few days at
Vesontio
, on account of corn and provisions; from the inquiries of our men and
the reports of the Gauls and traders (who asserted
that the Germans were men of huge stature, of
incredible valor and practice in arms-that oftentimes they, on encountering
them, could not bear even their countenance, and the fierceness of their
eyes)-so great a panic on a sudden seized the whole army, as to discompose the
minds and spirits of all in no slight degree. This first arose from the tribunes
of the soldiers, the prefects and the rest, who, having followed Caesar from the city [
Rome
] from motives of friendship, had no great experience in military
affairs. And alleging, some of them one reason, some another, which they said
made it necessary for them to depart, they requested that by his consent they
might be allowed to withdraw; some, influenced by shame, stayed behind in order
that they might avoid the suspicion of cowardice. These could neither compose
their countenance, nor even sometimes check their tears: but hidden in their
tents, either bewailed their fate, or deplored with their comrades the general
danger. Wills were sealed universally throughout the whole camp. By the
expressions and cowardice of these men, even those who possessed great
experience in the camp, both soldiers and centurions, and those [the decurions]
who were in command of the cavalry, were gradually disconcerted. Such of them as
wished to be considered less alarmed, said that they did not dread the enemy,
but feared the narrowness of the roads and the vastness of the forests which lay
between them and Ariovistus, or else that the supplies could not be
brought up readily enough. Some even declared to Caesar, that when he gave orders for the camp to be moved and the troops
to advance, the soldiers would not be obedient to the command, nor advance in
consequence of their fear.
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License.
An XML version of this text is available for download, with the additional restriction that you offer Perseus any modifications you make. Perseus provides credit for all accepted changes, storing new additions in a versioning system.