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                <requestUrn>urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0551.tlg017.perseus-eng2:2.13.93-2.14.97</requestUrn>
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                <passage>
                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="edition" n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0551.tlg017.perseus-eng2" xml:lang="eng"><div n="2" type="textpart" subtype="book"><div n="13" type="textpart" subtype="chapter"><div n="93" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p>The soldiers ran together tumultuously without arms, and, as was their
						custom, saluted their commander who had suddenly appeared among them. When
						he bade them tell what they wanted they were so surprised that they did not
						venture to speak openly of the donative in his presence, but they adopted
						the more moderate course of demanding their discharge from the service,
						hoping that, since he needed soldiers for the unfinished wars, he would
						speak about the donative himself. But, contrary to the expectation of all,
						he replied without hesitation, " I discharge you." Then, to their still
						greater astonishment, and while the silence was most profound, he added,
						"And I will give you all that I have promised when I have my triumph with
						others." At this expression, as unexpected as it was kind to them, shame
						immediately took possession of all, and reflection, together with jealousy
						at the thought of their abandoning their commander in the midst of such
						great wars and of others joining in the triumph instead of themselves, and
						of their losing the gains of the war in Africa, which were expected to be
						great, and becoming enemies of Cæsar himself as well as of the
						opposite party. Moved by these fears they remained still more silent and
						embarrassed, hoping that Cæsar would yield and change his mind on
						account of his immediate necessity. But he remained silent also, until his
						friends urged him to say something more to them and not leave his old
						comrades of so many campaigns with a short and austere word. Then he began
						to speak, addressing them first as "citizens," not "fellow-soliders," which
						implied that they were already discharged from the army and were private
						individuals. </p></div><div n="94" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p>They could endure it no longer, but cried out that they repented of what they
						had done, and besought him to keep them in his service. But Cæsar
						turned away and was leaving the platform when they shouted with greater
						eagerness and urged him to stay and punish them for their misdeeds. He
						delayed a while longer, not going away and not turning back, but pretending
						to be undecided. At length he came back and said that he would not punish
						any of them, but that he was grieved that even the tenth legion, to which he
						had always given the first place of honor, should join in such a riot. "And
						this legion alone," he continued, "I will discharge from the service.
						Nevertheless, when I return from Africa I will give them all that I have
						promised. And when the wars are ended I will give lands to all, not as Sulla
						did by taking it from the present holders and colonizing the takers among
						the losers, and making them everlasting enemies to each other, but I will
						give the public land, and my own, and will purchase what may be needful."
						There was clapping of hands and joyful acclaim on all sides, but the tenth
						legion was plunged in grief because to them alone Cæsar appeared
						inexorable. They begged him to choose a portion of their number by lot and
						put them to death. But Cæsar, seeing that there was no need of
						stimulating them any further when they had repented so bitterly, became
						reconciled to all, and departed straightway for the war in Africa.</p></div></div><div n="14" type="textpart" subtype="chapter"><head>CHAPTER XIV</head><head>Cæsar sails for Africa -- The Forces arrayed against him --
							Battle of Thapsus -- Cato at Utica -- He commits Suicide -- Juba and
							Petreius kill each other</head><div n="95" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p>He crossed from Rhegium to Messana and went to Lilybæum.<note anchored="true" resp="HW" place="foot">The modern Marsala, at the western
							extremity of Sicily. It was the port nearest the African coast. Hirtius
							says that Cæsar arrived there on the 14th day before the
							Calends of January and sailed eight days later.</note> Here, learning
						that Cato was guarding the enemy's magazines with a fleet and a part of the
						land forces at Utica, and that he had with him 300 men who had for a long
						time constituted their council of war and were called the Senate, and that
						the commander, L. Scipio, and the flower of the army were at Adrumetum, he
						sailed against <note anchored="true" resp="HW" place="marg">Y.R. 708</note>
						the latter. He arrived at a time when Scipio had gone <note anchored="true" resp="HW" place="marg">B.C. <date when="-0046">46</date></note> away to
						meet Juba, and he drew up his forces for battle near Scipio's very camp in
						order to come to an engagement with the enemy at a time when their commander
						was absent. Labienus and Petreius, Scipio's lieutenants, attacked him,
						defeated him badly, and pursued him in a haughty and disdainful manner until
						Labienus' horse was wounded in the belly and threw him, and his attendants
						carried him off. Petreius, thinking that he had made a thorough test of the
						army and that he could conquer whenever he liked, drew off his forces,
						saying to those around him, "Let us not deprive our general, Scipio, of the
						victory." In one part of the day's work did Cæsar's luck show
						itself, in that the victorious enemy seems to have abandoned the field at
						the very moment of success. It is said that in the flight Cæsar
						dashed up to his whole line<note anchored="true" resp="HW" place="foot"><foreign xml:lang="grc">e)gxri/mptwn a(/pasin.</foreign> How could he
							dash up to all of them at once? Mendelssohn suggests <foreign xml:lang="grc">a)podra=sin,</foreign> i.e. he dashed up to the
							runaways.</note> and turned it around and seizing one of those who
						carried the principal standards (the eagles) dragged him to the front.
						Finally, Petreius retired and Cæsar was glad to do the same. Such
						was the result of Cæsar's first battle in Africa. </p></div><div n="96" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p>Not long afterward it was reported that Scipio himself was advancing with
						eight legions of foot, 20,000 horse (of which most were Africans), and a
						large number of light-armed troops, and thirty elephants; together with King
						Juba, who had some 30,000 foot-soldiers in addition, raised for this war,
						and 20,000 Numidian cavalry, besides a large number of spearmen and sixty
						elephants. Cæsar's army began to be alarmed and a tumult broke out
						among them on account of the disaster they had already experienced and of
						the reputation of the forces advancing against them, and especially of the
						numbers and bravery of the Numidian cavalry. War with elephants, to which
						they were unaccustomed, also frightened them.<note anchored="true" resp="HW" place="foot">"Whenever," says Suetonius, " his (Cæsar's)
							troops were dispirited by reports of the great force of the enemy, he
							rallied their courage not by denying the truth of what was said or
							minimizing the facts but on the contrary by exaggerating every
							particular. Accordingly, when his troops were in great alarm at the
							expected arrival of King Juba, he called them together and said, 'I have
							to inform you that in a very few days the king will be here with ten
							legions, 30,000 horse, 100,000 light-armed foot, and 300 elephants. Let
							none of you therefore presume to make any further inquiry or indulge in
							conjectures, but take my word for what I tell you, which I have from
							undoubted intelligence; otherwise I shall put them aboard an old crazy
							vessel and leave them exposed to the mercy of the winds to be
							transported to some other country.' " (<title>Jul.</title> 66.)</note>
						But Bocchus, another Mauritanian prince, seized Cirta, which was the capital
						of Juba's kingdom. When this news reached Juba he started for home at once
						with his army, leaving thirty of his elephants only with Scipio. Thereupon
						Cæsar's men plucked up courage to such a degree that the fifth
						legion begged to be pitted against the elephants, and it overcame them
						valiantly. From that day to the present this legion has borne the figure of
						an elephant on its standards. </p></div><div n="97" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p>The battle was long, severe, and doubtful in all parts of the field until
						toward evening, when victory declared itself on the side of Cæsar,
						who went straight on and captured Scipio's camp and did not desist, even in
						the night, from reaping the fruits of his victory until he had made a clean
							sweep.<note anchored="true" resp="HW" place="foot">This was the battle of
							Thapsus. According to Hirtius Cæsar's soldiers broke away from
							their officers and began the battle without. orders. (<title>Bell.
								Afr.</title> 82.)</note> The enemy scattered in small bodies
						wherever they could. Scipio himself with Afranius, abandoning everything,
						fled by sea with twelve open ships. And thus was this army also, composed of
						nearly 80,000 men who had been under long training and were inspired with
						hope and courage by the previous battle, in the second engagement,
						completely annihilated. And now Cæsar's fame began to be
						celebrated as of a man of invincible fortune, and those who were vanquished
						by him attributed nothing to his merit, but ascribed everything, including
						their own blunders, to Cæsar's luck. And it seems that the result
						of this war also was due to the bad generalship of the commanders who, as in
						Thessaly, neglected their opportunity to wear out Cæsar by delay
						until his supplies were exhausted, in this foreign land, and in like manner
						failed to reap the fruits of their first victory by pushing it sharply to
						the end.<note anchored="true" resp="HW" place="foot"><foreign xml:lang="grc">suntrifqei\s ou(/tws o)ce/ws dialuqh=nai.</foreign> No commentator
							has been able to explain satisfactorily the first of these four words.
							Schweighäuser says that <foreign xml:lang="grc">po/lemos</foreign> must be understood, but he adds that a "crushed
							war" would be a wonderful thing. It may mean that the war, " crushed out
							in this way, quickly came to an end."</note>
					</p></div></div></div></div></body></text></TEI>
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