Plutarch's
Fabius
The “Dryden Version” as
edited ca. 1860 by Arthur Hugh Clough
(and Paul Swarney in
2006)
1. Having related the memorable actions of Pericles, our history
now proceeds to the life of Fabius. A son of Herakles and a nymph, of
some woman of that country, who brought him forth on the banks of Tiber,
was, it is said, the first Fabius, the founder of the numerous and
distinguished family of the name. Others will have it that they were
first called Fodii, because the first of the race delighted in digging
pitfalls for wild beasts, fodere being still the Latin for to dig, and
fossa for a ditch, and that in process of time, by the change of the two
letters, they grew to be called Fabii. But be these things true or
false, certain it is that this family for a long time yielded a great
number of eminent persons. Our Fabius, who was fourth in descent from
that Fabius Rullus who first brought the honourable surname of Maximus
into his family, was also, by way of personal nickname, called
Verrucosus, from a wart on his upper lip; and in his childhood they in
like manner named him Ovicula, or The Lamb, on account of his extreme
mildness of temper. His slowness in speaking, his long labour and pains
in learning, his deliberation in entering into the sports of other
children, his easy submission to everybody, as if he had no will of his
own, made those who judge superficially of him, the greater number,
esteem him insensible and stupid; and few only saw that this tardiness
proceeded from stability, and discerned the greatness of his mind, and
the lionlikeness of his temper. But as soon as he came into employments,
his virtues exerted and showed themselves; his reputed want of energy
then was recognized by people in general as a freedom of passion; his
slowness in words and actions, the effect of a true prudence; his want
of rapidity and his sluggishness, as constancy and firmness.
Living in a
great commonwealth, surrounded by many enemies, he saw the wisdom of
inuring his body (nature's own weapon) to warlike exercises, and
disciplining his tongue for public oratory in a style conformable to his
life and character. His eloquence, indeed, had not much of popular
ornament, nor empty artifice, but there was in it great weight of sense;
it was strong and sententious, much after the way of Thucydides. We have
yet extant his funeral oration upon the death of his son, who died
consul, which he recited before the people.
2. He was five times
consul, and in his first consulship had the honour of a triumph for the
victory he gained over the Ligurians, whom he defeated in a set battle,
and drove them to take shelter in the Alps, from whence they never after
made any inroad or depredation upon their neighbours. After this,
Hannibal came into Italy, who, at his first entrance, having gained a
great battle near the river Trebia, traversed all Tuscany with his
victorious army, and, desolating the country round about, filled Rome
itself with astonishment and terror. Besides the more common signs of
thunder and lightning then happening, the report of several unheard of
and utterly strange portents much increased the popular consternation.
For it was said that some targets sweated blood; that at Antium, when
they reaped their corn, many of the ears were filled with blood; that it
had rained red-hot stones; that the Falerians had seen the heavens open
and several scrolls falling down, in one of which was plainly written,
"Mars himself stirs his arms." But these prodigies had no effect upon
the impetuous and fiery temper of the consul Flaminius, whose natural
promptness had been much heightened by his late unexpected victory over
the Gauls, when he fought them contrary to the order of the senate and
the advice of his colleague. Fabius, on the other side, thought it not
seasonable to engage with the enemy; not that he much regarded the
prodigies, which he thought too strange to be easily understood, though
many were alarmed by them; but in regard that the Carthaginians were but
few, and in want of money and supplies, he deemed it best not to meet in
the field a general whose army had been tried in many encounters, and
whose object was a battle, but to send aid to their allies, control the
movements of the various subject cities, and let the force and vigour of
Hannibal waste away and expire, like a flame, for want of the aliment.
3. These weighty
reasons did not prevail with Flaminius, who protested he would never
suffer the advance of the enemy to the city, nor be reduced, like
Camillus in former time, to fight for Rome within the walls of Rome.
Accordingly he ordered the tribunes to draw out the army into the field;
and though he himself, leaping on horseback to go out, was no sooner
mounted but the beast, without any apparent cause, fell into so violent
a fit of trembling and bounding that he cast his rider headlong on the
ground; he was no ways deterred, but proceeded as he had begun, and
marched forward up to Hannibal, who was posted near the Lake Thrasymene
in Tuscany. At the moment of this engagement, there happened so great an
earthquake, that it destroyed several towns, altered the course of
rivers, and carried off parts of high cliffs, yet such was the eagerness
of the combatants, that they were entirely insensible of it.
In this
battle Flaminius fell, after many proofs of his strength and courage,
and round about him all the bravest of the army; in the whole, fifteen
thousand were killed, and as many made prisoners. Hannibal, desirous to
bestow funeral honours upon the body of Flaminius, made diligent search
after it, but could not find it among the dead, nor was it ever known
what became of it. Upon the former engagement near Trebia, neither the
general who wrote, nor the express who told the news, used
straightforward and direct terms, nor related it otherwise than as a
drawn battle, with equal loss on either side; but on this occasion as
soon as Pomponius the praetor had the intelligence, he caused the people
to assemble, and, without disguising or dissembling the matter, told
them plainly, "We are beaten, O Romans, in a great battle; the consul
Flaminius is killed; think, therefore, what is to be done for your
safety." Letting loose his news like a gate of wind upon an open sea, he
threw the city into utter confusion: in such consternation, their
thoughts found no support or stay. The danger at hand at last awakened
their judgments into a resolution to choose a dictator, who by the
sovereign authority of his office, and by his personal wisdom and
courage, might be able to manage the public affairs. Their choice
unanimously fell upon Fabius, whose character seemed equal to the
greatness of the office; whose age was so far advanced as to give him
experience, without taking from him the vigour of action; his body could
execute what his soul designed; and his temper was a happy compound of
confidence and cautiousness.
4.
Fabius, being thus installed in the office of dictator, in the first
place gave the command of the horse to Lucius Minucius; and next asked
leave of the senate for himself, that in time of battle he might serve
on horseback, which by an ancient law amongst the Romans was forbid to
their generals; whether it were, that, placing their greatest strength
in their foot, they would have their commanders-in-chief posted amongst
them, or else to let them know, that, how great and absolute soever
their authority were, the people and senate were still their masters, of
whom they must ask leave. Fabius, however, to make the authority of his
charge more observable, and to render the people more submissive and
obedient to him, caused himself to be accompanied with the full body of
four-and-twenty lictors; and, when the surviving consul came to visit
him, sent him word to dismiss his lictors with their fasces, the ensigns
of authority, and appear before him as a private person.
The first
solemn action of his dictatorship was very fitly a religious one: an
admonition to the people, that their late overthrow had not befallen
them through want of courage in their soldiers, but through the neglect
of divine ceremonies in the general. He therefore exhorted them not to
fear the enemy, but by extraordinary honour to propitiate the gods. This
he did, not to fill their minds with superstition, but by religious
feeling to raise their courage, and lessen their fear of the enemy by
inspiring the belief that Heaven was on their side. With this view, the
secret prophecies called the Sibylline Books were consulted; sundry
predictions found in them were said to refer to the fortunes and events
of the time; but none except the consulter was informed. Presenting
himself to the people, the dictator made a vow before them to offer in
sacrifice the whole product of the next season, all Italy over, of the
cows, goats, swine, sheep, both in the mountains and the plains; and to
celebrate musical festivities with an expenditure of the precise sum of
333 sestertia and 333 denarii, with one-third of a denarius over. The
sum total of which is, in our money, 83,583 drachmas and 2 obols. What
the mystery might be in that exact number is not easy to determine,
unless it were in honour of the perfection of the number three, as being
the first of odd numbers, the first that contains in itself
multiplication, with all other properties whatsoever belonging to
numbers in general.
5. In this manner Fabius, having given the people better heart
for the future, by making them believe that the gods took their side,
for his own part placed his whole confidence in himself, believing that
the gods bestowed victory and good fortune by the instrumentality of
valour and of prudence; and thus prepared he set forth to oppose
Hannibal, not with intention to fight him, but with the purpose of
wearing out and wasting the vigour of his arms by lapse of time, of
meeting his want of resources by superior means, by large numbers the
smallness of his forces. With this design, he always encamped on the
highest grounds, where the enemy's horse could have no access to him.
Still he kept pace with them; when they marched he followed them; when
they encamped he did the same, but at such a distance as not to be
compelled to an engagement and always keeping upon the hills, free from
the insults of their horse; by which means he gave them no rest, but
kept them in a continual alarm.
But this his dilatory way gave occasion in his own camp for suspicion of
want of courage; and this opinion prevailed yet more in Hannibal's army.
Hannibal was himself the only man who was not deceived, who discerned
his skill and detected his tactics, and saw, unless he could by art or
force bring him to battle, that the Carthaginians, unable to use the
arms in which they were superior, and suffering the continual drain of
lives and treasure in which they were inferior, would in the end come to
nothing. He resolved, therefore, with all the arts and subtleties of war
to break his measures and to bring Fabius to an engagement, like a
cunning wrestler, watching every opportunity to get good hold and close
with his adversary. He at one time attacked, and sought to distract his
attention, tried to draw him off in various directions, and endeavoured
in all ways to tempt him from his safe policy. All this artifice, though
it had no effect upon the firm judgment and conviction of the dictator,
yet upon the common soldier, and even upon the general of the horse
himself, it had too great an operation: Minucius, unseasonably eager for
action, bold and confident, humoured the soldiery, and himself
contributed to fill them with wild eagerness and empty hopes, which they
vented in reproaches upon Fabius, calling him Hannibal's pedagogue,
since he did nothing else but follow him up and down and wait upon him.
At the same time, they cried up Minucius for the only captain worthy to
command the Romans; whose vanity and presumption rose so high in
consequence, that he insolently jested at Fabius's encampment upon the
mountains, saying that he seated them there as on a theatre, to behold
the flames and desolation of their country. And he would sometimes ask
the friends of the general, whether it were not his meaning, by thus
leading them from mountain to mountain, to carry them at last (having no
hopes on earth) up into heaven, or to hide them in the clouds from
Hannibal's army? When his friends reported these things to the dictator,
persuading him that, to avoid the general obloquy, he should engage the
enemy, his answer was, "I should be more faint-hearted than they make
me, if, through fear of idle reproaches, I should abandon my own
convictions. It is no inglorious thing to have fear for the safety of
our country, but to be turned from one's course by men's opinions, by
blame, and by misrepresentation, shows a man unfit to hold an office
such as this, which, by such conduct, he makes the slaves of those whose
errors it is his business to control."
6. An oversight of Hannibal occurred soon after. Desirous to
refresh his horse in some good pasture-grounds, and to draw off his
army, he ordered his guides to conduct him to the district of Casinum.
They, mistaking his bad pronunciation, led him and his army to the town
of Casilinum, on the frontier of Campania which the river Lothronus,
called by the Romans Vulturnus, divides in two parts. The country around
is enclosed by mountains, with a valley opening towards the sea, in
which the river overflowing forms a quantity of marsh land with deep
banks of sand, and discharges itself into the sea on a very unsafe and
rough shore. While Hannibal was proceeding hither, Fabius, by his
knowledge of the roads, succeeded in making his way around before him,
and despatched four thousand choice men to seize the exit from it and
stop him up, and lodged the rest of his army upon the neighbouring
hills, in the most advantageous places; at the same time detaching a
party of his lightest armed men to fall upon Hannibal's rear; which they
did with such success, that they cut off eight hundred of them, and put
the whole army in disorder. Hannibal, finding the error and the danger
he was fallen into, immediately crucified the guides; but considered the
enemy to be so advantageously posted, that there was no hope of breaking
through them; while his soldiers began to be despondent and terrified,
and to think themselves surrounded with embarrassments too difficult to
be surmounted.
Thus reduced, Hannibal had recourse to stratagem; he caused two thousand
head of oxen which he had in his camp to have torches or dry fagots well
fastened to their horns, and lighting them in the beginning of the
night, ordered the beasts to be driven on towards the heights commanding
the passages out of the valley and the enemy's posts; when this was
done, he made his army in the dark leisurely march after them. The oxen
at first kept a slow orderly pace, and with their lighted heads
resembled an army marching by night, astonishing the shepherds and
herdsmen of the hills about. But when the fire burnt down the horns of
the beasts to the quick, they no longer observed their sober pace, but
unruly and wild with their pain, ran dispersed about, tossing their
heads and scattering the fire round about them upon each other and
setting light as they passed to the trees. This was a surprising
spectacle to the Romans on guard upon the heights. Seeing flames which
appeared to come from men advancing with torches, they were possessed
with the alarm that the enemy was approaching in various quarters, and
that they were being surrounded; and, quitting their post, abandoned the
pass, and precipitately retired to their camp on the hills. They were no
sooner gone, but the light-armed of Hannibal's men, according to his
order, immediately seized the heights, and soon after the whole army,
with all the baggage, came up and safely marched through the passes.
7. Fabius, before the night was over, quickly found out the
trick; for some of the beasts fell into his hands; but for fear of an
ambush in the dark, he kept his men all night to their arms in the camp.
As soon as it was day, he attacked the enemy in the rear, where, after a
good deal of skirmishing in the uneven ground, the disorder might have
become general, but that Hannibal detached from his van a body of
Spaniards, who, of themselves active and nimble, were accustomed to the
climbing of mountains. These briskly attacked the Roman troops, who were
in heavy armour, killed a good many, and left Fabius no longer in
condition to follow the enemy. This action brought the extreme of
obloquy and contempt upon the dictator; they said it was now manifest
that he was not only inferior to his adversary, as they had always
thought, in courage, but even in that conduct, foresight, and
generalship, by which he had proposed to bring the war to an end.
And Hannibal, to enhance their anger against him, marched with his army
close to the lands and possessions of Fabius, and, giving orders to his
soldiers to burn and destroy all the country about, forbade them to do
the least damage in the estates of the Roman general, and placed guards
for their security. This, when reported at Rome, had the effect with the
people which Hannibal desired. Their tribunes raised a thousand stories
against him, chiefly at the instigation of Metilius, who, not so much
out of hatred to him as out of friendship to Minucius, whose kinsman he
was, thought by depressing Fabius to raise his friend. The senate on
their part were also offended with him for the bargain he had made with
Hannibal about the exchange of prisoners, the conditions of which were
that, after exchange made of man for man, if any on either side
remained, they should be redeemed at the price of two hundred and fifty
drachmas a head. Upon the whole account, there remained two hundred and
forty Romans unexchanged, and the senate now not only refused to allow
money for the ransoms, but also reproached Fabius for making a contract,
contrary to the honour and interest of the commonwealth, for redeeming
men whose cowardice had put them in the hands of the enemy. Fabius heard
and endured all this with invincible patience; and, having no money by
him, and on the other side being resolved to keep his word with Hannibal
and not to abandon the captives, he despatched his son to Rome to sell
land, and to bring with him the price, sufficient to discharge the
ransoms; which was punctually performed by his son and delivery
accordingly made to him of the prisoners, amongst whom many, when they
were released, made proposals to repay the money; which Fabius in all
cases declined.
8. About this time, he was called to Rome by the priests, to
assist, according to the duty of his office, at certain sacrifices, and
was thus forced to leave the command of the army with Minucius; but
before he parted, not only charged him as his commander-in-chief, but
besought and entreated him not to come, in his absence, to a battle with
Hannibal. His commands, entreaties, and advice were lost upon Minucius,
for his back was no sooner turned but the new general immediately sought
occasions to attack the enemy. And notice being brought him that
Hannibal had sent out a great part of his army to forage, he fell upon a
detachment of the remainder, doing great execution, and driving them to
their very camp, with no little terror to the rest, who apprehended
their breaking in upon them; and when Hannibal had recalled his
scattered forces to the camp, he, nevertheless, without any loss, made
his retreat, a success which aggravated his boldness and presumption,
and filled the soldiers with rash confidence. The news spread to Rome,
where Fabius, on being told it, said that what he most feared was
Minucius's success; but the people, highly elated, hurried to the forum
to listen to an address from Metilius the tribune, in which he
infinitely extolled the valour of Minucius, and fell bitterly upon
Fabius, accusing him for want not merely of courage, but even of
loyalty; and not only him, but also many other eminent and considerable
persons; saying that it was they that had brought the Carthaginians into
Italy, with the design to destroy the liberty of the people; for which
end they had at once put the supreme authority into the hands of a
single person, who by his slowness and delays might give Hannibal
leisure to establish himself in Italy, and the people of Carthage time
and opportunity to supply him with fresh succours to complete his
conquest.
9. Fabius came forward with no intention to answer the tribune,
but only said, that they should expedite the sacrifices, that so he
might speedily return to the army to punish Minucius, who had presumed
to fight contrary to his orders; words which immediately possessed the
people with the belief that Minucius stood in danger of his life. For it
was in the power of the dictator to imprison and to put to death, and
they feared that Fabius, of a mild temper in general, would be as hard
to be appeased when once irritated, as he was slow to be provoked.
Nobody dared to raise his voice in opposition; Metilius alone, whose
office of tribune gave him security to say what he pleased (for in the
time of a dictatorship that magistrateal one preserves his authority),
boldly applied himself to the people in the behalf of Minucius; that
they should not suffer him to be made a sacrifice to the enmity of
Fabius, nor permit him to be destroyed, like the son of Manlius
Torquatus, who was beheaded by his father for a victory fought and
triumphantly won against order; he exhorted them to take away from
Fabius that absolute power of a dictator, and to put it into more worthy
hands, better able and more inclined to use it for the public good.
These impressions very much prevailed upon the people, though not so far
as wholly to dispossess Fabius of the dictatorship. But they decreed
that Minucius should have an equal authority with the dictator in the
conduct of the war; which was a thing then without precedent, though a
little later it was again practised after the disaster at Cannae; when
the dictator, Marcus Junius, being with the army, they chose at Rome
Fabius Buteo dictator, that he might create new senators, to supply the
numerous places of those who were killed. But as soon as, once acting in
public, he had filled those vacant places with a sufficient number, he
immediately dismissed his lictors, and withdrew from all his attendance,
and mingling like a common person with the rest of the people, quietly
went about his own affairs in the forum.
10. The enemies of Fabius thought they had sufficiently humiliated
and subdued him by raising Minucius to be his equal in authority; but
they mistook the temper of the man, who looked upon their folly as not
his loss, but like Diogenes, who, being told that some persons derided
him, made answer, "But I am not derided," meaning that only those were
really insulted on whom such insults made an impression, so Fabius, with
great tranquillity and unconcern, submitted to what happened, and
contributed a proof to the argument of the philosophers that a just and
good man is not capable of being dishonoured. His only vexation arose
from his fear lest this ill counsel, by supplying opportunities to the
diseased military ambition of his subordinate, should damage the public
cause. Lest the rashness of Minucius should now at once run headlong
into some disaster, he returned back with all privacy and speed to the
army; where he found Minucius so elevated with his new dignity, that, a
joint-authority not contenting him, he required by turns to have the
command of the army every other day. This Fabius rejected, but was
contented that the army should be divided; thinking each general singly
would better command his part, than partially command the whole. The
first and fourth legion he took for his own division, the second and
third he delivered to Minucius; so also of the auxiliary forces each had
an equal share.
Minucius, thus exalted, could not contain himself from boasting of his
success in humiliating the high and powerful office of the dictatorship.
Fabius quietly reminded him that it was, in all wisdom, Hannibal, and
not Fabius, whom he had to combat; but if he must needs contend with his
colleague, it had best be in diligence and care for the preservation of
Rome; that it might not be said, a man so favoured by the people served
them worse than he who had been ill-treated and disgraced by them.
11. The young general, despising these admonitions as the false
humility of age, immediately removed with the body of his army, and
encamped by himself. Hannibal, who was not ignorant of all these
passages, lay watching his advantage from them. It happened that between
his army and that of Minucius there was a certain eminence, which seemed
a very advantageous and not difficult post to encamp upon; the level
field around it appeared, from a distance, to be all smooth and even,
though it had many inconsiderable ditches and dips in it, not
discernible to the eye. Hannibal, had he pleased, could easily have
possessed himself of this ground; but he had reserved it for a bait, or
train, in proper season, to draw the Romans to an engagement. Now that
Minucius and Fabius were divided, he thought the opportunity fair for
his purpose; and, therefore, having in the night-time lodged a
convenient number of his men in these ditches and hollow places, early
in the morning he sent forth a small detachment, who, in the sight of
Minucius, proceeded to possess themselves of the rising ground.
According to his expectation, Minucius swallowed the bait, and first
sends out his light troops, and after them some horse, to dislodge the
enemy; and, at last, when he saw
Hannibal
in person advancing to the assistance of his men, marched down with his
whole army drawn up. He engaged with the troops on the eminence, and
sustained their missiles; the combat for some time was equal; but as
soon as Hannibal perceived that the whole army was now sufficiently
advanced within the toils he had set for them, so that their backs were
open to his men whom he had posted in the hollows, he gave the signal;
upon which they rushed forth from various quarters, and with loud cries
furiously attacked Minucius in the rear. The surprise and the slaughter
was great, and struck universal alarm and disorder through the whole
army. Minucius himself lost all his confidence; he looked from officer
to officer, and found all alike unprepared to face the danger, and
yielding to a flight, which, however, could not end in safety. The
Numidian horsemen were already in full victory riding about the plain,
cutting down the fugitives.
12. Fabius was not ignorant of this danger of his countrymen; he
foresaw what would happen from the rashness of Minucius, and the cunning
of Hannibal; and, therefore, kept his men to their arms, in readiness to
wait the event; nor would he trust to the reports of others, but he
himself, in front of his camp, viewed all that passed. When, therefore,
he saw the army of Minucius encompassed by the enemy, and that by their
countenance and shifting their ground they appeared more disposed to
flight than to resistance, with a great sigh, striking his hand upon his
thigh, he said to those about him, "O Herakles! how much sooner than I
expected, though later than he seemed to desire, hath Minucius destroyed
himself!" He then commanded the ensigns to be led forward, and the army
to follow, telling them, "We must make haste to rescue Minucius, who is
a valiant man, and a lover of his country; and if he hath been too
forward to engage the enemy, at another time we will tell him of it."
Thus, at the head of his men, Fabius marched up to the enemy, and first
cleared the plain of the Numidians; and next fell upon those who were
charging the Romans in the rear, cutting down all that made opposition,
and obliging the rest to save themselves by a hasty retreat, lest they
should be environed as the Romans had been. Hannibal, seeing so sudden a
change of affairs, and Fabius, beyond the force of his age, opening his
way through the ranks up the hillside, that he might join Minucius,
warily forbore, sounded a retreat, and drew off his men into their camp;
while the Romans on their part were no less contented to retire in
safety. It is reported that upon this occasion Hannibal said jestingly
to his friends: "Did not I tell you, that this cloud which always
hovered upon the mountains would, at some time or other, come down with
a storm upon us?"
13. Fabius, after his men had picked up the spoils of the field,
retired to his own camp, without saying any harsh or reproachful thing
to his colleague; who, also, in his part, gathering his army together,
spoke and said to them: "To conduct great matters and never commit a
fault is above the force of human nature; but to learn and improve by
the faults we have committed, is that which becomes a good and sensible
man. Some reasons I may have to accuse fortune, but I have many more to
thank her; for in a few hours she hath cured a long mistake, and taught
me that I am not the man who should command others, but have need of
another to command me; and that we are not to contend for victory over
those to whom it is our advantage to yield. Therefore in everything else
henceforth the dictator must be your commander; only in showing
gratitude towards him I will still be your leader, and always be the
first to obey his orders." Having said this, he commanded the Roman
eagles to move forward, and all his men to follow him to the camp of
Fabius. The soldiers, then, as he entered, stood amazed at the novelty
of the sight, and were anxious and doubtful what the meaning might be.
When he came near the dictator's tent, Fabius went forth to meet him, on
which he at once laid his standards at his feet, calling him with a loud
voice his father; while the soldiers with him saluted the soldiers here
as their patrons, the term employed by freedmen to those who gave them
their liberty. After silence was obtained, Minucius said, "You have this
day, O dictator, obtained two victories; one by your valour and conduct
over Hannibal, and another by your wisdom and goodness over your
colleague; by one victory you preserved, and by the other instructed us;
and when we were already suffering one shameful defeat from Hannibal, by
another welcome one from you we were restored to honour and safety. I
can address you by no nobler name than that of a kind father, though a
father's beneficence falls short of that I have received from you. Front
a father I individually received the gift of life; to you I owe its
preservation not for myself only, but for all these who are under me."
After this, he threw himself into the arms of the dictator; and in the
same manner the soldiers of each army embraced one another with gladness
and tears of joy.
14. Not long after, Fabius laid down the dictatorship, and consuls
were again created. Those who immediately succeeded observed the same
method in managing the war, and avoided all occasions of fighting
Hannibal in a pitched battle; they only succoured their allies, and
preserved the towns from falling off to the enemy. But afterwards, when
Terentius Varro, a man of obscure birth, but very popular and bold, had
obtained the consulship, he soon made it appear that by his rashness and
ignorance he would stake the whole commonwealth on the hazard. For it
was his custom to declaim in all assemblies, that, as long as Rome
employed generals like Fabius, there never would be an end of the war;
vaunting that whenever he should get sight of the enemy, he would that
same day free Italy from the strangers. With these promises he so
prevailed, that he raised a greater army than had ever yet been sent out
of Rome. There were enlisted eighty-eight thousand fighting men; but
what gave confidence to the populace, only terrified the wise and
experienced, and none more than Fabius; since if so great a body, and
the flower of the Roman youth, should be cut off, they could not see any
new resource for the safety of Rome.
They addressed themselves, therefore, to the other consul, Aemilius
Paulus, a man of great experience in war, but unpopular, and fearful
also of the people, who once before upon some impeachment had condemned
him; so that he needed encouragement to withstand his colleague's
temerity. Fabius told him, if he would profitably serve his country, he
must no less oppose Varro's ignorant eagerness than
Hannibal's conscious readiness, since both
alike conspired to decide the fate of Rome
by a battle. "It is more reasonable," he said to him, "that you should
believe me than Varro, in matters relating to Hannibal, when I tell you
that if for this year you abstain from fighting with him, either his
army will perish of itself, or else he will be glad to depart of his own
will. This evidently appears, inasmuch as, notwithstanding his
victories, none of the countries or towns of
Italy come in to him, and his army is not now
the third part of what it was at first." To this Paulus is said to have
replied, "Did I only consider myself, I should rather choose to be
exposed to the weapons of Hannibal than once more to the suffrages of my
fellow-citizens, who are urgent for what you disapprove; yet since the
cause of Rome is at stake, I will rather seek in my conduct to please
and obey Fabius than all the world besides."
15. These good measures were defeated by the importunity of Varro;
whom, when they were both come to the army, nothing would content but a
separate command, that each consul should have his day; and when his
turn came, he posted his army close to
Hannibal,
at a village called Cannae, by the river Aufidus. It was no sooner day,
but he set up the scarlet coat flying over his tent, which was the
signal of battle. This boldness of the consul, and the numerousness of
his army, double theirs, startled the Carthaginians; but Hannibal
commanded them to their arms, and with a small train rode out to take a
full prospect of the enemy as they were now forming in their ranks, from
a rising ground not far distant. One of his followers, called Gisco, a
Carthaginian of equal rank with himself, told him that the numbers of
the enemy were astonishing; to which Hannibal replied with a serious
countenance, "There is one thing, Gisco, yet more astonishing, which you
take no notice of;" and when Gisco inquired what, answered, that "in all
those great numbers before us, there is not one man called Gisco." This
unexpected jest of their general made all the company laugh, and as they
came down from the hill they told it to those whom they met, which
caused a general laughter amongst them all, from which they were hardly
able to recover themselves. The army, seeing Hannibal's attendants come
back from viewing the enemy in such a laughing condition, concluded that
it must be profound contempt of the enemy, that made their general at
this moment indulge in such hilarity.
16. According to his usual manner, Hannibal employed stratagems to
advantage himself. In the first place, he so drew up his men that the
wind was at their backs, which at that time blew with a perfect storm of
violence, and, sweeping over the great plains of sand, carried before it
a cloud of dust over the Carthaginian army into the faces of the Romans,
which much disturbed them in the fight. In the next place, all his best
men he put into his wings; and in the body which was somewhat more
advanced than the wings, placed the worst and the weakest of his army.
He commanded those in the wings, that, when the enemy had made a
thorough charge upon that middle advance body, which he knew would
recoil, as not being able to withstand their shock, and when the Romans
in their pursuit should be far enough engaged within the two wings, they
should, both on the right and the left, charge them in the flank, and
endeavour to encompass them. This appears to have been the chief cause
of the Roman loss. Pressing upon Hannibal's front, which gave ground,
they reduced the form of his army into a perfect half-moon, and gave
ample opportunity to the captains of the chosen troops to charge them
right and left on their flanks, and to cut off and destroy all who did
not fall back before the Carthaginian wings united in their rear. To
this general calamity, it is also said, that a strange mistake among the
cavalry much contributed. For the horse of Aemilius receiving a hurt and
throwing his master, those about him immediately alighted to aid the
consul; and the Roman troops, seeing their commanders thus quitting
their horses, took it for a sign that they should all dismount and
charge the enemy on foot. At the sight of this, Hannibal was heard to
say, "This pleases me better than if they had been delivered to me bound
hand and foot." For the particulars of this engagement, we refer our
reader to those authors who have written at large upon the subject.
The consul Varro, with a thin company, fled to Venusia; Aemilius Paulus,
unable any longer to oppose the flight of his men, or the flight of his
men, or the pursuit of the enemy, his body all covered with wounds, and
his soul no less wounded with grief, sat himself down upon a stone,
expecting the kindness of a despatching blow. His face was so
disfigured, and all his person so stained with blood, that his very
friends and domestics passing by knew him not. At last Cornelius
Lentulus, a young man of patrician race, perceiving who he was, alighted
from his horse, and, tendering it to him, desired him to get up and save
a life so necessary to the safety of the commonwealth, which, at this
time, would dearly want so great a captain. But nothing could prevail
upon him to accept of the offer; he obliged young Lentulus, with tears
in his eyes, to remount his horse; then standing up, he gave him his
hand, and commanded him to tell Fabius Maximus that Aemilius Paulus had
followed his directions to his very last, and had not in the least
deviated from those measures which were agreed between them; but that it
was his hard fate to be overpowered by Varro in the first place, and
secondly by Hannibal. Having despatched Lentulus with this commission,
he marked where the slaughter was greatest, and there threw himself upon
the swords of the enemy. In this battle it is reported that fifty
thousand Romans were slain, four thousand prisoners taken in the field,
and ten thousand in the camp of both consuls.
17. The friends of Hannibal earnestly persuaded him to follow up
his victory, and pursue the flying Romans into the very gates of Rome,
assuring him that in five days' time he might sup in the Capitol; nor is
it easy to imagine what consideration hindered him from it. It would
seem rather than some supernatural or divine intervention caused the
hesitation and timidity which he now displayed, and which made Barcas, a
Carthaginian, tell him with indignation, "You know, Hannibal, how to
gain a victory, but not how to use it." Yet it produced a marvellous
revolution in his affairs; he, who hitherto had not one town, market, or
seaport in his possession, who had nothing for the subsistence of his
men but what he pillaged from day to day, who had no place of retreat or
basis of operation, but was roving, as it were, with a huge troop of
banditti, now became master of the best provinces and towns of Italy,
and of Capua itself, next to Rome the most flourishing and opulent city,
all which came over to him, and submitted to his authority.
It is the saying of Euripides, that "a man is in ill-case when he must
try a friend," and so neither, it would seem, is a state in a good one,
when it needs an able general. And so it was with the Romans; the
counsels and actions of Fabius, which, before the battle, they had
branded as cowardice and fear, now, in the other extreme, they accounted
to have been more than human wisdom; as though nothing but a divine
power of intellect could have seen so far, and foretold contrary to the
judgment of all others, a result which, even now it had arrived, was
hardly credible. In him, therefore, they placed their whole remaining
hopes; his wisdom was the sacred altar and temple to which they fled for
refuge, and his counsels, more than anything, preserved them from
dispersing and deserting their city, as in the time when the Gauls took
possession of Rome.
He, whom they esteemed fearful and pusillanimous when they were, as they
thought, in a prosperous condition was now the only man, in this general
and unbounded dejection and confusion, who showed no fear, but walked
the streets with an assured and serene countenance, addressed his
fellow-citizens, checked the women's lamentations, and the public
gatherings of those who wanted thus to vent their sorrows. He caused the
senate to meet, he heartened up the magistrates, and was himself as the
soul and life of every office.
18. He placed guards at the gates of the city to stop the
frightened multitude from flying; he regulated and confined their
mournings for their slain friends, both as to time and place; ordering
that each family should perform such observances within private walls,
and that they should continue only the space of one month, and then the
whole city should be purified. The feast of Ceres happening to fall
within this time, it was decreed that the solemnity should be
intermitted, lest the fewness, and the sorrowful countenance of those
who should celebrate it, might too much expose to the people the
greatness of their loss; besides that, the worship most acceptable to
the gods is that which comes from cheerful hearts. But those rites which
were proper for appeasing their anger, and procuring auspicious signs
and presages, were by the direction of the augurs carefully performed.
Fabius Pictor, a near kinsman to Maximus, was sent to consult the oracle
of Delphi; and
about the same time, two vestals having been detected to have been
violated, the one killed herself, and the other, according to custom,
was buried alive.
Above all, let us admire the high spirit and equanimity of this Roman
commonwealth; that when the consul Varro came beaten and flying home,
full of shame and humiliation, after he had so disgracefully and
calamitously managed their affairs, yet the whole senate and people went
forth to meet him at the gates of the city, and received him with honour
and respect. And, silence being commanded, the magistrates and chief of
the senate, Fabius amongst them, commended him before the people,
because he did not despair of the safety of the commonwealth, after so
great a loss, but was come to take the government into his hands, to
execute the laws, and aid his fellow-citizens in their prospect of
future deliverance.
19. When word was brought to Rome
that Hannibal, after the fight, had
marched with his army into other parts of Italy, the hearts of the
Romans began to revive, and they proceeded to send out generals and
armies. The most distinguished commands were held by Fabius Maximus and
Claudius Marcellus, both generals of great fame, though upon opposite
grounds. For Marcellus, as we have set forth in his life, was a man of
action and high spirit, ready and bold with his own hand, and, as Homer
describes his warriors, fierce, and delighting in fights. Boldness,
enterprise, and dating to match those of Hannibal, constituted his
tactics, and marked his engagements. But Fabius adhered to his former
principles, still persuaded that, by following close and not fighting
him, Hannibal and his army would at last be tried out and consumed, like
a wrestler in too high condition, whose very excess of strength makes
him the more likely suddenly to give way and lose it. Posidonius tells
us that the Romans called Marcellus their sword, and Fabius their
buckler; and that the vigour of the one, mixed with the steadiness of
the other, made a happy compound that proved the salvation of Rome.
So that Hannibal found by experience that encountering the one, he met
with a rapid, impetuous river, which drove him back, and still made some
breach upon him; and by the other, though silently and quietly passing
by him, he was insensibly washed away and consumed; and, at last, was
brought to this, that he dreaded Marcellus when he was in motion, and
Fabius when he sat still. During the whole course of this war, he had
still to do with one or both of these generals; for each of them was
five times consul, and, as praetors or proconsuls or consuls, they had
always a part in the government of the army, till, at last, Marcellus
fell into the trap which Hannibal had laid for him, and was killed in
his fifth consulship. But all his craft and subtlety were unsuccessful
upon Fabius, who only once was in some danger of being caught, when
counterfeit letters came to him from the principal inhabitants of
Metapontum, with
promises to deliver up their town if he would come before it with his
army, and intimations that they should expect him. This train had almost
drawn him in; he resolved to march to them with part of his army, and
was diverted only by consulting the omens of the birds, which he found
to be inauspicious; and not long after it was discovered that the
letters had been forged by Hannibal, who, for his reception, had laid an
ambush to entertain him. This, perhaps, we must rather attribute to the
favour of the gods than to the prudence of Fabius.
20. In preserving the towns and allies from revolt by fair and
gentle treatment, and in not using rigour, or showing a suspicion upon
every light suggestion, his conduct was remarkable. It is told of him,
that being informed of a certain Marsian, eminent for courage and good
birth, who had been speaking underhand with some of the soldiers about
deserting, Fabius was so far from using severity against him, that he
called for him, and told him he was sensible of the neglect that had
been shown to his merit and good service, which, he said, was a great
fault in the commanders who reward more by favour than by desert; "but
henceforth, whenever you are aggrieved," said Fabius, "I shall consider
it your fault, if you apply yourself to any one but to me;" and when he
had so spoken, he bestowed an excellent horse, and other presents upon
him; and, from that time forwards, there was not a faithfuller and more
trusty man in the whole army. With good reason he judged, that, if those
who have the government of horses and dogs endeavour by gentle usage to
cure their angry and untractable tempers, rather than by cruelty and
beating, much more should those who haze the command of men try to bring
them to order and discipline by the mildest and fairest means, and not
treat them worse than gardeners do those wild plants, which, with care
and attention, lose gradually the savageness of their nature, and bear
excellent fruit.
At another time, some of his officers informed him that one of their men
was very often absent from his place, and out at nights; he asked them
what kind of man he was; they all answered, that the whole army had not
a better man, that he was a native of Lucania, and proceeded to speak of
several actions which they had seen him perform. Fabius made strict
inquiry, and discovered at last that these frequent excursions which he
ventured upon were to visit a young girl, with whom he was in love. Upon
which he gave private order to some of his men to find out the woman and
secretly convey her into his own tent; and then sent for the Lucanian,
and, calling him aside, told him, that he very well knew how often he
had been out away from the camp at night, which was a capital
transgression against military discipline and the Roman laws, but he
knew also how brave he was, and the good services he had done;
therefore, in consideration of them, he was willing to forgive him his
fault; but to keep him in good order, he was resolved to place one over
him to be his keeper, who should be accountable for his good behaviour.
Having said this, he produced the woman, and told the soldier, terrified
and amazed at the adventure, "This is the person who must answer for
you; and by your future behaviour we shall see whether your night
rambles were on account of love, or for any other worse design."
21. Another passage there was, something of the same kind, which
gained him possession of Tarentum. There was a young Tarentine in the
army that had a sister in Tarentum, then in possession of the enemy, who
entirely loved her brother, and wholly depended upon him. He, being
informed that a certain Bruttian, whom Hannibal had made a commander of
the garrison, was deeply in love with his sister, conceived hopes that
he might possibly turn it to the advantage of the Romans. And having
first communicated his design to Fabius, he left the army as a deserter
in show, and went over to Tarentum. The first days passed, and the
Bruttian abstained from visiting the sister; for neither of them knew
that the brother had notice of the amour between them. The young
Tarentine, however, took an occasion to tell his sister how he had heard
that a man of station and authority had made his addresses to her, and
desired her, therefore, to tell him who it was; "for," said he, "if he
be a man that has bravery and reputation, it matters not what countryman
he is, since at this time the sword mingles all nations, and makes them
equal; compulsion makes all things honourable; and in a time when right
is weak, we may be thankful if might assumes a form of gentleness." Upon
this the woman sends for her friend, and makes the brother and him
acquainted; and whereas she henceforth showed more countenance to her
lover than formerly, in the same degrees that her kindness increased,
his friendship, also, with the brother advanced. So that at last our
Tarentine thought this Bruttian officer well enough prepared to receive
the offers he had to make him, and that it would be easy for a mercenary
man, who was in love, to accept, upon the terms proposed, the large
rewards promised by Fabius. In conclusion, the bargain was struck, and
the promise made of delivering the town. This is the common tradition,
though some relate the story otherwise, and say, that this woman, by
whom the Bruttian was inveigled to betray the town, was not a native of
Tarentum, but a Bruttian born, and was kept by Fabius as his concubine;
and being a countrywoman and an acquaintance of the Bruttian governor,
he privately sent her to him to corrupt him.
22. Whilst these matters were thus in process, to draw off
Hannibal from scenting the design, Fabius sends orders to the garrison
in Rhegium, that they should waste and spoil the Bruttian country, and
should also lay siege to Caulonia, and storm the place with all their
might. These were a body of eight thousand men, the worst of the Roman
army, who had most of them been runaways, and had been brought home by
Marcellus from Sicily, in dishonour, so that the loss of them would not
be any great grief to the Romans. Fabius, therefore, threw out these men
as a bait for Hannibal, to divert him from Tarentum; who instantly
caught at it, and led his forces to Caulonia; in the meantime, Fabius
sat down before Tarentum. On the sixth day of the siege, the young
Tarentine slips by night out of the town, and, having carefully observed
the place where the Bruttian commander, according to agreement, was to
admit the Romans, gave an account of the whole matter to Fabius; who
thought it not safe to rely wholly upon the plot, but, while proceeding
with secrecy to the post, gave order for a general assault to be made on
the other side of the town, both by land and sea. This being accordingly
executed, while the Tarentines hurried to defend the town on the side
attacked, Fabius received the signal from the Bruttian, scaled the
walls, and entered the town unopposed.
Here, we must confess, ambition seems to have overcome him. To make it
appear to the world that he had taken Tarentum by force and his own
prowess, and not by treachery, he commanded his men to kill the
Bruttians before all others; yet he did not succeed in establishing the
impression he desired, but merely gained the character of perfidy and
cruelty. Many of the Tarentines were also killed, and thirty thousand of
them were sold for slaves; the army had the plunder of the town, and
there was brought into the treasury three thousand talents. Whilst they
were carrying off everything else as plunder, the officer who took the
inventory asked what should be done with their gods, meaning the
pictures and statues; Fabius answered, "Let us leave their angry gods to
the Tarentines." Nevertheless, he removed the colossal statue of
Herakles, and had it set up in the Capitol, with one of himself on
horseback, in brass, near it; proceedings very different from those of
Marcellus on a like occasion, and which, indeed, very much set off in
the eyes of the world his clemency and humanity, as appears in the
account of his life.
23. Hannibal, it is said, was within five miles of Tarentum, when
he was informed that the town was taken. He said openly, "Rome
then has also got a
Hannibal; as we won Tarentum, so have we lost it." And,
in private with some of his confidants, he told them, for the first
time, that he always thought it difficult, but now he held it
impossible, with the forces he then had, to master Italy.
Upon this success, Fabius had a triumph decreed him at Rome, much more
splendid than his first; they looked upon him now as a champion who had
learned to cope with his antagonist, and could now easily foil his arts
and prove his best skill ineffectual. And, indeed, the army of Hannibal
was at this time partly worn away with continual action, and partly
weakened and become dissolute with overabundance and luxury. Marcus
Livius, who was governor of Tarentum when it was betrayed to Hannibal,
and then retired into the citadel, which he kept till the town was
retaken, was annoyed at these honours and distinctions, and, on one
occasion, openly declared in the senate, that by his resistance, more
than by any action of Fabius, Tarentum had been recovered; on which
Fabius laughingly replied: "You say very true, for if Marcus Livius had
not lost Tarentum, Fabius Maximus had never recovered it." The people,
amongst other marks of gratitude, gave his son the consulship of the
next year; shortly after whose entrance upon his office, there being
some business on foot about provision for the war, his father, either by
reason of age and infirmity, or perhaps out of design to try his son,
came up to him on horseback. While he was still at a distance, the young
consul observed it, and bade one of his lictors command his father to
alight, and tell him if he had any business with the consul, he should
come on foot. The standers-by seemed offended at the imperiousness of
the son towards a father so venerable for his age and his authority, and
turned their eyes in silence towards Fabius. He, however, instantly
alighted from his horse, and with open arms came up, almost running, and
embraced his son, saying, "Yes, my son, you do well, and understand well
what authority you have received, and over whom you are to use it. This
was the way by which we and our forefathers advanced the dignity of Rome,
preferring ever her honour and service to our own fathers and children."
And, in fact, it is told that the great-grandfather of our Fabius, who
was undoubtedly the greatest man of Rome in his time, both in reputation
and authority, who had been five times consul, and had been honoured
with several triumphs for victories obtained by him, took pleasure in
serving as lieutenant under his own son, when he went as consul to his
command. And when afterwards his son had a triumph bestowed upon him for
his good service, the old man followed, on horseback, his triumphant
chariot, as one of his attendants; and made it his glory, that while he
really was, and was acknowledged to be, the greatest man in Rome, and
held a father's full power over his son, he yet submitted himself to the
laws and the magistrate.
24. But the praises of our Fabius are not bounded here. He
afterwards lost his son, and was remarkable for bearing the loss with
the moderation becoming a pious father and a wise man, and as it was the
custom amongst the Romans, upon the death of any illustrious person, to
have a funeral oration recited by some of the nearest relations, he took
upon himself that office, and delivered a speech in the forum, which he
committed afterwards to writing.
25. After Cornelius Scipio, who was sent into Spain, had driven
the Carthaginians, defeated by him in many battles, out of the country,
and had gained over to Rome many towns and nations with large resources,
he was received at his coming home with unexampled joy and acclamation
of the people; who, to show their gratitude, elected him consul for the
year ensuing. Knowing what high expectation they had of him, he thought
the occupation of contesting Italy with Hannibal a mere old man's
employment, and proposed no less a task to himself than to make Carthage
the seat of the war, fill Africa with arms and devastation, and so
oblige Hannibal, instead of invading the countries of others, to draw
back and defend his own. And to this end he proceeded to exert all the
influence he had with the people. Fabius, on the other side, opposed the
undertaking with all his might, alarming the city, and telling them that
nothing but the temerity of a hot young man could inspire them with such
dangerous counsels, and sparing no means, by word or deed, to prevent
it. He prevailed with the senate to espouse his sentiments; but the
common people thought that he envied the fame of Scipio, and that he was
afraid lest this young conqueror should achieve some great and noble
exploit, and have the glory, perhaps, of driving Hannibal out of Italy,
or even of ending the war, which had for so many years continued and
been protracted under his management.
To say the truth, when Fabius first opposed this project of Scipio, he
probably did it out of caution and prudence, in consideration only of
the public safety, and of the danger which the commonwealth might incur;
but when he found Scipio every day increasing in the esteem of the
people, rivalry and ambition led him further, and made him violent and
personal in his opposition. For he even applied to Crassus, the
colleague of Scipio, and urged him not to yield the command to Scipio,
but that, if his inclinations were for it, he should himself in person
lead the army to Carthage. He also hindered the giving money to Scipio
for the war; so that he was forced to raise it upon his own credit and
interest from the cities of Etruria, which were extremely attached to
him. On the other side, Crassus would not stir against him, nor remove
out of Italy, being, in his own nature, averse to all contention, and
also having, by his office of high priest, religious duties to retain
him.
26.
Fabius, therefore, tried other ways to oppose the design; he impeded the
levies, and he declaimed, both in the senate and to the people, that
Scipio was not only himself flying from Hannibal, but was also
endeavouring to drain Italy of all its forces, and to spirit away the
youth of the country to a foreign war, leaving behind them their
parents, wives, and children, and the city itself, a defenceless prey to
the conquering and undefeated enemy at their doors. With this he so far
alarmed the people, that at last they would only allow Scipio for the
war the legions which were in Sicily, and three hundred, whom he
particularly trusted, of those men who had served with him in Spain. In
these transactions, Fabius seems to have followed the dictates of his
own wary temper.
But, after that Scipio was gone over into Africa, when news almost
immediately came to Rome of wonderful exploits and victories, of which
the fame was confirmed by the spoils he sent home; of a Numidian king
taken prisoner; of a vast slaughter of their men; of two camps of the
enemy burnt and destroyed, and in them a great quantity of arms and
horses; and when, hereupon, the Carthaginians were compelled to send
envoys to Hannibal to call him home, and leave his idle hopes in Italy,
to defend Carthage; when, for such eminent and transcending services,
the whole people of Rome cried up and extolled the actions of Scipio;
even then, Fabius contended that a successor should be sent in his
place, alleging for it only the old reason of the mutability of fortune,
as if she would be weary of long favouring the same person. With this
language many did begin to feel offended; it seemed to be morosity and
ill-will, the pusillanimity of old age, or a fear, that had now become
exaggerated, of the skill of Hannibal. Nay, when Hannibal had put his
army on shipboard, and taken his leave of Italy, Fabius still could not
forbear to oppose and disturb the universal joy of Rome, expressing his
fears and apprehensions, telling them that the commonwealth was never in
more danger than now, and that Hannibal was a more formidable enemy
under the walls of Carthage than ever he had been in Italy; that it
would be fatal to Rome whenever Scipio should encounter his victorious
army, still warm with the blood of so many Roman generals, dictators,
and consuls slain. And the people were, in some degree, startled with
these declamations, and were brought to believe that the further off
Hannibal was, the nearer was their danger.
27.
Scipio, however, shortly afterwards fought Hannibal, and utterly
defeated him, humbled the pride of Carthage beneath his feet, gave his
countrymen joy and exultation beyond all their hopes, and-
"Long shaken on the seas restored the state."
Fabius Maximus, however, did not live to see the prosperous end of this
war, and the final overthrow of Hannibal, nor to rejoice in the
re-established happiness and security of the commonwealth; for about the
time that Hannibal left Italy, he fell sick and died. At Thebes,
Epaminondas died so poor that he was buried at the public charge; one
small iron coin was all, it is said, that was found in his house. Fabius
did not need this, but the people, as a mark of their affection,
defrayed the expenses of his funeral by a private contribution from each
citizen of the smallest piece of coin; thus owning him their common
father, and making his end no less honourable than his life.